Jawoyn

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The Jawoyn, also written Djauan, are an Australian Aboriginal people living in the Northern Territory of Australia. The Bagala clan are of the Jawoyn people.

Contents

Language

Jawoyn, known as Kumertuo, is a non-Pama–Nyungan language that belongs to the Macro-Gunwinyguan group of languages of Arnhem land. [1] (It has recently been established that the Gunwinyguan and Pama-Nyungan languages are both branches of a proto-Macro-Pama–Nyungan language.) At one time, Kumertuo was a group of several closely related spoken dialects, but since resettlement in the post-war period, these dialects have been tending to converge into a single standardized language. [1]

Country

Map showing the traditional lands of the Aboriginal tribes in the Roper River area of Northern Territory, Australia Roper River tribes, Northern Territory.png
Map showing the traditional lands of the Aboriginal tribes in the Roper River area of Northern Territory, Australia

. Historically, the land occupied by the Jawoyn, which Norman Tindale has estimated covered about 3,800 square miles (9,800 km2), [2] were in the Katherine Gorge area in the Northern Territory. The Jawoyn call this area Nitmiluk, a name derived from the word nitmi (which refers to the cicada song that Nabilil the crocodile is said to have heard when he set up camp at the entrance to a particular gorge) and the word luk, which means "place". [3] “Nitmiluk” specifically denotes a 12 kilometre stretch there, consisting of a spectacular chain of chasms and ravines. [4] It has been suggested that the Jawoyn people refers not only to those who speak a Jawoyn language, but also to those who are associated with the landscapes inscribed in the Jawoyn language according to their foundational mythology of the Dreamtime. [5] [lower-alpha 1] The language itself, in several varieties was spoken along the Katherine River system as far as the Mainoru River. [1] Their southern limits were around Maranboy, and their western extension came close to Katherine. [2]

Mythology

A widespread belief in Aboriginal thought holds that each language emerged during the formative time of creation when a demiurgic totem figure moved through the landscape crafting it and, simultaneously, endowing each topological feature with its proper word. [6] The creative being changed the language at certain transit points which then were taken as boundary markers between tribes speaking different languages. [7] Thus, in Jawoyn thinking, the landscape of the Katherine Gorge was created in the primordial time (burr) by Nabilil (Crocodile), who named all of the area's distinctive features in the Jawoyn language. [8] He came from the sea, furnished with his firestick (meya) and moved through what became Dagoman and Nangiomeri lands before reaching the gorge. [9]

The Burr Dreamtime also contains other key figures of myth such as Boolong (the Rainbow Serpent) and Barraya (the kookaburra). [3]

History of contact

Many Jawoyn moved to Tandandjal on the ridge affording spring water of a grassy plain 44 miles east-north of Maranboy in November 1948 when a short-lived government settlement for Aborigines had been established. The surrounding hills were thickly forested with lancewoods and eucalypts. While exploring the area in June of that year, 1948, Mr. Ivan Frazer came across a cave littered with stone artifacts, whose walls were adorned with paintings.

Notable people and events

Bangardi Robert Lee (1952–2005), a leader of the Bagala clan, initiated the Barunga Sport and Cultural Festival in 1985. It became an important forum for sharing ideas, showcasing the Aboriginal Australian and Torres Strait Islander cultures and talent, and to engage with social and political issues. At the 1988 event, the Jaowyn council met with representatives of the Northern and Central Land Councils, Galarrwuy Yunupingu AM and Wenten Rubuntja AM, and the Prime Minister Bob Hawke and Minister for Indigenous Affairs. At the event, Yunupingu and Rubuntja presented Hawke with the Barunga Statement, which asserted the rights of the Indigenous owner-occupiers of Australia. [12]

Seasons

Jawoyn seasonal calendar [13]
JiorrkBungarungJungalkMalaparrWorrwopmiWakaringding
January FebruaryMarch April MayJune July AugustSeptember OctoberNovember December
Main part of wet rainsLast rainsEarly hot dryMiddle dryEarly build-upThe build-up
Drying outCoolerHot and stickyFirst rains
Burning time

Alternative names

Some words

Source: Language 2016

See also

Notes

  1. "Jawoyn people are Jawoyn not because they speak Jawoyn. But because they are linked to places to which the Jawoyn language is also linked". (Rumsey 2005, p. 200)
  2. In Tindale's classification, Kumertuo refers rather to the Djowei (Tindale 1974, p. 224)

Citations

Sources

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