TY - GEN
T1 - Every Hill Got a Story
AU - Wissing, Kirsty
N1 - Contribution as interviewee of Sammy Butcher Japanangka, excerpts of interview featured in pp.112, 200, 201, 205, 257 of book (see content p.27 for details).
(To ANU Library staff: an e-book version is listed and can be accessed via the ANU Library website).
PY - 2015
Y1 - 2015
N2 - Central, Land Council. Every Hill Got a Story: We grew up in country, edited by Marg Bowman, Hardie Grant Publishing, Richmond, 2015Kirsty Wissing was the interviewee of Sammy Butcher Japanangka, excerpts of this interview are featured in pp.112, 200, 201, 205, 257 of the book (see content p.27 for details). Every hill got a story is the first comprehensive history of Central Australia's Aboriginal people, as told in their own words and many languages.Nyinanyi ngurangka - being on country - is not a 'lifestyle choice' but a hard-won right, a spiritual and cultural duty, a constant battle, a source of happiness and opportunity and the meaning of life all at the same time.In this heartbreaking, funny and poignant collection, 127 eminent men and women remember surviving first contact, massacres and forced removals and resisting more than a century of top-down government policies. Their testimonies, some available as audio sound bites, paint an unflinchingly honest picture of life and work on the missions, cattle stations and fringes of towns. They speak eloquently of their struggle for self-determination and basic citizen rights. The storytellers also celebrate winning back ownership of more than 410,000 square kilometres of their ancestral lands.Key to this achievement, and deeply entwined with the lives of the storytellers and their families, is the Central Land Council. It is a Commonwealth statutory authority governed by 90 elected Aboriginal representatives. The CLC has protected the interests of Aboriginal people in the southern half of the Northern Territory since 1975 against ongoing threats to their rights. It supports them to manage their land and to use income from it to strengthen their communities and to achieve their social, cultural and economic aspirations.Through the CLC, the people and the land tell us of country where every hill got a story.For more information about the CLC and the oral history project that became Every hill got a story visit www.clc.org.au.
AB - Central, Land Council. Every Hill Got a Story: We grew up in country, edited by Marg Bowman, Hardie Grant Publishing, Richmond, 2015Kirsty Wissing was the interviewee of Sammy Butcher Japanangka, excerpts of this interview are featured in pp.112, 200, 201, 205, 257 of the book (see content p.27 for details). Every hill got a story is the first comprehensive history of Central Australia's Aboriginal people, as told in their own words and many languages.Nyinanyi ngurangka - being on country - is not a 'lifestyle choice' but a hard-won right, a spiritual and cultural duty, a constant battle, a source of happiness and opportunity and the meaning of life all at the same time.In this heartbreaking, funny and poignant collection, 127 eminent men and women remember surviving first contact, massacres and forced removals and resisting more than a century of top-down government policies. Their testimonies, some available as audio sound bites, paint an unflinchingly honest picture of life and work on the missions, cattle stations and fringes of towns. They speak eloquently of their struggle for self-determination and basic citizen rights. The storytellers also celebrate winning back ownership of more than 410,000 square kilometres of their ancestral lands.Key to this achievement, and deeply entwined with the lives of the storytellers and their families, is the Central Land Council. It is a Commonwealth statutory authority governed by 90 elected Aboriginal representatives. The CLC has protected the interests of Aboriginal people in the southern half of the Northern Territory since 1975 against ongoing threats to their rights. It supports them to manage their land and to use income from it to strengthen their communities and to achieve their social, cultural and economic aspirations.Through the CLC, the people and the land tell us of country where every hill got a story.For more information about the CLC and the oral history project that became Every hill got a story visit www.clc.org.au.
UR - https://catalogue.nla.gov.au/catalog/6897932
M3 - Other contribution
PB - Hardie Grant Publishing
ER -