For Yolngu language see Yolngu Matha.
The Yolngu (or Yolŋu) are an Indigenous Australian people inhabiting north-eastern Arnhem Land in Australia.
Madayin embodies the rights of the owners of the law, or citizens (rom watangu walal) who have the rights and responsibilities for this embodiment of law. Madayin includes all the people's law (rom); the instruments and objects that encode and symbolise the law (Madayin girri); oral dictates; names and song cycles and the holy, restricted places (dhuyu nunggat wanga) that are used in the maintenance, education and development of law.
This law covers the ownership of land and waters, the resources on or within these lands and waters. It regulates and controls production and trade, the moral, social and religious law including laws for the conservation and the farming of fauna, flora and aquatic life.
Yolŋu believe that if they live out their life according to Madayin, it is a right and civilised way to live. The Madayin creates the state of Magaya, which is a state of peace, freedom from hostilities and true justice for all.
Yolŋu life is divided into two moieties: Dhuwa and Yirritja. Each of these are represented by people of a number of different groups, each of which have their own lands, languages and philosophies.
A Yirritja person must always marry a Dhuwa person and vice versa. If a man or woman is Dhuwa, their mother will be Yirritja.
Kinship relations are also mapped onto the lands owned by the Yolngu through their hereditary estates – so everything is either Yirritja or Dhuwa – every fish, stone, river, etc, belongs to one or the other moiety.
Brother–sister avoidance normally begins after initiation. In avoidance relationships, people don't speak directly or look at one another, and try to avoid being in too close proximity with each other. People are avoided, but respected. There are other avoidance relationships, including same-sex relationships, but these are the main two.
Yolngu speak a dozen dialects of a language group known as Yolngu Matha. English can be anywhere from a third to a tenth language for Yolŋu.
They made yearly visits to harvest trepang and pearls, paying Yolŋu in kind with goods such as knives, metal, canoes, tobacco and pipes.
In 1906, the South Australian Government did not renew the Macassan's permit to havest trepang. This loss of trade caused some disruption to the Yolŋu way of life, particularly since they did not know why the Macassan had stopped coming.
Yolŋu had well established trade routes within Australia, extending to Central Australian clans and other Aboriginal countries.
This contact was maintained through use of message sticks, as well as mailmen –- with some men running several hundred kilometres in their work to send messages and relay orders between tribes and countries. For example, boomerangs, which were not made in Arnhem Land, were often ordered from Central Australia.
There was also a series of massacres. (See List of Australian Aboriginal massacres).
Two notable cases are an instance at Florida Station, around 1885 where Yolngu were fed poisoned horsemeat after they killed and ate some cattle (under their law, Madayin, it was their land and they had an inalienable right to eat animals on their land). Many people died as a result of that incident.
Another incident took place around 1895. Some Yolngu took a small amount of barbed wire from a huge roll to build fishing spears. Men, women and children were chased by mounted police and men on horseback from the Eastern and African Cold Storage Company and shot.
The Australian Government feared this would create bad international relations (this was prior to World War II). There were calls in some quarters to "teach the blacks a lesson", ie, to send out shooting parties to hunt down and shoot men, women and children; a not uncommon practice in nineteenth-century Australia.
However, Donald Thomson, a young anthropologist, was able to avert this by going to live with the Yolŋu and ascertaining the facts of the case (ironically, the prisoners were released on a legal oversight, not through these facts).
Thomson lived with the Yolŋu for several years and made some excellent photographic and written records of their way of life at that time. These have become important historical documents for both Yolŋu and European Australians.
In 1935, as a result of this publicity, a Methodist mission opened in Arnhem Land.
In 1941, during World War II, Donald Thomson persuaded the Australian Army to establish a Special Reconnaissance Force of Yolŋu men to help repel Japanese raids on Australia's northern coastline (this was top secret at the time). Yolŋu made contact with Australian and US servicemen at this time, although Thomson was keen to prevent this (it is believed this is where petrol sniffing began for Aboriginal Australians). Thomson relates that the soldiers would often try to obtain Yolŋu spears as mementos. These spears were vital to Yolŋu livelihood, and took several days to make and forge.
More recently, Yolngu have seen the imposition of large mines on their tribal lands at Nhulunbuy.
In 1963, provoked by a unilateral government decision to excise a part of their land for a bauxite mine, Yolngu at Yirrkala sent to the Australian House of Representatives a petition on bark. The bark petition attracted national and international attention and now hangs in Parliament House, Canberra as a testament to the Yolngu role in the birth of the land rights movement.
When the politicians demonstrated they would not change their minds, the Yolngu of Yirrkala took their grievances to the courts in 1971, in the case of Milirrpum v Nabalco Pty Ltd, the Gove land rights case. Yolngu lost the case because Australian courts were still bound to follow the terra nullius principle, which did not allow for the recognition of any “prior rights” to land to Indigenous people at the time of colonisation. However, the Judge did acknowledge the claimants' ritual and economic use of the land and that they had an established system of law, paving the way for future Aboriginal Land Rights in Australia.
The song Treaty, by Yothu Yindi, which became an international hit in 1989, demonstrates the dedication of Yolngu to the cause of reconcilation, land rights and the recognition of their culture and Law.
Artists, such as David Malangi Daymirringu, are renowned for their work. Malangi's work featured on the original Australian dollar note. The Australian Government used this artwork without his approval, or even knowledge.
The hollow logs used in Arnhem Land burial practices are also important Yolngu art canvasses (see image at top of this article), as is the yidaki/didgeridoo (see below).
Yolngu are also master weavers. They weave dyed pandanus leaves into baskets. Necklaces are also made from beads made of such objects as seeds, fish vertebrae or shells.
Yongu art often expresses stories of creation or the traditional culture of trade.
Colours are often important in determining where a certain artwork comes from and which clan or family group created it. Some designs are the insignias of particular families and clans.
Arnhem Land is the home of the yidaki, which Europeans have named the didgeridoo.
Yolngu are master players and craftsmen of the yidaki. It can only be played by certain men, and traditionally there are strict protocols around its use.
Indigenous peoples of Australia | History of Australia | Yolngu