A PRISONER OF HOPE

The return of ‘Bubu to Bama’ is more than a transfer of real estate, it is more profound than that. At its core it is a journey of reconnection and a celebration of the identity of Aboriginal people, the Eastern Kuku Yalanji. This act of restorative justice will have implications well into the future. 

A PRISONER OF HOPE

By John Stevens 

John Stevens is Associate Professor at Southern Cross and Newcastle universities, co-founder and Director of the Australasian Society of Lifestyle Medicine and Chair of the Board, Rainforest 4 Foundation 

In a recent conversation, with a dear friend, Gamilaraay educator Professor Bob Morgan, my spirit was lifted when he told me that after 50 + years of struggling for justice and equity for first nations’ people in Australia and overseas that he remains ‘a prisoner of hope’ despite the glacial speed of progress and change. I am filled with this sentiment following the recent announcement that over 160,000 hectares of Country stretching from Mossman to Cooktown, including the UNESCO World Heritage-listed Daintree National Park has been handed back to the traditional owners the Eastern Kuku Yalanji. The traditional owners wept as they celebrated the ‘return of Bubu to Bama’.

As a non-Indigenous man living in Mullumbimby NSW, I will never fully appreciate the spiritual and emotional significance of this event that returns ‘Bubu to Bama’. It is a concept that was explained to me by a number of the Kuku Yalanji people last year during an On Country smoking ceremony in the Daintree. I hope I do justice to the telling of its meaning off country:

Bubu, the land, is Country. Country is more than a western appreciation of Country as real estate. It is the mother. It is life. 

The Bama are the children, the people that have sprung from Bama. The relationship is circular. One does not exist without the other. All of the Eastern Kuku Yalanji ancestors are living among Bubu. All of the culture, lore, and resources required for the children of Bubu to survive and flourish for 60 thousand years or more are located here. It is Bama’s job to care for Country.

It is well known in the scientific literature that dispossession is a leading upstream determinant for the health gaps which torment every one of the 90+ remaining first nations’ populations of the world including Australian Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people. The phenomenon is literally universal: that all first nations’ populations do worse on all health and welfare measures than their non-Indigenous counterparts.  On average, there is 10 years less life expectancy for instance, and it doesn’t stop there. Infant mortality, obesity and malnutrition, disease like diabetes, kidney disease, mental illness, suicide, poverty, unemployment, incarceration rates, substance abuse, domestic violence, and the list goes on, are significantly higher in First Nations people. The source of this inequity can be traced back to colonisation and dispossession.

It is not just the physical removal from the land, it is the brutal severing of the connection with it that has devastated First Nations people.  It results in the loss of Elders and knowledge keepers, language and customs and the knowledge of self and who your mob are. Continuing to have to justify and explain the unexplainable loss of generations past to a dominant non-Indigenous community, whose view of the world is to see Country as something to exploit and dominate, leads to, what Professor Morgan calls, spiritual fatigue.

Dispossession leading to meaningless, alienation and loss of culture and identity is seen as the root cause and source of the intergenerational trauma that has created the gap. The divide cannot and will not heal while the physical, social and spiritual wounds caused by dispossession remain untendered and ignored. The failure to close the gap is not for want of effort or desire by a large number of people, Indigenous and non-Indigenous who seek truth-telling, justice and equity for all. Nor is it for lack of money thrown at well-intended solutions. It has been due to our failure to understand and address the cause of the inequities experienced by First Nations people; dispossession and social and political marginalisation.

The return of ‘Bubu to Bama’ is more than a transfer of real estate, it is more profound than that. At its core it is a journey of reconnection and a celebration of identity of Aboriginal people, the Eastern Kuku Yalanji. The hand-back provides a window for us to witness the healing of land and people that will follow over the years as the Kuku Yalanji are able to exercise their rightful and now legally ratified role as custodians and carers of Country. This act of restorative justice will have implications well into the future. We will see in years to come declines in physical, mental, and spiritual illness within the community. We will see the land once again being treated with respect and the love needed for it to heal and repair and provide us all with a little more protection against climate change if nothing else. And we have lost nothing. We who are not Eastern Kuku Yalanji will still be able to visit and immerse ourselves in the embrace of the Daintree forest both physically and as a destination in our minds. When you close your eyes and imagine the rainforest, the light, the sounds, the smell, the crystal-clear creeks, the giant trees, and ancient animals like the cassowary, your body is in tune with therapeutic essence, you relax! Your mind is more at peace and breathing comes more easily.    

Global phenomena such as: the rise in the incidents of infectious diseases such as SARS 2, the cause of Covid 19; diseases like obesity and diabetes; mental illness that is leading to record rates of suicide; the recent trend to decreasing life expectancy in many populations; degradation of ecosystems and the threat of mass extinctions; pressure on food systems and water supply are not coincidences. These phenomena are all linked, outcomes related to a type of dispossession and loss of connection from our universal Bubu – the planet and each other. 

The hand-back, therefore, is not just a story about an isolated case of restorative justice in far north Queensland, it is a vision and a template for what can be achieved for and by all if we move together united in purpose and resolve.

 Bama caring for Bubu - Jabalbina Rangers

This hand back is not just a feel-good story for a news cycle, it is the way forward if we want a future. It is our legacy and indeed our gift to future generations.

In this act are the seeds of the solution to our survival and prosperity. In the act of restoring justice and equity across the planet, we save each other and we save ourselves. The most obvious lesson from the current pandemic is that we cannot be well until we are all well. We cannot be safe until we are all safe.

Organisations like the Mullumbimby-based Rainforest 4 Foundation are part of a growing movement providing a platform for the public to contribute to the purchase of at-risk freehold land in the Daintree Rainforest to be owned and managed by the Kuku Yalanji Traditional Owners, adding to the recently announced hand-back.  

That we are finding ways through all of the many and complex hurdles and obstacles to hand back Bubu to Bama lifts my fatiguing spirit and keeps me a prisoner of hope.  

ENDS

On the 29th of September 2021, a historic handover of land occurred seeing more than 160,000 hectares returned to the ownership of the Eastern Kuku Yalanji people. Read the full story here

 

   

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  • Kelvin Davies
    published this page in Latest News 2021-10-08 09:56:57 +1100