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Bundjalung people

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   * Aborigines in big land claim win, BBC News Online
   * Australian Tribe Gets Rights to Parks, Guardian Unlimited
   * Tribe on high as heartland won back - The Australian - 11 September 2007

The Githabul Native Title claim was lodged by the Native title claimant Trevor Close in 1995. Mr Close received financial help from the Canadian Government to study law at University of Technology in Sydney Australia.

Mr Close dedicated 15 years of his life as a volunteer to force the NSW Government to respect his Githabul Elders and to come to Woodenbong to sign a treaty with the Githabul Elders.

In Australia a treaty is called an Indigenous Land Use Agreement and must be signed by a Federal Court Justice. In this case Justice Lisa Branson signed the Githabul Treaty at the Woodenbong Common on the 29th November 2007. The Githabul Native title claim made World news as it was the first time natives in the State of NSW had been able to prove that they still openly practiced their laws and culture.

Githabul are not Bundjalung.


The Bundjalung people (aka Bunjalung, Badjalang & Bandjalang) are those Australian Aborigines who are the original custodians of northern coastal areas of New South Wales (Australia), 554 km northeast of Sydney: an area that includes the Bundjalung National Park and Mount Warning (known to the Budjalung people as Wollumbin.[1])

Bundjalung people all share in common descent from ancestors who once spoke as their first, preferred language, one or more of the dialects of the Bandjalang language

Country

Norman Tindale 's (1974) Catalogue of Australian Aborignal tribes identifies the identifying Baryulgal dialect (Badjalang) country as follows[2]:

"From northern bank of Clarence River to Richmond River; at Ballina; inland to Tabulam and Baryugil."

Religious Beliefs

People believe the spirits of wounded warriors are present within the mountains, their injuries having manifested themselves as scars on the mountainside, and thunder storms in the mountains recall the sounds of those warriors' battles.[1]

Wollumbin itself is the site at which one of the chief warriors lies, and it is said his face can still be seen in the mountain's rocks when viewed from the north.[1]

Much of the Bundjalung peoples culture and heritage continues to be celebrated..[3]

And people, these days, now gather annually in the Bundjalung national park as a community to celebrate as a Bundjalung People's Gathering[3].

"We want to celebrate our Aboriginal traditions and customs. We want to share them with other people an show them our beliefs and our culture is still alive today, it hasn't been lost" - Chris Phillips, event organizer"

On these occasions traditional garments are often worn by the Bundjalung peoples, who partake in custodial dances and other performances.[3]

Wollumbin is the site at which one of the chief warriors lies, and it is said his face can still be seen in the mountain's rocks when viewed from the north

See also

References