Aboriginal people throughout Australia, including the Kuku Yalanji tribe, were not given citizenship rights in 1901 when Australia became an independent federation, nor were they counted in the census. After decades of well-meaning yet destructive attempts at dealing with indigenous people by Europeans, their culture has been severely battered. The Aboriginals Protection and Restriction of the Sale of Opium Act was repealed only in the 1960s. Aboriginal people were finally given the right to vote in 1967.
In recent years however, efforts have been made by Aboriginal Australians and white Australians to improve the living conditions of the original inhabitants of this land. It is clear that Kuku Yalanji culture is still alive, and with progressive approaches to human rights in Australia the culture can thrive again. The Kuku Yalanji people are an integral and important part of the Daintree Rainforest
THE LANGUAGE
The Kuku Yalanji language has only 16 letters in the alphabet. There are a lot of consonants: b,d,j,l,m,n,ny,ng,r,rr,w,y. The “rr” is used for the rolled “r”, like the Scottish. The rest are said very similar to the English way, with the exception of “k”, which is pronounced as a “g”. The vowels they use are a, i and u and pronounced as, “a” as in farther, “i” as in pit, and “u” as in put.
LIVING ON THEIR LAND
These people are inhabitants of the rainforest, they collected food in the open forests and woodland across the Great Diving Range, they harvested and hunted the sea, in the mangroves, the rivers and creeks and the shoreline. Before European occupation the ancestors of the present day rainforest Aboriginal people gained their food and medicine and many of their implements, weapons, fibres and construction material from plants in their environment. There are two main food sources. Food that is gathered from plants is called Mayi. The other main food source is acquired by hunting, and this is referred to as Minya, for it is a meat substance.
These people lived in harmony with their environment. They were a part of it and it was a part of them. Their relationship with the land consisted of respect for nature and an intimate knowledge of its cycles. The Kuku Yalanji have five seasons, known by the typical weather patterns each.
Late December to March |
April to May |
June to September |
October to November |
Late November to the middle of December |
The rainforest has its natural patterns and cycles that give the people important information about the food which is available. The life of the rainforest tells them when different plants are ready to eat or when it is time to catch animals. The plants are their calendar, marking the seasons. There is a necessary understanding that is associated with the food. The Kuku Yalanji people have lived in harmony with the rainforest. Respectively, the rainforest always provided a means of survival, and as such, the Kuku Yalanji people hold the rainforest in the highest respect. |