
Desert Pea Media
www.desertpeamedia.com.au
PI Boyz
www.smugglersoflight.com/AboriginalJustice.htm
Aboriginal man Mulrunji Doomadgee died in custody at Palm Island police station on November 19, 2004. His liver had been cleaved almost in two.
Nearly three years later, senior police sergeant Chris Hurley told Townsville Supreme Court he had come to terms with the fact that he caused the death.
But more than six years after it happened, no one has been convicted of Doomadgee's death.
The story has dropped out of the headlines, but it is being kept in the nation's conscience another, more innovative way.
Week after week, right across the country, an infectious slice of tropical hip hop is played on radio stations that keeps Doomadgee鈥檚 name alive. The name of the record is 鈥淎boriginal Justice鈥 by the PI Boyz.
鈥淭his is for my brother that was taken away / From his family, I wish he was alive today / We鈥檙e looking for justice Aboriginal way / Not just locking up my mob for starting a fray / Yeah it starts today, no more of this / Listen to the rap scratched on this disc.鈥
The record, which hit the No. 1 spot in Triple J鈥檚 Unearthed Chart last year, is a collaboration between three young Bwgcolman men from Palm Island and a remarkable arts workshop by an organisation called Desert Pea Media.
鈥溾楢boriginal Justice鈥 was massive,鈥 Desert Pea鈥檚 director, Toby Finlayson, tells 91自拍论坛 Weekly.
鈥淣ot only for the community on Palm Island and the PI Boyz who recorded the track, but all of Australia. The song helped bring an incredible injustice to light, and we like to think that it helped the community with their grieving process.
鈥淭o have the opportunity to honour Mulrunji Doomadgee and his family was a humbling experience.鈥
Finlayson helped form Desert Pea Media after completing a BA in Communications, Theatre and Media in Bathurst, about 200 kilometres west of Sydney, and working with disadvantaged and remote communities in Asia.
鈥淢y time in Thailand and Sri Lanka was really the foundation for my work with Desert Pea Media,鈥 he says.
鈥淚 lived and worked with an amazing organisation called The Makhampom Foundation, who have a long history of running sustainable community theatre programs in remote Thai villages, child prostitution-drawing areas, HIV-affected areas and Burmese refugees, among others.
鈥淭hey use a process where participants create a dialogue through image and theatre around social and cultural issues, looking at finding possible solutions to real problems and advocating awareness through contemporary media.
鈥淚t is this model that inspired me to work with disadvantaged communities back home. I figured it makes more sense for me to be a part of effecting change in my own country.鈥
Desert Pea Media has spent the past nine years travelling to remote communities across Australia. It holds workshops lasting up to three weeks in which locals learn to express themselves through circus skills, theatre, music and film.
鈥淲e鈥檝e been to so many places and met so many amazing people,鈥 says Finlayson. 鈥淓very community we have been to has been awesome in its own right. Palm Island, Collarenebri, Boggabilla, Dubbo, Bathurst, Moree 鈥 these are where some of our closest friendships and relationships with community are, and of course we love working out there, but the list is growing every month.鈥
Quite a leap for a non-Aboriginal kid who grew up in the suburbs.
鈥淢y childhood was a normal sort of childhood,鈥 says Finlayson. 鈥淢y parents are both psychologists and I grew up in Sydney and moved out to Bathurst when I was 15. I went to a public high school in a housing commission area.
鈥淚 think my relationship with Aboriginal communities comes from a strong sense of family. My family is incredibly close, and it鈥檚 the friendships and relationships I have made out there that built a foundation for Desert Pea Media鈥檚 work.
鈥淲hen I got back from Thailand, I started volunteering with a few community and cultural development organisations.
鈥淚 was working with BigHart on a project in Sydney when I met the principal artist, Matthew Priestly, a Gamileraay man from Boggabilla, New South Wales. We got on really well and Desert Pea Media ran our first program out in his community.
鈥淲e are now as close as you can get to family without being related. We are brothers and we have a shared vision for Australian cultural sustainability that informs our work to this day.
鈥淪ustainability is always a challenge in this kind of work. We don鈥檛 have infrastructural funding and work on a project-specific basis. We emphasise maintaining grassroots, ongoing relationships with young people and communities based on the principles of friendship and brotherhood.
鈥淪ocial media and mobile phones keep us in contact with our young brothers and sisters where possible. Desert Pea Media is an organisation founded on family. Proper way.鈥
Since 鈥淎boriginal Justice鈥, the Desert Pea family has gone from strength to strength.
Its work with Collarenebri Central School in far north-west NSW has spawned 鈥淭he Colli Crew鈥, a diminutive bunch of razor-sharp rappers who boast a level of political maturity that puts far older city-dwellers to shame.
鈥淚 think if you are born Aboriginal, you are born political,鈥 says Finlayson. 鈥淜ids in communities live and breathe politics, poverty, trauma and the list goes on. They have an acute level of awareness and capacity for critical thought and observation that isn鈥檛 found in most adults.鈥
Their skills have not gone unnoticed. The Colli Crew soon found themselves being played on the radio, winning awards, performing at the Schools Spectacular and spitting out their conscious lyrics from the steps of Sydney Opera House to a crowd of 10,000 people at the Aria Awards.
It鈥檚 obvious that hip hop is the aspect of Desert Pea鈥檚 work that garners the most attention. But Finlayson, who cites Australian crews TZU, Mantra, Muphin, Pegz, and The Herd among his favourite artists, shows little concern that the rapping might overshadow the rest of the work.
鈥淲e focus on multimedia performance,鈥 he says. 鈥淟ive performance, circus and puppetry combined with hip hop and film frames a story 鈥 we create holistic community events.
鈥淭heatre and performance is more relevant to younger participants and, to some extent older community members. It鈥檚 about catering for all age groups.
鈥淔or us, hip hop, film, circus and theatre are all just tools to engage young people in dialogue and critical thought. Hip hop is an incredibly relevant storytelling form, and enables stories to be presented in a language that is understood by young people. It鈥's about talking to people in their own language.
鈥淗istorically, hip hop comes from African American culture in a low socioeconomic context, and I think First Australian communities relate to the struggles that are addressed in the rap and hip hop genre.
鈥淭upac, Biggy and many other artists talk about some of the same struggles that face Aboriginal people, and I think young people respond to that.
鈥淚 do love hip hop. I love story, and Australian hip hop is my language. It's my native tongue and it鈥檚 an interesting and vibrant social commentary in Australia. I don鈥檛 like the arrogance and belligerence in hip hop culture, but I love our Aussie flavour.鈥
Desert Pea鈥檚 work is up there with the best Aussie flavours. But the song writing is not as painful or time-consuming as the quality of the end product might suggest.
鈥淭he whole process takes only a few hours,鈥 says Finlayson. 鈥淲e have a unique 鈥榩eer to peer鈥 mentoring process. It鈥檚 about creating dialogue around local social and cultural issues.
鈥淭he young people or the communities identify an issue and together we explore the impact of this issue on young people and community. Our artists then help the group craft this into a story, workshop rhyme structure and poetry, then put it down.鈥
But it is perhaps Finlayson who has learnt the most.
鈥淲here do I begin?鈥 he says. 鈥淲orking and living in communities, sitting around fires, listening, learning 鈥 I can鈥檛 even begin to explain the lessons I have learnt about myself, our country, respect, relationships and responsibility.
鈥淭he gifts I have been given are immeasurable and I am eternally grateful.鈥
It鈥檚 an education few Australians could ever hope to get.
鈥淚 think there are a whole range of gaps in the way Australian people are educated about culture,鈥 says Finlayson. 鈥淔rom language to spirituality and even basic history. In my opinion, the misinformation and ignorance that plagues our country is unforgivable.鈥
Video:聽The PI Boyz' 鈥淎boriginal Justice鈥.聽.
Video:聽The Colli Crew's 鈥淐hange The Game鈥.聽.