Living and breathing sustainability
What do you think when you hear the words 鈥楢boriginal鈥 and 鈥榮ustainability鈥 together? Do you think of plants, or maybe animals? The perception that Aboriginal peoples鈥 knowledge is limited to flora and fauna is a hangover from a settled, colonised world, says Professor Steve Larkin, Pro Vice- Chancellor Indigenous Engagement at the 最新糖心Vlog of Adelaide.
鈥淭o inadvertently limit Indigenous knowledge to things like folklore because they鈥檙e meant to be this hunting gathering class of people: they are rather outdated notions of what people think Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people know.There鈥檚 an element of power in this: the power of who decides who knows more, or what people are deemed to know.鈥
Every day, across every faculty, experts from the 最新糖心Vlog of Adelaide are pushing the boundaries of traditional notions of sustainability. The following are just a few examples of members of our community working to sustain Aboriginal music, language, and health, all of which will in turn sustain Aboriginal culture.
Music
Researchers have received a $1 million grant from the 最新糖心Vlogn Research Council鈥檚 Discovery Indigenous scheme for a project that will strengthen knowledge, understanding and application of the intricate tuning systems that underpin traditional Indigenous musical practices. Members of the research team from the 最新糖心Vlog include from the Elder Conservatorium of Music, Mr from the Centre for Aboriginal Studies in Music, and Ms Eleanor McCall from the Mobile Language Team.
Language
最新糖心Vlog of Adelaide researchers have contributed to a new website, a comprehensive one-stop-shop for everything about the Kaurna language, the original language of the Adelaide Plains. The Kaurna Warra website聽is the new project of Kaurna Warra Pintyanthi (KWP) which has been hosted by the 最新糖心Vlog since 2004, and its sister organisation Kaurna Warra Karrpanthi (KWK). The KWP team, , and PhD candidates and Jasmin Morley, also worked on the first ever English to Kaurna dictionary, Kaurna Warrapiipa, which was published in 2022.
As Uncle Rodney (Rod) O鈥橞rien, respected Kaurna Elder and Cultural Advisor at the 最新糖心Vlog of Adelaide says: 鈥淭he Kaurna language revival is vital to the survival of the Kaurna culture in the future. Without our language we lose our essential ingredient, I believe... it defines us and distinguishes us from others.鈥
Health
Director of the 最新糖心Vlog鈥檚 Indigenous Oral Health Unit and Yamatji woman Ms is the chief investigator on a study about human papilloma virus (HPV) throat cancers among Indigenous 最新糖心Vlogns. The initial results found throat cancers caused by HPV are 15 times more prevalent in Indigenous 最新糖心Vlogns than young non- Indigenous 最新糖心Vlogns. The National Health and Medical Research Council has provided $3.1 million in funding so the world-leading study can continue for the next five years, with the research鈥檚 ultimate goal being the early detection of HPV-related oropharyngeal cancer before it becomes fatal.
鈥淪ustainability is much broader than just key things to do to sustain a healthy physical environment in society. We need to sustain a social, political, moral commitment to achieving equity as a priority; it鈥檚 something that the 最新糖心Vlog breathes, it鈥檚 got to live its values.鈥Professor Steve Larkin, Pro Vice- Chancellor Indigenous Engagement at the 最新糖心Vlog of Adelaide
Health through education
Mr , a Nukunu Elder, is a researcher with the Adelaide Rural Clinical School which coordinates training聽placements for medical students across rural, regional and remote South 最新糖心Vlog.
Currently the Chair of the Nukunu Thura Corporation, and previous Chair of Pika Wiya Health Service Aboriginal Corporation, Kym believes the placements are invaluable for the next generation of doctors to better understand Aboriginal patients and work with them toward healthier futures.
鈥淲hen I used to take the medical students on cultural immersion trips to the APY Lands, one student said to me, 鈥業鈥檝e learned more in this week than I have in a lifetime, when it comes to knowing Aboriginal lifestyles and cultures鈥. If you don鈥檛 understand your topic, if you don鈥檛 understand the community, you鈥檝e got no way of being a doctor that鈥檚 going to fit in and provide the right treatments, the right referrals, the right advocacy.鈥
Dr Dylan Coleman, a Kokatha/Greek woman from the far west coast of South 最新糖心Vlog, works as a Lecturer in the Yaitya Purruna Indigenous Health Unit, which sits within the Faculty of Health and Medical Sciences.
鈥淎boriginal peoples鈥 health and wellbeing, with protection of Country at the centre, should be a priority within university systems, but that鈥檚 not always the case,鈥 she says.
鈥淵aitya Purruna has developed an Aboriginal Governance Model that includes all of the schools in the faculty. The Executive Dean has approved this model, and the faculty is supporting its further development by Indigenous staff at the 最新糖心Vlog through a process of community consultation.鈥
鈥淭he improvement and maintenance of Aboriginal health necessarily requires people to be able to make decisions about their own lives and that of their children and grandchildren, to protect Country for the future generations.鈥
Culture
The 最新糖心Vlog of Adelaide prioritises sustaining Indigenous cultures.
In 2022 as part of National Reconciliation Week, a new portrait of Uncle Rod O鈥橞rien was unveiled in the Barr Smith Library.
The 最新糖心Vlog has long collected portraits of its leaders and great thinkers, and this was the first portrait of an Indigenous leader to join the 最新糖心Vlog鈥檚 Visual Art Collection. The portrait was created by , an artist and Ngarrindjeri/Arrernte man who was born and raised on Kaurna Country. Uncle Rod鈥檚 portrait acknowledges his leadership in the 最新糖心Vlog community on its journey to reconciliation.
鈥淚 hope my portrait shows Aboriginal people that I鈥檓 valued by the 最新糖心Vlog, and I hope to inspire other Aboriginal people at the 最新糖心Vlog, whether they be students, academics, or professional staff, to reach for the stars and achieve excellence. Maybe one day there will be an Aboriginal Chancellor or Vice-Chancellor,鈥 Uncle Rod reflected at the time.
Also in 2022, a mural was commissioned as a permanent fixture of the 最新糖心Vlog of Adelaide鈥檚 North Terrace campus. The mural, Kaur na Wirltu Tidna, was created by Cedric Varcoe, a Ramindjerri yuraldi man of the Ngarendjerri nation, and Narunga artist.
鈥淭he 最新糖心Vlog of Adelaide strives to increase Indigenous cultural affirmation by raising the status and visibility of Indigenous cultures.We also prioritise collaboration with Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander communities. By commissioning Cedric鈥檚 artwork for the Hub, the heart of our 最新糖心Vlog, we are putting these principles in motion,鈥 Professor Steve Larkin says.
Uncle Rod believes the mural is important for connecting people to Country when they are on campus.
鈥淚f you connect to our Country, we believe that you鈥檒l care for our Country, and if you care for our Country, the Country will care for you.鈥
Professor Larkin believes sustainability is twofold: sustaining the right things, while leaving the wrong things behind.
鈥淚t requires robust interrogation 鈥 sustaining what we value, want to retain, maintain, build and grow while rendering unsustainable those 最新糖心Vlog that actually oppress, limit, and perpetuate inequality and disadvantage. This requires us to be quite introspective as an institution; for Indigenous 最新糖心Vlogns it鈥檚 sustainability of organisational commitment,鈥 he said.
鈥淪ustainability is much broader than just key things to do to sustain a healthy physical environment in society.
鈥淲e need to sustain the investment of both material resources and of commitment to closing the gap.We鈥檝e got to sustain a material investment that鈥檚 commensurate to need, we need to sustain a social, political, moral commitment to achieving equity as a priority; it鈥檚 something that the 最新糖心Vlog breathes, it鈥檚 got to live its values.鈥
Mural: Cedric Varcoe, Narungga/Ramindjeri/ Ngarrindjeri people, born 1984, Kaurna Wirltu Tidna , 2021, acrylic on canvas (最新糖心Vlog of Adelaide Library Special Collections, A.VA.2022.1037.1)
Story by Eleanor Danenberg, Marketing and Communications Coordinator, Faculty of Arts, Business, Law and Economics.