Welcome?

Sam Balaton-Chrimes, Alice Bellette, Cameo Dalley, Victoria Stead

In this series, we talk about the difficult work of relationships between colonised, coloniser, and the many in-between categories, in three different contexts: Australia, Papua New Guinea and Kenya. We tell stories from our work as academic researchers, stories about real people in real places. In the Boon Wurrung and Wurundjeri lands where we live and work, in Naarm (Melbourne), you often see the phrase ‘Wominjeka/Womindjeka’ used in public places and at public events. It’s usually translated into English as ‘welcome’. At Welcome to Country ceremonies, though, Elders teach that it means more than that. They teach us that it’s a call to ethical relationship — with people, land, and with the future — that might be better translated as ‘come with purpose’, or ‘state your intention’. In this podcast, we ask the questions: who is welcome? Who does the welcoming? And on what and whose terms? And, of course, who is not welcome? That question mark after ‘welcome’ in our title – it’s intentional. Our stories help us explore different ways of accepting a welcome, offering one, or being alert to being unwelcome, and what we can do with such a situation. We invite you to join us as we try to work out what that question mark after ‘welcome’ might mean for us, and for you. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Episodes

  1. 04/03/2021

    Beyond Kokoda I: Kapurakambo

    Communities across Papua New Guinea’s Oro Province were profoundly affected by the Second World War, and the fighting between Australia, American, and Japanese forces that was waged on their lands. In the years since, the Kokoda Track has become a focal point for many Australian tourists looking to commemorate the war. But there are many other communities across PNG whose wartime experiences don’t attract that same kind of attention or recognition. In this episode we travel to one of these lesser-known places, a small village called Kapurakambo in PNG’s Oro Province. The community there describes the impacts of the war on their place, and the kinds of tenuous relationships that have followed in the years since. They also recall the remarkable tale of their ancestor, James Mamogoba, who established Kapurakambo as a coffee plantation back before the war started, in the midst of the colonial period. The relationships that he was able to forge with Australians and other outsiders, as one of the only Papuan plantation owners at that time, are held up in contrast to the absence of relationships with outsiders that his descendants describe today. This episode asks: How is it that recognition flows to some places and people and not others, and what are the effects of this? What would it mean to look beyond Kokoda? Indeed, what would it mean to recognise the war itself as just one chapter in a long, complex history of encounter that also includes Australian colonialism? And what kinds of ethical relationships might that kind of recognition of shared history yield today? Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    30 min
  2. 04/03/2021

    Radical Poetics: Writing Forward, Writing Blak

    The English language is an import to this country. As with the foreign flora and fauna brought by the boats to the shores, language spread where the speakers settled; thrown over like a blanket on the same bed where the pillows of the ‘dying race’ were being smoothed. And yet, we survived. Indigenous poets who have been published since owe a lot to the landmark publication of Oodgeroo Noonuccal’s 1964 collection We are Going, the first published collection of poetry from an Aboriginal person in this country. In the time since, poets have ‘written back’ into popular literary spaces with playful ways of using the English language and tongue-in-cheek refusal to adhere to those structures and conventions. The novel uses of Aboriginal English play with the limits of language to rework its meaning into the written and spoken word. Each poet is writing into a growing body of literary works dealing with the ongoing systems of oppression by challenging but also poking fun at the structures that uphold them. In this episode, Alice Bellette (Palawa) speaks with poets Alison Whittaker (Gomeroi) and Laniyuk (Larrakia, Kungarrakan and Gurindji) about their work, as well as experiences with communities that foster the literary voices of Indigenous people in this country. We also talk about the ‘coding’ of language, a strategy poets use to articulate different meanings for different audiences, usually in ways that privilege Indigenous audiences. We reflect on what this might mean for the various audiences of this kind of literature. You don’t need to be a regular reader of poetry to get something out of this episode, just bring an open mind and a value for the connections between humans. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    29 min
5
out of 5
31 Ratings

About

In this series, we talk about the difficult work of relationships between colonised, coloniser, and the many in-between categories, in three different contexts: Australia, Papua New Guinea and Kenya. We tell stories from our work as academic researchers, stories about real people in real places. In the Boon Wurrung and Wurundjeri lands where we live and work, in Naarm (Melbourne), you often see the phrase ‘Wominjeka/Womindjeka’ used in public places and at public events. It’s usually translated into English as ‘welcome’. At Welcome to Country ceremonies, though, Elders teach that it means more than that. They teach us that it’s a call to ethical relationship — with people, land, and with the future — that might be better translated as ‘come with purpose’, or ‘state your intention’. In this podcast, we ask the questions: who is welcome? Who does the welcoming? And on what and whose terms? And, of course, who is not welcome? That question mark after ‘welcome’ in our title – it’s intentional. Our stories help us explore different ways of accepting a welcome, offering one, or being alert to being unwelcome, and what we can do with such a situation. We invite you to join us as we try to work out what that question mark after ‘welcome’ might mean for us, and for you. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.