NAIDOC Week healing can be good for all

THIS week is NAIDOC Week. Every year, NAIDOC Week has a theme and this year’s is Heal Country.

It encourages us to consider the impact of colonisation on the environment and the depth of Indigenous knowledge on how to restore the balance, for everyone’s benefit.

Not only has this knowledge survived colonisation – which in itself is remarkable – but it is as relevant and instructive today as it ever was to protecting and restoring our precious ecosystems to health.

The river is a prime example.

I remember listening to local elder Aunty Janine Wilson, in one of her famous welcome to country speeches, referring to the river as “the old girl”, saying she was unwell and that she couldn’t look after us if we didn’t look after her.

And it’s true. Scientists can tell us in extraordinary technical detail how the river works.

Farmers can tell us the monetary value of horticulture and how vital it is to our communities – and they are right.

But there is something particularly special and informative about the way our Aboriginal elders talk about the river. It cuts through all the economic and scientific jargon and gets to the fundamental truth that underlies all of it, that the river can only help us if we help it. Our fate and the river’s fate are intertwined.

When Four Corners reported on industrial-scale water theft and corruption in the north of the basin, National Party leader Barnaby Joyce said: “You know what this is all about? It’s about them trying to take more water off you.”

But that’s not true. Pulling up water corruption was a matter of basic justice and equity. Ensuring generational equity by protecting the interests of our future family farmers.

Ensuring cultural equity for our Aboriginal communities whose families have used and enjoyed the river for tens of thousands of years.

And ensuring economic equity for the $8 billion Murray-Darling Basin tourism industry, whose operators rely on the system to put food on their family’s tables.

Healing Country is good for all of us. It sustains our families, our communities, our economies and our wellbeing. We should all heed that message this NAIDOC Week.

Digital Editions


More News

  • Tiramisu the ultimate energiser

    Tiramisu the ultimate energiser

    THE term tiramisu comes from a phrase “tireme su” in the Italian Treviso dialect, meaning “pick me up” in English. And Tara Radcliffe, the pastry chef at the new local…

  • One Nation soars over estranged Coalition bedfellows

    One Nation soars over estranged Coalition bedfellows

    WEEKS of infighting have taken a toll on the former Coalition partners as Pauline Hanson’s One Nation soars to new heights of popularity. The primary vote for the Liberals and…

  • Tai chi flee set free

    Tai chi flee set free

    A MAN has been banned from being in Mildura after he was granted bail over allegations that he threatened to kill his former landlord. The Mildura Magistrates’ Court heard the…

  • Department updates on fish deaths at Menindee

    Department updates on fish deaths at Menindee

    AFTER further investigation into dead fish discovered throughout the week near Menindee, the Department of Climate Change, Energy, the Environment and Water have released a community update of their findings…

  • Man gets bail in cop assault case

    Man gets bail in cop assault case

    A MILDURA man alleged to have punched an off-duty police officer to the jaw when he tried to arrest the accused over a shop theft has been released on bail…

  • Second light art installation on track

    Second light art installation on track

    THE Fibre Optic Symphonic Orchestra is on track to open to the public in April, coinciding with the Easter long weekend. The project is a joint initiative between Wentworth Shire…

  • Nats leader secure after spill bid falls flat

    Nats leader secure after spill bid falls flat

    DAVID Littleproud will remain the leader of the Nationals Party after a failed spill motion. Queensland MP Colin Boyce launched the attempt to trigger a leadership spill shortly after 2pm…

  • Supply shortage underpins shaky growth

    Supply shortage underpins shaky growth

    GROWTH in Australian home values re-accelerated in January, defying predictions 2026 would be a softer year for the property market and fears of an imminent Reserve Bank rate rise. The…

  • Outdoor pool remains shut

    Outdoor pool remains shut

    THE Mildura Waves’ 50-metre outdoor pool has remained closed to the public indefinitely, despite claims it would reopen on Saturday. The outdoor pool was closed in the lead-up to the…

  • Wanted man known to visit Mildura

    Wanted man known to visit Mildura

    POLICE are appealing for public help in locating a man facing serious criminal charges known to frequent the Mildura area. Thirty-nine-year-old Mark Cornwell is wanted on warrant on charges including…