The Gurindji peoples' land struggles with the Australian government began in 1883 when pastoralist Nathaniel Buchanan was granted 3000 square kilometres of Gurindji country. Aboriginal people were intrinsic to the expansion of pastoral activities in Northern Australia, often being exploited for cheap or even free labour. In 1914 the Buchanan family sold Wave Hill to the Vestey Brothers, an international meat packing company.
From 1913 legislation in the Northern Territory required Aboriginal workers to be compensated for work in tea, coffee, tobacco, food, and clothes (National Museum of Australia, 2020). However, a report by anthropologists in 1946 highlighted that many children were working illegally, accommodation and rations were poor, women were sexually abused, and there was no safe drinking water - amongst many other complaints (National Museum of Australia 2020). In 1959 Aboriginal peoples' wages were still up to 50% lower than European workers on the same stations, and some employers still refused to pay Aboriginal workers wages. In 1965, the North Australian Workers Union opposed this discrimination and proposed that discriminatory references in the pastoral award be deleted. Opposition from pastoralists delayed the proposed increase in wages for Aboriginal workers. Heated discussions between the Gurindji community and authorities began, with no progress toward equal pay and better conditions being made throughout 1966. This unrest led to the Gurindji community, led by Vincent Lingiari, walking off the station in August 1966. Consultations continued but no agreement was made and the workers remained off-site. In April 1967 the Gurindji people moved their camp to Daguragu (Wattie Creek) and drafted a petition to the Governor-General proposing a land lease be granted around Daguragu to be run cooperatively by the Gurindji people. This petition was unsuccessful. The Gurindji people remained at Daguragu and for the next seven years negotiations continued without resolution. In 1972, the Whitlam Labour government came into power, with an election promise to prioritise Indigenous land rights. In 1973 the original Wave Hill lease was surrendered and two separate leases were issued to the Murramulla Gurindji Company and the Vestey Brothers. The Prime Minister, Gough Whitlam, met Vincent Lingiari in 1975 on Gurindji country and ceremoniously poured sand through Lingiari's hands to represent the return of lands to the Traditional Owners. |