Mabo family attend gumbi gumbi gardens opening

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Mabo family attend Gumbi Gumbi Gardens opening

Bonita and Bethyl Mabo with Kooma Didgeri Dance Troupe. All images supplied

by Rhianwen Whitney 10 October 2013

T

hree generations of the Mabo family applauded as the University of Southern Queensland’s (USQ) Gumbi Gumbi Gardens were officially declared open on Tuesday. Bonita Mabo, wife of late Indigenous activist Eddie Mabo, her daughter and granddaughters joined community and business leaders, including many Aboriginal elders, for the ceremony at USQ Toowoomba.

The official opening included a rock laying and smoking ceremony and performances from internationally renowned novelist and poet, Herb Wharton; country music artists Roger Knox and Troy Cassar-Daley; and the Kooma Didgeri Dance Troupe. “It was really great to be here to enjoy this moment with the University,” Mrs Mabo said. “To see something like the Gumbi Gumbi Gardens is wonderful and I think this kind of thing is needed at all universities. “It’s not just something for

Indigenous people to enjoy, but for everyone to enjoy together.” USQ Vice-Chancellor Professor Jan Thomas said it was an honour to have three generations of the Mabo family at the official opening of the Gardens. “We’re really thrilled to have Mrs Mabo’s support and indeed some of the artworks in the Gardens were done by her granddaughters,” Professor Thomas said. “The Mabos were pivotal in changing the face of Australia and in progressing reconciliation - their contribution to Australian history is Page 1


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Well known and respected author Uncle Herb Wharton

profound. “To have the endorsement of someone so significant to the history of reconciliation is very special to USQ.” Professor Thomas said the Gumbi Gumbi Gardens celebrate the link between Australia’s traditional custodians and the land and plants they used for food and medicine for centuries. “These Gardens are a chance for locals and visitors to understand

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Elder Darby McCarthy

Country Music award winner Troy Cassar-Daley

and appreciate the heritage of our district,” she said. “They are also a visual symbol of USQ’s commitment to reconciliation and an opportunity for Indigenous and non-Indigenous Australians to move forward together.” The Gardens cover approximately 2.2 hectares of land adjacent to the northern side of the University main entrance and features extensive plantings of

Indigenous flora used by the local Aboriginal communities for food and medicine. It also includes a number of small and large teaching spaces infused into the overall character of the development. The Gardens have been designed in close partnership with Historical Elders from Toowoomba and Elders of the Jarowair People, the traditional custodians of the land on which USQ Toowoomba resides.

Renowned musician Roger Knox


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