Wagga Wagga City councillor Paul Funnell has called for Joe Williams to hand back his prestigious Australia Day award in the wake of his refusal to stand for the national anthem.
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Tensions have flared in Wagga since Williams controversially used the city's highest honour to make a public statement on racism.
Williams, who was recently appointed as the new Wellington Cowboys captain Coach and was part of the Dubbo CYMS side that claimed the 2011 Group 11 premiership, said he would never stand for the national anthem, declaring Australia could "never move forward" under a song he believes divides black and white.
Williams, who was declared Wagga's 2016 Citizen of the Year, said he stayed seated as the national anthem played at the city's Australia Day ceremony on Monday because he felt the song alienated Aboriginal people.
"I don't believe the national anthem represents me as an Aboriginal man, and I'm not the only one. Aboriginal people are far from free."
- Joe Williams
"I've been asked to sing the national anthem at national tournaments of touch footy. It was something I did because it's what I'd been taught in school then I was corrected," he said.
"What does Advance Australia Fair really mean? I was told by an Aboriginal Elder that it meant advance Australia - for fair-skinned people."
Williams said reconciliation could never be achieved as the race question loomed large on Australia's national identity.
"How can we move forward together while we have this hanging over our heads," he said.
"I don't believe the national anthem represents me as an Aboriginal man, and I'm not the only one. Aboriginal people are far from free."
Williams was recently appointed as the new Wellington Cowboys captain-coach. He was also part of the Dubbo CYMS side that claimed the 2011 Group 11 premiership.
Williams admitted feeling uncomfortable as he accepted Wagga's highest honour in a stirring ceremony, but said he would never shy away from his beliefs.
"What is Wagga council going to do; take the award off me?" he said. "If I don't stand up and speak up on what's happening - who will?"
"Perhaps as a people we should be asking why does Joey feel this way?" he said.
"Why do Aboriginal people feel this way? When we can answer those, we might be able to move forward as a nation in a stronger way."
Cr Kendall said he had faith the community could recognise a diversity of views. "It's basically everything we stand for," he said.
"I think we are a mature enough society to respect the right of a person to express how they feel about a particular issue."