Wednesday, April 29, 2015

ABORIGINAL CULTURE

                 A Fascinating Culture

       Aborigines, one of oldest civilizations on earth, are the indigenous people of Australia and have inhabited the continent for over 30,000 years. The word aborigine, in Latin, means from the beginning.         On both trips Down Under I had the good fortune to meet and talk to some of the indigenous people.                   One was more interested in telling about his experiences of which he was justifiably proud, but we wanted to learn about the culture. The second time the couple was most accommodating and freely explained their culture and answered questions.
     There were a wide variety of lifestyles among the aborigines. Hundreds of tribes had their own territory, language, and customs, developing their culture free from outside influences. Many were hunters and nomadic, living in temporary mud dwellings.
    The boomerang originally was meant as a throwing stick for hunting, fighting, making fire, or stoking coals when cooking.
    These people mastered the challenges of living in a harsh environment. They passed on their spiritual practices, planted crops, diverted streams, dug native wells, and maintained grasslands by deliberate burning to attract game for food. The population continually increased over the last 3000 years and across the continent the different tribes traded with each other. Among the exchanged items were shells, ochre, and wood.
     During colonization, aboriginal life changed dramatically. Unfamiliar diseases killed thousands. Arbitrarily displaced from the most fertile areas, many were confined to reserves in the misguided effort to overcome widespread poverty. They presently make up 2% of the country’s population, with about 90% living in the cities.  Many of the cultural groups, similar to tribes or clans, are still present today, with over 50 languages surviving. Walpiri is the largest spoken language.
    The Outback was home to many of the native peoples. The area is dry and can go years without rain. It is an area of red rock, ochre plains, purple mountains, and brilliant blue skies. Still today, towns with only basic facilities are few and far apart.
   In the aboriginal culture there is men’s business and women’s business and neither touches the business belonging to the opposite gender. This was made very clear.
   Men’s business includes playing the didgeridoo which is a long small hollow log-type instrument making a very deep sound when blown into. Men’s work also included walking, hunting, spearing game, and making spears.
   Women’s business includes concerns about human rights, providing food (the more wives, the better a man ate), digging for yams, digging for honey, grinding flour, and digging for grubs under the witchery tree.
   Common law does not recognize aboriginal law. Each tribe has a law person. Respect for the elders is very important. Traditionally teaching was verbal in the form of storytelling. Aborigines are returning to this today. Songs tell the story of Dreamtime. Tribal boundaries are crossed only by invitation.  Breaches of aboriginal law bring severe penalties.
   One is born into a skin name group. Names beginning with the same letter, such as N are for women, and those with another letter are for men. This is done for identity purposes and to avoid incest. Extended families are large, and sex between family members is forbidden.
   Men are polygamous with many wives, but the women can only have one husband. A male is not a man until he takes a wife. In the old days marriages were arranged, and it was common for a girl to be promised when about 13. Aborigine women had children at a young age. Because aborigines had little in worldly goods, the number of wives a man had proved his wealth, the more the wealthier.
       Boys used to be taken on a walk-about for two years, but only go for six weeks now, to learn lessons and culture. Then he was promised a wife; In-laws do not fight, particularly a son and his mother-in-law. Avoidance is a show of respect.
      Aborigines were not allowed to vote until 1962, and were not allowed to own land until 1976, when a land council was established to negotiate with the government. Now where rights have been established, the land cannot be altered in any way. In 1979 aborigines were granted title to 144 former reserves.
       In the 1970s the art world started to take aboriginal art seriously. Their art depicts religious and daily life. The carpet in the Sydney airport is in an aboriginal print as is the carpet in the Ayers Rock Hotel. Each has a different design.  Dances communicate with their ancestors.
       Men wear headbands made of hair. After eating kangaroo, the remains are covered with dirt and a burial is held. Yet, aboriginal children learn to endure pain at an early age. When death occurs, men show their grief by cutting themselves. Widows hit themselves on the head or are beaten by another woman because it is believed she caused the death. The mourning continues for three days to a week. All such mourning is done in the respective men’s or women’s camp.
      It was an interesting evening and we all enjoyed learning about this unique culture.







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