Kakadu National Park Wed 21/12/11
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Glenoverland
Tue 27 Dec 2011 08:57
12:54.3S 132:31.2E
Kakadu National Park is virtually closed because of the height of the
water, but we are here camping in splendid isolation. We booked ourselves
on a boat trip that surprisingly had people on it, with a guide called Rupert,
who was brilliant. Rupert told us he was aboriginal, and this was his back
yard, and his knowledge of the wetlands and aboriginal traditions was
superb. We saw some big crocodiles at close hand, much better and scarier
than meeting them in a crocodile farm.
Kakadu is jointly (and proudly) owned by the local indigenous people and
the government, so we expected to see a high proportion of indigenous people
running it, but this wasn’t the case. Apart from Rupert and one
receptionist, the staff we met were German, South African and white
Australian. We saw some superb rock art today, beautifully explained and
very accessible, then went on to the town of Jabiru for supplies, a desperate
place! Although clean and nicely maintained, it is a town of nasty
soulless 1960’s architecture with no feeling of bustle or direction. It
was built to service the Ranger uranium plant just to the east, which offers
tours but apparently it is just a big hole and the tours are a PR
exercise.
So we went back to Cooinda, cheered ourselves up and cooled ourselves down
with a swim. Bit later the heavens opened, the wind howled, and we had
another soaking, battening down the tent.
Later in the bar I chatted to Rupert again. He told me his mum is
english and his father aboriginal. I said I had thought he looked south
European or north African and he was most offended and accused me of prejudice,
so that was obviously a very wrong thing to say. He told me he was
educated in a fee paying school and studied Aboriginal politics. He said
the drunks we see in towns are the older generation who are stuck in a time
warp, and that the younger generation are doing much better. He also said
that all the indigenous people still possess the skills to live off the land and
that many do, and even the people in the towns will be doing some fishing.
He was angry about the police being able to “come into anyone’s home and turn it
over looking for alcohol” (I didnt know they could do this) and said he is
passionate about educating his visitors about aboriginal culture.
By the end of the evening though, I was getting very mixed messages.
One the one hand , it was stuff about “you english”, the inequality of our class
system and the inevitability of riots; on the other, pride in Australia’s
prosperous economy with so many raw materials and foodstuffs to export. At
least I got to talk to someone; I liked Rupert. But we are left with the
impression that they are a divided nation – some proud to be involved in their
wonderful national parks and artistic enterprises; some disenchanted and
embittered and steeped in social problems. Hope we can find out
more.
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