The first thing is that there are two moieties, Dhuwa and Yirritja.
Everyone and everything is either Dhuwa or Yirritja. Yirritja people
sing about Yirritja things, like Yirritja rocks, Yirritja winds,
wildlife, clouds, ancestors, creators, and many things.
A Yirritja
person must always marry a Dhuwa person, and Dhuwa must marry
Yirritja. You can't marry the same moiety. That's how the world
works. It has been there
for thousands of years. We live by that.
If a man or a woman is Dhuwa, their mother will be Yirritja. Also,
Dhuwa land can have another piece of land nearby which is its mother,
Yirritja. For example, the Gumatj land at Bawaka (pictured above),
which is Yirritja, is right next to its mother, the Rirratji\u
homeland
centre named
Yala\bara, which is Dhuwa.
Everywhere we can find the child and the mother, not only when
we see people, but also when we see the land. This relationship
is commonly referred to as Yothu-Yindi. In a Yothu-Yindi partnership,
one partner is always Dhuwa, the other always Yirritja. The Yindi
is always considered to be the mother of the Yothu, even if we
are talking about two men, or two pieces of land. Sometimes Yirritja
is the mother for Dhuwa, sometimes Dhuwa is the mother for Yirritja.
Notes from a talk by Raymattja Marika-Munu\guritj, lecturer
Faculty of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Studies (FATSIS)
Charles Darwin University & Yol\u Advisor to FATSIS
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