Aboriginal humour
Aboriginal humour has carried people over many an abyss. Meeting Aboriginal people on 'Koori Time' usually means you have to wait.
Aboriginal Australia has a great history of resistance and a great history of humour.—Shane Howard, musician [2]
Koori Time still has 24 hours in the day—only slightly offset to the hours you and I are used to.
One of the key characteristics of Aboriginal people is their humour. No matter how dire the situation Aboriginal people are always able to find a humourous way of dealing with their life.
Professor Gordon Briscoe, a man from the Marduntjara/Pitjantjatjara peoples of Central Australia and an Aboriginal activist, researcher, writer and teacher, said when talking about the Aboriginal housing situation:
"We have not yet got to the point of putting solar energy on our roof because many of us don't even have a roof."
Here are some more Aboriginal jokes and sayings:
- What the TAB called by Aborigines? —The Koori Bank (because many Aboriginal people love to place a bet, but lose their money).
- Where ever there is a will…there's relatives! (Aboriginal saying)
- One of the best things I think I've probably got is my community degree because that's what you need in black community, not a university degree. [6].
Fact: "Talking about laugh..." is a verbal precedence or ending used frequently by Murris (Aboriginal people from Queensland) when telling their rendition of a funny story or event [7].
A lot of typical Australian humour actually derives from Aboriginal humour, but the nation doesn't acknowledge the Aboriginal element in our make-up. —Nigel Parbury, author and educator [1]
Our survival has been about laughter, otherwise you cry a river.—Leah Purcell, Aboriginal director and actor [4]
Comedic storytelling… deters us from the dysfunctional repercussions of our Aboriginal/Indigenous lives caused by colonisation. —Angelina Hurley, Aboriginal director and writer [7]
A silent conversation with your face
Aboriginal director and writer Angelina Hurley recounts a silent form of Aboriginal humour [7].
"When something nurrigar or womba [strange] happens, I want to look straight at another countryman for that look you know. That silent conversation you have with your face. You now, it entails a lot of eye rolling, eyebrow lifting, lip biting and pursing.
"Mostly when you don't want another relative to know you're gossiping about them, running them down or making fun of them. It can also (depending on circumstance) be accompanied by sound, eg. a grunting or humming.
"I have one cousin back home who is the queen of this phenomenon. She cracks me up without speaking a word."
Australia's only Aboriginal comedy competition
Deadly Funny is Australia's only Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander comedy competition. It started in 2005 at the Melbourne International Comedy Festival before spreading to Victoria, South Australia, and New South Wales in 2011.
Previous winners are Kevin Kropinyeri, Shiralee Hood, Mia Stanford and Denise McGuinness. The competition offers comedy workshops, and established comedians travel to Aboriginal communities to help emerging comedians shape their stories and jokes into a stand-up performance.
See also Aboriginal festivals
Some of the most tragic things in life can be funny to us, I think that's what makes blackfellas so versatile and resilient. —Sean Choolburra, Aboriginal comedian [3]
'Koori Time'
Aboriginal people have a different understanding of time than white people. They call it Koori Time or TI Time (for Thursday Island in the Torres Strait).
What they mean is that an Aboriginal person is probably not on time as you would expect or estimate differently compared to a whitefella. Russell James puts it well when he talks about his Aboriginal friend Clifton Bieundurry [5]:
"I'd say, 'Well, how long to get there, mate?' And he'd say, 'Oh, just a little bit, 10 minutes', and two hours later we're still driving. I had moments of having to get out and run abournd in circles and scream alound in the desert."
Out of respect for Aboriginal culture I use Indigenous sources as much as possible.
[1] 'Debate focus on hot spots', Koori Mail 494 p.39
[2] 'Murundak', Sydney Morning Herald, 31/12/2007
[3] 'The Funnyman', Koori Mail 469 p.21
[4] 'Humour from tradgedy', Koori Mail 512 p.64
[5] '2 of us - Russell James & Clifton Bieundurry, Good Weekend, 7/11/2009 p.12
[6] 'Broad range of topics covered', Koori Mail 516 p.30
[7] 'Talk about laugh!', Koori Mail 517 p.22
