China Daily

Sacred ground

Tourists may be prohibited from visiting native Australian sites

- By KARL WILSON in Sydney karlwilson@chinadaily­apac.com

Indigenous activists and traditiona­l owners of Australian land, encouraged by the recent closure of Uluru rock to tourists, are calling for similar bans on more sites considered “home” or sacred by indigenous people.

Among a growing list of places Australia’s indigenous people want closed are popular walking sites such as Mount Warning in northern New South Wales, Mount Beerwah in the iconic Glass House Mountains on Queensland’s Sunshine Coast and St. Mary Peak in the Flinders Ranges in South Australia.

The climbing ban on Uluru, also known as Ayers Rock, took effect on Oct 26. In its wake there have been renewed calls by the local indigenous people to close access to Mount Warning.

Mount Warning in the Tweed Range, also known to the local aboriginal community as Wollumbin, attracts an estimated 100,000 visitors annually. But to the traditiona­l owners, the Bundjalung people, it has been a sacred site for thousands of years.

A spokespers­on for the Tweed Shire Council said: “There have been a number of calls over the years to close Mount Warning to walkers, but nothing has ever come from it. … I expect now we will probably see a greater effort on the back of the Uluru closure to follow suit.”

In South Australia, visitors to the Flinders Ranges, 200 kilometers north of Adelaide, are being asked by the traditiona­l owners not to climb St. Mary Peak.

St. Mary Peak is central to the local Adnyamatha­nha people’s creation story, which involves two serpents entwined to form a huge natural amphitheat­er in the foothills of the ranges where rock art can be traced back 5,000 years.

“All we want to do is to stop people walking up the peak. You get the same views of the area from other places,” Adnyamatha­nha Traditiona­l Landowners Associatio­n chairman Michael Anderson told China Daily.

“We would rather educate people about the importance of the site, rather than ban them altogether.”

From midnight on Oct 25, the climbing track on Uluru was officially closed — something the Anangu, the original occupants of the area, had long advocated.

A new sign was erected at the base of the rock to inform visitors of the new policy. It read “This is our home” and “Please don’t climb”.

The Anangu people celebrated the closure at the base of the rock to signify to new visitors that it was no longer available or lawful. The ban was a contentiou­s issue, winning global headlines.

‘Delicate balancing act’

Professor Jakelin Troy, director of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Research at the University of Sydney, said walking on Uluru was “disrespect­ful” to the “country” of the Anangu people.

“In disrespect­ing country, we disrespect its people,” said Troy, who is an aboriginal Australian himself.

“This is exactly the same reason why people are not allowed to walk on places that are sacred and highly respected in all cultures,” he said.

Freya Higgins-Desbiolles, a senior lecturer in tourism management at the University of South Australia, said: “As a non-indigenous person, it is incredibly important for us to understand just how important sites like Uluru are to the Anangu people.

“Aboriginal people in this country today have a voice and they are using that voice to have their sacred sites respected.”

In March, the Victorian state government announced a climbing ban in much of the Grampians National Park, west of Melbourne.

Covering more than 165,000 hectares, the park is home to around 90 percent of southeaste­rn Australia’s aboriginal rock art. But over the years it has also become a popular rock-climbing area, not only for locals but also internatio­nal climbers.

The government took the decision following complaints from indigenous elders that climbers were causing environmen­tal and cultural damage.

They said many climbers ignored marked tracks, cut their own paths to climbing sites, defaced rock walls with climbing bolts, covered rock paintings with climbing chalk, and even defecated in sacred areas.

“It is a very delicate balancing act,” a spokespers­on for Parks Victoria told China Daily.

“It’s not just cultural sites that need protecting, but plant and animal life as well. At the same time, the Grampians have become popular for climbing — some of the best in the world.”

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 ?? LUKAS COCH / EPA ?? Uluru, also known as Ayers Rock, is seen just before sunrise at Uluru-Kata Tjuta National Park in the Northern Territory, Australia, on Oct 26.
LUKAS COCH / EPA Uluru, also known as Ayers Rock, is seen just before sunrise at Uluru-Kata Tjuta National Park in the Northern Territory, Australia, on Oct 26.
 ?? KYODO NEWS AGENCY ?? A sign announcing the end to climbing Uluru is erected at the base of the iconic Australian monolith previously known as Ayers Rock, on Oct 25.
KYODO NEWS AGENCY A sign announcing the end to climbing Uluru is erected at the base of the iconic Australian monolith previously known as Ayers Rock, on Oct 25.

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