Alyawarre Country: The grinding stone

Title:
Alyawarre Country: The grinding stone
Year
2001
Warnings
WARNING: Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander viewers are advised that the following program may contain images and/or audio of deceased persons
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Reggie Camphoo Pwerl and Donald Thompson Kemarre tell us about what Indigenous people used to carry with them when they travelled everywhere on foot – the main tool being the grinding stone. Images show the grinding stone being used to crush seeds. Two men survived – Lame Tommy and George Wickham. Their bush names were Alupathik and Arralta (whiskers). Still photographs of Indigenous people fade in and out of frame. We hear about how the white men took the Aboriginal women as wives, and the Aboriginal men would watch from the hills and not come down for fear of being shot. The two elders tell us about how the Indigenous people used to eat the introduced animals – horses, donkeys, and bullock – and how they developed a taste for cattle because it has more fat. Summary by Romaine Moreton.