Galiwin’ku Djakamirr Project
The Australian Doula College has always been an advocate for First Nations peoples and we felt that this was the time to build stronger relationships and foundations to ensure sustainable, thoughtful, and impactful outcomes for reconciliation. We are honoured to work with Reconciliation Australia and implement an Innovate Reconciliation Action Plan.
Our vision for reconciliation is an Australia that acknowledges Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples as the Traditional Custodians of this land and that First Nations people have equal care and access to culturally safe support and education through any of life’s transitions, while embracing First Nations cultures into care practices across the Country.
Hello Galiwin’ku!
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I have had a once in a lifetime experience.
One that forces you to see life though a different lens.
My eyes and ears have been exposed to a culture and languages I had never seen nor heard before, yet they have existed in the land I call home, for over 60 thousand years.
I had not anticipated being ignited in such a big way, having found myself in a world of mixed emotions, complex questions and unexpected responses every day, on what was to be a wild and grand adventure. The beauty, love and wisdom I experienced took my breath away.
Visiting Elcho Island, 550km north of Darwin, known to its traditional owners as Galiwin’ku, is a remote traditional First Nations community with restricted access. I was privileged to receive an invitation to head there for work.
The invitation was a surprise, a gift that came about 18months ago when I received a random phone call from the impressive Dr Sarah Ireland at Charles Darwin University. Sarah was undertaking an enormous, much needed research project called Caring for Mum on Country. Sarah and Associate Professor Lawurrpa Maypilama, a proud Yolgnu woman, had identified that Yolgnu women from East Arnhem land are losing their traditional birthing practices. So, what if, these were formally recorded and shared and the women became more empowered about their bodies and their current options and choices, or lack thereof?
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Combining ancient wisdom in YolÅ‹u Matha, meaning “YolÅ‹u tongue” with some new ideas and the modern birthing ways of the ‘Balanda’ (a white person), we could bring enormous possibilities.
Sarah, who has been researching and working with a variety of Indigenous tribes over an impressive and expansive career had discovered the ADC during her search for a Government Accredited Doula training. The plan was to formally train some of the local women to become Doulas by having them complete a unit of Accredited training. I was thrilled and jumped in without hesitation. Once all the formalities were sorted, myself and my daughter Ruby, who was joining me were 100% on board.
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Most people are unaware that Australia sends its First Nations pregnant women away from their homeland, to birth off Country. For them, this means being separated from loved ones, their culture, their language, their bush tucker, and all their usual comforts and supports. These beautiful and venerable women are forced to travel to a foreign place to give birth. Imagine that for yourself?
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For some women this can be from as early as four weeks pre-their babies estimated birth date. These divine women, once new mothers, would also have issues getting their babies back home as soon as possible, due to travel restrictions with a newborn.
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So finally, in November 2019 I hit the ground running being greeted by Sarah and Lawurrpa at the airport and heading straight to the Uni where we got to know each other a little better and completed a, dare I say loose time line on what our vision in Galiwin’ku might look like. Three days later we were on a small plane off to Galiwin’ku.
Setting eyes on what I was to learn is a broken yet resilient community for the first time, I found myself feeling as equally heartbroken as I was excited. The air was thick, hot and extremely humid and the dirt beneath my feet was red and fine.
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As we drove from the airport to our accommodation, I was pretty gobsmacked as I looked around and started to soak in the surrounds.
Houses were the strangest colours; the streets were full of garbage and many of the local people seemed to be walking around aimlessly without any purpose. The surrounding ocean was an inviting iridescent blue but there were many signs to remind you not to swim because of the baru (crocodile).
Where had we landed?
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We arrived at our accommodation and whist basic to say the least, we had a kitchen, a flushing toilet and for us ladies, a single bed each. Patrick, the projects official photographer, was to sleep on a mattress on the floor.
We got straight to work. Lawurrpa and Sarah wanted to ‘round’ up the women who had said they were interested in the training. Lawurrpa had been speaking with many of the local elder women in preparation for many months. English is not the first language in Galiwin’ku and I was to learn that amazingly, some of the women spoke up to 12 dialectics. I was to learn quite a lot of Yolgnu Matha but the women would often joke, that I had a lazy tongue.
We drove around in the troopie, our beaten-up old hire vehicle, for a couple of hours allowing Lawurrpa to speak with women in the community. The majority of the local community do not have phones, access to computers or email addresses, so communication is often challenging and was proving to be so.
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We had no expectations on how many women would come along for training and I had no idea about the local culture other than the crash course I had received. Sarah had the experience in that realm and of course Lawurrpa as a Yolgnu woman, so I was to learn. And fast!
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On the second day we were in Galiwin’ku I met the beautiful Guymun Dhamarrnydji. A strong, wise elder whose history of contribution to women in Galiwin’ku is outstanding. Guymun adopted myself and my family into the Djambarrpuynu tribe. Being adopted placed us in the kinship, a complex system that determines how people relate to each other, their responsibilities and obligations in relation to one another, ceremonial business and land. Traditional kinship structures remain important in most Indigenous communities today.
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I have got to say that as a white woman with no understanding of kindship at all, I struggled to work out how I related to everyone I was meeting, yet all the children I met knew exactly who I was and how to relate to me and what we should call each other in that relationship. Amazing! I was given the Aboriginal name Bulwunu, meaning west wind. In the kinship, Guymun is my yapa (sister)
Guymun contributed immensely to our time in Galiwin’ku.
What was incredible was that we had six of the elder women that joined us for the first weekend who wanted to work with us on the piolet and share their wisdom. Each contributing to the Yolngu traditional birthing practices and teaching me Yolngu Matha along the way. Sarah and I covered the modern birthing culture, options and choices and together we built a foundation based on trust and discovery.
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We came together as women, mothers, sisters and friends. The colour of our skin and history did not stop a collective wisdom that came from a shared contribution though stories and shared meals.
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The willingness to teach my daughter and I about Indigenous culture and secret women’s business actually took my breath away multiple times. The trust I was given was boundless. Many people never hear the stories I was privileged to listen too. Sitting in women’s circle, sharing our stories, listening in on each other’s dreams, hopes and visions. Amazing for all of us.
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I learnt so much from these thoughtful, bright, wise and insightful women. Women who have good reason to be angry at us white fellas. But all I experienced was love, laughter and an understanding that the Yolgnu women are screaming out for more support and education. We talked about the training and what was possible short and long term.
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Those women were to inject an incredible amount of themselves and their culture into this project. Next phase was to enlist as many of the young women as possible and then as a collective they could all complete the official Accredited unit.
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Amazingly, after driving around for hours that next day, we had 13 women in total committed to the training.
Over the next five days we worked together so the women could complete the necessary requirements to be deemed competent on the Cert IV Unit Promote Positive Birth Outcomes.
What a journey that was. Every day felt like a week had past with the learning curve being steeper than I had imagined for all of us.
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We become friends and confidants and we believed in the vision that the support of a Djakamirr (Doula) would make it difference for our First Nations women when they are pregnant and forced to birth off Country. The Yolgnu word Djakamirr means caretaker.
We celebrated each other and the triumph of these divine women completing an Accredited training with the delicacy of kangaroo tails, fish and vegetables cooked in an underground oven on the beach one night. Being a vegetarian, I’ll never forget picking up frozen kangaroo tails from the supermarket! Not my normal.
I promised myself from the get go, I would take this job on with an open heart and mind and that I would take it all in, no matter how it unfolded. Thing is, it unfolded in so many more amazing ways than I had anticipated.
It took me a long time to assimilate the combination of feelings I had coming home from Arnhem land and I honestly received more than I gave. I got to transcend into a world I never expected to visit. A visit I am incredibly grateful for. And one that has sparked my newest project.
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The Youtu Project.
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It is my intention to visit Galiwin’ku every year and to offer free training, information and support to this incredibly resilient yet struggling community.
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My dream is to see this rolled out to all First Nations Communities so all women, if not able to birth on Country, have a Djakamirr to escort them, inform them, love and support them.
Caring for Mum on Country is a participatory-action-research project working in collaboration with Yolŋu (Aboriginal) women in North East Arnhem Land in the Northern Territory, Australia. It is though this program that the ADC partnered with CDU to training local Yolŋu women to become Djakamirrs.
YOTHU Basket Project
Our First Nations birthing women and their babies need our support.
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Yothu is the Yolgnu word for baby. Yolngu (or YolÅ‹u) are Australian First Nations people who live in north-eastern Arnhem Land of Australia. Yolngu means “person” in the regions YolÅ‹u Matha languages. Yolngu culture is among the oldest living cultures on earth, stretching back more than 50,000 years.
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In March 2019, the Australian Doula College (ADC) was approached by Dr Sarah Ireland and Associate Professor Elaine Lawurrpa Maypilama from Charles Darwin University to take Accredited Doula Training to Galiwin’ku, a remote Aboriginal community in East Arnhem Land as part of a pilot training under their Caring for Mum on Country research program.
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ADC Founder and Director, Renee Adair, excited to collaborate, presented the Accredited unit: Promote Positive Birth Outcomes, 13 women started the program and 11 successfully completed the program in Nov/Dec 2019.
As women in remote First Nations communities are forced to birth off Country away from family, support, culture and language, the vision is that those trained, aptly named Djakamirrs’ (caretakers) will escort and support the pregnant women when birthing off Country.
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The time in Galiwin’ku deeply affected Renee. “Many of us want to understand the journey of our first nations people but we have no idea. We treat our Indigenous brothers and sisters like second class citizens and I was shocked to witness firsthand how we as a nation have degraded and disempowered the traditional owners of the land on which we live. The ADC is committed to continuing to provide much needed training and products for Yolgnu women and babies, and hope to do so for all our First Nations communities across Australia”. Renee Adair
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The Yothu Basket Initiative will supply basic newborn baby and new mother care products to Yolgnu mothers who do not have access or cannot afford what most of us take for granted. We are looking to supply 50 baskets a year to Galiwin’ku, as this is the average birth rate per year in that community. We then hope to replicate this project in all remote First Nations Communities across the Country.
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Please help us to gather these much-needed products. Please see below for a list of items. Please reach out via email using the button below, if you would like to offer assistance for this life changing project.
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For Baby:
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Wraps
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Baby blankets
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Onesies
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Baby clothes (new & secondhand, 00000-6 months)
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Wipes (bio degradable)
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Bath
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Baby Towel
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Nappy Rash Cream
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Face cloths
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Baby wash
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Nail clippers
For Mum:
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Nipple Cream
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Maternity Pads
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Body wash
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Moisturiser (face and body)
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Shampoo and conditioner
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Hair ties
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Hair brush
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Toothbrush and toothpaste