Kuranda: ‘Village in the Rainforest”

July 23, 2009 by Diana Russo  
Filed under Kuranda

The picturesque mountain retreat of Kuranda Village is just 25km northwest of Cairns in Far North Queensland, Australia and is surrounded by World Heritage Rainforest.

Visitors to the village are attracted by not only the magnificant natural environment, but, as well, the relaxed and casual atmosphere of the place.

One of the best things about living in Kuranda, aside from this, is the wonderful sense of ‘community’ that is found through the many local organizations and  networks in the village itself, through the coffee shops and community venues such as the Kuranda Amphitheatre.

Xaver Rudd at the Kuranda AmphitheatreXavier Rudd at the Kuranda Amphitheatre

“Dja-bu-guy” is the name of the tribe of Aboriginal people who lived in the Kuranda region. The present Kuranda village was “Ngunbay”, or place of platypus. An important camping area, with good fishing and hunting for locals, this all changed with the opening up of the hinterland for gold and tin mining. The access was along tracks of the “Bama”(rainforest) people, and through their country. “Gadja” (ghost spirit), or white man, had an immediate impact on the Djabugay people. In May 1886 construction of the Cairns to Herberton railway began over one such walking track, which crossed the ranges and went down to the coast. This was not popular with the Djabugay, who stood up to the white invasion by spearing bullocks and the occasional white man. They took worker’s food, as their traditional food gathering and hunting grounds were now either taken over by new settlers, or over hunted by the 1500 workmen living and working on the railway line. An infamous massacre, known as the Speewah massacre, occurred in the mid 1890s. Early settler, John Atherton, sent native troopers to revenge the death of a bullock. Other unconfirmed reports of similar atrocities occurred locally. Before white man, the population of the Bama people in the Cairns area was estimated at between 4000 and 5000, but by the turn of the century their numbers had rapidly declined, overtaken by the Gadja settlers. Coffee, the regions first cash crop, began in 1896. The Bama people were soon utilized as farm labourers on the rapidly expanding plantations around Kuranda, until well into the twentieth century. Many Bama became fringe dwellers on the edge of white settlements, unable to hunt and fish, or move around as they had for thousands of years.  referenced from

http://www.kuranda.org

dancersonstreet

The land around Kuranda has been home to the Djabugay Aboriginal people for more than 10,000 years and this vibrant indigenous culture continues to thrive today, showcased in traditional artefacts, fine visual arts, tribal dance (corroboree) and more.

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