It’s a wonderful sight to see proud First Australian men, painted up and doing their thing. An impressive show of strength and masculinity. Keep the culture alive!
This is beautiful and amazing to see. So glad they are alive and keeping their traditions alive. I'm currently visiting south east Australia, and in 5 weeks I have not seen a single indigenous person. I've seen their art, instruments, boomerangs etc in settlers' shops though. Seems wrong to me to not buy such artefacts from the original creators directly, so I will be going home with no souvenirs of my visit. Keep on being strong, I know you are and always will be.
Pretty sure they are imitating different types of animals - Could be family totems- Or animals they wish to eat and love or make use of for things in their tribes such as for hunting and gathering. Also, it’s an imitation of hunting, gathering and successfully catching their food- hence the happy call at the end.
@@colinheenan-puruntatameri782 there is a lot of debate about the term farming which usually means you put a seed in the ground and you reap the reward which is not what they were doing
@@colinheenan-puruntatameri782 palya watti we,er picaringani .now you do know that not all Australians originally were convicts like South Australia and the Northern Territory which was South Australia ?
@@colinheenan-puruntatameri782 listen mate don't start getting hysterical with me. now I do actually know a lot about Australian history and out of respect for the land that I live on I'm now learning the local language which is the second most spoken in the country ( PIT ) I have been to parts of South Australia where you must have a permit and was invited .now you need to get over this whole thing that everybody hates you because that is not the case also most of the people you seem to hate so much were bought here against their will not the South Australians however . I think it's you that needs to brush up on your history and maybe read your comment before you send it so it makes sense
@@shannongreen4768 Sorry, no, I don't; the language is no longer widely spoken; the Nunggubuyu language (Wubuy), however, is in serious decline; although the school had a bilingual program, young people don't speak it anymore, but use "Kriol", an Aboriginal Creole based on a mainly English vocabulary instead, like in Ngukurr and other communities in this region. I was Teacher-Linguist there in 1995-1998; if you are interested, check out my web page ozoutback.com.au/Australia/numbulwar/index.html for photos of those days. The videos were taken there during those years too; all of them are on that site as well.
@@LudoKuipers I am currently learning pitanjara I know it's not spelt like that but that language is spoken by the entire community and spoken by children I thought the same was the case for one of the languages in the Territory ?
no idea who Joseph is but did you know the American guy that poisoned the blankets to kill the Indians was brought to Australia to do the same thing here
A'HO brother's and sister's A'ho walk in beauty dream smoke of past Pangaea mound builders Olmce rubber people culture!!🐢🐢🌲🐢🐢turtle island yes history is fascinating story tellers as well honor your ancestor's music and lyrics inter tribal respect for one another's people dream smoke!🖖😎🖑aboriginal means Aborigines of Olmce culture first nation mound builders red sand of time the hour glass red Rocks of south West New Mexico Chaco canyon!.
@@diandrestarquino9757 what is your aura from your feet to top head or you don't have voice or culture indigenous people question of turtle island dream smoke white sage to clear air that surround your aura✌🤔👌👈😎🖒
@@kevinhermi9861 The Scientist keep telling people that but when you say to them the word Australian Aboriginal they run for their lives because they can't explain how that happened . most historians will say we've had a sort of human for at least 100000 years so how is it these people walked out of Africa to Australia didn't pick up any of the technology along the way not even the bow and arrow and were basically living a stone age life when the white people come to Australia
Humans are indeed fascinating. Especially humans like you that seem to keep their minds in the past, instead of accepting different cultures. So... maybe *you* aren't fascinating. More like ignorant.
It’s a wonderful sight to see proud First Australian men, painted up and doing their thing. An impressive show of strength and masculinity. Keep the culture alive!
Proud to be Aboriginal. Always was always will be.
Beautiful and amazing, and the woman at the end was incredible.
this is great keep the culture and spirit alive
This is awesome. As an American 🇺🇲 this is great to look at different cultures from around the world.
This is beautiful and amazing to see. So glad they are alive and keeping their traditions alive. I'm currently visiting south east Australia, and in 5 weeks I have not seen a single indigenous person. I've seen their art, instruments, boomerangs etc in settlers' shops though. Seems wrong to me to not buy such artefacts from the original creators directly, so I will be going home with no souvenirs of my visit. Keep on being strong, I know you are and always will be.
KING GEORGE WORLD RESPECT RESPECTED WORLD WIDE EMPIRE TO MY HOME PEOPLE ABORIGINAL indigenous koori AUSTRALIA
Beautiful! Powerful!!
Why do they stop dancing like that?
Pretty sure they are imitating different types of animals - Could be family totems- Or animals they wish to eat and love or make use of for things in their tribes such as for hunting and gathering. Also, it’s an imitation of hunting, gathering and successfully catching their food- hence the happy call at the end.
@@colinheenan-puruntatameri782 there is a lot of debate about the term farming which usually means you put a seed in the ground and you reap the reward which is not what they were doing
@@colinheenan-puruntatameri782 palya watti we,er picaringani .now you do know that not all Australians originally were convicts like South Australia and the Northern Territory which was South Australia ?
@@colinheenan-puruntatameri782 listen mate don't start getting hysterical with me. now I do actually know a lot about Australian history and out of respect for the land that I live on I'm now learning the local language which is the second most spoken in the country ( PIT ) I have been to parts of South Australia where you must have a permit and was invited .now you need to get over this whole thing that everybody hates you because that is not the case also most of the people you seem to hate so much were bought here against their will not the South Australians however . I think it's you that needs to brush up on your history and maybe read your comment before you send it so it makes sense
@@colinheenan-puruntatameri782 Or the land councils selling of land to the mining company's. seeing the wagenas on broken Rocks was really sad
Fuck i wish we were all still traditional new language and full bloods love my people UP THE MURRIES QLD
looks like initiation ceremony for the young boy whose sitting in the middle with the song men, celebrating for the young boy to become young man
Amazing!
What language group?
Wubuy (Nunggubuyu)!
@@LudoKuipers Do you know the Wubuy word for clapsticks?
@@shannongreen4768 Sorry, no, I don't; the language is no longer widely spoken; the Nunggubuyu language (Wubuy), however, is in serious decline; although the school had a bilingual program, young people don't speak it anymore, but use "Kriol", an Aboriginal Creole based on a mainly English vocabulary instead, like in Ngukurr and other communities in this region. I was Teacher-Linguist there in 1995-1998; if you are interested, check out my web page ozoutback.com.au/Australia/numbulwar/index.html for photos of those days. The videos were taken there during those years too; all of them are on that site as well.
@@LudoKuipers I am currently learning pitanjara I know it's not spelt like that but that language is spoken by the entire community and spoken by children I thought the same was the case for one of the languages in the Territory ?
@@garyp4374 there are many dialects but warlpiri seems to be the most common up there
This is the original of shufflin
Lol I see a girl wearing a Michael Jackson shirt
So amazing to see the thong dance 😂
joseph campbell brought me here
no idea who Joseph is but did you know the American guy that poisoned the blankets to kill the Indians was brought to Australia to do the same thing here
A'HO brother's and sister's A'ho walk in beauty dream smoke of past Pangaea mound builders Olmce rubber people culture!!🐢🐢🌲🐢🐢turtle island yes history is fascinating story tellers as well honor your ancestor's music and lyrics inter tribal respect for one another's people dream smoke!🖖😎🖑aboriginal means Aborigines of Olmce culture first nation mound builders red sand of time the hour glass red Rocks of south West New Mexico Chaco canyon!.
robot
@@diandrestarquino9757 what is your aura from your feet to top head or you don't have voice or culture indigenous people question of turtle island dream smoke white sage to clear air that surround your aura✌🤔👌👈😎🖒
big robot@@pontiacaztec917
Love my brother or sisrter from Wakka Wakka, Kabb Kabbi (-🖤-)
Aho my brother we are thé true humans
Number one
They remind me of Africans
Why?
Aboriginals have african ancestors
@@noahmon5835 every human has African ancestry
Well it was believed that before the continents all split up, they migrated to Australia thus indigenous Australians/Aborigines
@@kevinhermi9861 The Scientist keep telling people that but when you say to them the word Australian Aboriginal they run for their lives because they can't explain how that happened . most historians will say we've had a sort of human for at least 100000 years so how is it these people walked out of Africa to Australia didn't pick up any of the technology along the way not even the bow and arrow and were basically living a stone age life when the white people come to Australia
Its not didjeridu it didgeridoo that's how u spell it right.
□♡
It actually can be spell this way, and yidaki is the name for it where it originated.
it's a yidaki.
There talented lol
2:26
Fascinating species
As are you
I'm hoping that's some sort of language barrier. Otherwise what an inappropriate offensive thing to say !
Yes we are a fascinating species
Humans are indeed fascinating. Especially humans like you that seem to keep their minds in the past, instead of accepting different cultures. So... maybe *you* aren't fascinating. More like ignorant.
Fascinating indeed.