Australia, Restoring Lost Connections

 

Members of the Noongar group in southwestern Australia

View a slideshow and hear and see the connection between Aboriginal people and the lands of their ancestors.


Stories

Noongar Stories of Hope Eugene Eades talks to the importance of land to Aboriginal people.

"We can learn from [our ancestors'] traditions what we must do today and in the future, to live in the most balanced way possible."

Eugene Eades, Noongar People

A study tour of Conservancy staff at the Australian Wildlife Conservancy's Newhaven Nature Reserve in Australia's Northern Territory.

For Australia’s Aboriginal people the natural world is alive with stories. Places, plants, animals and people are woven together in a vibrant tapestry of history, legend and beliefs called the Dreaming.* When settlers displaced the land’s original people, these tapestries began to unravel — and nature lost its caretakers.

Today, The Nature Conservancy is working with Aboriginal people to protect key landscapes in Australia — for the sake of nature and communities that seek to reconnect with their ancestral lands.

We are partnering with Australian conservation groups, governments and Aboriginal communities to:

Conservation successes that protect Australia’s remarkable places and species can also enable descendents of distinct tribal groups such as the Noongar find their way back “on country” and revive rich cultures that are bound inextricably to nature.

Read Noongar leader Eugene Eades’ personal account of the importance of land to Aboriginal people.

Aboriginal communities have a vital role to play in preserving the resources that sustained and defined their cultures for 40,000 years. Out of great respect for this truth, the Conservancy is committed to helping reinstate Aboriginal peoples to their homelands.

Along with partners, including PEW Charitable Trusts, the Conservancy is providing funding and land management expertise to the Indigenous Protected Areas (IPA) program, an initiative by the Australian government to help indigenous peoples effectively conserve their land. With 25 IPAs covering more than 20 million hectares already established, supporting this initiative enables the Conservancy to affect conservation on a massive scale.

We are also committed to helping Aboriginal communities secure sustainable sources of income. Without ways to support their families, just going back on country is not enough. We are exploring ways to help communities exploit the potential sustainable tourism and innovative new prospects, such as selling carbon offset credits to companies in exchange for sound fire management of grasslands. With a creative and collaborative spirit, we can help make it possible for the land’s original caretakers to return and thrive for generations to come.

*“Dreamtime” refers to “the time of the creation of all things” when Ancestor Spirits came to Earth and land, plants and animals were given the form they take today. “Dreaming” refers to beliefs or spirituality; it establishes rules for social behavior and ceremonies — such as songs, dances, stories and paintings — that ensure continuity of culture and connection with the land. The significance of particular places and creatures is wedded to their origin in the Dreaming, and certain places have a particular potency.

Nature picture credits (top to bottom, left to right): Photo © Mark Godfrey/TNC (A study tour of Conservancy staff at the Australian Wildlife Conservancy's Newhaven Nature Reserve in Australia's Northern Territory); Photo © Ami Vitale (Members of the Noongar group in southwestern Australia).