Waddananggu

Wangan and Jagalingou man Coedie McAvoy
Published
November 10, 2021
October 28, 2022
Last Updated
October 26, 2022
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Gemma Pol
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Wiradyuri, Ngemba and Paakantji
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Wiradyuri, Ngemba and Paakantji
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Shaun Allen
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Waddanganggu means ‘the talking’ in Wirdi language. It is a ceremony on Wangan and Jagalingou Country in the Galilee Basin, Central Queensland. 

On 26 August 2021, Wangan and Jagalingou people set up a stone Bora ring and ceremonial ground opposite Adani’s Carmichael Mine. Since then, at least one Wangan and Jagalingou person has been inside the Bora ring, ensuring the sacred fire continues. Wangan and Jagalingou people are asserting their human rights as Traditional Owners to practice culture on Country.

Wangan and Jagalingou man, Coedie McAvoy, is inviting all sovereign First Nations people and allies to join him on his Country for Waddananggu.

W&J STANDING OUR GROUND

W&J Standing Our Ground is a group of self-determined Wangan and Jagalingou Traditional Owners who maintain a constant presence on Country to care for and protect their sacred lands and waters. They are fulfilling their cultural obligations as Wangan and Jagalingou people. They are safeguarding the future of their Dreaming stories.

W&J Standing Our Ground has been resisting Adani for over a decade. Adani is an Indian energy and mining company. They’re building the largest coal mine in this continent’s history (and one of the largest in the world) without the consent of Traditional Owners. Adani’s Carmichael Mine harms Wangan and Jagalingou Dreaming, destroys Country and sacred sites, and disregards First Law

Wangan and Jagalingou Country, near Adani's Carmichael Mine

DOONGMABULLA SPRINGS

The Doongmabulla Springs are sacred to Wangan and Jagalingou people. The Springs are also a one-of-a-kind ecosystem — a desert Country oasis. All thanks to an age-old freshwater source, emerging from deep ground. 

The exact water source of the complex springs system is still unknown. According to this ABC article, two Federal Government groundwater studies have been conducted since Adani received Commonwealth environmental approval in 2014. Both were unable to identify which underground aquifer fed the system, and Adani aren’t conducting further research. 

Adani plans to extract billions of litres of groundwater for their Carmichael Mine, and they’ve already started. The Doongmabulla Springs depend on groundwater, and not knowing the source means they are at extreme risk.

These springs have been running since the dawn of time. They are one of the most unique spring systems in Queensland, if not Australia. There is a Waxy Cabbage Palm tree that is endemic to that area that it doesn't grow anywhere else in the world.
— Wangan and Jagalingou man Coedie McAvoy

The Springs are central to Wangan and Jagalingou Dreaming. Mundangarra (the Rainbow Serpent) shaped the mountains and rivers, and created the animals and ecosystems. Coedie says Doongmabulla is Mundangarra’s final resting place — “his entrance place into underground.”

Sacred Country near Doongmabulla Springs

CLIMATE JUSTICE

Climate change affects us all, but the impacts are not evenly distributed. Low-income earners, migrant communities, women, young people and First Nations peoples are the most affected by climate change.

Amelia Telford is a Bundjalung and South Sea Islander woman and the National Director of Seed Mob. In the context of what we now call Australia, Amelia says First Nations people are impacted first and worst. “We’ve contributed the least to the causes of climate change, yet are the ones facing the most severe consequences,” she says.

First Nations communities are quite literally on the frontlines. Mining leases and exploration licenses for oil and gas are often granted on land legally owned by First Nations people through land rights legislation, or native title land.

We need to start centering land rights over mining rights if we want to tackle climate change. First Nations people have cared for Country sustainably since time immemorial. We have accumulated a wealth of knowledge and as Amelia says, “it’s time for First Nations people to take the lead.”

Wangan and Jagalingou warrior, Nathan Baira

CALL TO ACTION

No one knows Wangan and Jagalingou Country like Wangan and Jagalingou people. It’s time to back Traditional Owners so they can protect their Dreaming and regenerate their Country. 

You've been invited to stand with Wangan and Jagalingou people and take part in Waddananggu. Click here to read the information pack and get directions to the ceremony ground. 

If you’re not able to make it, that’s okay! You can support by donating or helping to spread the word on social media.

Donations go towards:

  • Monitoring of damage and destruction of Country, helping to expose and prosecute Adani’s environmental and cultural heritage breaches.
  • The essentials needed to maintain a permanent presence on Country – like vehicles, shelter, and infrastructure – which were recently damaged by flooding.
  • Support for Wangan and Jagalingou people to travel to and camp on Country, fulfilling their cultural responsibility to protect land, water, people, history and totems.
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