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Article: Youth Camps in big demand

NPY aboriginal youth

Youth Camps in big demand

Youth Camps are in big demand from both young people and adults in remote communities. The camps connect people with land, culture and new skills. Recently, a young mans camp was run at a site near the Umutju road. This road was a major migration track for thousands of years across the Peterman Ranges running near important waterholes and sites.

aboriginal youth

Ranger Visit

The Mutitjulu Community Rangers are Anangu that work for Uluru-Kata Tjuta National Park. They carry out seasonal land and fire management activities, patch burning, fauna surveys and park facilities maintenance. The Rangers took the guys out to a special site that needed caring for. A nearby waterhole clogged by years of dirt was causing local animals to perish in great numbers. The guys worked hard at cleaning out the waterhole and were also taught how to burn buffel grass safely.

Dan the Underdog

Musician, Dan the Underdog spent the evenings with the guys working on some tracks– listen here to one of their recorded tracks. A beautiful love song! https://qrco.de/bbrJvb

npywc youth service

The camps also included men’s health, AFL clinics with NT AFL & more!

Find out more about the Youth Service

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tjanpi weavers aboriginal art
Tjanpi Desert Weavers

Making the road to Warburton - Judith Chambers

The “Making the Warakurna to Warburton road” story

There was only one road from Warakurna to Warburton and it was a big distance, going the long way around, passing through Blackstone. So there was a community talk, and people wanted a road running straight from Warakurna to Warburton, to make that trip shorter.

Lots of families from Warakurna and Warburton came to help make the road, men, women, children and dogs. My dad was one of those men. I was just a young girl. We started at Warburton. The men made the cutline, chopping down trees by hand with axes, and clearing grass. The women made the fire and prepared food and looked after the camp. While the adults worked we would have fun. There were lots of children and dogs running around playing together. A white man came and paid money for the work done. We all stayed out on the road until that road was finished.

Two brothers drove the tractor, taking it in turns. The tractor had a trailer which stored food, 44 gallon drums of diesel, and blankets. We would get lovely clean water from rockholes. Sometimes we would get in the trailer and play. Each day the men would clear a bit more of the road, and we would move on and camp somewhere else, getting closer and closer to Warakurna every day.

judith chambers tjanpi aboriginal art

The Artwork

Judith was commissioned by the Art Gallery of Western Australia (AGWA) Stimulus Acquisition Package 2020 to tell this story as a tjanpi sculpture. Titled ‘Making the Warakurna to Warburton Road’ The sculpture was purchased by AGWA, and will be exhibited at the AGWA Covid 19 Stimulus Art Exhibition scheduled for early May 2021.

tjanpi aboriginal art

About Judith

Judith was born in the bush at Mitika, near Jameson Community and went to school at the Warburton Mission and later at Docker River. Judith now lives in the remote community of Warakurna, WA.

Judith is an accomplished weaver, making both baskets and fibre sculptures from desert grasses that grow close to her home. Judith is renowned for her flat sculptural works which tell stories of the Ngaanyatjarra Lands, both historical and contemporary; she also uses the animals from her country as inspiration, including camp dogs, birds, goannas, porcupines and rabbits. Ancestral figures also inspire her work, and Judith’s work is very fine and detailed. Judith also paints and is represented by Warakurna Artists.

Find out more about Tjanpi Desert Weavers

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aboriginal health nutrition
Child & Family Wellbeing

Anangu researchers give nutrition study real meaning

Anangu nutrition staff are preparing to head an important new study investigating food security in the APY lands. Their central role as co-researchers will grow greater community engagement, relevant interpretation and greater outcomes for community members. The research is a joint initiative between NPYWC, University of QLD & Menzies School of Health Research.

The aim of the research is to improve nutrition and food security in the APY region through an analysis of people’s buying habits and the development of culturally appropriate nutrition education and promotion resources.

The project hopes the research will lead to the following outcomes:

  • evidence to inform policy and systems change, based on feedback from research looking at availability, affordability and accessibility of healthy foods in community stores
  • Development of co-designed priority nutrition education and promotion activities for APY communities
  • Increased engagement between NPYWC and Mai Wiru Regional Stores
  • Community-relevant knowledge translation products
  • Peer reviewed publications

Anangu Co-Researchers will undertake training in privacy and confidentiality, conducting surveys and understanding and interpreting data.

Find out more about NPYWC’s Child & Family Wellbeing Service

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