- Raymattja Marika
Raymattja Marika (c. 1959 – 11 May 2008) was an
Australia nYolngu aboriginal leader,scholar ,educator ,translator ,linguist , grandmother and cultural advocate. She was a Director ofReconciliation Australia and a member of theAustralian Institute of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Studies . cite news |first=|last=|title=Tributes for Aboriginal leader|url=http://news.theage.com.au/national/tributes-for-aboriginal-leader-20080512-2dap.html leader|work=The Age |publisher= |date=2008-05-12 |accessdate=2008-05-17] She was also a director of theYothu Yindi Foundation and a participant in the2020 Summit , which was held in April 2008. cite news |first=|last=|title=Tributes for Aboriginal leader|url=http://news.theage.com.au/national/tributes-for-aboriginal-leader-20080512-2dap.html|work=The Australian |publisher= |date=2008-05-12 |accessdate=2008-05-17] Marika advocated understanding andreconciliation between Aboriginal and Western cultures.Marika was the eldest daughter of
Roy Marika , a prominent leader in theland rights campaign forAustralian Aborigines . cite news |first=|last=|title='Cultural bridge' Marika dies in Arnhem Land
url=http://www.abc.net.au/news/stories/2008/05/12/2241711.htm|work=ABC News (Australia) |publisher= |date=2008-05-12 |accessdate=2008-05-17] She was also the niece of painter andactor Wandjuk Marika (OBE ). [ [http://www.abc.net.au/dynasties/txt/s982928.htm "Wandjuk Marika"] ,Australian Broadcasting Corporation , December 1, 2003] She was born into theRirratjingu clan of theYolngu Indigenous Australians of theNorthern Territory ofAustralia . She lost a leg to cancer when she was young. She graduated and held degrees from theBatchelor Institute of Indigenous Tertiary Education andMelbourne University . Marika was a native ofYirrkala, Northern Territory inArnhem Land .Activism
Marika became a scholar, translator, linguist and cultural defender for the rights of
Indigenous Australians . Many of her writings appeared in nationwide and she lectured throughout Australia. She devoted her professional career to educations and worked to bridge the gap between Australia's aboriginal society's, especially her nativeYolngu , and the wider English-speakingmainstream society . She taught atCharles Darwin University in Darwin, which awarded her anhonorary doctorate .Marika was considered a leading expert of Yolngu
customs andlanguages in northeastArnhem Land , including the community ofYirrkala and theGove Peninsula . She was considered to be an expert in the inner workings and history of the Yolnguclan systems of Arnhem Land. Marika, herself, was a member of theRirratjingu clan of the Yolngu people. She also worked to preserve the traditional storytelling of the Yolngu, often comparing themorals andinsights of Yolngu traditions with ideas from theWestern world .Marika understood the pressures placed on the Yolngu's small language group, called
Yolŋu Matha , due tobauxite mining in the area, which commenced during the 20th century. She worked as a linguist to prevent the extinction of her people's indigenous languages. Pertaining to the languages of her own clan, Marika understood all fourteen languages of the Rirratjingu clan, and spoke three of these Rirratjingu languages fluently. She later helped to develop a traditional languagecurriculum for Yolngu children to preserve local languages.Marika also focused much of her attention on her native community of
Yirrkala . She co-founded theDhimurru Land Management Aboriginal Corporation , aland management group, in 1992 with her late husband, Mununggurritj, and remained the group's cultural adviser for many years.Raymattja Marika was awarded two awards for her work in 2006 by the
National Australia Day Council : the Territorian of the Year award and the Northern Territory's Australian of the Year Award. cite news |first=|last=|title=Northern Territory's Australian of the Year Award Recipients Announced|url=http://www.australianoftheyear.gov.au/pages/page276.asp|work=National Australia Day Council |publisher= |date=2006-11-23 |accessdate=2008-05-17]Death
Marika suddenly died in
Yirrkala in Northern Territory, while hunting with members of her family in the afternoon on Sunday,May 11 ,2008 . She was believed to have died from a suddenheart attack . She was just 49 years old when she died and was survived by her three children, whom she had with her late husband, Mununggurritj.Barbara Livesey, the current head of Reconciliation Australia, said that Marika had made massive contributions to Aboriginal affairs across the country, "While we know that she did much work in her community, at the national level she was just a tireless worker for
reconciliation and for building understanding between non-Indigenous people, Yolngu people and other Indigenous people."Syd Stirling , the MP forNhulunbuy in Northern Territory, also paid tribute to Marika saying, "She really was a bridge between the two cultures out here. Dr Marika endeared herself to all of us as amentor , reconciliation advocate, a passionate and giftededucator ,academic , interpreter, translator and a wonderful mother."Jenny Macklin , who is Australia's Minister for Indigenous Affairs, also called Marika the "embodiment of reconciliation."According to Yolngu cultural traditions, Marika can only be referred to by her last name following her death for cultural reasons. This is why those paying tribute to Marika did not use her full name.
References
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