Exploring the cultural heritage and historical significance of the Aborigines in Australia - Martin Luther King Jr.'s

News & Society

  • Author Solomon Lartey
  • Published October 10, 2024
  • Word count 4,040

Exploring the cultural heritage and historical significance of the Aborigines in Australia through the lens of interconnectivity with Martin Luther King Jr.'s 'I Have a Dream' speech

  1. Introduction

Australia is home to one of the oldest continuing cultures on earth. Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples have rich cultural traditions and a deep connection to their country that dates back more than 65,000 years. The re-articulation of Indigenous culture and identity forms an important part of the cultural narrative in Australia today. However, there still exists a rift between the general Australian population and Indigenous Australians and their cultural heritage and eroded landscapes. The need to present aspects of particular Indigenous languages, cultures, songs, dances, stories, artwork, shared knowledge and experience, heritage, traditional ecological knowledge, and sense of place en masse comes through an exploration of interconnectivity.

Martin Luther King Jr.'s "I Have a Dream" speech is regarded as a seminal and iconic piece of rhetoric. The themes of the speech speak to the lived experience of oppressed peoples and cultures across the globe, including Australia's own Indigenous peoples. Themes of dreams, contentment, hope, fellowship, freedom, oratory, time, and equality resonate. At once seminal and iconic, in a worldwide context, it is as if the speech were written for Australian Indigenous peoples and their cultural heritage and eroded landscapes, which are threatened and all but invisible to the majority of the Australian population and beyond. The power of the speech13,14 widens the space in which ancient and contemporary languages, songs, dances, stories, artwork, knowledge systems, and connections to country and the cosmos can play out. There are broader cultural thoughts and actions at play on an Indigenous level, making the blanket terms of Aboriginal or Indigenous cumbersome when addressing a global and local audience.

The visions and dreams contained within and animated by the speech highlight commonality—situating Indigenous creation stories (in a western sense), mythology, philosophy, sonics, performance, and culture across vast distances, both temporal and spatial, while also inhabiting the particular landscapes and experience of place. The oratory itself, inclusive of the elocution and style, brings to mind similar ancient forms of hyperbolic speech and drama traditions. The notion of New World's, Buffalo Soldiers, Barren Grounds, Eucalyptuses, Woollooa Birds, Rushes, Yellow Currants, Fish Bones, Inha-ed Bread, Lake and Sea Sparks and other Indigenous flora, fauna, and topography itself traces such lineages in context.

1.1. Background and Rationale

This research endeavors to delve into the cultural heritage and historical significance of the Aboriginal communities in Australia, utilizing a thematic analysis of Martin Luther King Jr.'s iconic "I Have a Dream" speech. MG expects to foster public comprehension of Australia's cultural diversity, heighten awareness of the struggles faced by Aboriginal communities toward reconciliation, and encourage the commemoration of Aboriginal history by exploring Aboriginal culture through the lens of interconnectivity with King’s speech. At its core, the speech epitomizes the struggle for equality confronted by African Americans, as well as other oppressed and marginalized communities worldwide. This investigation acknowledges the richness of Aboriginal culture, addressing the enduring aftermath of colonialism, encompassing violence and unaddressed trauma. The speech serves as a poignant reminder that Indigenous communities across the globe yearn for fundamental rights and the opportunity to embrace their own cultural identity. Despite being situated on the same land for an extensive period, Aboriginal peoples have been marginalized within their own country. Therefore, the intent is to foster a broader understanding of Aboriginal culture and Aboriginal issues.

Located in the Southern Hemisphere in the Indian Ocean, the Commonwealth of Australia is geographically the smallest continent, comprising the Australian mainland, Tasmania, and various small islands. The capital city is Canberra, and the estimated population in 2023 is around 26.5 million. Aboriginal people, comprising the Indigenous populace of Australia, have successfully sustained their cultural connections for over sixty thousand years. The descendants of the World’s oldest continuing civilization, Aboriginal Australians, are a collective term encompassing around 270 distinct nations. Although they share ancestral links with each other, each nation possesses its distinct customs, languages, beliefs, and cultural practices. Words of welcome, narratives, and songs that embody the environment and ecology are passed down the generations. Aboriginal art, a significant feature of their communities, is created in diverse styles including painting on bark, canvas, rock, and sand, sculpture, woodwork, and weaving, often with a spiritual significance intertwined with daily life. (Dunbar-Ortiz, 2023)(Williams, 2020)

Inspired by the American civil rights movement, King sought equality and justice for African Americans advocating for the peaceful integration of all Americans irrespective of race. In this revered speech, King highlights the significance of freedom for African Americans and invokes the founding American beliefs that all individuals should be treated equally, undeniably alluding to Aboriginal issues in Australia and other nations around the world. While the "I Have a Dream" speech accurately depicts the struggles confronted by African Americans, it is the hope of many that oppressed and marginalized communities globally would endure similar freedom and equality. (King, 2020)

  1. The Aborigines of Australia

The Aborigines of Australia, one of the oldest living cultures in the world, possess a profound cultural heritage that has evolved over at least 65,000 years. It is believed that the forebears of the Aborigines migrated from Africa across southern Asia. Archaeological sites suggest that during the melting of the ice caps, rising sea levels formed watersheds that created geographic barriers to the South Pacific islands, including Australia, New Guinea, and Tasmania. The thickening of vegetation, supplemented with monsoon rains, allowed pre-tribal societies to spread annually into the temperate areas of the continent. Today, the term "Aborigines" commonly refers to the Indigenous peoples of Australia, who are divided into two main groups based on cultural background: Torres Strait Islanders and Aboriginal Australians. (Benjamin et al.2020)

In geographic terms, Aboriginal Australia refers to the communities residing within the mainland of Australia and the majority of its islands. They contested Jan Carstensen and his crew who arrived in the islands on 1623. For all of them, the islands were not terra nullius, a latin term still used in legal and governmental discourse. So caught up with his interpretation of the sustainable unity of nature and culture, Heidegger intended a wholesale rejection of any concern for the concrete materiality of the soil, forest, or mountain—the historical lifeworlds of specific peoples. The Aborigines lived a colourful dreamtime, believing in the vibrancy of the ancestors who created the land, or the waters inspiring the songs sung by the mountains. In preserved rock art they left a legacy to those who heard the songs. Belief in the cross-currents of the water was integral to their concepts of identity and kinship. The music of the songlines invented city-scapes built around inter-locking motifs lifting their strategies of livelihood deep into history. To travel outside them was to risk the limits of imagination. (Behrendt, 2021)

For European men, this was the law of men, where the land was a barren desert until discovered and dominated by Westernreason. Napoleon called it a “wilderness,” a French invention that mythologized nature, clothing it in a robe of idyllic beauty while wishing to confound its beauty and its ferocity in firm control. From Pope’s pointed maps depicting terra nullius—to be possessed, to be governed—to the Enlightenment ethos of progress driving a technics of enlightenment, the laws of racial superiority operated with great efficiency. And as these laws operated to deny the humanity of other races, their experience of self and of the world as dreamers emerged as symbols of the urge for assurance.

2.1. Brief History and Cultural Heritage

Australia boasts an expanse of land designated as the continent, encompassing islands such as Tasmania, and being the vastest individual nation globally. It remains one of the last expansive landmasses settled by contemporary humans. The Aborigines, Australia’s original inhabitants, have dwelled here for over 50,000 years, evolving as a unique and distinct group from the rest of the world. The latter is estimated to have entered Australia approximately 40,000 years ago, following Latin and Greek groups at the peripheries of Mesopotamia and North Africa some 6,000 years earlier. The Aborigines thus constitute one of the world's most culturally rich and ancient tribes interconnected with the land. (Putri2021)(Charles & O'Brien, 2020)

The external environment moulded the groups or tribes into their present physical and cultural forms. This topic encompasses a few key interconnections between the Aborigines, their culture or heritage, and the land. The Aborigines' interconnection with the land has resulted in a body of knowledge regarding its physical and environmental features. This knowledge has been developed, disseminated, and employed by the Aborigines over the course of thousands of years. The land has been conceived not merely as a commodified economic resource but as an integral part of life and subsistence. The ceremonies and rituals performed to ensure its continued fertility and bounty reflect this conception.

The Aranda people of Central Australia have beheld their land holistically across aspects that have physical, metaphysical, historical, social, and ritual connotations, all within a complex cultural interpretation. For the Aranda, possessing tangible property vis-à-vis the Nunga outside Adelaide has no meaning. Dreamtime, a conception of a world pervasive in time, refers to the heritage of places and Dreaming ancestors, the permanent features of the land, the sites of trance and cosmic battles, rivers, trees, plants, geological formations, and celestial occurrences. For the Aranda, being an Aboriginal is synonymous with being a land Aboriginal, as their heritage is inseparable from the land. Despite the transition from primitive to civil societies, all societies, either united with or detached from the land, retain a mutual bond. The land has been symbolized as a “Mother Goddess.” (Colloff, 2020)(Woodward et al., 2020)

  1. Martin Luther King Jr. and 'I Have a Dream' Speech

The universe of the interconnectivity between all life on Earth was beautifully envisaged by the late Martin Luther King Jr. in his "I Have a Dream" speech. This idealistic vision of humanity resonates universally with all indigenous people who, since the dawn of man, have contemplated the "big questions" of existence. They find themselves to be an integral part of Creation, sharing in the fate of the forests, the flowers, the animals, the rivers, the mountains, the skies, and the oceans. Indigenous people were in harmony with the environment and believed that all life came from the womb of Mother Earth and would one day return to this cradle. Only in the relative recent past did a new culture separate itself from the larger eternal tapestry of Life to become a separate, alien force. That later culture fragmented the unity of Nature across the Earth and continues to threaten the planet with its blind, insatiable pursuit of personal wealth and power. King’s words are a cry and a reminder of the world of harmony, interconnectivity, equality, and respect for all life centering on Mother Earth. The power and beauty of his speech derive from its fidelity to its own guiding vision; it is like a perfectly staged symphony. Here, in the land of its birth, is the opportune moment to present this cultural heritage. (Acharibasam & McVittie2023)

An African-American man delivered the "I Have a Dream" speech in Washington D.C, USA. He had recently won the Nobel Peace Prize for leading a non-violent movement that forced a racist society, determined to exclude blacks from full humanity, to grant them the basic, inalienable rights of all human beings. The interracial and interfaith cooperation engendered by this movement was a revelation for many people in the 1960s. It is often said that the world was never the same again after the Industrial Revolution. The same claim could just as well be made about the "I Have a Dream" speech. Since its birth it has reverberated around the world and has been translated into many languages. It inspired many other movements across the globe that are today coupled with the hope of interconnectivity and harmony. The essence of the "I Have a Dream" speech is an envisioning of a future world of harmony and equality for humanity that resonates with the ideal state of all Indigenous people and that of the world’s environment. (Rwezaura, 2023)

3.1. Context and Significance

The civil rights movement of the 1960s in the USA is an important chapter in the struggle for social justice and equality for African Americans. In this context, the words and vision of Martin Luther King Jr. would stand tall among the architects of a new social order where justice and rights would be the birthright of every citizen, regardless of race. This chapter will closely explore King Jr’s landmark speech “I Have a Dream”, its context and significance, its key theme and central idea, and its message for an ideal world. (Grady-Willis, 2020)

In answering these questions, this chapter hopes to bring to the forefront the plight of a people dispossessed of their rights to land, culture, and dignity, and ethnically cleansed from their land, who are reconciled to a life on the fringes of society as the victims of policies of assimilation and uncontrolled abuse. In this equally unlikely alliance and 3,000 miles distance, the shared vision of a night of rights for songs and dignity of people from either end of the world is brought to attention: Aborigines through King Jr’s “I Have a Dream”. King, who stood for all that is rights and dignity of people in history, reminds of the idiocy of “the deafening silence of the good” to the “unjust law”. King Jr, who stood for land of freedom and the lung of the world as an example for its harmony, reminds to argue, dream, and hold on to the beauty of the land sung for ages despite the fall to the absurdity. (Cunneen, 2020)

  1. Intersections and Interconnectivity

There are certain contemporary debates concerning the cultural heritage and historical legacy of the Aborigines in Australia, which are explored with special regard to an interesting artistic work. This is based upon a multi-format and transnational project, which consists of a personal anecdote and experience, videos, a video installation, a graphic-light performance, written texts that explain and elaborate upon the cultural references, as well as exhibitions and artistic installations. This project layers aspects of the cultural memory of Australia’s Aboriginal heritage and the historical speech delivered by Martin Luther King Jr. from the steps of the Lincoln Memorial on August 28, 1963, entitled “I Have a Dream.”

In particular, the work reflects upon the way migration, traveling, globalization, as well as transcultural pedagogy have an impact on approaching the cultural heritage and historical legacy of the Aborigines or Australian Indigenous peoples, the interconnectivity of knowledge, and the problems and benefits ensuing from creolization. Creolization, a term that stems from linguistics and musicology, refers to the contact and interactions of (sub)dominant and dominated languages. This creates hybridized or creole forms of culture that embrace identification with several, and sometimes incommensurable, contexts, which share a living within the creole world, thus caring more about the daily life of survival than concerning or challenging the (sub)dominant culture. However, while being confronted with world knowledge, creole cultures can continue the creolization process in ways that engender a reconceptualization of the dominant (sub)dominant context. (Thomason & Kaufman, 2023)(Murdoch, 2023)

Additionally, the creole production of knowledge can appropriate vehicles and their symbolism that reflect upon collective identity and heritage, as well as the intervention of dominant (sub)dominant groups. In their creole guise, elaborated and executed cultures have the ability to renegotiate and contest the law of the (sub)dominance, thereby representing a risk for those in power and at the center of representation. There are, however, different modes of creolization, which unfold according to the people and cultures in question, the creolization arena, as well as the historical circumstances, such that the outcome is unpredictable. Some creole manifestations counteract intercultural possibilities, while others radically democratize and reshape collective identity constructions and cultural maintenance. There have also been realized discursive analyses of text, images, and cultural speech acts that trace the guidelines and exclusion rules of Aborigines. These problems, concepts, and issues are examined with regard to a particular artwork. In this sense, this text aims to better understand both the cultural heritage and historical legacy of Australia’s Aborigines, as well as the feasibility of creole approaches in clarifying such complex and overwhelming themes and events. (Lydon, 2021)

4.1. Shared Themes and Ideals

The songs of the Aborigines echo with a sense of place, community, and history that envelops all realities like a blanket. This awareness of space, time, community, context, and understanding resonates with the words of Martin Luther King, Jr. It begins not with the present but with the past. That moment of Edgeworth David’s speech on the helm of Zuytdorp appears as an Aboriginal riff and feel. It is composed of the layers of ancient mythic place, community, and the direct communion with the wave of time. David’s gaze reaches beyond the exposure, beyond individual, beyond immediate and into the unbroken time and everlasting sense of place. His voice converges the prevenient with the unknowing future to speak here and now. As it is uttered the past and the present merge, the unbroken and unknown amalgamate and the stones speak to the waves; all is sung into one voice. Wisdom unfurls and floods the reality: all are related, the human, the wave, the stone, the flame in the void, the inaudible warmth of the Earth; the scattering galaxies; the whisper of echoes; happiness just is. (Locke2023)

The Aboriginal chant awakens here the long-embedded layer of reality in the heart of the western descent of the faith. It is the beginning, the hope, but also the face of unknowing. The chant reveals that which sleeps in idolatry. In the endless arena of graspings, solidifications, happiness becomes the impossible. All is shattered into individuals sunk in the solitude of their own creatureliness; nothing can appear nor sound with another. All is a crowded void. Pure singleness becomes infinite multiplicity; all are alone. In the beginning, all are helpless; all bend to despair; all wonder in impotence: Who actually is? The question does not start with anything visible nor tangible. It defies all knowing; it casts out all that feeds upon what is; it reaches into no-thing and darkness to grasp on void; it asks: Is there anything?

The shattered galaxies scavenge nothingness in vain. Within the solitude of being nothing remains but hurt, fear, and rage. To speak on behalf of existence becomes the impossibility. Entrapped in the someone's meaning all the meaning collapses into that which hears. The nothingness of it all unveils the absolute madness of being; existence is sheer piquant delirium. That which exists does not touch existence. The songs of the Aborigines resonate and dwell in the depth of being; and so does the mind of the engineer. The song is: Do not touch the tent. Do not listen to the dweller in the tent. There whisper the thoughts of stones; that is etched in the stillness of the desert, in the sand hills. Listen to the whisper and heed that which breathes. Conceal in the womb of being there becomes the wisdom of the trees, the flocks of clouds on the blue sky and the laughter of children. There the golden veil unfolds and all are again one knowing intimately. (Robinson, 2020)(Country et al.2022)

  1. Implications and Future Directions

In light of the findings of the exploration into the cultural heritage and historical significance of the Aborigines in Australia, there are several implications and future directions to consider. Foremost is the urgent need for a more inclusive narrative in Australian history that acknowledges the rich and varied narratives of the Aborigine people as custodians of the land and the world’s oldest known culture. Such a revisionist approach in history writing should be championed by all Australians, particularly educators who have the power to shape the discourse around Aboriginal history and culture in schools.

Importantly, such a discourse should vigorously counter the prevailing myth that Australian history can be understood simply through white settlement and its chronology. It must also neutralize any attempts to present Aboriginal culture as a homogenous entity limited to the period relating to European colonization. Traditionally, history is constructed through a narrative chronology of significant events that informs contemporary identities. As a consequence, marginal or suppressed narratives are rendered illegitimate by failing to conform to such a strict framework for legitimate knowledge. In order to reclaim dignity in their historical narrative, it is argued that Aborigines themselves must actively participate in the writing of their own histories.

Moreover, the perceptions that history is merely ‘a narrative of things that happen in the past’ should force historians and educators to confront the difference between a ‘memory’ that is systematically recorded and transmitted and one that is ‘forgotten’. As it stands, the prevailing Eurocentric version of Australian history has rendered Aboriginal culture automatically illegitimate. Most importantly, ignoring such an argument invokes the incredibility of finding a ‘solution’ to Aboriginal affairs, or worse, simply dismissing any pursuit for such a ‘solution’ out of hand as a ‘grave error’. In defence of such a position, it is worth noting the normative premises that prevail in use of the term ‘Aborigine’. (Nilsson-Siu, 2024)

To start with, the term is restricted to those possess an unbroken lineage to the dimension to the establishment of white Australia on January 26, 1788. Moreover, unquestioningly at the time of white settlement, Aboriginal society was ‘primitive’, ‘uncivilized’, barbaric’, ‘dangerous’ and, in the words of one Governor, ‘living entirely outside of social order, and the laws of God and nature’. Those immutable characteristics of history, society, culture and lore have since come to justify, rationalize and legitimate both conquest and dispossession.

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Solomon lartey a PhD student at Teeside university, researcher, influencer, business analyst and construction supervisor.

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