Bold statement: Native title recognition is not just a legal milestone—it reshapes lives, language, and community pride in real, tangible ways. And here’s the part most people miss: the true impact unfolds when culture, land, and self-determination converge in shared celebration. This rewritten piece preserves all original facts while presenting them with fresh wording, expanded context, and clearer explanations for readers new to the topic.
Wotjobaluk Nations Festival marks a watershed moment in native title recognition
As twilight settles along the Barengi Gadjin (Wimmera River) in Victoria’s western region, the riverbank glows with the living memory of Dreamtime. The scene is set on a Saturday night beneath the shade of ancient river red gums, where Wotjobaluk elders honor the Creation stories of their people. The Wotjobaluk Nations Festival took place in Dimboola over the weekend, featuring a light show led by Tracy Rigney, a celebrated Wotjobaluk and Ngarrindjeri artist and storyteller.
Rigney blended dance, animation, and multimedia to illuminate culturally significant sites around Horseshoe Bend in the Little Desert National Park, about 337 kilometres northwest of Melbourne. She described the experience as an immersive, self-guided journey that draws visitors along the path much like moths to a flame, inviting spontaneous discovery and reflection.
Heads-up: Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander readers are advised that the article includes images of people who have died.
Twelve installations line the route, delivering a vivid storytelling experience. Highlights include three Talking Trees and the enduring stories of Bunjil the Spirit Creator, Barra the Red Kangaroo, and Tchingal the Giant Emu. A standout moment occurred at stop seven, Bunyo Budnitt, where projections and ceremonial dance by the Dalki Murrup ceremonial group conveyed a segment of Ebenezer Mission history. Ebenezer Mission, established in 1859 by Moravian Missionaries, operated for over four decades before closing in 1904.
Ceremonial dance returns to Country
This year’s festival also marked the return of the Dalki Murrup ceremonial performance group’s traditional dance. Tanisha Lovett, a Gunditjmara and Wotjobaluk woman, described the revival as a powerful act of language revitalization and storytelling through dance. The group spent the past year rehearsing to craft performances that echo ancient speech and movement, helping participants build confidence and reconnect with their roots. The dances included a welcome sequence, an origin of fire, a repatriation performance, and a show-off dance, each designed to express lineage, history, and pride.
Aunty Janine Coombs, a respected Wotjobaluk elder and Barengi Gadjin Land Council board director, spoke proudly of the return. Seeing younger generations embrace the dance in its full splendor fills her with deep pride.
Song, language, and connection
Music underscored the festival, with performances by Wergaia and Wemba Wemba artist Alice Skye, Ngiyampaa songwriter Pirritu, and Gunditjmara musician Andy Alberts & the Walkabouts. Skye explained that she wove poetry and the Wergaia language into her set, describing how language acts as a portal to ancestral connections and helps make Country feel comprehensible again. She expressed pride in young people singing in their language and affirmed her love for this Country as the best place in the world.
Native title recognition and its ongoing journey
The weekend’s celebrations served as a powerful reminder of the Wotjobaluk Nations’ resilience, identity, and ongoing path toward self-determination. The federal court’s landmark decision on December 13, 2005—the first consent determination under the Native Title Act 1993 and Victoria’s inaugural successful native title claim—was acknowledged as a turning point. Aunty Janine reflected that the decision recognized that Wotjobaluk sovereignty was never ceded, and that their ancestors’ relentless efforts laid the foundation for present-day self-determination, now formally recognized.
The event drew more than 450 attendees, uniting generations of traditional owners to celebrate a significant achievement and to strengthen communal ties. Chris Harrison, a Wotjobaluk man and chair of the Barengi Gadjin Land Council, described the day as nostalgic—an occasion to reflect on how far the community has come and how it continues to advance together. He emphasized that the festival’s success stems from bringing diverse efforts together and ensuring the broader community participates in and benefits from this journey.