
Originally Posted by
scrambler
Last "full blood," crump. The current definition of Aboriginality is that you have SOME ancestry, own up to it and be recognised by the local Aboriginal community as Aboriginal. If your great-great-great-grandparent was Aboriginal and everyone else from then on was Irish, you could still identify as Aboriginal. Or Irish, depending if it was St Pattie's day or not.
In places like Tassie, though, claims rarely get further than the first bit of paperwork, because continuing ties to the land need to be proved. Mostly this means verified Dreaming stories which tie to particular places, continuing use of the land for hunting, ceremonies, etc. It's why places where people DO live more traditional lifestyles get "locked up" and Tassie will never be, nor most of Victoria or most places East of the Great Divide for the matter.
thanks, so theoretically as I once attended an induction ceremony to the (cant remember the name) tribe that once inhabited the Brisbane area, I fit the criteria, I am Indigenous.So now I can go wherever I want, last time I pay $80 to cross the Jardine.
The Ugly Duckling-
03 Defender Xtreme, now reduced by 30%.
a master of invisibleness.
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