Monday, February 4, 2013

Aborigines


15th September 2010 – My Exchange partner, Barega an Aborigine, came

 In the evening Barega cooked a typical Aboriginal meal. Actually he wanted to prepare a snake but there was no chance to buy it anywhere. So he decided to cook little birds with the bush-banana. In the supermarket there were just normal bananas, but Barega thought this wouldn’t make a big difference. At this moment we all sat down to enjoy the dinner.
The following dialogue is our conversation at dinner. I think it is more interesting to read it if it is written like this:
While she took the bananas, my mother asked him:” Maybe you can tell us a little bit more about the nutrition of the Aborigines? I think this is a wonderful chance to learn something about the Natives of Australia. When I was a child I thought it would be an adventure to meet an Aborigine.” Barega started shyly to answer my mother: “We are hunters and pickers and the Aborigines, who live on the coast also fish a lot and in the Victoria of today, there are two eel farms. These Aborigines used complicated systems to catch them.” He ate a little piece of his bird and I could see that he was really happy to eat his own traditional food. So I asked him: “And what did they do with the eels? Eat them all?” “No.” he answered” They traded with them to the area, where Melbourne is now.” “The Aborigines traded. I can’t believe it!” I wondered, while I tasted the bush-banana. I decided that I didn’t like them, but I didn’t want Barega to see this. He started to tell us something more while I tried to look at him and put the bananas inconspicuously back into the sauce pan.
The area from Sydney also was a big trading facility. The Aborigines sold there their typical nutrition, the bush food. They still eat kangaroos, emus and their eggs and also wombats, goannas, snakes and birds. If they live in the desert they also eat insects like the honey ant and the witchetty grubs.” “They eat insects. I think I would not like this.” I said. Barega joked “Oh I can do it tomorrow so that you could try.” And I answered: “No thank you. I don’t think that we could buy it here in York, maybe in London. But what do they also eat? Maybe we can cook something else.” “On the coast they eat mussels and crustaceans. Although the Aborigines eat a lot of meat they also eat nuts, fruits and berries for example the bush-tomato, the bush-banana and the bush-plum.” My father asked: “And how do you catch the animals?”
To catch animals they used the javelin thrown by a woomera or by hand and there are two boomerang types. The first one, which does not come back, and the second one, that comes back, but the first type is the better one and the Aborigines called it also throwing stick.”This sounded interesting and I said: “And you can catch animals with a boomerang?” He answered humbly: “A little bit”

16th September – His first day at my school

Today Barega had a presentation about the history and the groups of the Aborigines. Our teacher Mr. Gilderoy decided this is the best chance to learn something about other cultures and so we will learn something about the Aborigines in the next few lessons.
But first here is the text of Barega´s presentation:

Hello my name is Barega and I come, like Mr. Gilderoy said, from the Arrente which is an aboriginal clan in Australia. The word ‘aboriginal’ comes from the Latin words ab origin and that means “from the Beginning”. In your language, in English, it just means something like “Natives”. Today the English word Aborigines is considered pejorative and more acceptable and correct expression is “aboriginal Australians” or “aboriginal people” and since 1980 is “indigenous Australians” particulary popular.
Now I want to tell you something about the History of the Aboriginal population, how they came to Australia and what happened to them when the Europeans came.
The Aborigines descended like every Nation from the Africans. They moved to Australia 40,000 to 50,000 years ago, as they began to build seaworthy ships. There is a roughly date, about 48,000 BC, but this could be wrong.
The Aborigines always had contact to the outside world. For example the Dingos came to Australia 40,000 years ago and since the 16th century there came pickers of sea cucumbers. Then in 1606 the first Europeans came. Willem Jansz was followed by a lot of other discoverers but the British colonisation started first in 1788.
In this time many immigrants came to Australia and many diseases came with them, illnesses like measles, smallpox and tuberculosis which also often killed Europeans brought death to Aborigines. So many Natives died.
In 1834 there occurred the first recorded use of Aboriginal trackers, who proved very adept at navigating their way through Australian landscape and finding people.
In 1868 the first Australian cricket team moved to England. In this team were mostly Aboriginal Australians.
The 19th and the 20th century was the worst time, because this was the time of the suppression and the Stolen Generation. Everything started with the appropriation of land and water resources. At the beginning most Aborigines were allowed to vote, but with the 20th century their situation got worse. They lost many rights, for example the control over their work, their marriage and their social life.
In the first world war 500 Aborigines had to fight for England. In Australia the full-blood Aborigines were killed by the white people during the half-blood children were stolen to educate like white children. About 1/3 to 1/10 were stolen. There were differences between religion and time. Also in the second world war the Aborigines had to fight.
There was no chance for a better way of life.
But then in the 70s the stealing and killing stopped.
In 2000 an Aboriginal athlete light the Olympic fire and at the 13th February 2008 President Kevin Rudd made a public appology. Since this day there is a “Sorry Day” every year.
Before the English settlers came they had a population of approximately 318.000- 750.000 and they were all divided into 400-700 groups/clans. To say how many Aborigines now live in Australia is not that easy because young people once in a while have aboriginal blood in them and they just count as Aborigines if they are convinced that they are and if they say that they are and make that legal.
Then and today there are many different Aboriginal groups who have their group name from their language. They live all across Australia: for example the Ngunnawal in the East, the Nunga in the South, the Umatji in the West and the Anangu in the West, North and South.
The largest groups in Australia are the Pitjantjatjara, the Luritja, the Warlpiri and our clan, the Arrente. A very similar group to the Aborigines in central Australia are the Torres Strait Islanders. They live in the very, very east on over 100 islands at the, who would have thought this, east-coast. Every group has their own culture, language and belief structure.
More than 250 languages were spoken in Australia before the Europeans arrived, but now there are just 15-20 languages spoken by all age groups.
There are many languages who are related like families. The first “family” is spoken on
7/8 of the country, the second on 1/8 and the third one is a mix between an individual Aboriginal language and English.
Most young Aborigines can speak English because they go to an English school where both languages are taught and because of that I could make the exchange.

Today we had RE and Barega told us a little bit about their belief system. It is very different from ours so here I will try to explain it: The Aborigines do not believe in one god or something like that - they belief in a whole story. Their most important story is the history of creation; they call it the “dreamtime” or “tjukurpa” in aboriginal language. The creator ancestors travelled across their land and created the land, the plants and the animals and gave them all a name. But their belief is not just this dreamtime, it defines their rules, moral and cognation. And they have special dances (they have dances for every cause), songs and art, which help them to understand this belief. Barega told me that every dance has a special melody. If they dance, they paint their bodies with ochre. The same pattern, that they draw on their bodies are also drawn on their paintings.



18th September 2010 – Our next “Aborigine lesson”

Mr. Gilderoy gave us a worksheet. Here it is:

    1. Life expectancy
It is really difficult to say how old the Aborigines get, because their deaths are poorly identified. So the figures for the size of the population need large adjustment factors.
Accordingly are the differences between the years.
In the following table you can see the life expectancy from Aboriginal men and women in comparison to the other Australians.
year
male
female
difference
1973
45.3
49.8
25 years
2005
59.4
64.8
17 years
2006
67.2
72.9
11 years

The second problem for finding out the size of the population is the difference between northern and southern Australia. You can see this in the following table. These figures are also from 2006.

Male
female
          Northern
          Territory
61.5
69.2
New South Wales
69.9
75.0

    1. Health
The Aborigines health is not so good and they get ill twice as often as other Australians. As well 1.5 % more of the Aborigines have a disability or a long-term disease. On the following table you can see which illnesses have the most Aborigines and how many Aborigines have this in comparison to the other Australians.
illnes
Frequency
Circulatory system
2 to 10 fold
Renal failure
2 to 3 fold
Communicable
10 to 70 fold
Diabetes
3 to 4 fold
Cot death
2 to 3 fold
Mental health
2 to 5 fold
Neoplasms
60 % increase in the death rate
Respiration
3 to 4 fold

Many people think that more Aborigines have these illnesses, but the Australian Government says these figures to protect the image of the Aborigines.

Exercises: Read both texts and write a report about the reasons for the low life expectancy. (200 words)

Of course Barega wrote the best text, although he had 146 words too much. He told me that he had to write a text about this theme two times before. We both finished the text soon, so we had time to talk to each other and Barega had a great idea. Maybe we can dance a typical Aboriginal dance in the PE lesson on Monday and when we asked Mrs. Smith, our PE teacher, she answered, we could set up the lesson on Monday. This will be the funniest lesson we have ever had!!!!
I thought it would be interesting, because the lesson was very boring, to hear something else about Baregas culture and so I asked the teacher if Barega could tell us more about his language. The teacher agreed and Barega began to speak.
I asked him if he could write the text he said in my diary:
And of course I agreed.We normally speak a mixture between Arrente and English, but when we are at my grandmothers, we just speak Arrente.
A word that many people do not understand is billabong. It’s not the make???.
It means just something like pond and in Australia not all people know this word, either.
You cannot imagine how it is to live in a land with so different cultures and languages. Before the Europeans came we, the Aborigines, had over 250 different languages.
Now we just have 15-20 spoken by all age people.
My name has a special meaning. Actually all Aboriginal names have a meaning.
My name, Barega, stands for the wind.
I would call you, Fred, uhmm.. Let me think about it... Dheran.
what does that mean?
a gully
haha. very funny.


19th September – Visiting my aunt
This morning, when we were all sitting around the table, Mum asked us if we would like to come with her to Aunt Margret’s birthday party. Aunt Margret is her sister, so Mum said that her “sister is very friendly”. We looked at Barega, but he just wondered. After a little conflict of agreement, my mother and me understood that in the Aboriginal society all the sisters of his mother are also his mothers and all the brothers of his father are too his fathers. So when Mum, said that we will go to my aunt and then in a second sentence said, that her sister is very friendly, Barega was very confused, because he did not really know what the first thing had to do with the other thing. It was a really funny situation. But what really confused me was that all the brothers of his mother are not his fathers, but his uncles and the same with the sisters of his father. He explained me the reason for it: in contrast to the children of his “mothers” and “fathers”, he was allowed to marry all the children of his aunts and uncles. That sounded very strange to my European ears, because in our society (I think) no one would have the idea to marry his or her cousin. But Barega had also a reason for that. He told me that most clans are just made up from one family, so there are no other possibilities to marry someone.
Well, after this very confusing dialogue we drove to Aunt Margret and it was a very nice afternoon.

20th September 2012 – Watching the Olympics
This Sunday evening we watched the Olympic closing ceremony on TV. I asked Barega if there are any special aboriginal sports. He told us that they have a lot of different sports but that they are not that famous and more like games than sports like it is understood in Europe. He said that the majority of them are team games, which you can play with different numbers of players, from 2 up to 20 or more. There are a lot of ball games. Some are a bit like volleyball; some like hockey and some are just catching games. For example Woggabaliri, that is a game for which you need four to eight players, which are standing in a circle. They throw the ball and use their hands and feeds to not let it fall on the ground. My Mum knew some kind of ball games from her teaching at the primary school. That was funny, because Barega told us, that children in their clan also play this game.
On TV they played just right now a song from the Beatles. My dad asked Barega if he knew them, but of course he knew them, so my mum asked him about Aboriginal Bands. He told us that there are some bands which mix up the traditional Aboriginal music with modern music, but he also said that they are not that famous in other parts of the world. His favourite musician is Herb Patten. He plays like Herb the gum leaf, which makes very funny noises. Here are two videos from him playing the leaf; it is worth to listen to it.












http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jpWUEEuXBtg (Herb at Australia’s got Talent)



http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0Znte5nJm80 (Herb at ABC Radio National)
For those who are interested in: he told us that they have lots of different instruments like the didgeridoo (that’s a long wooden instrument, which is often painted; it makes a very deep and deep-throated sound; in former times, only the men played it; some people say that Aborigines would tell stories with playing it, but that’s not correct; they use it just as a background instrument in their ceremonies). A friend of mine has got one, so Barega and me will visit him soon and try it out. That will be great!
They also use clapping sticks, rattles and drums for getting the rhythm, rasps and the Bora-Bora (a bullroarer). That is a wooden instrument at a cord, which you just have to take at one end and leverage it with turning it around, to get a sound with it. You just have to swing it very fast. It produces a dumb sound, a little bit like a swarm of bees. Barega said that they use it only in initiations.
Initiations - that was once again a theme, which interested my Mother. There are a lot of different kinds of initiations in the different regions, Barega said. There are clans, which scratch their skin in the age of 16 or 17, there are clans which do nothing and there are clans, like Barega’s clan, which separate the boys in age of 10 to 12 years from their families, especially their mothers. He told us that it was very hard, because he was not allowed to speak to anybody and nobody was allowed to speak to you for THREE weeks.

21th September 2012 – Our dancing in PE

The PE lesson was very funny because we tried to dance parts of this Aboriginal Dance: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rspN1MUcIOk
If you try it you will see that it is very difficult, but It is great fun!!









Adelaide

Adelaide

The city of Adelaide, which is located at the Saint-Vincent-Golf, is the capital of the State of South Australia.
With an area of ​​1,836.9 km² it is the fourth largest city in Australia.
1,159,256 people live in Adelaide.
The first governor was John Hindmash.
He founded the town in 1836 and named it after the British Queen Adelaide, but Aborigines from the Kaurna tribe settled in the land long before the first Europeans arrived in Australia.
Adelaide is the first Australian city that did not arise from a prisoners camp.
Adelaide is also well known as the „City of Churches“.

The city has a Mediterranean climate with hot and dry summers and cold winters with 5°C -15°C.
Between December and February the temperature usually is about 28°C, but it can also reach about 40°C.

The town consists of a city center, which lies within the parkring.
Adelaide is divided into North Adelaide and Adelaide, which together have 17,500 inhabitants, but 250 villages are count to the city zone, too.
Colonel Light formed the city center, which is one square mile large, to create much open space and greenery.
The roads in the center are arranged in a grid.
The city center is surrounded by a green-belt, which is also known by the name State Heritage Listes Parklands.
Today the green-belt consists of many parks, gardens, picnic and sport areas.


Adelaide is also well known as the city of wine because six of Australia's top ten wines come from Adelaide. Here you can also find the Wine Centre of Australia.

Art Gallery of South Australia


The gallery was established in 1881 and opened first in two rooms.
With 38.000 works the Art Gallery has the biggest art collection in Australia.
There are works from the Antik Roman time to the Modern time.
You can see there Australian, European, North American and Asia works.
There are paintings, sculptures, prints, drawings, photographs, textiles, furniture, ceramics, metal works and jewellery.


The European collection spans the Renaissance to today and the Asia collection covers twelve countries with galleries dedicated to the art of Southeast Asia, India, Japan and to the only Islamic dedicated gallery space in Australia.
In 1922 Art Gallery was the first gallery in Australia that began collecting works of photography.

Adelaide Festival Centre

Adelaide Festival Centre is a complex of theaters, bars and lodgings.
It is the scene for festivals and celebrations, theatre and opera performances, dances, musicals and cabaret shows. Also there are regular markets held on the premises. For the smaller visitors there is a children's theatre.
A special offer of the Centre is called "Behind the Scenes". On this tour you can go backstage and have a look at the changing rooms of the "stars".The Fesival Centre consists of several buildings. The Festival Theatre, which is the main building, was built in the 1970s and so it was almost built at the same time like the opera house in Sydney.
In the late 1970s all the buildings were completed.
Now it is not only the cultural center of Adelaide, but from whole South Australia.
In Adelaide Festival Centre always very well-known festivals take place, for example the Adelaide Cabaret Festival or the Festival of the Arts.


Festivals

Adelaide is also very well known as the „festival city“, because there are often regional wine- and music festivals. As well Adelaide has got good markets and restaurants. A famous street with a lot of restaurants is e.g. the Gouger Street.
On the Adelaide Central Market you can find delicious specialities from Tuesday to Saturday. With a wide range of fresh food you can nearly get everything: meat, seafood, gourmet cheese, fruit and vegetables, bakery products, sweets, nuts and health foods.


You can see how the cooks prepare and show their meals and you are able to take part on a cook-workshop ore on a guided tour to get to know more about the history of this market.
The market has existed for more than 140 years and every month over one million people come to visit it.
Moreover there are very popular festivals in Adelaide; e.g. the Fringe Festival, which is Australia’s biggest art festival.
It takes place every year from February to March and lasts three weeks. This festival is an open access-festival, so everyone is allowed to take part. In this three weeks the visitors can see street artists, bands and DJs with live-music, street theatres and art-, comedy- and dance shows. There are the world’s best jongleurs, magicians and acrobats.


There you can see a street artist, performing his show.

Another festival that Adelaide is famous for, is the WOMAdelaide. Since 1992 it is one of Australia’s most famous festivals.
On seven stages artists from the whole world perform spectacular shows in music, dance, theatre and acrobatics. The popular festival runs from 6pm to 1am on Friday, from 12noon until 1am on Saturday and from 12noon – 12midnight on Sunday.
More than 300 groups/artists have appeared there since 1992.

Every year many people come to join the groups. Most popular are the musicians.


St Peter’s Cathedral

One of the greatest, most beautiful and majestic churches in Adelaide is St Peter´s Cathedral. They certainly don't call this city the city of churches for nothing.
St Peter’s Cathedral is a landmark in the City of Adelaide and an important part of the city’s heritage. However, the Cathedral is much more than a beautiful historical building. It is also the mother church of the Anglican Diocese of Adelaide.
St Peter's can be seen from all over Adelaide, situated on a hill just north of the city centre.
It includes people who travel from all over Adelaide to share in Cathedral life.
The foundation stone of this beautiful church was laid in 1869 yet the church was not complete with the internal and external facade you see until 1910.
Another little beauty in this church is the mix of contemporary and traditional British stained glass windows.
.

Where it differs from traditional cathedrals is in it's modern stain-glassed windows, which contrast to the original windows portraying Christ's crucifixion and innumerable saints. The Magdalene Window, opposite the large crucifixion scene, is dedicated to the women who have influenced the church throughout its history. This window was designed and installed in 2001, when women got a part in Christianity.



Sydney


Sydney

Sydney is the state capital of New South Wales in Australia. It is also one of the most popular city in Australia. The population from Sydney - called Sydneysiders - are about 4.6 million people. Sydney is located on the south-east coast of Australia. In the year 2000 Sydney was the place for the Olympic Games which was a big success. The city received 7 million domestic visitors and 2.7 million international visitors in year ending December 2010. With this numbers is Sydney the 42nd most visited city in the world.

Sydney was founded in 1788 when the first fleet arrived in Australia from England. On 13 May 1787 a fleet of 11 ships set sail from Portsmouth, England. On board were 759 convicts, most of them men with sailors and marines to guard the prisoners. They also brought seeds, farm implements, livestock such as cattle, sheep, pigs, goats, horses and chickens and 2 years supply of food with them. The first colonists came ashore at Port Jackson on 26 January 1788. They were commanded by Captain Arthur Philip.
A big problem at first was the food, the people in Sydney had not enough of it.
So England sent a fleet of five ships to bring more food to Sydney.
In December 1792 the governor captain Philip left Australia. Three years Australia did not have a governor, than John Hunter took over. He was governor from 1795 to 1800. From 1800 to 1806 Philip king was the governor.
Lachlan Macquarie was governor from 1810-1822. Before Macquarie came into town, Sydney was grown up by a very casual way. Macquarie brought order to this place. He built streets and many public buildings in Sydney. Francis Greenway - a very good architect – supported him. In the following years Sydney grew very fast. Sydney got a church, a University and a Government House was built in 1845.
Sydney continued its rapid growth during the 20th century. By 1900 Sydney had a population of 481,000. By 1921 it had reached 981,000 and by 1950 it was almost 1.7 million. Nearly 3 million people lived in Sydney in 1975.
In the 21st century Sydney blossom out.
Visitors of the town usually visit Sydney Harbour called Port Jackson. You can see there the Opera House of Sydney, witch is one of most distinctive and famous buildings of the 20th century.  It was included in the Olympic Torch route in 2000 to the Olympic stadium. The Danish architect Jørn Oberg Utzon has built the Opera in the years from 1959 to 1973.
In Port Jackson is also the Sydney Harbour Bridge, which connects the north and the south side from Sydney. It’s called “coat hanger” (Kleiderbügel). On the 19.1.1932 the Through arch bridge was finish. The bridge is 1149m long and 134m high.
There are so much nice buildings and places that tourists can visit in Sydney.



Sport is an important part of Sydney’s culture. There are 4 major football codes of Australia: Rugby league, Australian Rules football, Rugby union and soccer. The most popular summer sport in Sydney is Cricket. The NSW Blues cricket team got his ground in Sydney and is one of the best teams in Australia.


In Sydney are two main daily newspapers. The Sydney Morning Herald and The Daily Paragraph. The Sydney Morning Herald is the oldest newspaper in Australia. In 1831 it was the first newspaper published.
The three commercial television networks from Australia are also located in Sydney.

Beaches Part III


Introduction
Welcome to our English blog! My friends and I made a journey along the 50.000 km long coast of Australia. We can`t visit every of the 11,011 beaches and so we have to try to only go to the seven famous and favoured beaches. We have chosen as possible beaches all over Australia, what wasn`t difficult, because 12 million of the Australian inhabitants (85%) live only one hour by car away from the coast. I hope it will be interesting!!!!!





Byron Bay
Today we arrived at Byron Bay at the north coast of Australia, in New South Wales. It`s great weather here and you can see a lot of wonderful, unspoiled nature. We didn`t know it before, but here we are at Australia`s most eastern point.

The symbol of Byron Bay is a lighthouse in the east of the bay, the Cape Byron Light. In the evening we`ve planned a trip to that place, because I have heard that the sunset there should be awesome to see. Also, you can see how the lighthouse keepers have lived in their houses and worked in the past. Every year there are about 2 million viewers and more than 200,000 are from other countries. But famous is Byron Bay mostly because of its hundreds of kilometers of beach. Especially surfers like this big, long drawn-out bay, because you find optimal conditions for surfing. Almost all the taxis have some roof beams on it to transport the surfing boards. This morning we went swimming in the sea. You can swim here throughout the whole year because the water temperature is always about 18°-25°C. We`ve seen some humpback whales and that`s another big reason why the tourists are coming here: whale watching. They are here in the sea till June, July and from November to October. Sometimes you can also see dolphins here, but you can better view them if you go to the beach in the morning, when it is just quiet. The name the bay had from a John Byron.

Cottesloe

In the last days we made a long journey to Perth. That is a pretty green city with a bit more than 1.740.000 citizens in the west of Australia. It has a lot of terraced lawns, where you can have a picnic for example. In the west from Perth´s city centre there`s Cottesloe, which is famous for its beautiful beach. Very impressive are the high Norfolk Pines, from which some trees are older than 70 years. At the beach there are only a few reefs and nearly no sea grass, but therefore kilometres of grit sand and a clean, clear coastline, where it is very favoured to walk into the ocean, go fishing in the deep-sea or snorkel. Because of the bad wave breaking we haven´t seen any wave surfers yet but there are two or three kiters, that we`ve seen at the horizon. But I think for swimming and relaxing this beach is perfect. Sir Frederick Napier Broome (1883-1890 governor of West Australia) named this district on the 21. September 1886 in honour of his brother, who became the baron of Cottesloe in 1874 .
Rottnest Island

Yesterday we were at Rottnest Island. That`s a beautiful island near Perth. Some Natives in the city tells us that it should be a beautiful, untouched place. Yesterday I didn´t write anymore because I was so tired. Cars aren`t allowed there and so we had to walk and had seen one Quokka, from which the island has got its name.

The native was right. It was fantastic! Rottnest Island has got 63 sheltered beaches with very clear, turquoise water. It`s an exciting adventure to snorkel around the many coral reefs or dive to the 13 historic wrecks. Also there should be good fishing places, where we were not, because we are all not doing that. After we were so tired that we couldn`t walk any step further we made a pleasure flight with a helicopter to see the island from the high-angle shot. There we`ve learned that in the past the island was used as a prison for Aborigines. Bye!


Beaches Part II


Bondi Beach

Today we arrived at wounderful Bondi Beach.The weather was nice: sunny but not too hot.
We could wear short trousers and tops. The water was warm (about 20 degrees) and many people were swimming.But before we run into the waves I want to give you some interesting information about the beach.

Most important facts

Bondi Beach, founded in 1851, is 7 kilometers from the centre of Sydney. With its pavillon, park and promenades it is one of the most famous beaches in Australia and one of the best known surfspots. The 1,5 kilometers long beach is after the Sydney Opera House and the Sydney Habour Bridge the most visited sight in Australia. Since 2008 it belongs to The Australian National Heritage List as a national monument.


Some interesting historical aspects

In the 1830s swimmming at Bondi Beach got popular. In the middle of the 19th century more and more families went there to have picknick. The first tram arrived Bondi Beach in 1848. In 1929 nearly 60 000 people visited Bondi Beach. After the pavillon opened there were about 200 000 visitors. Since 1930 the visitors come from all over the world.

On “Black Sunday“ in 1939 35 000 people and a big group of life guards were on the beach to make a swimming competition. Suddenly three big waves smashed on the beach and took hundreds of people with them. It was the biggest live saving action ever on a beach. The life guards could save about 300 people.

The beach

In summer there is a net in the sea to protect swimmers from dangerous sharks.
In Australia every beach got a danger-level from 1 to 10. The northern part of Bondi beach has got a 4, the southern has got a 7 because of its dangerous currents.
You are not allouwed to play volleyball or football on the beach.
The Bondi Beach Markets also open on sundays.

Beachfestivals:

January: The Flickerfestival were you can watch short films on the beach
November: “Skulpture by the sea“
Australian Surf Carnival“: famous surfer and newcomer meet on the beach and take part in surf competitions

In the Olympiayear 2000 the Beachvolleyball Championchip took place there in a stadion for 
10 000 people.


At our visit we spent a lot of time in the water for swimming and taking surf lessons. After that we sat on our blankets an had a nice picknick. When we left the beach we did a little shopping tour in the Bondi Beach Market. Then we took the bus to the next beach. It was a sunny and fantastic day on Bondi Beach and if I go back to Astralia in the future I will visit it again.