Bay of Martyrs at Great Ocean Road for Water H2O Thursday + REFLECTIONS IN WINDOWS

February 27, 2024  •  18 Comments

This post is participating City Daily Photo Theme Event - Reflections in Windows City Daily Photo Theme Gallery

This is linking Through my lens My Corner of the World Intelliblog Sunday Best FACE OFF

 

You are invited to the Inlinkz link party!

Click here to enter

Below is an article excerpt from The Age Newspaper: 

Chris Saunders, a young Gunditjmara man, stood with his feet washed by Portland Bay and asked for a short silence.

It was in acknowledgment of those who had gone, he said, their spirits transported far out across the bay to an island known to Indigenous people as Deen Maar, or Dhinmar, and to Europeans as Lady Julia Percy Island.

 

Plenty of spirits had taken leave from this very beach in Victoria’s far south-west.

Mr Saunders was standing on the land of his ancestors at a place called the Convincing Ground: the site of the first massacre in Victoria of Aboriginal people by Europeans.

An unknown number of Indigenous people were killed by whalers in 1833 or 1834 in a dispute about ownership of a beached whale.

The story was documented by Victoria’s Protector of Aborigines, George Augustus Robinson, after hearing of it in 1841 from one of the earliest white settlers in Portland, Edward Henty.

The whalers, Mr Henty had told him, had used their guns to “convince” the Aboriginal people that the whale was not theirs. By the time Mr Robinson heard the story, he recorded that just two young men from the entire clan that occupied the whaling ground remained alive.

But the truth lay ignored and covered up for more than a century and a half until modern historians turned their attention to it.

Knowledge of the atrocity, however, was passed down by the Gunditjmara, who fought development plans for the Convincing Ground in the 1990s and eventually gained traditional rights to the site.

Several years ago Mr Saunders, of nearby Heywood, began organising smoking ceremonies on the beach each January 26, a date he and his people call Invasion Day.

 

At first, only a handful of Indigenous people turned up.

But on Tuesday, almost 300 people attended – many of them from the local white population.

“At first, it was just family and elders,” Mr Saunders said.

“But now, it’s shifted to include the wider community, which we wanted to see all along.

“With things like this, with community discussions and so on, it shows the community’s mind is opening up.

“I don’t lecture or shove the stories at people. I’m asking people to do their own research to learn the truth.”

Rawleigh Cox said he had come to the ceremony to learn. He and his wife Emma had brought their two sons, Clayton, 11, and Mason, three, because they believed it was important that the next generation learn, too.

Mr Cox, who has spent all his life in the Portland district, said he had never been taught the Indigenous history, even though he was of Wurundjeri ancestry, and had never heard the dreaming story of Deen Maar before the smoking ceremony.

Earlier, a “secret” dawn ceremony was held at the beach for traditional owners.

Later in the morning, the Gunditjmara moved to Portland, where they held another smoking ceremony for the wider community at an area known as “the Ploughed Ground”.

The area is claimed to be the spot where the Henty family first ploughed the land, introducing farming to Victoria, and includes a memorial stone “in commemoration of the discovery of Portland Bay by Lt James Grant” in 1800.  Gunditjmarra Aboriginal site Budj Bim is considered one of the oldest aquaculture systems in the world. 

But Mr Saunders said it should also be acknowledged that the Gunditjmara had lived in the area for many thousands of years before Lieutenant Grant’s “discovery”, and not far out of town was evidence that his people had been farming long before the Hentys.

The Budj Bim landscape, about 40 kilometres north-east of Portland, is Australia’s latest UNESCO World Heritage site, chosen for its evidence of fish and eel farming dating back at least 6800 years – the world’s oldest aquaculture operation.

Bay of Martyrs, PeterboroughBay of Martyrs, Peterboroughdefault Bay of Martyrs, PeterboroughBay of Martyrs, Peterboroughdefault Bay of Martyrs, PeterboroughBay of Martyrs, Peterboroughdefault

Bay of Martyrs, PeterboroughBay of Martyrs, Peterboroughdefault Bay of Martyrs, PeterboroughBay of Martyrs, Peterborough Bay of Martyrs, PeterboroughBay of Martyrs, Peterboroughdefault Bay of Martyrs, PeterboroughBay of Martyrs, Peterborough Bay of Martyrs, PeterboroughBay of Martyrs, Peterborough Bay of Martyrs, PeterboroughBay of Martyrs, Peterborough

Bay of Martyrs, PeterboroughBay of Martyrs, Peterborough Bay of Martyrs, PeterboroughBay of Martyrs, Peterborough Bay of Martyrs, PeterboroughBay of Martyrs, Peterborough Bay of Martyrs, PeterboroughBay of Martyrs, Peterborough

 

 

Reflections in Windows series

Reflections in Windows Theme DayReflections in Windows Theme Day
It must be an awkward moment 

Reflections in Windows Theme DayReflections in Windows Theme Day No edit. Just pure luck getting this shot.

Reflections in Windows Theme DayReflections in Windows Theme Day

The pasta is great there 

Reflections in Windows Theme DayReflections in Windows Theme Day Reflections in Windows Theme DayReflections in Windows Theme Day

Reflections in Windows Theme DayReflections in Windows Theme Day Reflections in Windows Theme DayReflections in Windows Theme Day

My entry for Reflections in Windows this month! 

 

 


Comments

NixPixMix(non-registered)
Amazing photos! I especially love all of your reflections in windows shots, James. Thanks for taking part in the "My Sunday Best" meme.
Mari(non-registered)
That was a sad story of history. I'm glad many people are now taking part in the memorial.
Your reflection shots are fun!
Michelle Keltner(non-registered)
I like the window shots. Great captures of everyday life. Thank you for linking up.
Esmé Slabbert(non-registered)
Thanks so much for participating and sharing at SSPS 300. See you again next week! Please do not forget to come and join us at #17 InLinkz #WordlessWednesday (Words are also welcome).
Sandee @ CP(non-registered)
Thank you for joining the Wordless Wednesday Blog Hop.

Have a fabulous Wordless Wednesday. ☺
No comments posted.
Loading...
Subscribe
RSS
Archive