Native name: Mer | |
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Geography | |
Location | Torres Strait |
Archipelago | Torres Strait Islands |
Total islands | 247 |
Major islands | Thursday Island |
Highest elevation | 234 m (768 ft) |
Highest point | Gelam Paser |
Country | |
Australia
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State | Queensland |
Regional Authority | Torres Strait Regional Authority |
Local Government Area | Torres Strait Islands Region |
Murray Island (known by the local Torres Strait Islanders as Mer) is a small island of volcanic origin, populated by the Melanesian Meriam people and situated in the eastern section of Torres Strait, near the Great Barrier Reef. The island has a population of around 450.
This island is one of the Torres Strait Islands and supports a population of around 450 people. The Murray Group comprises three islands - Mer, Dauar and Waier. There are eight Meriam tribes - Komet, Zagareb, Meuram, Magaram, Geuram, Peibre, Meriam-Samsep, Piadram and Dauer Meriam. The organization of the island is based on the traditional laws of boundary and ownership.
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Murray Island is a basaltic island formed from an extinct volcano, which was last active over a million years ago. It formed as a result when the Indo-Australian Plate slid over the East Australia hotspot. The island rises to a plateau 80 m above sea level. The highest point of the island is the 230 metre Gelam Paser, the western end of the volcano crater. The island has red fertile soil and is covered in dense vegetation. The island has a tropical climate with a wet and dry season.
Murray Island has been inhabited by the Meriam people for thousands of years prior to European exploration and settlement of Australia. Regular contact between the inhabitants of Torres Strait (including Murray Island, known by the Meriam people as Mer Island) and Europeans began once the Torres Strait became a means of passage between the Indian Ocean and the Pacific Ocean in the 19th Century.
The inhabitants of the Torres Strait, including the Meriam people, gained a reputation as fierce warriors and skilled mariners. Warfare (both inter-tribal and against European ships in transit through the Coral Sea) and head hunting were part of the culture of all Torres Strait islanders. The account of Jack Ireland, a surviving cabin boy from the barque Charles Eaton that was wrecked in 1834 at Detached Reef near the entrance to Torres Strait is of interest in this respect. He spent much of his time on Murray Island before being rescued. A large ceremonial mask was recovered in 1836 from a neighbouring island following his rescue and that of young William D’Oyley, the only other survivor of the Charles Eaton, and their return to Sydney. The mask was made of turtle shells surrounded by numerous skulls, seventeen of which were determined as having belonged to the crew and passengers of the Charles Eaton who were massacred when they came ashore following the shipwreck. The mask was entered into the collection of the Australian Museum after the skulls were buried on 12 November 1836 in a mass grave at Bunnerong Cemetery, Sydney.
Westerners began to settle on the island in 1872 when the London Missionary Society founded a missionary school there.[1] The Queensland Government annexed the islands in 1879. Tom Roberts, the well-known Australian painter, visited the island in 1892.[2] He witnessed a night-time dance and depicted it in a painting.
In 1936, a maritime strike fueled by Islander dissatisfaction with the fact that their wages and boats were managed by the Protector of Aborigines allowed islanders to assert control and reject government controls. In 1937, the inaugural meeting of Island Councillors on Yorke Island resulted in the "Torres Strait Islander Act" (1939), giving Islanders more authority in their own affairs and established local governments on each island.
After the outbreak of the Pacific War in 1941, over 700 Islanders volunteered to defend the Torres Strait. This group was organised into the Torres Strait Light Infantry Battalion. The migration of Islanders to mainland Australia as jobs disappeared in the pearling industry. A call for independence from Australia in the 1980s was due to the government failing to provide basic infrastructure on the island.
Murray Island's most famous resident was trade unionist Eddie Mabo, whose decision to sue the Queensland Government in order to secure ownership of his land, which had been removed from his ancestors by the British colonial powers using the terra nullius legal concept, ultimately led to the High Court of Australia, on appeal from the Supreme Court of the State of Queensland, issue the "Mabo decision" to finally recognise Mabo's rights on his land on 3 June 1992. This decision continues to have ramifications for Australia. Mabo himself died a few months before the decision. After vandalism to his grave site, he was reburied Murray Island where the islanders performed a traditional ceremony for the burial of a king.[3]
The people of Mer (Meriam) maintain their traditional culture. Modern influences such as consumer goods, television, travel and radio are having an impact on traditional practices and culture. Despite this, song and dance remains an integral part of island life and is demonstrated through celebrations such as Mabo Day, Coming of the Light, Tombstone openings and other cultural events. In 2007, after two years of negotiations, the skulls of five Islander tribesmen were returned to Australia from a Glasgow museum where they had been archived for more than 100 years.[4]
The people of Murray Island speak Torres Strait Creole and Meriam. English is a second language.
The artist Ricardo Idagi was born on Murray Island.[5] Idagi won the main prize at the Western Australian Indigenous Art Awards in 2009.
Murray Island is governed by the Community Council, which is responsible for roads, water, housing and community events. The Community Council has a major influence on community life. The elders of the community hold a position of respect and also have a major influence on island life.