Maralinga’s
Long Shadow: Yvonne’s Story by Christobel Mattingley (Allen & Unwin) PB
RRP$19.099 ISBN 9781760290177
Reviewed by
Dianne Bates
The first
thing to notice about this book is how beautiful it is, like a small work of
art from the title page with its background of indigenous pattern artwork through its almost 200 pages with good
quality paper and numerous photographs, black and white and coloured. The
typeface is brown, easy on the eye, and the whole design of the book is
considered and attractive.
Award-winning
author Christobel Mattingley, a white woman from Adelaide, honours the legacy
here of Yvonne Edwards, a highly respected and community elder who was born
near the United Aborigines Mission (UAM) at Ooldea in 1950. The artwork is
Yvonne’s, and so is the country shown in the photos. Yvonne’s mother was one of
the Anangu family while her father was white (a walypala). Her Aboriginal name was Tjintjiwara and her mother
tongue was Pitjantajara. As her child she learned how to carve artifacts, skin
rabbits, make damper and draw in the sand. And, too, she learned the stories of
the Dreamtime.
However, the
Anangu family was told to leave by the white people and sent to the country of
another Aboriginal family. Meanwhile, at an Anangu place called Maralinga,
white people were planning something which would cause long, slow and painful
dying to Yvonne’s husband and two of her sons. Maralinga, of course, was the
site of atomic bomb testing.
In clear and
obviously well-researched fiction, Mattingley relates Yvonne’s story from her
birth through her upbringing. Like many indigenous children, she was taken from
her family for a while, but then returned to the Lutheran mission. When the
girl was pre-pubescent, the atomic testing – almost 100 kilotons of explosives
– occurred near the mission. It went on from 19653 to 1957 with elderly people
dying and some blinded. More personal disaster occurred for Yvonne when her
first born son was taken from her by Welfare: it would be 20 years before she
saw David again.
This
beautifully written and designed book is sure to be of interest not just to
young readers, but for anyone with an interest in the life of a woman whose
life and those of her clan was affected by decisions made by ignorant white
people. Maralinga cast a very long shadow, but throughout her life Yvonne
triumphed, finding her gift as an artist in her later years. In 2012 after a
turbulent life which included the loss of close family, Yvonne died at the age
of 61. Happily a copy of Maralinga: The Anangu Story was brought to the
hospital for staff to see what an important person they were caring for.
Mattingley
met and befriended Yvonne six years before her death, but had to wait for two
years after her friend’s death, as is Aboriginal custom, before she could write
her book. It is a moving tribute to a wonderful woman.
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