Newfong's family moved to North Stradbroke Island but, when Newfong was five, the family returned to Wynnum, where he attended the local school,[citation needed] and later, Wynnum High School. After graduating in 1961,[1] he wanted to study law; however, entrance to university at the time would only allow Aboriginal people to undertake education degrees to become teachers, and only if they chose to teach in a community. He instead worked in Mount Isa as a miner in 1965.[citation needed]
In 1970, he was elected as the national (general) secretary of FCAATSI and, in the same year was involved in protests against celebrating the bicentennial of Captain Cook's visit to Australia.[1] He resigned from the FCAATSI position after a few months.[2]
In 1972, Newfong was made the "chief spokesperson" for the Aboriginal Tent Embassy on the lawns of Old Parliament House in Canberra, where his media contacts and experience in the Canberra press corps were crucial in establishing a public image for the embassy.[3] His political allies here included Gary Foley, Charles Perkins, Paul Coe, Isabel Coe, Gordon Briscoe and Chicka Dixon.[2] Although he resided at the embassy, which was established as a land rights protest, from February until July and was quoted frequently in The Australian and overseas press, he is best remembered for his quote, "The Mission has come to town".[1]
Newfong was known to be extremely knowledgeable on African matters.[2] He was one of the first people in the Aboriginal movement to realise the importance of international pressure on Australia, especially from the African nations. During the 1960s, he was heavily influenced by overseas independence movements in removing colonial overrule. He was the only Aboriginal speaker at the Black Moratorium to speak specifically about the influence that multinational corporations had on the Australian government in relation to Aboriginal policy.[citation needed]
Newfong's was the inaugural editor and principal writer of Identity[4][5] from 1972 to 1973 and 1979 to 1980. This was an Indigenous Australian magazine funded by the Aboriginal Publications Foundation. According to Marcia Langton, the publication became "enormously influential" under his leadership.[1] Newfong published a five-point plan for land rights in the magazine.[2]
He became involved in Koori Bina, a monthly newspaper published by Black Women's Action from 1976 to 1979,[6] helping the inexperienced young women in its production.[1]
Throughout the 1980s and 1990s, he contributed to a long list of publications.[1]
He served on the board of the Public Broadcasting Foundation, assisting with the expansion of Aboriginal radio.[1]
Later life, death and legacy
Until his death in 1999,[1] Newfong lectured at various Australian universities on Indigenous health and government relations.[citation needed]
In November 2018, he was inducted into Australia's Media Hall of Fame.[7]
In the annual Kennedy Awards, named after crime reporter Les Kennedy, the prize for outstanding Indigenous affairs reporting was named the John Newfong Award.[1]
Adrian Atkins is writing Newfong's official anthology.
^Grieve-Williams, Victoria (28 June 1969). "2: 'We have survived the white man's world': A critical review of Aboriginal Australian activism in media and social media". In Guntarik, Olivia; Grieve-Williams, Victoria (eds.). From Sit-Ins to #revolutions: Media and the Changing Nature of Protests. ISBN9781501336959. Retrieved 28 September 2022 – via dokumen.pub.