Ngaanyatjarra
Template:Short description Template:Use dmy dates Template:Use Australian English Template:Short description Script error: No such module "infobox".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". The Ngaanyatjarra, also known (along with the Pini) as the Nana,Template:Efn are an Indigenous Australian cultural group of Western Australia. They are located in the Goldfields-Esperance region, as well as Northern Territory.
Language
Ngaanyatjarra is a Western Desert language belonging to the Wati branch of the Pama-Nyungan languages.Template:Sfn Ngaatjatjarra is mutually intelligible with Ngaanyatjarra, and both are treated as dialects of the one language.Template:Sfn
Ngaanya literally means "this" (that is, the demonstrative pronoun) and -tjarra means "with/having" (the comitative suffix); the compound term means "those that use 'ngaanya' to say 'this'". The neighbouring Ngaatjatjarra use ngaatja for "this". Many Ngaanyatjarra are multilingual, not only speaking English but also a number of other dialects in the area.Template:Sfn
Country
Ngaanyatjarra lands cover roughly 3% of the Australian landscape,Template:Sfn a territory as large as that of the United Kingdom. Predominantly desert, they lie Script error: No such module "convert". away from the two nearest towns of Alice Springs and Kalgoorlie.Template:Sfn The neighbouring tribes are the Martu and the Pitjantjatjara.Template:Sfn They extend through parts of the North Western and Little Great and Little Sandy Deserts, the southeast Gascoyne region, the Gibson Desert, the Central Central Great Victoria Desert and the Western Central Ranges.Template:Sfn
Local government
Script error: No such module "Labelled list hatnote". The Shire of Ngaanyatjarraku covers Script error: No such module "convert"., and the Shire council is the local government authority responsible for the provision of services to the communities.Template:Sfn The associated Ngaanyatjarra Council operates various services for the communities.
There are 10 small local centres within the Ngaanyatyarra Lands:Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn
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Kiwirrkurra and Yilka (Cosmo Newbery) lie outside the Lands, but are served by the Shire.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn
Time zones
On July 1 2024, the Ngaanyatjarra Lands standardised on Australian Western Standard Time (AWST).Template:Sfn Previously the lands operated on two time zones: Yilka/Cosmo, Mantamaru/Jameson, Patjarr, Tjirrkarli, Wanarn and Warburton used AWST, while Blackstone, Kiwirrkurra, Tjukurla, Warakurna, and Irrunytju/Wingellina were on Australian Central Standard Time.Template:Sfn
People and society
The area inhabited by the Ngaanyatjarra people (yarnangu)Template:Sfn has a record of human habitation going back some 10,000 years.Template:Sfn In traditional society, the Ngaanyatjarra comprised numerous bands, usually constituted by a group of a dozen people. Males only reached marriageable age at around 30, after a thorough training and graduation through a complex initiatory system, that transformed tjilku (male children) into wati (men).Template:Sfn Passage to this status was marked by the right to wear a red headband, though as post-initiates (tjawarratja) they were still required to dwell apart from the main camp as elders continued to instruct them. Learning the lore required that the initiates had to supply their elders with foodstuffs like meat, a scarce resource in the area. In this sense, the tjukurrpa system also functioned as a cross-generational mode of exacting obedience and an income from the younger men.Template:Sfn Females entered into wedlock just after the onset of puberty.Template:Sfn Ceremonial induction consisted of learning to absorb the complex details of tjukurrpa, namely the lore/law of the dreamtime.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn The process is graded so that full knowledge only comes after 50 the normal age after which one can begin gain recognition as a wati yirna or tjilpi, a thoroughly knowledgeable elder, though even 60-year-olds can still be denied that recognition.Template:Sfn
The Ngaanyatjarra had a moiety system divided into sun-side (Tjirntulukultul(pa)) and shade-side (Ngumpalurrungkatja), with a 6 section classification.Template:Sfn
Sun-side
- Tjarurru men have Purungu children as the offspring of marriage to either Panaka or Yiparrka women
- Panaka men marry only Tjarurru women, producing Karimarra offspring
- Yiparrka men marrying a Tjarurru women have Milangka offspring
Shade-side
- Purungu men have Tjarurru through marriage to either Karimarra or Milangka women.
- Karimarra men only marry Purungu women to have Panaka children
- Milangka men marry Purungu women and produce Yiparrka children.Template:Sfn
Estimates of the number of Ngaanyatjarra range from 1,600,Template:Sfn referring to permanent residents and 2,700, including a more mobile people of Ngaanyatjarra descent,Template:Sfn who often visit the area.Template:Sfn Though life is generally peaceful, the adaptation to modern society has produced considerable trauma and alienation, as the genealogical continuity of family structures has suffered disruption from numerous accidents or family violence, including sexual abuse and assault, and suicide.Template:Sfn The area is "dry" meaning that the destructive effects of excessive alcoholic consumption are not in evidence throughout their communities, and longevity has been a characteristic of the people.Template:Sfn However, incarceration rates, predominantly for offences of sexual or domestic violence or reckless driving, are high, 14 times higher than the non-indigenous rate. Ngaanyatjarra councils have lobbied, with some success, to get more police stationed in their areas to address the problem.Template:Sfn
History of contact
Until the establishment of the Warburton Mission in 1934 there had been no external agency established on their lands.Template:Sfn Until the 1960s, contact with the outside world had been sparse and relatively benign, with none of the disruption of displacement from their traditional terrain typically suffered by Aborigines generally.Template:Sfn The mission sowed the seeds of Christian culture which continues to this day, particularly in the form of charismatic evangelism.Template:Sfn
Native title
The Ngaanyatjarra made a claim to native title, and on 29 June 2005 their lands were the subject of the largest native title determination in Australian history, according to Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Social Justice Commissioner Tom Calma,Template:Sfn when a Federal Court hearing presided by Justice Michael Black ruled on the claim to Script error: No such module "convert". in Western Australia.Template:Sfn
People
- Tjapartji Kanytjuri Bates (c.Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".1933–2015), artist
See also
Notes
Citations
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Sources
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External links
General information on the region:
Arts Organisations Websites:
- Wilurarra Creative website
- Warakurna Artists website
- Papulankutja Artists website
- Kayili Artists website
- Tjarlirli Art website
- Tjanpi Desert Weavers website
Template:Aboriginal peoples of Western Australia Template:Aboriginal peoples of the Northern Territory Template:Aboriginal South Australians Template:Authority control