Ernabella South Australia Removals

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Pukatja .

Geography

Pukatja is in the eastern Musgrave Ranges, west of the Stuart Highway, about 30 km south of the Northern Territory border. The community sits at an elevation of 676 metres.

Pukatja is about 1400 km by road from Adelaide, including 200 km on unsealed roads.

Population

The Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS) recorded a population of 332 in the 2006 census, up from 226 in the 2001 census and down from 470 in the 1991 Census.

PY Media reports that the population of Pukatja / Ernabella is somewhere between 500 and 700 people.

In the 2001 census, Pukatja was second only to sister community Mimili in having the lowest per capita income in South Australia .

History

Ernabella has been an Aboriginal community for a long time. It was established as a Presbyterian mission in 1938. The principles for the establishment of the mission at that time were:

Dr. Charles Duguid, the advocate for the establishment of Ernabella laid down the following principles:

There was to be no compulsion nor imposition of our way of life on the Aborigines, nor deliberate interference with tribal custom ... only people trained in some particular skill should be on the mission staff, and ... they must learn the tribal language.

Anangu people started gradually to come in from traditional life in the desert to live at the Mission after its establishment. The mission respected Anangu culture and traditions and offered medical help and education, with no conditions attached.

Responsibility for the administration of Ernabella Mission was formally handed over to the Ernabella Community Council — later Pukatja Community Council — on 1 January 1974.

The historic former Ernabella Mission Hospital, Church and Manse are listed on the South Australian Heritage Register.

Climate

Climate records for Ernabella/Pukatja have been kept since 1971. Due to its elevation high in the Musgrave Ranges, Pukatja is one of the coldest locations in central Australia. Minimum temperatures may drop below −5 °C , which is typical of an arid climate, and mostly falls from brief summer thunderstorms.

Facilities

Mail is delivered twice a week by air mail bag.

Ernabella Arts Inc is the longest continually running aboriginal arts centre in Australia. It has a school teaching Reception through to senior high school. Technical and further education (TAFE) facilities for the Anangu Pitjantjatjara Yankunytjatjara Lands are based at Pukatja.

The community store sells grocery supplies, clothes and hot food, and has EFTPOS facilities. The garage has basic parts and diesel fuel. The clinic has three registered nurses and the doctor is based here, but often absent visiting other communities.

The medical clinic is staffed by a doctor and 3 nurses, as well as Anangu Health Workers.

A basic police station exists at Pukatja, and is not permanently manned. In July 2007, the Police Association of South Australia described the stations as "dirty" and "ill-equipped", and a "disgrace". The Pukatja station is due for replacement, though its preferential status is in doubt with apparent priority for a station upgrade at Amata. In response to that criticism, a month later the SA State Government announced that it would spend A$7.5 million at Amata and Pukatja for new police stations, court facilities and cells along with associated police housing and facilities.

Even in this remote area, houses have telephones, access to multiple television channels including (Imparja and ABC), and mail is delivered twice weekly by air from Alice Springs. As with most APY settlements, Australian Broadcasting Corporation and Special Broadcasting Service television are available.

The Uniting Church in Australia has a congregation in Pukatja.

A permit is required for a member of the public to visit any community on the APY Lands, as they are freehold lands owned by the Aboriginal people.

Ernabella Arts

Ernabella Arts, established in 1948, is one of Australia's longest continuously running Aboriginal arts organisations. The purpose of the organisation is to provide a place "where senior women and men and young women and men practice and develop our art, in order to sustain, support and promote our cultural heritage, and to improve the lifestyle of our community’s members." During the 1950s and 1960s, art and craft using locally produced wool was the predominant artistic form produced by the Ernabella artists. Batik was successfully introduced after several Ernabella artists travelled to Indonesia in the 1970s. The Ernabella artists are now renowned for their batik work and printmaking. A substantial collection of Ernabella art can be seen at the National Museum of Australia, including a range of fine ceramics also produced by the Ernabella artists. Ernabella Arts celebrated its 60th anniversary in 2008.

Faunae

The Adelaide Advertiser reported on Monday 1 October 2007 that the black-flanked rock wallaby, known as 'warru' to the local population, faced extinction and 15 of the wallabies had been transferred from an undisclosed location on the APY Lands and also from Pukatja to Monarto Zoo. The article claimed there were only approximately 50 of the animals left in the wild. Work in monitoring the species' survival was said to involve Aboriginal trackers and schoolchildren from Pukatja to help track the wallabies' movements.