Saturday, August 31

First Nations Ethics


First Nations Ethics
 
Ethics and the moral compass as it suggested might have applied to the first nation’s people
 
Introduction
What I think one might say right from the outset is that the Australian aboriginal tribal systems (before it broke down very badly with addiction to alcohol, loss of tribal oversight by elders, law etc.), strove to keep their children safe and to become responsible members of a tribe’s culture. Gifted children were identified early on as representatives on the elder’s councils and there was no inherited rights that we see elsewhere in ancient cultures. In fact it is doubtful if the colonizers ever saw the culture accurately such was the pace of devastation caused by disease and the sudden loss of habitant.

There was almost an immediate outbreak of smallpox and loss of habitat, to the extent that the position pre colonization of their rich culture was largely non-visible, except for isolated pockets in the remote regions. In Tasmania, for instance, as early as 1835, only a tiny fraction remained up until the last surviving full blood died in 1876. 
Even so, anthropologists misinterpreted such things as skin types and totems as was erroneously attributed to a form of incest, according to Jim Pouter- Sharing Heritage in Kulin Country.

My interest in the subject goes back to early  school days growing up in a small country town , where it became rather obvious that something was sadly remiss in not only what we were taught at school, but in the prejudicial talk of the townsfolk. They considered the aboriginal people’s second class citizens.

I recall the small housing settlement where they lived on the outskirts of town, constructed using poor quality timber work and which might be described as a cluster of tiny huts, many with broken windows and exhibiting an air of isolation and neglect. So, in writing this paper, it now reminds me those early childhood thoughts of what I imagined it must have been like, to appreciate in some small childlike manner, a sense of the loss and loneliness of a once rich culture now just a distant faint shadow of its former self. But this paper is not about the social ills that led to this state of affairs, but rather aims to provide an insight into their rich history and to talk about their 
morals and tribal ethics. Along the way I will attempt to shed some light on their belief systems resplendent in the Dreamtime, which underpinned every facet of their life.
As a final aim I want to continue to explore the idea of ethics by way of a moral compass, to talk about how this theme might be exemplified in their beliefs and practices. But first of all I need to debunk some of the stereotyped ideas and misinformation that permeated early history.
A tendency to stereotype first Nations people and misunderstandings by Anthropologists.

Historians, up until fairly recently, with a few notable exceptions, were prone to label first nations peoples culture as primitive. To recap, I vividly recall descriptions of aborigines from my early school books depicted as small tribes of nomadic hunter gatherers,  dependent on using stone and whose only shelter from the elements were  temporary ones, constructed from branches and the bark of trees. Whilst that may have been true, by way of necessity for the more arid areas, they occupied, it was certainly not so for the more densely populated areas in around the coastal areas where game was more plentiful and farming was undertaken. Evidence exists of what must have been similar to maize harvested and stored in certain areas. We also have evidence of stone buildings where they stayed during the season of eel farming. Even the pictures of aboriginal peoples, taken in remote arid areas, gave the impression they only barely eeked out an existence from a barren landscape. 
 
This is in stark contrast to seeing pictures of clans on the Dorrigo plateau (which possesses some of the richest soils if anywhere in NSW) as the sturdiest looking group you could ever encounter.    
 
Rather, we were treated to oblique reference to their colorful carvings on the rock faces or the occasional news item about corroborees or to “payback punishment " handed out to an offender of a tribe violating ancient law. Looking back to the 1950’s we find the first Australians did not rate a mention in a typically chronicled “A short history of Australia", notwithstanding an existence stretched back maybe 70,000 years. The significance of dreamtime stories which gave meaning to successive generations and ensured an ongoing affinity with the land was mostly overlooked, as was their complex system of law, extensive kinship and spirituality.  
 
Recent discoveries uncover a far richer dust   
According to the Conversation, In the 1970s, Dr Peter Coutts of the Victoria Archaeological Survey carried out site surveys at Lake Condah (Tae Rak), the centrepiece of the Bim cultural landscape. Lake Condah is very different to the marshy plains near Mt William. It is a rugged lava flow terrain of basalt rises, swampy depressions, and waterways formed as a result of the eruption of Mt Eccles (Budj Bim) at least 30,000 years ago. Coutts and his team found what local Gunditjmara people had long known about – extensive Aboriginal fish-trapping systems comprising hundreds of metres of excavated channels and dozens of basalt block dam walls constructed  over innumerable generations before European contact. Coutts estimated that the volume of basalt blocks moved measured in “the many hundreds of tonnes.
Another aspect is the first Nations peoples appear to have understood lunar and solar eclipses and the movement of the Sun, Earth and Moon. The ABC reported that Duane Hamacher from Sydney's Macquarie University, said Aboriginal communities in different parts of Australia often have similar traditional stories to explain these events.
According to Hamacher they understood the motions of astronomical bodies and the correlation with terrestrial events which meant they could identify the movement of the tides and the emergence of changing seasons and attendant emergence of different food sources.

First Nations Society and Culture
What was also evident was a high degree of autonomy was evident in the small groups that lived together as clans. But, I need to pause here and attempt to explain their complex structure. Each tribal nation, of which it was thought to number about 500, was designated within defining borders. Residing within these nations there are the so called clan groups. They are larger than a family but based on a family link through a common ancestry. Hence Clan groups shared a common language and kinship system. 
What I aim to do is to explain these kinship systems, but I first need to explain their spirituality.
I would draw attention to the fact that although there wasn't one deity covering all of Australia. Rather there was a common idea about initial creation was evident according to Jim Pouter, which he describes as Wandjinism.  How it works is that each tribe has its own creation spirits with an overlap of beliefs, (just as there is an overlap of words between language groups) but the beginning creation story remains consistent.   
By way of example, Wandjinism in the northern Kimberley of Western Australia is associated with the Ngarinyin, Worora and Wunambal tribes. Thus, although the tribe’s beliefs and accompanying theology are different in other parts of Australia, that is only applicable as it relates to the different creative spirts.  According to Jim Poulter, the foundational belief (Wandjinism as GOD) is of a universe created by a Supreme Being. This was made possible as in the Dreaming. The permanence to the Dreaming creation was that it was broken up into assorted creation pieces and existential life, projected into the Dreaming in the form of Creator Spirits. 
When these Creator Spirits had concluded their creation, they then surrendered to the Dreaming, to become the landmarks and animals we see today. Poulter goes on to explain the only creatures left with full consciousness were human beings, so their role is to protect the living spirit world that makes up the landscape and is representative of the Land and the Dreaming. Hence, when Wandjina (GOD) saw that human beings understood their ecological responsibilities, all knowledge that would ever be needed was seeded into the Dreaming, and the first nation’s peoples believed that had access to it through our own Personal Dreaming.
GOD (Wandjina) then took no ongoing part in the affairs of the real world, but watches. Hence, in summing up, the idea was creation was continuous and the spirit of that creation in various landmarks continues in tandem with the tribe’s existence.  It is also important to understand the first nation’s idea of time which is non-lineal. According to elder Dr Fejo -King the best way to think about is to imagine the figure 8. Thus, prior to pregnancy the creation spirit enters the womb to convey knowledge. During existence this knowledge is reinforced during ritualistic ceremonies such as during ceremonial dances at Corroborees that prepare one for the future and so on. The idea of a past, present and future is not applicable, rather there is only continuous creation and re-incarnation via the dreaming.  Hence, in summing up, the idea was creation was continuous and the spirit of that creation in various landmarks that continues in tandem with the tribe’s existence. Other matters of importance were decided at Corroborees as to where to hold planned festivals when resources might be in such abundance they could be shared. Long journeys were undertaken to attend these festivals using the stars to navigate across well-worn tracks and landmarks. Trade was facilitated by the use of message sticks, using symbols to support the negotiators who could then overcome foreign language difficulties. Such negotiations might involve the granting of water rights to fish certain sections of the river in one region in exchange for the right to mining scarce resources available in another.       
Having explained their spirituality and customs we can know better understand their kinship system and ultimately the source of their individual morals. In a nutshell their kinship system operated at 3 levels, Moiety, Totem and Skin types. 
I will attempt to explain how each works, but additionally I would recommend several websites for those seeking a more comprehensive coverage.    
Moiety 
According to Moiety the Creation stories, embedded in the Dreamtime, ensured everything can be seen as two halves, inclusive of yourself and your environment. 
One side of the Moiety may be principally concerned with preservation whilst the other can hunt and fish, but both are a mirror image of each other according to the totem and skin system that defines the Clan. 
A Moiety is preordained and when you share the same Moiety as other people, they are all considered as siblings, and hence, you are forbidden to marry within your Moiety. 

This also means you have a duty to reciprocally support one another, as in your enlarged family.   

Accordingly, the moiety system exists across Australia and there is a section or subsection system with four to eight ‘skin names’. Individuals gain ‘skin names’ upon birth based on the skin names of his or her parents, to indicate the section/subsection that he/she belongs to. The children then must not marry into that side of the Moiety, but alternate with each generation. Later on I have provided a diagram to illustrate  how this works by Elder Dr Fazo – King.    

Totems
The foundation of the kinship is also the totem systems that ensures each person has at least four Totems; their personal, family, clan and nation totem.
The Totems provide a link to the physical universe: to land, water, geographical features, and animals. The family, clan and nation totems are pre-ordained but an additional individual totem will be decided by tribal elders which recognizes personal strengths. Individuals then are accountable for their totems and are to ensure these totems are protected and passed on to future generations.
 
Skin Names
The 3rd level of the kinship system are skin names. They define the relationship of one another and their obligations to one another. An individual doesn't have the same skin name as their parent's, husband and wife. Rather It is a sequential system based off the mother’s name (in a matrilineal system), or the father’s name (in a patrilineal system), and has either a four cycle or 8 cycle a naming cycle. From the reference there is an explanation of the 8 cycle naming cycle  

 
 
Notice that on each side of the Moiety the children who marry will marry into the opposite side until such time as the cycle is complete. The naming cycle then repeats.
 
Hence, by way of example, cast your eye on to the far left hand daughter’s side, to notice the children’s Moiety’s skin Type.
 Notice that Nampin is on the red side of the Moiety (called Wuriurru). After marriage Nappanangka ( daughter) is then on the black side of the Moiety (called Kingili ).
After marriage Nakamarra (daughter) is then on the red side of the Moiety (called Wuriurru). After marriage Namkill (daughter) is then on the black side of the Moiety (called Kingili). After marriage, Nampin (daughter) is then on red side of the Moiety (called Wuriurru) as the cycle repeats. It is not hard to understand why the early anthropologists did not understand the system and how it quickly became compromised with the decimation of the clans and tribal systems. 
If you like you could now do the son on the right had side and then the alternate other sides to grasp how the whole skin systems relationships works.
Note the N Names are for female skin names and the J for males in respect to skin names within either side of the Moiety.  
 
For a further reference Dr DAVID M. WELCH has set up a site as per the link below to help students better understand Australia’s ancient culture, which provides an excellent reference. The website represents an amalgam of books relating to the subject matter. Dr David M. Welch is a general medical practitioner based in Darwin in the Northern Territory of Australia, who has worked with Aboriginal people since the 1970s, researched their rock art (painted shelters and engraved rocks) and other aspects of their culture, and written more than thirty journal articles, reports and books on the subject. The journal articles can be found and downloaded at http://davidmwelch.com.au/
The aboriginal Land Council also provides excellent material on how the kinship systems works as per the First Nations Website  : https://www.commonground.org.au/our-vision
 
Morals arising from the kinship tribal system. 
One can now readily ascertain the moral duty to your extended family under the Moiety system. You also have a responsibility to pass on his knowledge associated with your 4 assigned totems.
You come into the world with your moral responsibility already defined by your Moiety, Totems and Skin types with additional guidance provided by the elders.     
   
Identifying different ethical categories. 
What is not surprising is the ease we now find in identifying different ethical categories without the need to draw too long a bow.
Note there was no hierarchical inherited claims that plagued other cultures, as governance by elders was based on merit. That is evident in a reservoir of knowledge (epistemology) encapsulated in the Law and the responsibilities defined under the Totems, as an ongoing commitment to consistently apply it’s principles to both tribal life and in the wider obligations to other nations.
The spiritual application to show reverence to MOTHER EARTH provided the ethical values as to how they must act responsibly to the land and to nature. We may not agree with some aspects of the application of their law or its brutality, but what does seem relevant is it ethical framework to support the tribe’s sustainable existence ahead of the individual. Given a bit of a stretch we might associate this reverence to the land as kind of either evolutionary or virtue ethic, as it defines how we must look after the earth upon whom we depend. Plato posited early training in the moral virtues was essential in ensuring goodness in ensuing adulthood. We might liken the tutelage period for aborigines, separated from the tribe to be instructed to the law, until such time as they were deemed fit to enter adulthood, as a similar type of idea.      
But, I think it is far easier to make the transition to duty ethics, since the loyalty to the tribe to stay true to its rituals and rules was paramount.
Separation from the clan or tribe was tantamount to death of the spirit in both physical and in spiritual forms. This is evidenced by a rare ‘pointing of the bone episodes’ to serious law breakers, where we have the account of one unfortunate subject who died of a broken heart. Such an event occurred during my childhood and I remember the baffled reports from the hospital that could find no medical reason for his untimely sudden death. I only mention this to illustrate the extraordinary kinship and feelings of belonging that existed to be part of a tribe.      
A theory as to where morals came from for the first Nations peoples.    
As various instinctive type reactions underpinned enhanced survival, psychological traits became aligned to this social cohesion principle which was reinforced by evolving beliefs. Hence what emerges towards sustainable tribal cohesion and existential order is the requirement to adopt principals of ethical fairness to ensure optimum survival outcomes.    
The integration of their knowledge served principally ecological purposes, evident in the clan system that operated throughout Australia and allowed them to exist within their designated water catchment systems,  
From what has been uncovered it is clear their existence was supported and reinforced by ideas closely aligned with nature, underpinned by the ideas of the dreamtime, a period considered outside of time when creation was thought to have occurred. In this respect reverence is demonstrated to be shown in practices that point to a type of communal existence co-dependent with nature together with what was regarded as sacred land.   To reiterate the dreamtime posited a first Creator appeared in the physical world to bring forth natural children and plants under the control of a MOTHER EARTH, from thence came animals but lastly humankind.
Dreamtime stories were instrumental in defining their tribal values which led to an elaborate system of ethical rules under the common law, such as initiation into adulthood. To reiterate this law covered ritualistic ceremonies such as the processes for corroborees when the tribes met to resolve matters such as arranged marriages, to plan for trade between the nations, to celebrate and so forth.
Whilst there is no evidence of full scale war between nations, there is evidence of severe skirmishes between them and a high level of violence as scores were settled brutally by means of “payback”. Penalties were quite severe and death prescribed for unauthorized entry into sacred sites.
But what was remarkable was their existence for such a long period without denuding the landscape, although changes due to the operation of fire stick farming may have led to the extinction of some species. Like many other rich culture there are aspects of Aboriginal values which tend to suggest pluralism, self-determination, community, family, relationships, and achieving balance within all the domains of human life.
Possibly the idea of moral values arose from the concept of fairness.
To reiterate I think it is fair to say our earliest codes of accepted behaviors in Aborigines appears to be based on putting sharing ahead of individualism, so that loyalty to the group underwrote enhanced chances of survival.
Concurrent on the other side of the globe the success of the human species adapting to the enhanced dynamics of the group has been extraordinary but many would argue to excess. One could argue in the process the table has turned to become consumers and not sharers in nature’s bounty.   
Possibly the early roots for this twist in the evolutionary road from sharers to consumers may be linked to the idea we have dominion or superiority over nature, which is to be tamed and brought under human control. Such a view, combined with our extraordinary inventive improvements and adaptions in modernity has prospered humanity, but often this is at the expense of all of the other species. This in turn has the capacity to change our ideas on what are our underlying ethical values; to engender the need for a revision in our thinking to return to the way we viewed the lands when once we were more reliant to respond to the changing seasons for our survival. 
Conclusion
I think there are grounds to believe there are many ingredients in a universal type of morality entwined in nature, brutal as it may seem, although of course this cannot be proven and is by no means easily discernible. What I have attempted to do in this paper is to illustrate the important ingredient of social cohesion as form of evolutionary ethics that played a pivotal role in in our own early evolutionary journey.
 

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