TheYorta Yorta,also known asJotijota,[a]are anAboriginal Australianpeople who have traditionally inhabited the area surrounding the junction of theGoulburnandMurray Riversin present-day north-easternVictoriaand southernNew South Wales.
Names
editAs was customary with many tribal names in the Murray basin –Wemba-Wemba,Latjilatji,Muthi Muthi,Nari-Nariand so on – the Yortaethnonymis derived from reduplicating their word for "no" (yota/yoda).[1][2]
Norman Tindale(1974) listed the following alternative names used to refer to Yorta Yorta people:[3]
Language
editTheYorta Yorta languagemay be alanguage isolatewithin thePama-Nyungan language family,[4]though it is often treated as a member of theYotayotic branchof that family along withYabula Yabula,which is not particularly close. It is adialect continuumof closely related languages traditionally spoken on either side of the Murray River from west of Echuca to east of theCobram/Tocumwal area, and south-east along the Goulburn River as far as theMooroopna/Shepparton.It was the first language for many of these groups down to around 1960 but elements of the language are still transmitted in families by descendants to this day.[5]
It shares few similarities in vocabulary with the languages used by neighbouring tribes, and lexically seems closest toPallanganmiddang.[4]
Social organisation
editThe Yorta Yorta were divided intoclans,of which the names of ten were enumerated byEdward Micklethwaite Currbased on the situation in the 1840s:
Tindale (1974) named only three:[7]
- Gunbowerooranditchgoole[c]
- Ngarrimouro
- Woollathura
Another source mentions"Dhulinyagan".[8]
The numbers may well estimate the historic population since evidence from oven mounds in the area suggested a higher population density in former times, and it is known that the area was ravaged bysmallpoxepidemics.[citation needed]
In modern times, the Yorta Yorta comprise a number of historically distinct tribes, as well asclansand family groups descending directly from the original Yorta Yorta. Tribes that now come under the general umbrella term of Yorta Yorta include theBangerangandKwatkwat.Clans groups represented include theKailtheban, Wollithiga, Moira, Ulupna,Yalaba Yalaba,andNgurai-illiam-wurrung.[9]
1995 Native title claim
editIn aNative title claimsubmitted in 1995 by the Yorta Yorta people, it was determined byJustice Olneyin 1998 that the "tide of history" had "washed away" any real acknowledgement of traditional laws and any real observance of traditional customs by the applicants.[10]An appeal was made to the full bench of the Federal Court on the grounds that "the trial judge erroneously adopted a 'frozen in time' approach" and "failed to give sufficient recognition to the capacity of traditional laws and customs to adapt to changed circumstances". The Appeal was dismissed in a majority 2 to 1 decision.[11]The case was taken on appeal to the High Court of Australia but also dismissed in a 5 to 2 majority ruling in December 2002.[12][13]
In response to the failed native title claim, in May 2004 theVictoria State Governmentled by Premier Steve Bracks signed an historic co-operative management agreement with the Yorta Yorta people covering public land, rivers and lakes in north-central Victoria. The agreement gives the Yorta Yorta people a say in the management of the traditional country including theBarmah State Park,Barmah State Forest,Kow Swampand public land along the Murray and Goulburn rivers. Ultimate decision-making responsibility was retained by theEnvironment Minister.[14]
Yorta Yorta Nation Aboriginal Corporation
editTheYorta Yorta Nation Aboriginal Corporation(YYNAC), established in 1999 and not to be confused with the former Yorta Yorta Local Aboriginal Land Council which took ownership ofCummeragunja Reservein NSW in 1984,[15]has its headquarters inBarmahand a branch office inShepparton.[16]YYNAC is governed by a board of seven directors, one of whom is anElder’s representative, and a Council of Elders comprising 16 Yorta Yorta family group representatives. There is aCEOwho manages the day-to-day operations, administration and personnel.[17]
History
editTheAborigines Advancement League(AAL) was established in the 1930s by Yorta Yorta activists such asWilliam Cooper,Sir Douglas Nicholls,Marj Tucker,Geraldine BriggsandShadrach James.It lodged a claim for theBarmah Forestin 1975 which was rejected by the Victorian Government.[18]
TheYorta Yorta Tribal Council(YYTC), formally established in April 1983,[19][18][20]but according to some accounts originally established in 1972 byElizabeth Maud Hoffman,Margaret Wirrpandaand others,[21][22]took over the work of the AAL in working for the Yorta Yorta people. Among the founders were It made another claim for the Barmah Forest in 1984[23]under theCain government,which did not succeed.[18]
The Yorta Yorta Tribal Council was superseded by theYorta Yorta Clans Group(YYCG) in 1989, which broadened its scope and encompassed a wider geographic area of traditional Yorta Yorta land. YYCG was superseded by the YYNAC in 1999.[18]
TOSA land settlement
editIn October 2010, the State entered into aTraditional Owner Land Management Agreementwith the Yorta Yorta, which established the Yorta Yorta Traditional Owner Land Management Board to jointly manageBarmah National Park(a "TOSA" settlement, under theTraditional Owner Settlement Act 2010[24]).
TheYorta Yorta Traditional Owner Land Management Boardis a unit of YYNAC.[17]As recognisedtraditional ownersof the land, a joint management plan is as of 2020[update]being agreed between the YYNAC and theState of Victoria.Parks Victoria,as designated manager of Barmah National Park, will have responsibility for implementing many of the plan's strategies and actions, working in partnership with the YYNAC and other partners such as the Department of Environment, Land, Water and Planning (DELWP).[25]
Prominent people
edit- Briggs,hip-hop artist
- Burnum Burnum(1936–1997), activist, actor and author
- Deborah Cheetham(born 1964),operasinger and composer[26]
- William Cooper(1861–1941), helped establish theAustralian Aborigines' Leaguein 1935, led the first Aboriginal deputation to a Commonwealth minister, and another to protest the treatment of Jews and Christians in 1938[27]
- Scott Darlow,singer, songwriter
- Jeremy Finlayson,Australian rules footballer[28]
- Isaiah Firebrace,singer who representedAustralia in the Eurovision Song Contest 2017
- Jade Gresham- Australian rules footballer[28]
- Joel Hamling- Australian rules footballer[28]
- Jarman Impey- Australian rules footballer[28]
- Jimmy Little(1937–2012), musician whose career spanned over six decades. His 1958 song "Give the Coloured Boy a Chance" was the first written and recorded by anIndigenous Australianfor the modern music industry.
- Sir Douglas Nicholls(1906–1988), professional athlete, pastor and pioneering campaigner for Aboriginal reconciliation, the first Aboriginal person to be knighted, and the 1976 first Indigenous Australian to hold vice-regal office (Governor of South Australia)
- Bill Onus(1906 – 1968), activist and actor
- Lin Onus(1948 – 1996), artist, son of Bill
- Jack Patten(1905 – 1957), professional boxer, civil rights activist, war veteran, writer, president and co-founder of theAborigines Progressive Association.He led the first delegation of Aboriginal people to meet with a serving prime minister.
- John Trevor Patten(born 1936), Australian bantamweight boxing champion between 1958 and 1962
- Jy Simpkin- Australian rules footballer[28]
- Wes Patten(born 1974), actor, television host, and former NRL player
- Margaret Tucker,civil rights activist and writer, known for her part in the 1938Day of Mourningconference; first Aboriginal person to have published an autobiography
- Andrew Walker,a formerAFLplayer with theCarlton Football Club[29]
- David Wirrpanda,former AFL player with theWest Coast Eagles,known for his community work in helping to improve the lives of young Indigenous Australians, named the 9th most influential Aboriginal Australian byThe Bulletinin 2007[30]
- Margaret Wirrpanda,activist, niece of Margaret Tucker, born atCummeragunja,New South Wales, daughter of activists Geraldine Clements Briggs and Selwyn Briggs and mother to David Wirrpanda
Music
editThe track "Ngarra Burra Ferra"sung by indigenous artistJessica Mauboy,from the 2012 hit filmThe Sapphires,is a song based on the traditionalAboriginalhymn "Bura Fera". The song is in the Yorta Yorta language and speaks ofGod's help in decimatingPharaoh's armies. The chorus, "Ngara burra ferra yumini yala yala", translates into English as "The Lord God drowned all Pharaoh's armies, hallelujah!" These lyrics are based on an ancient song in Jewish tradition known as the "Song of the Sea"from theBook of Exodus.Aboriginal communities of Victoria and southernNew South Walesmay be the only people in the world who still sing the piece (in Yorta Yorta).[31]
See also
edit- Wharparilla Flora Reserve,a small environmental reserve, the place where the Yorta Yorta first met European settlers
Notes
edit- ^The presence of the "r" in the first term does not indicate the presence of aRhotic consonant,but probably merely indicates a vowel quality similar to theawsound inyawn(Bowe & Morey 1999,p. 3)
- ^also calledWaarīngulum(Bowe & Morey 1999,p. 6)
- ^-goolerepresentskuli,meaning "man"
Citations
edit- ^Tindale 1974,p. 41.
- ^Bowe & Morey 1999,p. 3.
- ^Tindale 1974,p. 194
- ^abBowe & Morey 1999,p. 4.
- ^Bowe & Morey 1999,p. 1.
- ^Bowe & Morey 1999,p. 6.
- ^(Tindale 1974,p. 194)
- ^Koori History 2016.
- ^Yorta Yorta Co-operative Management Agreement.
- ^AustLII 1998.
- ^AustLII 2001.
- ^AustLII 2002.
- ^The World Today2002.
- ^Shiel 2004.
- ^"Members of the Yorta Yorta Aboriginal Community v Victoria [2002] HCA 58 (12 December 2002)".kooriweb.Retrieved4 August2020.
In 1984, as a consequence of the operation of provisions of theAboriginal Land Rights Act 1983(NSW), an estate in fee simple in the former reserve land at Cummeragunja was vested in the Yorta Yorta Local Aboriginal Land Council.
- ^"Yorta Yorta Nation Aboriginal Corporation".Yorta Yorta Nation Aboriginal Corporation.5 February 2020.Retrieved4 August2020.
- ^ab"YYNAC Governance".Yorta Yorta Nation Aboriginal Corporation.12 August 2019.Retrieved4 August2020.
- ^abcdAtkinson, Wayne (10 September 2015)."The history of the YYNAC".Yorta Yorta Nation Aboriginal Corporation.Retrieved4 August2020.
- ^Atkinson, Wayne."Chronology of the Yorta Yorta Struggle for Land Justice 1860–2009: A prima facie case for prioritising Yorta Yorta Nations in the Governments Land Justice Agenda"(PDF).Retrieved6 August2020.
- ^"May 2009".Yumpu.Retrieved6 August2020.
- ^"Elizabeth Maud Morgan-Hoffmann".www.aboriginalvictoria.vic.gov.au.26 September 2019.Retrieved5 August2020.
- ^"Aunty Elizabeth Morgan-Hoffman".Yorta Yorta Nation Aboriginal Corporation.5 February 2020.Retrieved6 August2020.
- ^Marcussen, Lisa (November 2014)."Selected bibliography of material on theYorta Yorta/ Yota Yota language and peopleheld in the AIATSIS Library"(PDF).AIATSIS.Retrieved6 August2020.
Corporate Author: Yorta Yorta Tribal Council. Title: Land claim submission / prepared by M. Wirrpanda, W.Atkinson and S. Bailey. Publication info: Shepparton, Vic 1984
- ^"Agreements with Traditional Owners".Victoria Government. Dept of Environment, Land, Water and Planning (DELWP) Forests and Reserves.State of Victoria (Department of Environment, Land, Water and Planning). 12 June 2019.Retrieved4 August2020.Text was copied from this source, which is available under aAttribution 4.0 International (CC BY 4.0)licence. (Statedhere.)
- ^"FAQ".Yorta Yorta Traditional Owner Land Management Board.Retrieved4 August2020.
- ^Barnett 2013.
- ^The Argus1938,p. 3.
- ^abcdeAFL Players Indigenous Map 2023
- ^AFL Record. Round 9,2009. Slattery Publishing. pg 75.
- ^AFL 2007.
- ^towalkwithyou.com 2013.
Sources
edit- Barnett, Laura (22 October 2013)."Aboriginal opera singer Deborah Cheetham: 'Not everyone was as lucky as me'".The Guardian.
- Blandowski, W. von(1858)."Recent discoveries in natural history on the Lower Murray".Transactions of the Philosophical Society of Victoria.2:124–127.
- Bowe, Heather; Morey, Stephen (1999).The Yorta Yorta (Bangerang) language of the Murray Goulburn: including Yabula Yabula.Pacific Linguistics.ISBN978-0-858-83513-9.
- Curr, Edward Micklethwaite(1887)."Book The Twenty-Third"(PDF).InCurr, Edward Micklethwaite(ed.).The Australian race: its origin, languages, customs, place of landing in Australia and the routes by which it spread itself over the continent.Vol. 3. Melbourne: J. Ferres. pp. 567–592.
- "Deputation not admitted".The Argus.Melbourne. 7 December 1938. p. 3.Retrieved25 February2018– via National Library of Australia.
- Goldberg, Dan (10 December 2012)."An Aboriginal Protest Against the Nazis, Finally Delivered".Haaretz.
- "The lyrics to Bura Fera".We Want To Walk With You.13 September 2013. Archived fromthe originalon 10 April 2017.Retrieved26 April2014.
- Members of the Yorta Yorta Aboriginal Community v Victoria[1998] FCA 1606(18 December 1998),Federal Court(Australia).
- Members of the Yorta Yorta Aboriginal Community v Victoria[2001] FCA 45(8 February 2001),Federal Court (Full Court)(Australia).
- Members of the Yorta Yorta Aboriginal Community v Victoria[2002] HCA 58,(2002) 214CLR422 (12 December 2002),High Court(Australia).
- "Remembering Margaret Tucker (1904–1996)".Koori History.6 March 2016.Retrieved18 February2020.
- Shiel, Fergus (1 May 2004)."Yorta Yorta win historic deal".The Age.Retrieved11 September2011.
- Tindale, Norman Barnett(1974).Aboriginal Tribes of Australia: Their Terrain, Environmental Controls, Distribution, Limits, and Proper Names.Australian National University Press.ISBN978-0-708-10741-6.
- "Wirrpanda recognised for work".Australian Football League. 30 November 2007. Archived fromthe originalon 6 June 2012.Retrieved30 November2007.
- Yaxley, Louise (12 December 2002)."Yorta Yorta lose native title case".The World Today.Australian Broadcasting Corporation.Retrieved11 September2012.
- "Yorta Yorta Co-operative Management Agreement".Archived fromthe originalon 13 September 2006.