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MAN: The sea itself and the land,
it nurtures us, you know?
Gives us what we live off.
It has been since time began.
We're so proud to be Yanyuwa people,
knowing that we work
with the country.
We look after it
and it looks after you.
SECOND MAN: For Yanyuwa mob,
enchantment, respect, trust, family
they're the things that actually
bring about practical outcomes
and that is healthy country.
That feeds back into healthy people.
You talk to them old people
and there's these really sophisticated stories about
who can take certain species at what time,
according to family,
the four clans,
and really sophisticated natural resource management
in white fella parlance.
LEONARD NORMAN: These clan groups are called
Wurdaliya, Wuyaliya, Rrumburriya and Mambaliya-Wawukarriya.
They've got special tasks that they do.
They have special areas they look after.
Each one of those clans
has got their own certain work and purpose,
how to fix things up in country,
how to look after it.
But when we come together
it all fits and we have this
one big plan together.
It makes it perfect for everybody
to utilise their skills towards making it
better for this country.
That is why the ranger groups,
we work it out together,
each and every one of them.
Each boy has their own things,
what they can do
and the other person can do other stuff
But when this comes together and they
help each other out
they'll make it happen for everybody else.
STEPHEN JOHNSON: There are no real bosses here.
I've got skills that Leonard hasn't got.
Leonard's got skills I haven't got.
We put them all together
and we get a
really good working relationship.
With this part of the country
there's no baseline data.
Very little scientific information whatsoever,
but there's thousands and thousands of years
of years of close observation
and finely grained knowledge
from Yanyuwa traditional owners.'
(WOMAN SINGS IN LOCAL LANGUAGE)
STEPHEN JOHNSON: A lot of scientists
are starting to hook into that.
They can see the value
of that knowledge, at last.
It's been a long struggle
to get that message through.
We've set up a junior ranger program
and I think there's a continuity
where them old people
are passing on what they know to us.
It's then, to us, to pass that information
through, that knowledge that goes back
at least 8000 years in this country
and probably a lot longer than that, in fact.
NICHOLAS FITZPATRICK: I grew up out bush, I grew up
on my mum's side,
with my grandfather and my nana
and learnt a lot of things about
culture and language and ceremony and law.
I went to Darwin for high school
and I finished Year 12 and studied
Conservation and Land Management.
I always wanted to be
a ranger since high school.
I went to Alice Springs.
I was doing a Tourism and Rangering
course down there.
I finally got the job down here.
I've been a sea ranger
for a year and a half now.
MAN: It's a small one but it does a bit of damage.
SECOND MAN: The Yanyuwa mob,
they are so grateful that
we're taking kids out to the island,
we're showing them country,
we give them language
for each and every place that they visit.
Cos it's been carried down from
generation to generation
just the knowledge and the language and everything
and the culture together,
it makes it strong
for the Yanyuwa people.
It carries them in their heart.
LEONARD NORMAN: The areas you find
the strongest biodiversity values
are the areas where countrymen
are living on country.
So it's no accident
that those species are healthy,
the numbers are high.
It's because people are living there.
That wilderness thing,
that's just nonsense, you know?
This is managed country,
people look after this country.
STEPHEN JOHNSON: Kids are busy on these video games
and everything else
whereas before, old people used to sit us down
and speak to us
in a real meaningful
way and telling us,
"These are the things that you gotta
keep on carrying on for you
and your kids all the way through".
NICHOLAS FITZPATRICK: When we moved away
when I was ten,
I wanted to come back ever since.
If I hadn't found a job here
I wouldn't have come back.
I probably would have ended up doing
I don't know, an apprenticeship in something.
Probably mechanics.
My dad kept annoying me in Alice Springs
to get into the mines,
but I kept telling him to wait
so I'd get the job.
And, yeah, I got it.
I took off back home.
Being Indigenous rangers on your own country,
looking after it,
you know, that's the best thing.
Jobs for new generations to come.
A lot of kids,
back when I was at primary school,
didn't get the chance
to come out here,
there was no rangers.
Now with the junior rangers,
it's good because
we've got rangers to bring
the kids out and educate
them about their land.
LEONARD NORMAN: I'm so proud to be one of the ranger men.
And with the other boys,
I'm proud of them, as well.
Cos this is something that gives us
some pride in ourselves,
knowing that we're part of this program
that's gonna help this place,
keep it strong
as it were in the old days.