Q&A Week 4: Aren’t Aboriginal languages very basic?

Q10. After all the millions of dollars spent on Aboriginal health and education why haven’t the problems facing Indigenous people today been solved?

Q11. Aren’t Aboriginal languages very basic, with no real grammar system?

 

Q12. Weren’t Aborginal people just hunter-gatherers, wandering around to find food?

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About Richard Trudgen

Richard Trudgen was born on Wiradjuri country. His conception Spirit Well site was near the top of Gaanha-bula (two shoulders) on Mount Canobolas, close to the city of Orange in NSW. Grew up along the Belubula River (stony river or big lagoon), near the small town of Canowindra (home or camping place), a key Wiradjuri traditional homeland. In his late teens, he was a lead guitarist in a rock band with two of his brothers and two friends called the South Side Five. He trained as a fitter and turner in a farm machinery workshop. Arriving in Arnhem Land in 1973 to volunteer for 12 months. He was compelled to learn Yolngu Matha and remained to work alongside some of the most traditional First Nation Australians, the Yolngu People. Having learn their language, he stayed, trained as a community worker-educator, and now he speaks Djambarrpuyŋu to a deep legal, economic, and medical level. He still works full-time with Yolngu people in his mid-seventies. Was the CEO of Aboriginal Resource and Development Services (ARDS) for 10 years, during which he developed the Discovery Education methodology with Rev Dr Djiniyini Gondarra OAM and also established Yolŋu Radio in 2003. The Yolngu elders asked him to write "Why Warriors Lie Down and Die" and to train mainstream Balanda people to understand Yolngu law and culture. So, he ran ‘Bridging the Gap’ seminars and corporate workshops across Australia, focusing on cultural competency and cross-cultural communication. He is currently the CEO of Why Warriors Pty Ltd, a community development social enterprise working with Yolngu people. He spends his days writing, producing podcasts, building an online learning centre for Yolngu (djambatjmarram.com), creating videos, developing online cross-cultural training materials, running workshops for Yolngu and Balanda, and working with Yolngu to develop their own family businesses.

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