Open Letter from Aboriginal Elder ‘Auntie’ Beve: “Protect Our Sacred Women’s Fertility Site from Mining”

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Our Sacred Land, Our Identity

6th January 2014

By Auntie Beve

Special Guest Writer for Wake Up World

My Tribal name is Goolabeen. I am a fully Initiated Law and Medicine Woman of the Alleyerwere Tribe of Utopia from the Central Desert of Australia.

But I am better and more widely known as Auntie Beve, particularly in the Jails of NSW, where I have just retired after 29 years working with Aboriginal prisoners – being there for them 24/7 as an Elder, an Aboriginal Art and Culture teacher, suicide Counsellor and Mental Health Worker.

As I was born here in Woy Woy NSW 78 years ago, I speak as an Elder of the Darkinoong Tribe from the Central Coast of NSW. And today, I speak on behalf of all Central Coast Aboriginal women with the support of the Aboriginal men and of many non-Aboriginal people who know of the importance of preserving the Sacred Aboriginal Dreaming Track.

 

Bulldozing Our Ancient Culture

New Zealand based sandmining company, Rocla, is planning to build a mine on an Aboriginal Women’s Fertility Rites Songline and Teaching Place, in Calga on the Central Coast NSW. This Songline is part of the Sacred Dreaming Track, and its destruction would destroy with it tens of thousands of years of Aboriginal heritage. Her Majesty’s NSW Government has approved the company to go ahead with their stage 4 extension, which comprises a massive 30 metre deep hole gouged out of the ground that will take our Sacred Sites out completely.

My mission is to make all Australians aware of how significant this loss would be – to help them fully understand the Cultural importance of this site, and why it must not be destroyed by Rocla mining company and Her Majesty’s Government of NSW.

 

 

 

I, as an Initiated woman, wish to explain the importance of this site so that all Australians can understand how important it is for this site to be preserved and not destroyed – as Rocla Sand Mining intends to do.

I first ask for your respect and acknowledgement of the existence and importance of our Black History in white Australia.

Secondly, I would like it acknowledged that Black history and culture is recorded and taught in ways that are different from the White Fellas ways, but are no less important to its people.

White Australia has The Mitchell Library, given funded and maintained by the government, to house all your important papers, records, books, events, stories and artefacts. At the Mitchell Library, all your White History is kept safe from vandalism, kept safe for posterity.

We, the original custodians of this land, had no paper, pens or writing equipment like yours to record our history on. Instead, back then, we used our recall, our memory to re-tell our stories and the law, and to re-sing our songs of what came before us, what needed to be passed down, carried on, down through time for posterity – just like the white man’s way.

Our people also had the dedication and patience to carve those stories and laws into hard rock platforms, to build entire sites that record our history, our culture and our stories – where we hoped they would be preserved for posterity. Every symbol or line we carved may have taken months to complete, but how else were we to permanently record – for our children, and their children – the stories, the law and the history of the original custodians of the land? And this area is full of such sites.

Famous French Archaeologist Jean Clottes viewed some of these rock platforms when visiting the area, and said “This area of the Central Coast has the greatest diversity of Rock Art in the world that I have ever seen”

This diversity is part of what Rocla want to destroy – part of our Dreaming track, an important Songline – the Women’s Fertility Rites Teaching Place. This Dreaming Track goes right around Australia through every tribal country, and is a common space which all can use to walk, hunt and gather, visit relatives, attend important meetings and participate in special Sacred Ceremonies. It has very great significance in telling our History, how we lived here as Hunters and Gatherers, as custodians of the land, how we evolved, and what roles we played in life.

sacred places quote

The Dreaming Track must never be broken. Its ancient history cannot be lost. It is our Mitchell Library. And like yours, it must be saved for posterity. Lose it and it is gone forever. And that would be a shameful blight on the history of this land.

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Comments

I call on the Navajo Nation...

kmisha2014AU's picture

Rise up in prayer for we know that the ancestors created those NASCA lines for reason. We the Navajo Nation know the trembling of the legs of mother earth for we walked it long ago and now. Forced to dig into the land felt like the rape of the mother. Rise in prayer...Albuquerque Papa's hold signs on Moon that they regret lost Fatherhood...

Almost Si

I lie on a table

legs spread, still feet

stirrupped and stripped

of socks and dignity

from the waist down

gown hiked up

I am splayed and sprayed

with anti-something

from a bottle

so cold.

I stand in a recovery

room

trying to remember how feet slip

through leg holes of underpants

almost forgot to recall

“take out the packing”

some voice had said

what?...oh yeah

I am packed

I pull out the gauze

freeing feet of bloody

tickertape announcing

the capacity of a vagina

to hold

so much.

Cotton

I sit in the silence of others

now gripped by cramps and

tucked nicely into maxi-pads

we are given cookies and juice

and I wait for my mother to pick me up.

xteen

...Drums...know styx

...Sage...fuckin' kick ass

World wide

 

 

 

In Love and Light, Teosinte.

KMisha