Meet Dr. Anne Poelina: The Nyikina Traditional Custodian Advocating For Economic Sustainability

Screenshot: Martuwarra Fitzroy River website.


By Danielle Schmidt

I don’t think “idle hands” or “idle mind” are in Dr. Anne Poelina's vocabulary.  Wielding a Master of Public Health and Tropical Medicine, Master of Education, Master of Arts, PhD in Philosophy and completing a second PhD (Health Science), she is a force to be reckoned with.  It feels like she constantly is working on something, wearing so many different hats at a single time, but when I mentioned this to her, she simply replied “I do what I do, it is my destiny.”  After hearing her story, you realize it truly is.

Life in the Kimberley

Dr. Poelina grew up in the Kimberly region of Western Australia as “ngajanoo Yimardoowarra marnin”, which, translated from the Nyikina language, meansa woman who belongs to the Martuwarra (Fitzroy River).”  Generations of her family have dedicated themselves to the pastoral industry, “overseeing and managing other Aboriginal people who were involved in shepherding, mustering, shearing, wool-scouring, cooking, housework, carting, blacksmithing, pit-sawing, and fencing”.  She said it was during this upbringing when she learned about generations of her family being enslaved, dispossessed, deported, and murdered. 

“My memories are etched in the stories of how my family became part of the workforce vital to run those stations,” she explained.  “But when those enslaved to work demanded equal wages, they were driven out to local towns and cast away from our River Country. With unemployment rife in the towns in the late 1960s and 1970s, some took the opportunity to work on development schemes, such as the Camballin irrigation project, or for the Agricultural Protection Board.”  

But still, her people suffered.  “They witnessed the failures of poorly designed development schemes, or worse, became victims of unconscionable work practices which saw many Aboriginal men die or suffer ongoing, intergenerational health issues.”  Today, the community struggles with cattle industry leaders looking to harvest water from the Fitzroy river.

Martuwarra and Green Economies

So it’s no surprise that she, along with others of the Martuwarra Fitzroy River Council, took part in workshopping and reviewing Professor Jeff Connor’s 2019 report Environmental, cultural and social capital as a core asset for the Martuwarra (Fitzroy River) and its people, in conjunction with the Pew Charitable Trust, and reviewed by external experts and contributors.  It focuses on the Kimberly region and makes two essential arguments: local irrigation projects are not as profitable as one might believe, and that focusing on Aboriginal-led projects already in place actually have higher returns in investments and regional job growth. It also explores the added eco-benefits of Aboriginal-led enterprises (such as carbon farming, food production, tourism, traditional medicine, education, and arts & culture) over unsuccessful irrigation ones.  

Using the report, and in collaboration with national and international experts, Dr. Poelina continues to advocate for green industries by publishing papers, keynoting presentations at conferences, and producing plays, songs and ceremonies highlighting her people’s experiences and stories.  She and other Traditional Custodians are also currently working to have the Fitzroy River, which was listed as an Australian National Heritage site in 2011, inducted as a World Heritage site.  

In 2016, the six Traditional Owner nations signed the Fitzroy River Declaration, vowing to work together to protect the region.  “It is globally unique and belongs to all of us to share,” she exclaimed.  They are also utilizing social media and the internet to propel their advocacy further by launching a website and running a Facebook page, which allies can go to in the meantime.

So how can people use this report to advocate for greener jobs in their own community?

Dr. Poelina suggested engaging with Indigenous people, no matter where one lives and works.  “It is my belief that when we share our world views and wisdom, we can begin to deal with the complexity of climate chaos, and recognise the sacredness of our nation.  We all need to work collaboratively to right size our nation and planet, and sustain humanity and rights of nature to thrive now and into the future.”

She explained good governance is also key.  “Our work must combine multiple sciences, diverse cultures, and arts.  We need to find ways to work together to transition from the old economies to the new, which we are framing as the ‘forever industries’ (culture and science economies, renewable energy as obtainable ‘Green Economies’).”  

And morality comes into play too.  “The notion of the ‘greater good’ needs to be expanded to include Australia’s original people, as Traditional Owners of these resources who continue to manage our diverse estates, and have done so since the beginning of time.”

It’s worth noting that many indigenous communities around the globe have been tracking climate change for thousands of years through storytelling.  According to Smithsonian Magazine, one Aboriginal community has a story which describes a time when northeastern Australia’s shoreline reached all the way to the Great Barrier Reef, and a river flowed into the sea at what is now Fitzroy Island.  Researchers have proven that these stories, which have been passed down through oral storytelling, art, song and dance, match up to ecological events noted by scientists

Due to Indigenous groups’ special relationship with the earth, many have expressed the importance of protecting indigenous communities globally.  And as news concerning environmental issues like climate change increases, it’s becoming clear that the world at large needs to support indigenous conservation projects for widespread well-being.

Words for the future

Yet sadly, it still feels like environmentalists face obstacles everyday.  I asked Dr. Poelina how she manages to not get discouraged, and her words of wisdom were full of inspiration:  

“I am born into this role...I exist in a world of complexity, changing rules/laws, policies, systemic racism, structural violence, invasive and exploitative investment and development,” she continued.  “Against this is the backdrop, the elephant in the room:  climate change.  This global phenomenon brought on by greed and destruction is spiralling towards climate chaos, and we have a moment in our time to give our planet and humanity and climate a chance.”

You can also follow Dr. Anne Poelina’s work here.



Danielle Schmidt is a California-based film producer and freelance writer passionate about increasing climate literacy and its coverage in the media.  She is a past recipient of the Center for Asian American Media’s Student Film Award, and has worked in the TV/Film industry for over eight years.  She is currently developing a documentary following eight different walks of life navigating the climate movement during this heightened era.

Redstone Statement

Today marks the anniversary of the signing of the 1st may 2010 ‘Redstone Statement’ in which it is stated:

“… All governments, communities, leaders, individuals, industries, and corporations must immediately act together to restore the balance that is essential for continued existence. We call for a review of existing commercial practices and an end to any further non-sustainable exploitation and degradation of natural resources- for all generations to come.  We also call for a portion of profits to be invested in the development of renewable energy resources. We as Indigenous environmental philosophers breathe life into this statement and commit to implementing the provisions contained in it.”


Download the Redstone Statement [ PDF 90KB ]

2019 Development Practice Public Lecture

Dr. Anne Poelina at Walmadany, Western Australia

Human Rights and Climate Change Conference and Annual Key Note Address for the School of Social Science Masters of Development Practice.

“… Dr Poelina champions the need to strengthen Indigenous peoples’ capacity to uphold their human, cultural and economic rights from anthropogenic (human-caused) climate change. The National and Aboriginal Heritage Listed Mardoowarra/ Fitzroy River is at a crossroad, with diverse and conflicting visions for its future. Colonialism continues, mining, fossil fuel extraction, unconventional gas, and large-scale irrigated agriculture are invasive development proposals that threaten land, water, food security and the life ways for all Kimberley citizens.

This presentation includes a short film; bridging culture and shared understandings integral to transforming climate change spiralling into climate chaos, continued species extinction, human and environmental injustice. Bringing these threads together, a picture of the Mardoowarra/Fitzroy River emerges as a national treasure for new economies. Economies grounded in collective wisdom; traditional ecological knowledge, customary law with transdisciplinary knowledges; ecological, archaeological, heritage, arts and cultural values. This aligned with the rights of nature as the solutions for planetary health and wellbeing through an earth-centred regional governance provides the hope necessary to re-imagine the future now!”

Read more at The University of Queensland website.

Read more at the ‘Human Rights and Climate Change’ Conference website

View details at Eventbrite



Singing Not Crying

Grace Mulligan (2017) Story of Mijirrikan – Two Snakes Dreaming – Creation of the Fitzroy River.

‘Singing Not Crying’ – from the Mardoowarra–Fitzroy River of Life!

By Dr Anne Poelina

I am Yoongoorrookoo, Rainbow Serpent singing.
Travelling high up in the sky and down through rivers, land and sea. I hear the humans crying now, how woeful their cries continue to be! What is happening in our nation state, our nation home, our country. I see below me ... floods and fires crisscross this torched country. Then the floods, then the drought, then more heat.
Aboriginal leadership and water governance missing in action.
Buried within – systemic racism, structural violence.
Hidden at all levels of governance and bureaucracy.
Wake up I say, you human beings wake up and hear me belly crawl.

Wake up maybe ... one last time and listen to Bruce Pascoe’s call.
There is a wisdom here heavily rooted intrinsically between Aboriginal nations.
Their land, living waters, sea and the sky.
Aboriginal voice muted in the management and protection of our rivers.
Cry out ‘we need to be recognised’.
Defrauded, dis-eased into staying quiet.
Now through their mourning awakening others to their calling.
Recognised, reconciled, healing, transformation in order to fully adopt a united Australian nation. Australia taken by theft from these ancient nations.
It’s time to pause and take a deeper breath.

Read full poem - [ PDF 1.1 MBs ]

Balginjirr: A Special Place on our Home River Country

Anne Poelina shares her poetry with Westerly Magazine. Poelina belongs to the Fitzroy River and this poem expresses her relationship with the river and her concern for environmental governance in Australia.

“… Dr. Anne Poelina (Master of Public Health and Tropical Medicine, Master of Education, Master of Arts (Indigenous Social Policy), Doctor of Philosophy & Doctor of Health Science (Scholar)) is Managing Director of Madjulla Incorporated. She is a Nyikina Warwa Traditional Custodian from the Mardoowarra, Lower Fitzroy River in the West Kimberley region of Western Australia. Her childhood growing up in Broome, Derby and out on country has given her the love and respect for the diversity of Indigenous people, kinship and culture. She is a 2011 Peter Cullen Fellow for Water Leadership and is a signatory to the Redstone Statement that she helped draft at the 1st International Summit on Indigenous Environmental Philosophy in 2010. In 2011, she was the Inaugural Chair of the National First Peoples Water Engagement Council and later the same year she was elected onto the Broome Shire Council and became Deputy Shire President in her first term of office.  

In 2014, she was elected as Director and recently Deputy Chair of the Walalakoo Prescribed Body Corporate responsible for the integrated management of 27,000 square kilometres of Nyikina and Mangala Native Title lands and waters. In 2017, she was awarded a Laureate from the Women’s World Summit Foundation (Geneva). In 2018 she was elected Chair of the Martuwarra Fitzroy River Council. She is an Adjunct Senior Research Fellow with Notre Dame University and a Research Fellow with Northern Australia Institute Charles Darwin University. Her current work explores the entrepreneurial ‘New Economy’ opportunities for Indigenous people along the National Heritage Listed Fitzroy River, in relation to green collar jobs in diverse, science, culture, heritage and conservation economies. Dr. Poelina champions the need to include traditional ecological knowledge, First Law and the rights of nature to the solutions for planetary health and wellbeing.”

See website: www.majala.com.au

Music:
Immersed Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com)
Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0 License
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/

Review this article also at the Westerly Mag

Mothers Of Invention


Episode 4

Nyikina Traditional Custodian and academic working in Indigenous health, education, language and community development - Kimberley, Western Australia


This episode explores the impact of climate change on public health, traversing political, scientific, radical and spiritual realms with our Mothers of Invention. Mary and Maeve learn how all of our access to the very basics - clean air, clean water, livable temperatures - are at risk as well as the mental health implications of the destruction of the natural world. We meet a Black Lives Matter activist who believes that black neighbourhoods would be safer with less police and more trees. We speak to Siwatu Salama-Ra, a prolific environmental justice campaigner currently incarcerated in Detroit, Michigan and we spend time with a Traditional Custodian of the Fitzroy river in western Australia, currently at risk from fracking and industrial developments to consider our spiritual connection with nature. EPISODE NOTES: This week’s mothers of Invention are: Stella Hartinger - Lima, Peru Doctor and researcher exploring the global health impacts of climate change and fossil fuel pollution. Contributor to the Lancet Countdown report. lancetcountdown.org/the-report/ Sarra Tekola - Phoenix, Arizona Black Lives Matter activist, scientist and academic working on a PhD in Sustainability at Arizona State University. Co-founder of Women of Color Speak Out. @wocspeakout Siwatu Salama-Ra - Detroit, Michigan Climate justice activist. Co-Director of the East Michigan Environmental Action Council, building community power through environmental justice education, youth development, and collaborative relationship building. Learn about the campaign to free her from prison at freesiwatu.org Anne Poehlina - Kimberley, Western Australia Nyikina Warrwa Traditional Custodian and academic working to promote new economy opportunities and green collar jobs for Indigenous people. http://majala.com.au News clip from Democracy Now! Amy Goodman: On This Earth Day, Demand Freedom for Siwatu-Salama Ra Radio news clip, story from Sarah Cwiek on Michigan Radio (NPR) EPISODE WEBPAGE: mothersofinvention.online/undertheweather