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Red Centre Local’s Tips: Aboriginal culture

 

The vast emptiness of Central Australia is deceptive. While it doesn’t have the castles and cathedrals of Europe, those prepared to look deeper into our Red Centre will discover the world’s oldest living culture, a civilisation so intertwined with the land it is impossible to understand one without the other.

That journey of discovery begins at Alice Springs and continues through the Red Centre Way, with each major stop-over – the West MacDonnell Ranges, Kings Canyon, Uluru – cared for by different language groups, each with their own stories and traditions.

Alice Springs

The Alice (or Mparntwe in the local Aboriginal language) was established in 1872 with the construction of a repeater station for the Australian Overland Telegraph Line. However, Alice Springs and surrounds has been occupied for tens of thousands of years by the Arrernte people who used it as a place of meeting and trade.

So before you head out to explore the region, begin your engagement with Arrernte culture in Alice Springs, which has an array of important sites, museums, galleries and activities that will get you started on your journey of discovery into our country’s foundational culture.

Araluen Arts Centre

Built around a 300-year-old tree and located at the heart of the Araluen Cultural Precinct (which includes the Museum of Central Australia, the Strehlow Research Centre and many Arrernte sacred sites), the Araluen Arts Centre is the visual and performing arts hub of Central Australia. The Araluen Galleries showcase the origins and continuing evolution of the Contemporary Aboriginal Art movement and includes work by celebrated watercolourist Albert Namatjira.

Many Hands Arts Centre

The work of Arrernte artists continuing to follow in the footsteps of Namatjira can be seen at this vibrant arts centre established in 2004. Namatjira taught his children and grandchildren to use water colours to capture the beauty of the Central Desert. That work can be purchased at the gallery, with profits helping to support the local artists, cultural maintenance and the running of the art centre.

 

Tjanpi Desert Weavers

Contemporary fibre art of the women of the Central and Western Desert regions can also be seen in Alice Springs. Tjanpi Desert Weavers is a social enterprise supporting over 400 Aboriginal women earn money from beautiful handwoven baskets and sculptures made from locally collected wild grasses. Their work is collected by galleries across Australia.

Alice Springs Desert Park

Animals and landscape are the focus of the Desert Park. They are so intertwined with Aboriginal tradition and language that the Desert Park should be on the itinerary for anyone seeking a Central Australian cultural experience. Visitors get insights into the language, art and dreamtime stories of the area’s traditional owners in a facility that replicates the desert country, right down to the sand you’re walking on.

 

Napwerte/Ewaninga Rock Carving Conservation Reserve

Located 35 kilometres south of Alice Springs, this reserve has one of the highest concentrations of petroglyphs or rock carvings in the Northern Territory. About a thousand petroglyphs are distributed across the rocky outcrops of the claypan surface and constitutes one the most outstanding examples of Central Australian rock art.

West MacDonnell Ranges

If you caught up with the art of Albert Namatjira in Alice you’ll want to see the stunning landscapes featured in the work of this most beloved Australian artist. Namatjira was the first Aboriginal artist to paint in a European style. Using his remarkable grasp of mood and colour, he captured the ghost gums with their luminous white trunks, the palm-filled gorges and the red mountain ranges turning purple at sunset.

One of the must-see parts of the West MacDonnell Ranges National Park is Standley Chasm Angkerle Atwatye. A private flora and fauna reserve owned by the Iwupataka Land Trust, Angkerle Atwatye (the Gap of Water in the local language) features a 1.2-kilometre walk along a natural creek bed in which visitors look up at an 80-metre sheer rockface.

It is also an important cultural site for Western Arrernte women who are now giving travellers an insight into their history and traditions though a series of bush tucker tours, art workshops and language classes. The best way to take in this magical part of Central Australia is from those for whom the land is the bedrock of their identity.

 

Karrke Aboriginal Cultural Experience

Further along the Red Centre Way at the eastern edge of the Watarrka National Park (about 5 1/2 hours from Alice Springs) Southern Arrernte man Peter Abbott and Luritja woman Christine Breaden welcome visitors into their community with a cultural tour named after the Western bowerbird, Karrke.

“The male bird has a pink plume on the top of its head and decorates its bower with berries and flower and shiny things to attract the female. We chose the name for our business because we want visitors to fly away and bring all their friends back to Watarrka,” explains Peter.

Peter and Christine take groups on a cultural walk through the bush nearby the Wanmara Community, taking them through dreamtime stories, bush medicine and bush tucker (including the famed witchety grub), an explanation of dot painting, the process of making artefacts and weapons and the survival techniques that has allowed their people to thrive in this harshest of conditions.

“Christine and I want to share with visitors from other parts of Australia and around the world our traditional way of life, our culture and our language and ensure that it survives all the changes brought by the modern world,” explains Peter.

“We also want visitors to reflect on the ancient ways and what the wisdom they have for people today. We talk about the importance of certain types of grasses and trees and flora and fauna that need to be protected. This area is beautiful. But there have been changes even in my life time. We want visitors to understand the importance of protecting the land.”

 

Uluru

More marvels await at Uluru, one of the great natural wonders of the world. While this 348-metre high monolith that reflects and changes colour depending on the time of the day (from ochre to burnished orange to intense red) is a sight to behold, it’s also a place of deep cultural and spiritual significance to the local Aboriginal people, the Anangu.

A great way of engaging with Uluru is through the Aboriginal community, whose knowledge of the area and connection to a history that stretches back over the millennia, will bring this global treasure to vivid life.

Cultural Centre

A great place to start your visit to the Uluru-Kata Tijuta National Park is the Cultural Centre. An eye-catching free-form structure made from mud bricks that represents two ancestral snakes battling at the Mutitjulu Waterhole, the Cultural Centre is both a great source of information about the area and an immersive experience in its own right. When you enter through the Tjukurpa Tunnel you’ll be transported back through the beginning of time through the sound of wind and voices chanting ceremonial songs.

 

Maruku Arts

Art in Uluru is synonymous with Maruku (literally “belonging to black”), an organisation owned by the Anangu people to promote and to protect the artists of the Western and Central Deserts who have come to national and international prominence. Additional to operating a shop, Maruku (which is located inside the Cultural Centre) offers tours, workshops, demonstrations, traditional ceremonies and exhibitions.

 

Rock Art

The rock art around Uluru contains an important collection of rock art that can be easily viewed by visitors. The rock art in this part of Central Australia have many layers of pictures, symbols and figures painted on top of each other because the same sites have been used for education for tens of thousands of years, rather like a blackboard in a classroom. Rock art within the Uluru-Kata Tijuta National Park can be viewed through free ranger-guided walks.

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