Vincent Lingiari

Australian livestock worker and activist
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Quick Facts
Born:
June 13, 1908 [or 1919], Victoria River Gorge [now Victoria River], Northern Territory, Australia
Died:
January 21, 1988, Daguragu, Northern Territory

Vincent Lingiari (born June 13, 1908 [or 1919], Victoria River Gorge [now Victoria River], Northern Territory, Australia—died January 21, 1988, Daguragu, Northern Territory) was an Australian livestock worker and activist who fought for Aboriginal land rights. He is best known for leading the 1966 strike of Aboriginal workers at the Wave Hill cattle station in the Northern Territory, Australia.

Government sources list Lingiari’s birth year as 1919, but it may have been 1908. His parents were Aboriginal people of Gurindji descent who lived and worked at the Wave Hill cattle station owned by the British meatpacking company Vestey Brothers. Lingiari grew up at the station receiving no formal education. When he was about 12 years old, he began to work with the cattle at the stock camps. Over the years, he worked his way up to head stockman but received no payment for his promotion.

The Aboriginal workers at the Wave Hill cattle station were paid significantly lower wages than the white workers. In 1966 Lingiari organized some 200 Aboriginal workers and their families to strike against the unfair wages and substandard working conditions at the cattle station. The protesters left Wave Hill and set up camp a few miles away at Daguragu (Wattie Creek). This location was closer to the Gurindji’s sacred sites. The entire Gurindji strike lasted nine years.

At first the strikers demanded to receive the same pay as white workers, as well as better treatment for Aboriginal women. In 1967, however, Lingiari and his fellow strikers petitioned the government for ownership of the Wave Hill land for Gurindji cattle and a mining lease, stating that it had traditionally been Aboriginal land. This request was initially denied. However, the Gurindji stayed in Daguragu although it was technically considered illegal, as the land was leased to Vestey Brothers. Lingiari began to tour Australia, giving speeches to gain support for Aboriginal land rights. This garnered widespread attention and transformed the strike into a national and international issue. Lingiari and other activists recorded Gurindji Blues (1971) to raise money for the Gurindji and the main Aboriginal protest occupation site, the Aboriginal Tent Embassy.

The Labor Party’s ascent to power in 1972 changed the political landscape in Australia, with Prime Minister Gough Whitlam announcing that he would make Aboriginal land rights a priority. In 1973 Whitlam negotiated a deal to lease 3,250 square km (1,255 square miles) of the Wave Hill land, including Daguragu, to the Gurindji people. This lease included the most sacred areas of the Gurindji traditional lands. Two years later Whitlam met with Lingiari, symbolically pouring dirt into Lingiari’s hands with the words, “Vincent Lingiari, I solemnly hand to you these deeds as proof, in Australian law, that these lands belong to the Gurindji people.” Although this was considered a victory, the cattle station soon fell into disrepair, as the stockmen had never been taught the financial complexities of the business. The government gave the Gurindji legal possession of the land in 1986, but by then there was no longer any thriving business in the area.

The Wave Hill strike influenced the passing of the Aboriginal Land Rights Act (Northern Territory) in 1976. The act recognizes that Aboriginal peoples have a right to land that they have traditionally occupied and describes procedures for them to claim it. In 2020 the Gurindji people were granted their native title over the 5,000 square km (1,931 square miles) of Wave Hill station land. Freedom Day, a day to commemorate the strike, occurs each year in March and features multiple events, including the Vincent Lingiari Memorial Lecture.

For his work on behalf of Aboriginal people, Lingiari was named a Member of the Order of Australia (AM) in 1976. He died on January 21, 1988, at Daguragu, survived by his wife, Blanche Nangi, and their six sons and two daughters.

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