One of the things that could be very powerful is driving home his humanity … sometimes when you get down to race politics people overlook this or downplay it because it suits their purpose.
Tanya Koeneman, Bennelong Aboriginal Consultation Workshop, 28 June 2013
I think he was a survivor, he had to be what he was ... when he was with the white people he'd go back to his tribe and tell them what to expect and what's going to happen.
Maureen Reyland, Bennelong Aboriginal Consultation Workshop, 28 June 2013
As much as Bennelong was using the situation to his advantage, he was being used to the advantage of other people.
Tanya Koeneman, Bennelong Aboriginal Consultation Workshop, 28 June 2013
Someone who was determined to forge relationships.
Heidi Norman, Bennelong Aboriginal Consultation Workshop, 28 June 2013
This guy's a double agent. He's working both sides of the fence here.
Allen Madden, Bennelong Aboriginal Consultation Workshop, 28 June 2013
You have Bennelong sleeping on Phillip’s porch and you’ve got resistance from within the colony Caesar (a Negro) and Paddy (an Irish guy) and Pemulwuy … looking at that and Bennelong … they’ve got to be collaborating these fellows . You’ve got one from the Parramatta River and one from the Georges River … they have got to be passing information to each other.
Allen Madden, Bennelong Aboriginal Consultation Workshop, 28 June 2013
To try and tell people who he is based on the history of him - I think that does him a lot of injustice, because there's the other side of the man. There's the family man, the married man and there's the resistance man.
Allen Madden, Bennelong Aboriginal Consultation Workshop, 28 June 2013
Bennelong was a person in a particular time with a particular set of circumstances that he had to deal with.
Tanya Koeneman, Bennelong Aboriginal Consultation Workshop, 28 June 2013
Identity can be compiled by other people.
Tanya Koeneman, Bennelong Aboriginal Consultation Workshop, 28 June 2013
The Bennelong we think of today is a construct ... of generations of information.
Tanya Koeneman, Bennelong Aboriginal Consultation Workshop, 28 June 2013
It makes you wonder how much of Bennelong's motivations ... were geared towards tribal conflict ... but its was about the collective, about the group, about the mob ...
Tanya Koeneman, Bennelong Aboriginal Consultation Workshop, 28 June 2013
The idea of choice, that Bennelong had a choice - we probably need to think about that ... given how terrifying it must have been to see all your people dying around you ...
Heidi Norman, Bennelong Aboriginal Consultation Workshop, 28 June 2013
The adaptation that took place in those opening years was phenomenal and Bennelong is a strong example of that ...
Heidi Norman, Bennelong Aboriginal Consultation Workshop, 28 June 2013
There was a curiosity between Europeans and Bennelong ...
Heidi Norman, Bennelong Aboriginal Consultation Workshop, 28 June 2013
It's important to bear in mind that a lot of what we think we know about Bennelong is what people have chosen to record
Tanya Koeneman, Bennelong Aboriginal Consultation Workshop, 28 June 2013
What they said about him being a drunk and addicted to alcohol … it was the currency of the time. They (the colony) ran out of money … everybody was drinking. People of the time virtually drank more rum and wine than water …
Djon Mundine, Bennelong Aboriginal Consultation Workshop, 28 June 2013
The way Aboriginal people lived was a choice, it was an informed choice ... Bennelong is an embodiment of that choice ...
Tanya Koeneman, Bennelong Aboriginal Consultation Workshop, 28 June 2013
Everyone was trying to make out who these Martians were that had arrived here. That’s why Bungaree he came from around Patonga … came down here … to find out what they were all about … these people who had just arrived. Bennelong would have been doing the same.
Djon Mundine, Bennelong Aboriginal Consultation Workshop, 28 June 2013
He seemingly rejected a lot of the trappings of 'civilised' life. He stripped off and went back to the bush and took up where he left off.
Tanya Koeneman, Bennelong Aboriginal Consultation Workshop, 28 June 2013
We always look at him as a public figure but he had wives and children and people he’d cared about.
Heidi Norman, Bennelong Aboriginal Consultation Workshop, 28 June 2013
I suppose when you think about it everyone one of us in this room knows a blackfella that has a Bennelong in him. Was he a traitor? Was he an uncle tom? Did he go over to the white fellas to sell his people out?
Allen Madden, Bennelong Aboriginal Consultation Workshop, 28 June 2013
Phillip created another unfortunate precedent when his protégé Bennelong, became the first true Aboriginal fringe dweller. He existed from 1795 until his death in 1813 as a sad, pathetic figure, comfortable neither with his own people nor with the white settlers.
Bruce Elder, 1988
He appeared a volatile egotist, mainly interested in love and war; a tease, a flirt and very soon a wine-bibber; a trickster and eventually a bit of a turncoat.
William Stanner, The History of Indifference Thus Begins, 1963
it is clear that he could no longer find contentment or full acceptance either among his countrymen or the white men.
Eleanor Dark, Australian Dictionary of Biography, 1966
Sir, - I was very much interested in Mr. Weirter's account of the aborigine Bennelong, which appeared in last Saturday's "Herald." I am the owner of a portion of the late Mr. Squire's old brewery property at Kissing Point, and in that property there is a black-fellow's grave. A very old resident of Kissing Point told me that the man had worked at the brewery, and had died and was buried there. Seeing that history tells us that Bennelong was buried at Kissing Point in Squire's grounds, and this grave being the only one known on the property, it seems to me that there can be no doubt that the grave is that of Bennelong
CC Watson, Sydney Morning Herald, 8 July 1927