Karajarri Indigenous Protected Area
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The Karajarri are an
Aboriginal Australian people Aboriginal Australians are the various Indigenous peoples of the Australian mainland and many of its islands, such as Tasmania, Fraser Island, Hinchinbrook Island, the Tiwi Islands, and Groote Eylandt, but excluding the Torres Strait Islands ...
, who once lived south-west of the
Kimberleys The Kimberley is the northernmost of the nine regions of Western Australia. It is bordered on the west by the Indian Ocean, on the north by the Timor Sea, on the south by the Great Sandy and Tanami deserts in the region of the Pilbara, an ...
in the northern Pilbara region, predominantly between the coastal area and the
Great Sandy Desert The Great Sandy Desert is an interim Australian bioregion,IBRA Version 6.1
data
. They now mostly reside at
Bidyadanga Bidyadanga, also known as La Grange, is the largest Aboriginal community in Western Australia, with a population of approximately 750 residents. It is located south of Broome and from the state capital Perth, in the Kimberley region. The t ...
, south of Broome. To their north lived the
Yawuru people The Yawuru, also spelt Jawuru, are an Indigenous Australian people of the Kimberley region of Western Australia. Language A Japanese linguist, Hosokawa Kōmei (細川弘明), compiled the first basic dictionary of the Yawuru language in 1988, a ...
, to the east the Mangala, to the northeast the Nyigina, and to their south the Nyangumarta. Further down the coast were the Kariera.


Language

The first description of the grammar of their language, Garadjeri, was published by
Gerhardt Laves Gerhardt Laves (July 15, 1906 – March 14, 1993) was a graduate student at the University of Chicago and Yale University who between August 1929 and August 1931 undertook extensive fieldwork on Australian Aboriginal languages. Laves was probably ...
in 1931. It belongs to the Marngu branch of the Pama-Nyungan language family. The native conceptualisation of its varieties recognises 4 dialect forms, the Najanaja (or Murrkut) dialect spoken by coastal Karajarri, Nangu spoken in the central hinterlands and Nawurtu further east inland. Garadjeri has had a notable influence on the Yawuru language, many of whose terms for ceremonials, and for naming the indigenous flora and fauna, have been borrowed from the Karajarri. Less than 20 native speakers (2004) remain. Together with Nyangumarta, Karrajarri shows some features that are exceptional within the Kimberley Pama-Nyungan languages, in having bound pronominals affixed to inflecting verbs.


Country

According to Norman Tindale, Karajarri territory covered about . Running from Cape Villaret on the south of Roebuck Bay until a point north of ''Jawinja'', at the intertribal corroboree gathering site known as ''Manari.'' Their inland extension reached east as far as . Notable Karajarri sites marking their boundaries were at Lendjarkading, Redjarth, Undurmadatj and Mount Phire (Paijara).


Traditional social structure

The Karajarri were divided into two distinct groups, those who inhabited the coastal areas, called ''Naja'' (Nadja), and the inlanders dwelling on the eastern plains and bushlands, the ''Nawutu'' (Naudu). The social hierarchy was headed by ritual leaders (''pirrka'', literally 'roots of a tree'), male elders who organised ceremonial life, and who are also responsible for management of the country and the general affairs of tribal members. Members of a Karajarri group were classified in four ways, ''panaka'', ''purrungu'', ''parrjari'' and ''karimpa'', a tribal taxonomy that is determined by alternate generation levels distinguished along moiety lines called ''inara''. Thus one inara, represented by the barn swallow (''wiyurr''), is ''panaka-purrungu,'' being constituted by self, grandparents, sisters, brothers, cousins and grandchildren, together with marriageable partners and their siblings, the other, ''karimpa-parrjarri'', is inclusive of one's mother, father, aunts, uncles, great grandparents and grandchildren, and is emblemised in terms of the
fork-tailed swift Fork-tailed swift is the historic name of a kind of bird which has since been divided taxonomically into four species. It could refer to any of four different species of swifts: *Pacific swift, ''Apus pacificus'' *Salim Ali's swift, ''Apus salimali ...
(''kitirr''). Both the ''kitirr'' and ''wiyurr'' are viewed as heralds of rain. ''Pukarri'' (dream) connote states of reality formed in the mythic Dreamtime when the landscape was created, and exercises a binding, inviolable force, the word being applied to institutional practices that are traced back to the primal order of things in a given tribal country (''ngurrara''). Marriage and kinship relationships are influenced by factors related to the implications that arise from their legends concerning the ''living waters''.


Ecology

The area encompassed by Karajarri lands sits on the La Grange sub-basin, one of the richest groundwater areas in Western Australia, and a Pindan ecology, the ''pirra'' of the Karajarri inland, with
stygofauna Stygofauna are any fauna that live in groundwater systems or aquifers, such as caves, fissures and vugs. Stygofauna and troglofauna are the two types of subterranean fauna (based on life-history). Both are associated with subterranean environments ...
which has yet to be studied in any depth. The Karajarri perceive their world (''ngurrara'' (one's own country') in terms of a mythology that weaves seamlessly together all the features of the landscape, the language and customs, a nexus which was then reflected in ritual practices. The language itself, as is generally the case among indigenous cultures of Australia, is thought of in terms of particular stretches of country, and each form was first spoken by the Dreamtime being who wandered the land, speaking each tongue depending on the tract of land where its speakers came to dwell. In the Karajarri conception, one shared by many other nations in the region, such as the Nyigina, Yawuru, Nyangumarta and Mangala, the land is understood as coming from the 'Dreaming' (''pukarrikarra''), of which they are the custodians. Given the scarcity of fresh water, what they call 'living water'(''karnangkul''), the Karajarri secured their resources by a system of wells, soaks (''lirri'') and springs throughout the wetlands. The management of the ''karnangkul'' is dictated by the need to respect and placate powerful serpentine beings (''pulany''/''bulaing'') in the waters. The concept may reflect, etymology suggests, a residue of the conception of a rainbow serpent, still attested in
Arnhem Land Arnhem Land is a historical region of the Northern Territory of Australia, with the term still in use. It is located in the north-eastern corner of the territory and is around from the territory capital, Darwin. In 1623, Dutch East India Compan ...
lore (''bolung''). The word may be linked to the Arnhem land variant.) There is a complex mythology concerning the living waters, focused on the spirits, ''pulany'', dangerous or benign, that are thought to inhabit them, and are thought to be responsible for the seasonal replenishment of these water places (''ngapa''). Special ceremonies are undertaken to ensure that the water beings make rain. Camping is avoided in such sites. The presence of such water snakes is often attested by ''panyjin'' reeds, the whiskers of the pulany, which can travel underground to emerge from ''tulkarru'' holes. There exists a Karajarri song to entice back into the waters the ancestral serpent if a spring dries up, in order to refresh the aquifer. It is transmitted for such an emergency, though circumstances have never changed to require its recitation. The first whiteman's survey of the area, conducted by a party led by Frederick Kennedy Panter, commander of the
schooner A schooner () is a type of sailing vessel defined by its rig: fore-and-aft rigged on all of two or more masts and, in the case of a two-masted schooner, the foremast generally being shorter than the mainmast. A common variant, the topsail schoon ...
''New Perseverance''. After striking inland for 50 miles, Panter returned to report that the land was furnished with numerous native wells, thickly wooded and endowed with groves of cajeput eucalypts suitable for construction. Overall, Panter concluded the Karajarri lands offered '40,000 acres of splendidly grassed land,' while the natives were 'quiet' and 'friendly'. The area was one the Karajarri call ''pajalpi'' or 'spring country' given the richness of its spring waters and the lush growth of local plants there.


History of contact

The Karajarri developed a ceremonial rite (''milyankurl'') in order to govern the introduction of strangers into their midst, and to pacify the potential for danger in these encounters. They call non indigenous people ''walanyu'' (strangers from beyond), a concept that also embraces hostile spirits (''wirangu'') and other inland aboriginal people. It is thought that East Asian maritime sailors visited their region before the era of white exploration. Generally they would trade and barter with the Asian hired hands working the British pearling luggers, such as the Timorese, Chinese, Malays, Javanese and Japanese. In Karajarri practice, ''walanyu'' could drop their outsider status once if the recognized the ''pirrka'', were properly introduced, and had exchanged gifts. After Panter's report was circulated, the Roebuck Bay Pastoral Company was formed and a ship, the ''Nile'', was commissioned in
Freemantle Freemantle is a suburb and electoral ward in Southampton, England. There are similarly named places in Hampshire: notably Henry II's hunting lodge in Kingsclere; a suburb of Hannington, Hampshire, Hannington; and Freemantle Common in Bitterne. ...
to establish a presence in Karakarri territory, with company representatives and a contingent of police troopers. They set up a camp near Cape Vilaret and appropriated a local well, one of the few on the coast with fresh water. Hostilities broke out, as sorties to take over wells or cut timber were resisted. Attempts to drive them off were repelled for some months, causing the loss of life among some locals. An expedition led by James Richard Harding (1838–1864), comprising Panter, William Henry Goldwyer (1829–1864) and three police troopers, set out to explore the pajalpi lands suitable for pastoral development south around La Grange Bay. Martin had reported a regular system of wells 3–4 m deep, at intervals of a mile, stretching inland from Roebuck and La Grange. The three intruders encountered native resistance and, in a day, in two incidents shot 3 Indigenous people then a further 15, as they defended their campsite at a small lake called Boolla Boolla, otherwise known to the Karajarri as ''Injitana'', a Karajarri sacred ceremonial site. According to their traditional account, the expedition had desecrated a sacred site (''jinjarlkuriny''), a rainmaking permanent water place (''jila''). The whitemen in turn were overrun and killed. The ''Nile'' left the area in January 1865 with the men still missing. Stock routes in the 1880s such as those opened up by
Nat Buchanan Nathaniel Buchanan (1826 – 23 September 1901) was an Australian pioneer pastoralist, drover and explorer. Early life Buchanan was born near Dublin, and was of Scottish descent the son of Lieutenant Charles Henry Buchanan, and his wif ...
, who developed the de Grey-Kimberley stockroute, often followed aboriginal dreamtime contours and their sacred watering sites, and, as government inspectors noted, those who took up pastoral leases often then denied native peoples access to the wells on their
stations Station may refer to: Agriculture * Station (Australian agriculture), a large Australian landholding used for livestock production * Station (New Zealand agriculture), a large New Zealand farm used for grazing by sheep and cattle ** Cattle statio ...
. Eventually the Karajarri and other regional tribes, esp. after the Aborigines Act (1905), were taken on as indentured labour, their local knowledge of the waterways and lay of the land being of great use to the pastoralists. In the 1930s the anthropologists
Ralph Piddington Ralph O'Reilly Piddington (19 February 1906 – 8 July 1974) was a New Zealand psychologist, anthropologist and university professor. Biography He was born in Sydney, New South Wales, Australia in 1906, the son of Albert and Marion O'Reil ...
and
A. P. Elkin Adolphus Peter Elkin (27 March 1891 – 9 July 1979) was an Anglican clergyman, an influential Australian anthropologist during the mid twentieth century and a proponent of the assimilation of Indigenous Australians. Early life Elkin was bor ...
surveyed the water soaks and wells, and their function within Karajarri thought and life.


Native title and development

Following the landmark High Court Mabo ruling handed down in 1992, which repudiated the prevailing doctrine that Australia had been a terra nullius, and recognised the common law validity of the concept of native title, the Karajarri moved to gather evidence for an application to secure legal acknowledgement and endorsement of their claim to the traditional Karajarri lands. At the same time Western Agricultural Industries (WAI), a private development company, was eyeing the Karajarri lands for the potential their abundant waters offered for establishing a vast irrigation scheme for cotton production, though subsidiary cultivations of sugar cane,
leucaena ''Leucaena'' is a genus of flowering plants in the mimosoid clade of the subfamily Caesalpinioideae of the family Fabaceae. It contains about 24 species of trees and shrubs, which are commonly known as leadtrees. They are native to the Americas, ...
, exotic hardwoods,
hemp Hemp, or industrial hemp, is a botanical class of ''Cannabis sativa'' cultivars grown specifically for industrial or medicinal use. It can be used to make a wide range of products. Along with bamboo, hemp is among the fastest growing plants o ...
, viticulture and freshwater aquafarming were also envisaged. The earlier
Camballin Irrigation Scheme The Camballin Irrigation Scheme consisted of the Fitzroy River Barrage, the Seventeen Mile Dam The Seventeen Mile Dam was constructed as part of the Camballin Irrigation Scheme by the Public Works Department of Western Australia Western A ...
, implementing similar aims, turned the region immediately to the north of the Karajarri lands into a dustbowl, the toxic wash out of chemical fertilisers leading to drastic losses of local fish-eating species like pelicans and ibis, and the disappearance of kangaroos. The principle of earlier law remains in place: the waters themselves are commonwealth property, and the Indigenous peoples have only the right of usufruct. The Karajarri Indigenous Protected Area was established in 2014, with the Karajarri Rangers practising
fire-stick farming Fire-stick farming, also known as cultural burning and cool burning, is the practice of Aboriginal Australians regularly using fire to burn vegetation, which has been practised for thousands of years. There are a number of purposes for doing this ...
to encourage biodiversity in the area.


Alternative names

* ''Garadjara'' * ''Garadjari, Karadjeri, Garadjeri'' * ''Karadhari, Garad'are'' * ''Kularupulu.''(generic Nyangumarta exonym for their coastal branch and the coastal Karajarri) * ''Laradjeri.'' (misprint). * ''Minala.'' (''minal'' means 'east', used of inland Karajarri social bands) * ''Nadja.'' (coastal Karajarri) * ''Nadjanadja'' * ''Naudu.'' (inlander Karajarri) * ''Nawudu.'' ( Yawuru and Nyigina exonym) * ''Nawurungainj.'' (Nyangumarta and Mangala term Source:


Books about Karajarri life and lore

* Liz Thompson, ''The Danger Seed: Lirrinngkirn Dreaming a Story from Karajarri Country,'' Pearson Education Australia, 2011


Notes


Citations


Sources

* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * {{authority control Marrngu languages Pilbara