Major Lancelot "Moogy" Sumner AM (born 1948), also known as Uncle Moogy, is an Aboriginal Australian elder, cultural adviser, dancer, and environmental activist in South Australia.
Major Lancelot Sumner [1] was born in 1948 on Point McLeay mission on the shore of Lake Alexandrina in South Australia, [2] one of 12 children. The family moved to Millicent in the South East of the state, but after his parents split up, he and several brothers were placed in a boys' home in Adelaide. [3] His father, Colin Rex Sumner, was buried in an unmarked grave in the West Terrace Cemetery in Adelaide after being allegedly murdered in a brawl in the north of the state. Moogy has been investigating how to find his father's remains and re-inter them at Long Point (aka Dapung Talkinjeri), where he was born. [4]
Sumner is of the Ngarrindjeri and Kaurna peoples, [5] with particular knowledge of and affiliation to Ngarrindjeri culture. [1]
As a young man, Sumner worked in many places, including on the railways on the Nullarbor Plain. [3]
Sumner has long engaged in environmental activism, with particular reference to the Murray-Darling basin. He has campaigned to save the major Australian river systems and against drilling for oil and gas in the Great Australian Bight. [2]
In 2010, he began the "Ringbalin Murrundi" Rover Spirit project, which relit the ceremonial fires along ancient Aboriginal trade routes of the Darling and Murray Rivers. [6] [1] It is also known as "Dancing the River". [7] In 2010 he joined with other traditional owners in travelling down the river from Queensland to the Southern Ocean, performing ceremonies every night, in the ancient Ringbalin tradition that had been performed before colonisation but not since. The impetus for this undertaking was the decade-long drought, and, not long afterwards, the rains began that year, and there were record-breaking floods in the following year. [8]
In 2011, Sumner crafted the first Ngarrindjeri bark canoe on Country in over a century, which was dubbed "Moogy's Yuki". [6] [2]
In August 2023 Sumner addressed the Climate Action I Assembly at the Parliament of the World's Religions in Chicago, US. [9] In November 2023, he was part of a delegation who went to Canberra to lobby the government on the issue of river health. [10]
Sumner, also known as "Uncle Moogy" is an elder, dancer, cultural ambassador, [2] and activist, [11] who works to further Ngarrindjeri culture. Apart from traditional dance and song, cultural advice, he creates and advises on various traditional arts and crafts, including wood carving, and combat methods that employ traditional shields, clubs, boomerangs, and spears. [2] He has also built local, national, and international communities over many decades, and has become a community leader. [6]
In 1997 Sumner and his wife Loretta Sumner founded Tal Kin Jeri [12] [13] (or Talkindjeri) dance group, and is still artistic director. [6] [14]
Sumner often performs Welcomes to Country at various major events. He danced and spoke at the launch of the South Australian Voice to Parliament in Adelaide March 2023, [15] and performed the Welcome at the launch of the Yes campaign for the Indigenous Voice to Parliament in a northern suburb of the same city in August 2023. [16] In 2024, he welcomed former British Prime Minister and current foreign minister David Cameron to Government House in Adelaide. [17]
Sumner has been heavily involved with the repatriation and reburial of Aboriginal people's remains from overseas institutions. [14] He has worked closely with the South Australian Museum on the repatriation of human remains to country, [18] [19] and was instrumental in the establishment of Wangayarta, a burial ground for Kaurna ancestors in Smithfield Memorial Park in the northern Adelaide suburb of Evanston South. [20] [21]
Sumner has run the three-day Dupang Pangari (Coorong Spirit) Festival [22] at Long Point,Coorong [23] (on Ngarrindjeri land, adjacent to Coorong National Park, as part of the Adelaide Fringe several times. In 2018, the event won the BankSA Best Event Award. [12] The 2024 event included performances by the Tal Kin Jeri dancers; cultural workshops in basket-weaving, yidaki, and carving clubs and clap-sticks; traditional ceremonies; and a marketplace. [22] [23]
In 2018, Sumner stood for the Australian Greens in a by-election in the Division of Mayo, as they were the party which had the strongest policies to protect the Murray. [3] He also stood for the greens in the Division of Boothby at the 2022 federal election. [17]
In April 2024, Sumner was elected to the South Australian Voice to Parliament, topping the votes in his ward. [17] [24] He had previously campaigned for a "Yes" vote in the 2023 referendum for a national Indigenous Voice to Parliament. [25]
He was made a Member of the Order of Australia in the Australia Day honours in 2014, "For significant service to the Indigenous community of South Australia through contributions to health, social welfare, youth and cultural heritage organisations". [29] [14]
In November 2020, Sumner was recognised as Elder of the Year in the City of Port Adelaide Enfield's ATSI Awards, [a] in which he was described as a "world-renowned performer and cultural ambassador of Ngarrindjeri arts, crafts, martial arts and traditional culture", "highly respected Elder", "local ambassador for Aboriginal people and culture within the City of Port Adelaide Enfield and the broader western Adelaide suburbs... an international, national and local icon". [26]
In 2021 won the Premier of South Australia's NAIDOC Award. [30] [2]
In 2022, Sumner awarded a lifetime achiever award South Australian Environment Awards, and was inducted into the SA Environment Hall of Fame. [2] [6]
In 2023, the Adelaide Film Festival bestowed him with the Bettison & James Award. [31]
Sumner married Loretta Sumner, and they have a small leasehold on Aboriginal land not far from where he was born at Point McLeay. They had nine children, and as of 2018 had 28 grandchildren. [3]
The family lived in Canada for some time, to learn more about incorporating First Nations justice and law into modern judicial systems. [1]
A previous resident of Millicent in the South East of the state, [17] Sumner lives and works in Adelaide and at Camp Coorong. [27]
Coorong National Park is a protected area located in South Australia about 156 kilometres (97 mi) south-east of Adelaide, that predominantly covers a coastal lagoon ecosystem officially known as The Coorong and the Younghusband Peninsula on the Coorong's southern side. The western end of the Coorong lagoon is at the Murray Mouth near Hindmarsh Island and the Sir Richard Peninsula, and it extends about 130 kilometres (81 mi) south-eastwards. Road access is from Meningie. The beach on the coastal side of the peninsula, the longest in Australia, is also commonly called The Coorong.
The Kaurna people are a group of Aboriginal people whose traditional lands include the Adelaide Plains of South Australia. They were known as the Adelaide tribe by the early settlers. Kaurna culture and language were almost completely destroyed within a few decades of the British colonisation of South Australia in 1836. However, extensive documentation by early missionaries and other researchers has enabled a modern revival of both language and culture. The phrase Kaurna meyunna means "Kaurna people".
David Ngunaitponi, known as David Unaipon, was an Aboriginal Australian preacher, inventor, and author. A Ngarrindjeri man, his contribution to Australian society helped to break many stereotypes of Aboriginal people, and he is featured on the Australian $50 note in commemoration of his work. He was the son of preacher and writer James Unaipon.
The Ngarrindjeri people are the traditional Aboriginal Australian people of the lower Murray River, eastern Fleurieu Peninsula, and the Coorong of the southern-central area of the state of South Australia. The term Ngarrindjeri means "belonging to men", and refers to a "tribal constellation". The Ngarrindjeri actually comprised several distinct if closely related tribal groups, including the Jarildekald, Tanganekald, Meintangk and Ramindjeri, who began to form a unified cultural bloc after remnants of each separate community congregated at Raukkan, South Australia.
The South Australian Museum is a natural history museum and research institution in Adelaide, South Australia, founded in 1856 and owned by the Government of South Australia. It occupies a complex of buildings on North Terrace in the cultural precinct of the Adelaide Parklands. Plans are under way to move much of its Australian Aboriginal cultural collection, into a new National Gallery for Aboriginal Art and Cultures.
Nunga is a term of self-identification for Aboriginal Australians, originally used by Aboriginal people in the southern settled areas of South Australia, and now used throughout Adelaide and surrounding towns. It is used by contrast with Gunya, which refers to non-Aboriginal persons. The use of "Nunga" by non-Aboriginal people is not always regarded as appropriate.
The Ramindjeri or Raminjeri people were an Aboriginal Australian people forming part of the Kukabrak grouping now otherwise known as the Ngarrindjeri people. They were the most westerly Ngarrindjeri, living in the area around Encounter Bay and Goolwa in southern South Australia, including Victor Harbor and Port Elliot. In modern native title actions a much more extensive territory has been claimed.
Kaurna is a Pama-Nyungan language historically spoken by the Kaurna peoples of the Adelaide Plains of South Australia. The Kaurna peoples are made up of various tribal clan groups, each with their own parnkarra district of land and local dialect. These dialects were historically spoken in the area bounded by Crystal Brook and Clare in the north, Cape Jervis in the south, and just over the Mount Lofty Ranges. Kaurna ceased to be spoken on an everyday basis in the 19th century and the last known native speaker, Ivaritji, died in 1929. Language revival efforts began in the 1980s, with the language now frequently used for ceremonial purposes, such as dual naming and welcome to country ceremonies.
Tjilbruke is an important creation ancestor for the Kaurna people of the Adelaide plains in the Australian state of South Australia. Tjilbruke was a Kaurna man, who appeared in Kaurna Dreaming dating back about 11,000 years. The Tjilbruke Dreaming Track or Tjilbruke Dreaming Trail is a major Dreaming trail, which connects sites from within metropolitan Adelaide southwards as far as Cape Jervis, some of which are Aboriginal sacred sites of great significance.
Rymill Park / Murlawirrapurka, and numbered as Park 14, is a recreation park located in the East Park Lands of the South Australian capital of Adelaide. There is an artificial lake with rowboats for hire, a café, children's playground and rose garden, and the Adelaide Bowling Club is on the Dequetteville Terrace side. The O-Bahn passes underneath it, to emerge at the western side opposite Grenfell Street.
The Tandanya National Aboriginal Cultural Institute, usually referred to as Tandanya, is an art museum located on Grenfell Street in Adelaide, South Australia. It specialises in promoting Indigenous Australian art, including visual art, music and storytelling. It is the oldest Aboriginal-owned and -run cultural centre in Australia. It has been closed for building repairs since May 2023 and is due to reopen sometime in 2025.
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Raukkan is an Australian Aboriginal community situated on the south-eastern shore of Lake Alexandrina in the locality of Narrung, 80 kilometres (50 mi) southeast of the centre of South Australia's capital, Adelaide. Raukkan is "regarded as the home and heartland of Ngarrindjeri country."
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