Keepers of Lake Eyre on 25 Jul 2000 02:23:27 -0000 |
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<nettime> WALK UPDATE AND MORE |
An update from an Aboriginal rights and environmentalism action in south eastern Australia. The triangle of indigenous rights, environmentalism and social equity is the most important Australia will face in the next 20 years, and it is one it has been denying since 1788. See http://www.active.org.au for more details --Ben ****** Forwarded Message Follows ******* Keepers of Lake Eyre Walking the Land- for Our Ancient Right Update Sunday 23 July, 2000 ***In this update: 1. New Walk route, with dates, from Nicholas Szentkuti, on the Walk- includes report from Nicholas. 2..Report on Walk from Honey, dated July 10, Broken Hill 3. Rebecca Bear-Wingfield, Arabunna/Kokatha elder women, will be speaking in Melbourne- 31 July to 4 August. 4. Aboriginal Tent Embassy now open in Sydney. 5. Sacred Run- to join with Walking the Land in Canberra, then on to Sydney. 6. Keepers in need of legitimate computer software- -can you help? _______________________________________________ 1. New Walk route, with dates, from Nicholas Szentkuti, on the Walk- includes report from Nicholas. Date: Thu, 20 Jul 2000 23:44:49 -0700 (PDT) From: Nicholas Szentkuti <szentkuti@yahoo.com> Subject: Peace Walk information Hello again all my pals from Australia, Hungary and all over the world. I want to publicise this Peace Walk, Walking the Land for Our Ancient Right, taking the sacred Aboriginal fire to Sydney to show the world an alternative to the corporate flame of the olympic games. We need you all to join in walking, supporting and spreading the message about this walk to save our beautiful country, and the whole planet!! WHERE WE ARE: Friday 21st July nightcamp 30 odd kilometres out of Brewarrina (Kimm, get on down bruz!!) JULY 22; Brewarrina JULY 24; Walgett JULY 25; Collarenebri JULY 27; Moree JULY 30; Narrabri AUG 1; Coonabarabran AUG 3; Dubbo AUG 6; Wellington AUG 8; Orange AUG 11; Bathurst To BE CONFIRMED; Oberon, Taralga, Bungendore, Queanbeyan AUG 21; Canberra SEPT 3; Sydney Don't take these dates as gospel, coming up here and following the Darling was a change of plan thanks to the invitation of Robbie from the Kamilaroi people. If you head out to join us for a day, or a weekend or for the whole trip you can call the Keepers of Lake Eyre where this walk started on (08) 8232 8595 or email; lakeeyre@microsuxx.com. Check the website at: www.come.to/lakeeyre Sydneysiders can walk in with us. We will be up against the olympic laws which forbid banners, leaflets or flags in designated olympic zones, have employed a vast crew of security guards who, with the police have the right to arrest anyone in an olympic zone without an explanation or identifying themselves. We hope to fly the landrights flag and bring our messages from the heart of Australia to the world's attention but of course we will come in peace. After sleeping out under the stars and walking 1000 kilometres along old dreaming tracks it is becoming so clear how this great system of ours is fuelled by a deep destructive madness. Here in Australia our European culture continues the genocide of indigenous people, the eradication of native flora and fauna, to destroy the very land itself by mining and farming practises antithetical to the ancient and proper ways of this country. (Something as basic as having love and respect for the country you live in and not destroying it.) We are walking the land to feel its spirit - alive and blooming in this wonderful wet year which sees great Lake Eyre full of water. From Arabunna land around Lake Eyre, guardians of the fire and the its healing power. Into the Flinders and Adyamatana country (spelling?)through ancient hills. These nations face uranium mining on their lands, sinister South Australian special forces and the police protect these secretive and massive nuclear corporations, and have twisted the native title process with their massive budgets, to bribe, divide and conquer the rightful owners of this country. Our ancient grandmother land of Australia faces the poisoning of the great artesian basin by their nuclear mining and proposed waste dump. South Australia is a nightmare state whose small town redneck corruption has been coopted by the most powerful nuclear power corporations on the planet. Following the ancient path to the coast along the Darling river we see the destruction of this precious waterway by vast Dupont cotton fields. The Barkinji warriors of the Darling who remember the stockade outside Bourke where they bailed up the murderous explorers just 120 years ago are today initiated in the violence of jail. We have sat around the peace fire and heard their country and western songs, and met the local boys in the hood last night. It's all action here in Bourke. The great lie of our history is a front for the continued destructive exploitation of this land by old pastoral oppressors and massively powerful multinational corporations. I have a lot more to say about the peace fire, the symbolism of this walk, the way we come, the blessing we have to be invited by Kevin Buzzacott, an Arabunna elder to walk with him and carry the peace fire which contains ashes from the fire first kindled 27 years ago in Redfern and carried to the Aboriginal tent embassy in Canberra. We support the indigenous nations of this country and walk through their country the right way, with their invitation and guidance. This is a historic union of environmentalists and indigenous Australians, and all people of conscience in this world who are saying; Australia wake up and look at the destruction of your country. The time is now to say STOP. Lets say sorry, lets heal ourselves and our country. Let's learn from the wisdom of the ancient custodians of Australia who are showing us the way. There's room for everyone around the this wonderful peace fire. _____________________________________________ 2..Report on Walk from Honey, dated July 10, Broken Hill Hi again, here's a great article by our aviator, vet and surfer Honey Nelson which will fill you in on the walk. Please send it on, Love Nick Walking the Land for Our Ancient Right Broken Hill NSW, July 10 Four weeks into the Walk! - since leaving Lake Eyre on June 10. This is our first opportunity to send another message about the experience. This follows on from earlier reports about the Lake Eyre Walk. This report is long. So much has happened, relating to so many large issues. You are invited to press on and read the whole story! Please circulate this story to others on your email. We would be happy too for it to be published (unmodified) in any journal, without remuneration. Honey Nelson FOUR WEEKS OF WALKING, and running, riding, catching up, resting, lighting camp fires, driving, picking up tail-enders, talking to passers-by, looking after the undying peace fire, singing, eating porridge, playing drums, crawling out of swags, expeditions to sacred places, running not to miss gorgeous vegan lunch-camp, doing funny street theatre, painting, shivering, besieging op shops for more blankets, getting cars bogged, grieving for the pain and losses we meet along our journey, fixing cars with bits of string, escaping the irate pastoralist's shotgun, loving the welcome we receive in Aboriginal communities, sharing delicious kangaroo barbecue. Walking for Peace, and for people's ancient right to Walk the Land. This is the Walk. Inspired and led by Aboriginal knowledge, dedication to old and proper ways, to restoration of once-beautiful and bountiful Land. We carry smouldering sticks from the sacred Fire for Peace, lit at the shores of Lake Eyre, and fanned at nightly campsites. We departed Lake Eyre in South Australia a month ago, amid chanting ceremony of sacred songs by the very old Arabunna women - the Kungka Tjuta - of Coober Pedy. Arabunna elder Kevin Buzzacott and others from adjacent Adnyamathanha (north Flinders Ranges) land walked and rode out ahead across the satlbush dunes, carrying the Aboriginal flag, with a stream of thirty walkers. We have now walked 600 km. through Marree to Copley and Nepabunna in the Flinders, then south-east across the southern Strzlecki desert, followed the dingo fence which slices the continent in two, dared the no-go zones of vast pastoral leases and barricaded uranium mines, faced the numerous police sent out to track our whereabouts from the highest state authority, then stumbled out onto the hard noise of the Barrier Highway for the last stretch to Broken Hill. Arrived tired, exhilarated, unwashed, swags full of dust and prickles - now scrubbed, blisters healing, feet toughened, eating ice cream, making theatre and banners and music, resting. Numbers gathering - 50 walkers now. The Land. Gorgeous dawn-to-dark horizons of fire-red and high streaming clouds, still and subtle gibber desert undulations, the wall-to-wall dazzle of salt lakes, tiny whispering empires of micro-creatures, the stately outlines or shadowed recesses of sacred places. The offerings of exquisite oases amid red dust and stones, blue rushy pools and slow soaks tinkling with birds. When your feet cross the distances, the stubby bushes and creekbeds become friends, the small claypans welcoming campsites. Our little fires gleam to each other as they must have once glowed 200 years ago. We came together for diverse reasons, we walkers; but we are all united now in our understanding of the goodness, the kindness, the conscious giving of this ancient fragile Land: understanding what the Aborigines mean by the sacredness of the Land. The Aboriginal People. The extraordinary welcome we receive, bridging 200 years, their kind hospitality and willing expeditions to show special places, reveal huge stories, their forgiveness for awful centuries, their relief to join hands with some of the boat people who grieve and act with them for their land and their children's future. Their life-axioms are for the next generations; this governs all their treatment of land and creatures. Their losses are inconceivable to us: a vast, esoteric spiritual culture dying like salt-waste gum-forest, as the old people fall away daily. The young: hopeless, inert, even suicidal; or fiery, passionate, educating themselves fiercely in their spirit-land-culture. Our contemptuous oversight of their beloved way of living, and their immeasurable life-sorrow, is our loss and our disgrace. The Walkers. Mainly white, young, dreadlocked, toughened by their anti-logging and mining campaigns; and some from city families, put their study on hold; one or two middle-aged; some more Aborigines joining us now. Some walk a few days, some can stay longer. The core of original supporters, who maintained the Lake Eyre camp against siege by Western Mining Corp. (Hugh Morgan/Roxby Downs uranium mine), are often known to us as 'ferals' - the unsung, often derided soldiers of environmental action, the cold muddied tree-sitters who struggle together to save our remnant forests, these dusty prickled and ragged warriors who stand calling for peace before the remote barbed uranium mines, and tumble unheard before the extraordinary, authorised assaults of police, security and special forces. The Pastoralists. Their leases are absolutely huge: vast areas of Australia easily defined on a small continental map, easily seen from satellite. Bulldust-prickle-saltbush-claypan country, stripped by cattle, hopelessly unprofitable; locked gates protecting the mines deep within their boundaries, providing income from lease-money and machinery contracts. Hostile lease-holders have refused us permission to cross hundreds and hundreds of kilometres of open country, have threatened to shoot us, called the willing police, confronted Kevin Buzzacott with the most outrageous of racist insults. It is only when you set foot across the 'free range' of Australia that you knock into the barricades surrounding our gracious outback. (And it is, too, only when you take to the air to look down upon our lovely Land, that you crack into the bulletprooof glass walls blockading equally vast reaches of blue sky: the prohibited airspace of huge military and exercise zones in every part of the country, of US installation zones, of mines, the immense exclusion of radioactive Woomera - geometric blots the size of small states.) The Mines. Uranium, coal, magnesite, copper, silver, gold, lead, zinc.... These heavy metal and combustible minerals seem to provoke an aggressive hunt in people. The coal mine at Copley, kilometres of open-cut tailing and troughs full of black water, will close before long; with absolutely no requirement to rehabilitate a gross gaping ugliness: this place of very big sacred stories about fire and punishment. An open-cut magnesite mine is proposed in Flinders national park Weetootla Gorge, destined to knock down stark beautiful bluffs, and bulldoze a road through its delicate tillite creekbed. The uranium industry is frightening: drawing hundreds of millions of litres of precious ground-water daily, defaecating radioactive waste and sulphuric acid into deep unmapped strata, defended by mass security grunt within high barbed fences, and a no-trespass zone of purchased pastoral lease hundreds of km. in radius. We have been tracked and confronted by police at remote places, at the highest level of state authorisation, their paddywagons, trucks and the shiny silver car of the top detectives; our names and details demanded, warnings given, cars repeatedly 'defected' (for minor windscreen rust) off the road - for walking upon open inland Australia, carrying our small fire-embers, lighting a peace fire at the turn-offs to radioactive deposits. Ahead of us. Wilcannia, then north to Bourke. The cotton country. More measureless land locked in to poisonous spraying, mass-irrigation, controlled by international industries stripping profit and topsoil and meaningful work from regional communities. Like cattle and uranium and coal, cotton is one of the widest and most mass-destructive enterprises blighting the face of our land. This Walk of the Land is a bitter revelation: we who enjoy the illusion that we live in a free country, that we govern our own destinies and environs. How much deeper the horror of Aboriginal people, who such a short time ago lived out their whole lives in motion with the seasonal movements of their vast country. And who know their country to be a good and bountiful mother, who is honoured and cared for as all great mothers should be. They are crying out their shock to us, at the sight of the poisoned waters and rampant excavations and imprisoned deserts. This Walk will arrive in Sydney in early September, before the Olympics. By then we should be a river of people! The firestick brings the world's most ancient ceremony, the fire ceremony; and brings the message to sit down in peace, and to talk together, and to stop this state of siege and warfare upon people and country. Such words are not excessive. When you take up the privilege of walking properly upon the Land, and meeting eye to eye with the first people of the Land, then you can recognise the extremity of this relentless exploitation, spoilage, repression, and the ruthless dispossession of gentle people. This naked greed has not stopped with previous generations. 'Sorry' means way back then, and means right now: Sorry for the alive-and-well tradition of grabbing and profiting and hoarding and denial and secrecy. I am shocked at the maximum-security military-style barricading of uranium mines. The barely-reported protest action outside the Beverly sulphuric-acid-leach mine east of Flinders drew riot-squad police ('star force' of SA), baton assaults, beatings, capsicum spray (including a child), a truck charge and impact, a lock-up inside a shipping container with a blast of mace, multiple arrests for non-violent action: for banners and singing protest, and an attempt by an Aboriginal elder to light a peace fire on his land. I have an extraordinary video of this action: whose extremity did not even make the national news. Why are such violent, official, protective reprisals not reported? Why? Who do our governments and media work for: we the people, or for huge multinational corporations? How it is, that industries dealing in such life-threatening chemistry and geophysics are aggressively protected and encouraged, without national debate, to multiply and risk the future of all creatures and plants for thousands of generations? Southern Cross Resources (Beverley, Honeymoon, and three other proposed SA sites) do not even have a proper geological description of the (water) aquifers and adjacent radioactive dump-strata they are using. We attended a public meeting with them at Cockburn. Their answer to 'safety' for future water security, is to monitor peripheral water, teach occupational health and safety procedures to staff, and abide by the state construction code. There are surface earthquakes measuring up to Richter 6.2 in the northern Flinders: they rumble like dynamite for up to two minutes, and houses shake. The Beverley mine is perhaps 40 km. nearby. I am shocked at the abandonment of our young people by we the senior generations, to face these forces alone. They are fighting for a survivable future for our own great-grandchildren, by songs and calls and peaceful resistance and witnessing and information-gathering. These young people are utterly committed to retrieving some remnant decency from the clear-felled wastelands and toxic ashes of reckless engineering. It is a privilege to live amongst these lean young people, with their difficult living, matted clothing, too-thin bedrolls, threadbare occasional vehicles, their shared porridge and lentils. They are intense, clever, diversely talented, serious, selfless, brave, capable, funny, musical. They remain mostly single, tribal, united in their affections and in a kind of ferocity to save some kind of secure happiness for the children of others. These 'dregs of society' (as I have heard them called) are our own children, peace warriors gone out alone to struggle for the most dispossessed - for the Aborigines, for the wretched Land, for world poverty, and for our own speechless unborn descendants. Unlike other battlefronts, we elders did not conscript them to slog out for us our bitter old vendettas. They are self-appointed guardians. They have to be: for we older people, the generation of power, are the ones who actually construct and drive the huge politico-industries which risk and condemn our blighted forthcoming generations. They have no nurses, doctors. Not enough money, some, for enough blankets, tooth care, or a few videotapes to record the quite shocking confrontations they endure without notice. They are welcomed by Aborigines, 'the young greenies' offering action and help and art and muscle and voice to silenced suffering and loss. Half are young women: an accusation to our senior generations, that our girls must lie down before bulldozers and fall before batons to spare our own great-grandchildren. Where are the older people, we parents of young adults, grandparents of the little and infant? Why are we not out there - out here - joining with our children, supporting them, helping them, braving their frontlines alongside them, to insist upon a safe and clean and secure future for our descendants? How is it that we can support these terrible industries - by shrugs and inertia, or by active promotion - these engines of risk and destruction, uranium and coal and mass-desert-pastoralism, making radioactive ground-water, salt-poisoned and dust wastelands of our gorgeous continent? These young, lonely people out here are world heroes. Along with the Aborigines, they are the most serious people on Earth. As individuals they have variously pained and happy backgrounds. But as a group, they are the phenomenon of our collective societal sickness: our very own abandoned children, their future happiness finally and actually wrecked by their self-absorbed senior generations. Like us, they would like one day to have children of their own. But unlike us, they are prepared to suffer, and to do without, and to live simply, and to stand high for high principle. And to fight - as we have not - for a parent's right to bring forth these children into a legacy of clear atmosphere, fresh water, and a warm healthy planet. ____________________________________________ 3. Rebecca Bear-Wingfield, Arabunna/Kokatha senior women, will be speaking in Melbourne- 31 July to 4 August. Rebecca Bear-Wingfield, a Kokatha/Arabunna senior woman and Kungka Tjuta is being hosted in Melbourne by universitys, to do a speaking tour. She will speak on Walking the Land, Keepers of Lake Eyre and the Arabunna Going Home Camp, her families and her personal experience with radioactive contamination. She will be at the following university’s: 31 July- Monash 1 August- Melbourne Uni. 2 August- RMIT 3 August- La Trobe. Please contact the relevant Uni students association/union for more details. ________________________________________________ 4. Aboriginal Tent Embassy now open in Sydney. People from the Aboriginal Tent Embassy in Canberra have opened another Embassy at Victoria Park in Sydney’s inner, inner suburbs. This Soveriegn Embassy stands in solidarity with Walking the Land- for Our Ancient Rights and awaits their arrival in Sydney. The new Embassy will stay throughout the Olympic Games, after that? If you live in Sydney, go and check it out! _________________________________________________ 5. Sacred Run- to join with Walking the Land in Canberra, then on to Sydney. Sacred Run - Australia 2000 for earth and life - for future generations The Sacred Run is inspired by the Native American tradition of running great distances, even to the most distant villages, to spread messages, news and information. Ceremony was always part of the runner’s lives. Before a runner left on a mission, the village medicine man would place “medicine” in the form of a tobacco pouch around the runner’s neck while offering prayer to ensure the runner’s success. Early June, in the year 2000 we will embark on an 88 day spiritual relay run covering close to 11,000km starting in Sydney. The purpose of this run is to connect with the Indigenous people of Australia, and together in a spiritual way, try to raise people’s awareness towards issues affecting not only indigenous communities but for our future generations and the fragile balance between humanity and the environment. The time has come for us to look at these issues. These are connected to our spirituality, the survival of humanity and all living things that share this planet we call Mother Earth. We have to put an end to the greed, money orientated society which has become the cause of the environmental destruction and attempted genocide of the Indigenous people. If you would like to participate or suppoert this event in any way, please contact us at Sacred Run Foundation Australia: Ph/Fax (02) 9386 4693 Email run2000@primus.com.au The Sacred Runners are now in Alice Springs, having run there via the east coast and Jabiluka. They are due in Adelaide 1-2 August. Melbourne 18-19 August. Hobart 15 August. Canberra 23-25 August (when Walking the Land will join with the runners). Sydney 26 August. Walking the Land is carrying a Sacred Staff, given by the Sacred Run Foundation. This staff was carried from Los Angeles to Atlanta in 1996 (for the last Olympics). _________________________________________________________ 6. Keepers in need of legitimate computer software- -can you help? We now have a 486DX4100 laptop with 32mb RAM. As yet it has no software. Can anyone donate Windows 95?, Word7/97 (or earlier), Photoshop, Publisher/ or other page-setting software, other software you think we could use Hardware also welcome- external CD ROM..... Thanks, Chris Littlejohn _______________________________________________________________ THIS MESSAGE BROUGHT TO YOU BY: ________________________________________________________ Keepers of Lake Eyre, in South Australia: Web: www.come.to/lakeeyre Email: lakeeyre@microsuxx.com Tel: (08) 8340 4401 / Fax. (08) 8232 2490 Post: C/- Conservation Council, 120 Wakefield St, Adelaide, S.A. 5000 ________________________________________________________ ***you are on the Keepers of Lake Eyre email list. To get off the list- write us a note at: lakeeyre@microsuxx.com Do you want to be added to the list? 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