bora (Australian)

Information about bora (Australian)

A Bora is the name given both to an initiation ceremony of Indigenous Australians, and to the site on which the initiation is performed. At such a site, young boys are transformed into men. The initiation ceremony differs from culture to culture, but often involves circumcision and scarification, and may also involve the removal of a tooth or part of a finger. The ceremony, and the process leading up to it, involves the learning of sacred songs, stories, dances, and traditional lore. Many different clans will assemble to participate in an initiation ceremony.

The word Bora was originally from South-East Australia, but is now often used throughout Australia to describe an initiation site or ceremony. It is called a Burbung in the language of the Darkinjung, to the North of Sydney. The name is said to come from that of the belt worn by initiated men. The appearance of the site varies from one culture to another, but it is often associated with stone arrangements, rock engravings, or other art works. Women are generally prohibited from entering a bora.

In South East Australia, the Bora is often associated with the creator-spirit Baiame. In the Sydney region, large Earth mounds were made, shaped as long bands or simple circles. Sometimes the boys would have to pass along a path marked on the ground representing the transition from childhood to manhood, and this path might be marked by a stone arrangement or by footsteps, or mundoes, cut into the rock. In other areas of South-East Australia, a Bora site might consist of two circles of stones, and the boys would start the ceremony in the larger, public, one, and end it in the other, smaller, one, to which only initiated men are admitted.

Bora rings, found in South-East Australia, are circles of foot-hardened earth surrounded by raised embankments. They were generally constructed in pairs (although some sites have three), with a bigger circle about 22 metres in diameter and a smaller one of about 14 metres. The rings are joined by a sacred walkway.

References

  • Footprints on Rock, 1997, Sydney: Metropolitan Local Aboriginal Land Council. ISBN 0 7313 1002 0
  • The Burbung of the Darkinung Tribes, 1897, Matthews, R.H., 1897, Proceedings of the Royal Society of Victoria 10, 1: 1-12.


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Indigenous Australians are descendants of the first known human inhabitants of the Australian continent and its nearby islands. The term includes both the Torres Strait Islanders and the Aboriginal People, who together make up about 2.5% of Australia's population.
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Circumcision is the surgical or other cutting of some or all of the foreskin (prepuce) from the penis.[1] The word "circumcision" comes from Latin circum (meaning "around") and caedere (meaning "to cut").
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Scarification is a term that is used to describe the act of scarifying. Scarifying involves scratching, etching, or some sort of superficial cutting or incision. Scarification can be applied to horticulture, which involves cutting the seed coat using acid, sand paper, or a
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Darkinjung may refer to:
  • Darkinjung people
  • Darkinjung language

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Sydney
New South Wales

Location of Sydney within Australia

Population:
• Density: 4,280,190 (2006 Census) (1st)
345.
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Aboriginal stone arrangements are a ritual art form constructed by Indigenous Australians, and are a form of rock art. Typically, they consist of stones, each of which may be about 30cm in size, laid out in a pattern extending over several metres or tens of metres.
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The Sydney Rock Engravings are a form of Australian Aboriginal Rock Art consisting of carefully drawn images of people, animals, or symbols, in the sandstone around Sydney, New South Wales, Australia.
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''' Indigenous Australian art is art produced by Indigenous Australians, covering works that pre-date European colonisation as well as contemporary art by Aboriginal Australians based on traditional culture.
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Baiame (Baayami or Baayama) is a creational ancestral hero in the dreaming of several language groups (e.g. Kamilaroi, Eora, Darkinjung, and Wiradjuri), of Indigenous Australians of South-East Australia.
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Sydney
New South Wales

Location of Sydney within Australia

Population:
• Density: 4,280,190 (2006 Census) (1st)
345.
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Anthem
Advance Australia Fair [1]


Capital Canberra

Largest city Sydney
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Indigenous Australians are descendants of the first known human inhabitants of the Australian continent and its nearby islands. The term includes both the Torres Strait Islanders and the Aboriginal People, who together make up about 2.5% of Australia's population.
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Lists of Indigenous Australians by occupation and historic contribution.

Various indigenous Australian cultures consider the reference of deceased persons - whether in name or in image - to be taboo.
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List of Indigenous Australian group names contains names and collective designations which have been applied, either formerly or in the past, to groups of Indigenous Australians.
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Torres Strait Islanders are the indigenous people of the Torres Strait Islands, part of Queensland, Australia. They are Melanesians culturally akin to the coastal peoples of Papua New Guinea.
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Numerous Indigenous Australians have been notable for their contributions to politics, including participation in governments and activism in Australia. Others are noted for their public service, generally and in specific areas like law and education.
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Numerous Indigenous Australians and noted sportspeople.

Athletics (track and field)

  • Cathy Freeman
  • Nova Peris-Kneebone
  • Patrick Johnson

Australian rules football

  • Barry Cable
  • Graham "Polly" Farmer
  • Jeff Farmer
  • Adam Goodes

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Numerous Indigenous Australians are noted for their participation in, and contributions to, the visual arts in Australia and abroad.
  • Tjyllyungoo (Lance Chadd)
  • Ian Abdulla
  • Brook Andrew
  • William Barak
  • Richard Bell
  • Gordon Bennett
  • Mervyn Bishop

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Comedy

  • Mark Bin Bakar -- actor & comedian

Dance

  • Stephen Page
  • Frances Rings

Film, television and theatre

  • Kylie Belling -- actor
  • Ernie Dingo -- actor and television presenter

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Numerous Indigenous Australians are notable for their contributions to Australian literature and journalism.

Literature

  • Edward Warrigal Anderson - novelist, winner of the David Unaipon Award in the Queensland Premier's Literary Awards

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This is a list of Indigenous Australian musicians.

Solo artists

  • Christine Anu (Torres Strait Islander)
  • Mark Atkins
  • William Barton
  • Harold Blair
  • Gordon Butcher
  • Sammy Butcher
  • Troy Cassar-Daley
  • Kev Carmody

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Aboriginal Australia contains a large number of tribal divisions and language groups, and, corresponding to this, a wide variety of diversity exists within cultural practices. There are some similarities between cultures however.
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Dreaming may refer to:
  • Dreaming (story), an Indigenous Australian creation story
  • Dream, the experience of envisioned images, sounds, or other sensations during sleep
In music:

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The Dreaming or Altjeringa (also called the Dreamtime), a sacred 'once upon a time' [1] time out of time in which ancestral Totemic Spirit Beings formed The Creation.
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Indigenous Australians can be classified into about 400 separate language groups, each of which has a distinct culture. For this reason it is incorrect to classify any attribute as universal to them as a whole.
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Australian Aboriginal kinship is the system of law governing social interaction, particularly marriage, in traditional Aboriginal culture. It is an integral part of the culture of every Aboriginal group across Australia.
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Australian Aboriginal avoidance practices refers to those relationships in traditional Aboriginal society where certain people were required to avoid others in their family or clan. These customs are still active in many parts of Australia, to a greater or lesser extent.
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Indigenous Australians had distinct ways of dividing the year up. Due to their close reliance upon, and relationship with, nature they were traditionally acutely aware of seasonal variations.
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Australian Aboriginal enumeration refers to the way some Australian Aborigines traditionally counted.

A common misconception among non-Aborigines is that Aborigines did not have a way to count beyond two or three.
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