Ringbalin – River Healing Tour
The many rivers of the Murray-Darling Basin have long been in crisis as irrigators have increasingly sought to extract more and more water from the system. The downstream effects of large-scale irrigation have devastated the lower reaches of the rivers, leading to dry lake beds, stagnant ponds and at times, the closing of the Murray Mouth and the degradation of the Coorong.
In 2010, Ngarrindjeri Songman and Elder Major ‘Moogy’ Sumner led the Tal-Kin-Jeri Dancers on a journey of cultural healing from the headwaters of the Barwon River in northern NSW to the Murray Mouth. Flooding rains followed the group down as they performed ceremonies to heal the rivers and dance the spirit of the land.
The following year, Moogy was invited by the
Northern Basin Indigenous Nations (NBAN) to start
the Ringbalin ceremony at Murra Murra in southern
Queensland. Since then, alliances have been formed
with NBAN, the Murray Lower Darling Rivers
Indigenous Nations (MLDRIN) and the Murray Darling
Basin Authority to promote the well-being of the
river and to encourage more Indigenous participation
in the process of restoring this great river system
to health. A major component of the cultural sharing
among the various language groups is the sharing of
and capture of songs and stories in language by the
Ringbalin documentary makers. These short videos
will be shared with the community and used as
educational resources.
In 2019 Tal-Kin-Jeri has been invited by the Ngaran Ngaran elders to commence Ringbalin in the high country of the Snowy Mountains at the very source of the mighty Murray River.
The Tal-Kin-Jeri Dancers will travel from the source
to the sea and dance in places like Albury/Wodonga,
Echuca, Wood Wood near Swan Hill, Mildura,
Wentworth, Renmark, Murray Bridge and Wellington
before finishing off in Goolwa and then to the
Murray Mouth.