|
||||
Yol\u Rom - Introduction
Rom means “law” or “culture.” When a Yol\u elder, now deceased, was asked to speak to Yirrkala School staff about Yol\u curriculum, he pointed out that all Yol\u knowledge needs to be understood through five dimensions of rom. He was a Djapu man who was speaking about his own totem, the shark. But these dimensions, he said, are relevant to all Yol\u education. It was the ancestors of the many Yol\u groups who created the land as we know it as they sang, danced, talked and moved along their dreaming tracks. The ancestors actually changed their language as they arrived at each new territory, and created new groups of land-affiliated Yol\u, related to others along the same “dreaming” track. These ancestors were all either Dhuwa or Yirritja.
On this website, Yol\u are sharing some of their rom with you in the hopes it will increase your understanding and respect of the yidaki and its place within their culture. It all belongs very specifically to these Yol\u clans. Yol\u from one clan can not simply decide to take songs, designs, land or any other resources from other Yol\u clans - it would be the ultimate crime. You should behave the same way. Even the simplest art painted on yidaki belongs to the person who painted it and is not to be copied. According to copyright law and decent ethical behaviour, Yol\u music that has been recorded and released on CD is still owned by the artists just the same as music sold on CDs by western pop artists. |
||||
NEXT PAGE - DHUWA AND YIRRITJA |
||||
all material copyright 2006 Buku-Larr\gay Mulka Centre & the Yol\u individuals and clans concerned |
||||