Transcript Slide 1

Aboriginal Spirituality
Definitions
• Aboriginal
– original or earliest known; native; indigenous
– May also refer to a group of people
• Native
– of, pertaining to, or characteristic of the indigenous
inhabitants of a place or country
• Indigenous
– originating in and characteristic of a particular region or
country
Aboriginal Spirituality
• Though there is a wide variety of religious
practice among the many different and
culturally diverse indigenous groups around
the world, there are some basic themes and
characteristics of religion are shared
Aboriginal Religious Traditions
• No distinction between religion and their traditional
way of life
• Strong sense of the sacred in various forms
– Spirits, gods, ancestors, supreme impersonal power
• Influenced by their methods of acquiring food
• Rituals revolve around promoting, preserving and
being one with their environment
– Fertility
• Indigenous groups divided into three main cultural
types according to this…
Hunters and Gatherers
• Ancestors of all humans from beginning of our history until
agricultural revolution
– Gatherers
– Small game hunters
– Big game herd hunters
– Fishers
• Religious ideas focus on sacred powers of:
– the sky
– Gods associated with the life power of animals
Inuit
Australian
Aborigines
Planters
• Those groups who cultivate the earth to raise food
– Root plants – yam / potato
• (Maori)
– Cereal and grains – wheat / rice / maize
• (Native Americans)
• Religious ideas focus on sacred powers of:
– Mother earth as a life producing source
– Gods associated with the life power of vegetation
• Planting and harvesting rituals
Maori – New Zealand
Aztecs
Pastoralists or Herders
• Those who raise their own cattle, sheep, goats or camels
– Nomadic – moving with their herds among pasturelands
– Domestication of animals occurred as early as agriculture
• Religious ideas focus on sacred powers of:
– Sky gods
– Gods associated with the life power of large groups of animals
– Rituals of sacrifice
Dinka
Maasai
Central Themes
Animism
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The attribution of a living soul to all natural objects
All things have a soul - both human and nonhuman
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Plant, animal, inanimate objects and natural phenomenon
No separation of body and soul
Pantheistic in nature
believe they are connected and are one with the
supernatural
Supreme being permeates everything
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Power is given over to less powerful beings – ie: spirits
Dual Divinity
Supreme being has 2 roles:
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Creator - responsible for the creation of the world
recognized in religious ritual and prayers
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Mythical individual, a hero or trickster - teaches
culture, proper behaviour and provides sustenance
to the tribe
Creation Stories
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Similar to other religions
• Help to answer questions of beginning, existence
Why we are here?
– Oral tradition provides an account of each group's
origins, history, spirituality, lessons of morality, and
life skills
Sacred Knowledge
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Some tribes have complex forms of writing
Most tribes have preserved their spiritual beliefs as an oral
tradition
Culture, prayer and tradition passed down this way
Oracy – ability to communicate (speak, listen and
understand) through language
Effort is being made to record Aboriginal stories
Totems
– Physical link to ancestors
– Protective in nature, act as guides
– Often identify with an animal or mythological
being
– A totem can be the symbol of a tribe, clan,
family or individual
– Totem animal is with you for life, both in the
physical and spiritual world
– Individual is connected with nine different
animals accompanies each person through life
Totems
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=648gwElcPzU
Totem Assignment
• Consider the characteristics and meaning of the Totemic animals on
the back page to create a totem pole / symbol signifying who you
are as a person.
• Native belief holds that 9 different animals guide you through life but
for this assignment choose only 5.
• Write a brief paragraph at the bottom of the page describing your
totem and outlining why you chose those particular animals.
Evaluation:
• T 5 Marks - Text
– Clarity and originality of statement
• A
5 Marks - Illustrations/Visuals
– Varied, effective & meaningful
• C
5 Marks - Writing Mechanics/Neatness
– Spelling & grammar / visual clarity & colour
• Total
15 Marks
Some questions to ask yourself to help determine your animal totem:
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Have you ever felt drawn to one animal or another without being able to explain why?
(animal, including birds and insects)
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Does a certain kind of animal consistently appear in your life? This doesn’t
necessarily have to be a physical appearance, it could be represented in other ways
such as receiving card and letters with the same animal pictured over and over,
unexplainable dreams of a particular animal, watching television and seeing the same
animal featured time and time again, or, actually having the animal show up.
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When you go to the zoo, a park, wildlife area, or forest, what are you most interested
in seeing?
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Are there any animals that you find to be extremely frightening or intriguing?
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Is there a particular animal that you see frequently when you’re out in nature?
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Have you ever been bitten or attacked by an animal?
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Have you ever had a recurring dream about a certain animal, or a dream from
childhood that you have never been able to forget?
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Are you drawn to figurines or paintings of a specific animal?
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The totem itself is a symbol that represents this animal. This could be any number of
items - a crest, a totem pole, an emblem, a small figurine or anything else that depicts
your animal guide.
What is the Dreaming or Dreamtime?
“The Dreaming means our identity as people.
The cultural teaching and everything, that's
part of our lives here, you know. it's the
understanding of what we have around us.”
Merv Penrith - Elder, Wallaga Lake, 1996
Dreamtime
Dreamtime
Network of knowledge, faith and practices that come
from creation, and that dominates all spiritual and
physical aspects of Aboriginal life.
1. Human World
Body of Knowledge
Structures of society, rules for social behaviour
and the ceremonies performed in order to
maintain the life of the land
Governed the way people lived and how they
should behave
2. Physical World
Identity
with relation to land, animals and sky
Refer to where they came from or inhabited
Identified with places and how they came to be at
that location
ie Kangaroo Dreaming, or Shark Dreaming
3. Sacred World
Creation Time
Stories describe the time when the earth and
humans and animals were created
During the Dreaming, ancestral spirits came to
earth and created the landforms, the animals
and plants
Law of the land
Songlines or Dreaming tracks
Complex pathways of spiritual, ecological, cultural and
ontological knowledge across the land or sky
Often mapped the presence and routes followed by a
local 'creator-spirit' during the Dreamtime
Aborigines can navigate across the land by singing
The songlines describe the location of landmarks
and other natural phenomena off their land
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3c8LWX3vHKw
Seven Sisters Songline, by
Josephine Mick, Pipalyatjara, 1994.
Songlines or
Dreaming
tracks
Dreaming tracks crossing the
northern end of the Canning
Stock Route.
Rabbit Proof Fence
• Directed by: Phillip Noyce
• Written by: Doris Pilkington
Garimara
• Characters:
(Cast)
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Molly Craig: (Everlyn Sampi)
Gracie Fields: (Laura Monaghan)
Daisy Craig: (Tianna Sansbury)
A.O. Neville: (Kenneth Branagh)
Moodoo:
(David Gulpilil)
Historical Context
White settlers arrive in Australia
– interaction of two vastly different cultures with
different attitudes to the land made conflict inevitable
– By mid-19th century, European pastoralists and
settlers had moved into Aboriginal lands
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interrupted traditional hunting and gathering
depleted natural resources and grasslands
polluted waterways
damaged sacred sites
Historical Context
• Introduced European diseases
– smallpox and the common cold decimated Indigenous
populations
• Alcohol and money undermined traditional ways
• Europeans challenged structure of Aboriginal traditional
society
– authority of tribal elders was broken down
• By the 1930s, when the story of Rabbit-Proof Fence is
set, many communities had become reliant on
government handouts for food, clothing and other
necessities, since their traditional ways of life had been
eroded over time
Rabbit Proof Fence
- True Story
- 9 weeks - 2,400 km
- Terms
- Half-caste
- Stolen Generation
‘Half-caste’
• term used to describe people of mixed race or ethnicity
• In Australia, historically used to describe the offspring of
White colonists and the Aboriginal natives of the
continent
• Half Caste Act - Australian government could seize such
children in order to provide them with better homes and
life than those afforded typical Aborigines
– Official government ‘assimilationist’ policy – that took
‘half caste’ children from their kin and their land, in
order to be ‘made white’
‘Stolen Generation’
• Australian Aboriginal children who were forcibly removed
from their parents by various state governments
– Residential schools in Canada
• These children were trained to be domestic servants
(girls) and station workers (boys)
• Many of them never saw their parents again
Map of the Story
Rabbit Proof Fence
Assignment
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How can Aboriginal people of Australia heal
from the atrocity of forcible removal from their
homes and loved ones and cruel treatment at
the hands of those with power? How can
aboriginal society as a whole recover from
this?
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Choose one theme of Aboriginal spirituality
and explain how it is presented in the film.