Tjapukai is an Aboriginal Cultural Park. A short 15 minute
ride from Cairns, puts you right in the old world culture brilliantly revived,
and it seems to be alive and doing well.
It is a contained park with planned activities, and I
thought it was a terrific introduction to the Aboriginal culture and folk art.
There was a didgeridoo concert, the haunting mellow sound
resonated in the theatre, along with traditional dancing performed by the Tjapukai
Dance Troupe. The didgeridoo requires a lot of air power, but the sound that
comes out of the instrument resonates around you like an echo. Powerful, still
and evocative.
The dance movements were mesmerizing, you quickly got caught
up in the story they were telling. Tales of hunting, spiritualism, survival and
pride; an insight into the culture through music and dance. The perfect
introduction to a civilization that was
totally foreign to me. It was ideal, because it brought the past to life not
just through a lecture, but through art, music and dance, and it was
interactive
There were boomerang throwing lessons, along with spear
throwing, it’s not as easy as it looks. If thrown correctly, the boomerang will
return to you, but you must make the attempt to catch it. It will not magically
appear in your hand, although the return flight was fascinating to watch.
There were lessons about hunting tools and weapons that were
used some 40,000 years ago by the Aboriginal people. It was an amazing insight
into an ancient society.
The park is intimate, well organized, and first and foremost
educational. A rare glimpse of what once was, an inspiration to keep the old
culture alive for future generation. A tiny spark that shows awareness of what
once was.
More next week.
Cheers,
Margot Justes A Hotel in Paris
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