The Sydney Morning Herald
July 20, 2001
OBITUARIES

Paddy Roe

Aboriginal elder, 1912-2001

For many, there can be no greater loss than the death of Paddy Roe. A character
known far beyond his home country around Broome in
Western Australia, Roe was not only respected as an elder holding profound
cultural knowledge entrusted to him by his people, but also
for his generosity in sharing the "public" aspects of that knowledge with anyone
ready to listen.

Roe was a storyteller committed to sharing his time with countless visitors to
the tamarind tree at his home in Broome.

His goodwill and patience grew from his life. 

Roe was born on the Roebuck Plains (Pastoral) Station, 25 kilometres east of
Broome, about 1912. He grew up as a Nyikina man,
escaping the missions and forced assimilation that was taking the children away
from their families and homeland. 

During the early 1930s he travelled through the areas surrounding his homeland,
and the odyssey with his wife was as a way of
continuing the traditional law. Although Paddy was already a Nyikina lawman, his
people walked him through the country teaching him
its names, telling him its stories and showing him its sacred sites. 

Paddy was given the responsibility of a custodial role representing cultures
that had suffered the effects of the encroaching
non-indigenous cultures. 

After working for many years around the Kimberley as a station hand and windmill
contractor in the late 1960s, Roe settled with his
family north of Broome and established the Goolarabooloo community to fulfil his
cultural responsibility.

The result was the development of the Lurujarri (coastal dunes) heritage trail,
initiated in 1987 as a way of sharing the cultural
importance of the landscape with non-Aboriginal people.

As Broome continued to attract tourists and promote development, Roe's
obligation to ensure the country's maintenance in the "proper
way" led to an important cross-cultural bridge, working at the grassroots of
reconciliation long before the word became a central focus.

We first met Paddy Roe in the late 1980s as part of a group of 18 from the
landscape architecture course at RMIT, Melbourne, listening
to what he had to share about the environment of Broome. 

Notable was how welcome Roe made a group of students from Melbourne.

The experience changed everyone in some way, because what Paddy had to share
seemed to go to the very essence of human nature,
despite his difficulty in mastering English. He shared an understanding so
profound that it continues to resonate. For some of us, this
created personal turning points.

The profundity of the local landscape and culture was revealed through
experience.

Indeed, all who have walked the Lurujarri trail that winds 80 kilometres from
Minarriny (Coulomb Point) south to Minyirr (Gantheaume
Point) near Broome have learnt of its immense importance as part of a song cycle
celebrated by Aborigines as holding the path taken by
the ancestral spirits during Creation. 

For us, as landscape architects, Roe was and will always be a great source of
inspiration and guidance. The experience of meeting him
and his family, as well as the sheer power of his country, established a
foundation for our own pursuits.

He not only secured within our own spirits a greater sense of the places we live
and visit, but opened our eyes to the importance of
traditional and contemporary indigenous culture, in all its diversity and
complexity.

For all of us who have been privileged to have met and known Roe, surging
through the sense of loss at his passing is the reassuring
knowledge that his spirit will remain as part of the landscape's identity and
his family's strength. 

To many of us, Paddy Roe is the elder of the spirit of reconciliation and we are
hopeful that in history he will be remembered in this
light. 

Phil Murphy and Jim Sinatra

http://www.smh.com.au/news/0107/21/text/obituaries.html
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