Wilai Karingkareyang Turool

 

On Friday 19th August Vicki Couzens, Maree Clarke, Lee Darroch & Amanda Reynolds from Banmirra Arts travelled from Victoria to Newcastle to hold a workshop entitled Wilai Karingkareyang Turool: Possum Skin Cloak Healing Workshop, at the Newcastle Town Hall, where 40 members of the Awabakal Aboriginal community came from around the Newcastle and Lake Macquarie area to attend the 3 day workshop.

Wilai is the Awabakal word for possum, karingkareyang is the Awabakal word for cloak and turool is the Awabakal word for heal. Language is such a significant part of Aboriginal culture. Our languages hold the knowledge, history and stories of our ancestors. LANGUAGE + CULTURE = IDENTITY. The opportunity to share our language and our stories with each other whilst working on the possum skin cloak has enabled us, as Aboriginal people, to regain a big part of our cultural identity.

Children, who were part of the workshop, trying on a possum skin cloak

The ladies shared with us their vast knowledge of possum skin cloaks and Aboriginal culture; they taught the group many new skills including cutting the skins, sewing the skins together, creating designs for the cloak, burning onto the skins and painting ochre onto the cloak.

Cloaks embody and strengthen identity. The designs can represent Clan, Country, Dreaming, personal and contemporary identities and stories. Making a cloak is a physical, spiritual and emotional journey that requires patience and dedication.

The participants worked together as a group to cut the skins, sew the skins together and create a design which was then burnt onto the cloak and painted with ochre.

The cloak design portrays 3 Awabakal dreaming stories; The Stone Sisters at Swansea Heads – The Keepers of Lake Macquarie, the Creation of Belmont Lagoon - When the Moon Cried and the creation of the Hunter River – Maiyaa the Rainbow Serpent. The design also depicts the overall Awabakal totem; Birabaan the Eagle Hawk or Wedge Tail Eagle.

Community members who participated in the cloak workshop expressed feelings of pride, a sense of belonging, connection to country and spiritual wellbeing when working on the cloak and wearing the cloaks.

This workshop made me remember. Made me think about the importance of our mobs – all together. Put things aside to come together for cultural business. One way, only way, right way – is together. We’ve got all different mobs together here – we’ve come to learn and share.

We put up borders, we put up boundaries – but the song lines cross all of them. Where we are today and where we should be – is together with culture.

Thank you - Uncle Greg Griffiths


More in this category: « The Lizard Rock Timeline »

Possum Skin Cloak Workshop

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Welcome to Country

What is the difference between a Welcome to Country and an Acknowledgment of Country?
Who can do a Welcome to Country?

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Possum Skin Cloaks

Possum Skin Cloaks are very important to Awabakal people. These cloaks hold knowledge and stories from our ancestors in the designs.

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Awabakal Dreaming

The Awabakal people have many Dreaming stories. These stories have been passed down through the generations from our elders and our ancestors.

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13 - 15 Watt Street
Newcastle NSW 2300

02 4927 8222

contact@acra.org.au

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