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Australian Aborigines

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Australian Aborigines
Ernie Dingo, David Wirrpanda, Adam Goodes
Total population
517,000[1]
2.6% of Australia's population
Regions with significant populations
 Northern Territory 32.5%
 Western Australia 4.0%
 Queensland 3.6%
 New South Wales 2.5%
 South Australia 2.3%
 Victoria 1.0%
Languages

Several hundred Indigenous Australian languages, many no longer spoken, Australian English, Australian Aboriginal English, Kriol

Religion

Mixture of Christian, small numbers of other religions including Islam, and various locally indigenous religions grounded in Australian Aboriginal mythology

Related ethnic groups

see List of Indigenous Australian group names

Australian Aborigines (En-us-aborigine.ogg æbəˈrɪdʒɪni , aka Aboriginal Australians) are a class of people who are identified by Australian law as being members of a race indigenous to the Australian continent.

In the High Court of Australia, Australian Aborigines have been specifically identified as a group of people who share, in common, biological ancestry back to the original occupants of this continent.[2]

Justice Deane of the High Court famously described and defined an Australian Aboriginal person as:

"..a person of Aboriginal descent, albeit mixed, who identifies himself as such and who is recognised by the Aboriginal community as an Aboriginal.."[3]

Contents

[edit] From Australian Aborigines

Eve Fesl, an Aboriginal Australian from the Gabi Gabi people, published in the Aboriginal Law Bulletin describing how she and other Australian Aborigines preferred to be identified:

"The word 'aborigine' refers to an indigenous person of any country. If it is to be used to refer to us as a specific group of people, it should be spelt with a capital 'A', i.e. 'Aborigine'..."[4]

More recently, Lowitja O'Donoghue AC, CBE, commenting on the prospect of possible amendments to Australia's constitution, is quoted in an article entitled 'Call us Aboriginal' as saying:

"I really can't tell you of a time when 'indigenous' became current, but I personally have an objection to it, and so do many other Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people.... This has just really crept up on us ... like thieves in the night."

"We're very happy with our involvement with indigenous people around the world, on the international forum ... because they're our brothers and sisters...But we do object to it being used here in Australia."[5]

[edit] From Australian academia

Dean of Indigenous Research and Education at Charles Darwin University, Professor MaryAnn Bin-Sallik, has publicly lectured on the ways Australian Aborigines have been categorised and labelled over time:[6]

"Professor Bin-Sallik’s lecture offered a new perspective on the terms “urban” and “traditional” and “of Indigenous descent” as used to define and categorise Aboriginal Australians."

“Not only are these categories inappropriate, they serve to divide us,” Professor Bin-Sallik said.

“Government’s insistence on categorising us with modern words like ‘urban’, ‘traditional’ and ‘of Aboriginal descent’ are really only replacing old terms ‘half-caste’ and ‘full-blood’ – based on our colouring.”

"She called for a replacement of this terminology by the word: Aborigine ... “irrespective of hue”"

[edit] Peoples within the class

400 and more distinct Australian Aboriginal peoples have been identified across the Australian continent, each distinguished by unique names for groups of people's ancestral languages, dialects, or distinctive speech mannerisms.[7]

[edit] See also

[edit] References

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