The Australian Women's Weekly

INSPIRATIO­N: celebratin­g Aussie women of the land

From the red-earth outback to leafy paddocks on the edge of town, The Weekly travels this vast continent to celebrate the strength and courage of Aussie women who live and work on the land. Words by Samantha Trenoweth and Ingrid Pyne.

-

FOR LOVE AND COUNTRY

Keelen Mailman sits on her veranda, watching the sun set behind the vast plains and rocky outcrops of Mount Tabor Station, or Goorathunt­ha in the local Bidjara language that her mum treasured and taught her. “I love the late afternoons,” she says with that deep, warm, Queensland accent. “The sun’s not as harsh, you’ve got through your hard day, you’re coming towards the dark and you just sit out on the veranda having a cuppa and a smoke and a wind-down, thinking about your kids [she has three] and your grannies [her seven grandchild­ren] and your work. That’s my time that I really love.”

Keelen’s family has cared for this land for generation­s, and for the past 24 years, it’s been her turn. As a single mother, at just 30, she became the first Aboriginal woman to manage a commercial cattle station when she was employed first by the Indigenous Land Corporatio­n and then by the local Goorathunt­ha Traditiona­l Owners, once she’d secured the title to their land.

Those early days, out here on 90,000 hectares in outback Queensland with a salary pegged well below the poverty line and just her children for company, were some of the toughest she’s known. And Keelen’s known tough times. She grew up, a couple of hours from here, in an Aboriginal camp on the edge of town, where she survived poverty, racism, abuse, and helped care for her siblings after their mother’s stroke.

But there’s a lot she’s grateful for in her childhood, too.

“The greatest gift my mum gave me was life,” she says, “and then the handing down of cultural knowledge and language. She always taught us that the most important thing was to learn your culture, learn your land and where you come from. And if you were going to talk language, to pronounce it properly or don’t do it at all. She also taught us how to survive off the land in case we ever got lost or got into a jam.” Knowledge that came in handy in those early years on the station.

Keelen has earned a Barnardos Mother of the Year

Award for raising her own three children (Allan, Chris and Charlee) and then her five nieces, when her sister fell on hard times. Now, she wants to care for others with a healing centre for young Indigenous people who are struggling in the justice system.

She has also written a book (The Power of Bones), been a finalist in the Australian of the Year Awards and become a Member of the Order of Australia. But most important to her is the respect she’s earned from family and community while caring for country and bringing her ancestors home. Keelen has gone to extraordin­ary lengths to find the bones of the Bidjara (in museums and individual collection­s) and return them to country.

And those ancestors keep an eye out for her in return. “A lot of people say, ‘Don’t you get frightened out there by yourself?’” she chuckles. “I say, ‘No, I don’t. I’ve got thousands of my ancestors protecting me.’”

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Australia