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Maureen Watson, also known as "Aunty Maureen" (9 November 1931 – 4 January 2009), was an Aboriginal Australian activist actor, vocalist, writer, musician, and storyteller.
Maureen Watson | |
---|---|
Born | Rockhampton, Queensland, Australia | 9 November 1931
Died | 4 January 2009 77) Stradbroke Island, Queensland, Australia | (aged
Nationality | Indigenous Australian |
Other names | Aunty Maureen Watson |
Maureen Watson was born on 9 November 1931, in Rockhampton, Queensland,[1] her mother's Kungulu country[2] and attended school in the Dawson Valley,[1] where she involved herself heavily in sport. In 1944, at the age of 13, she was forced to leave her education after obtaining a serious injury falling off a horse.[1] During adolescence, she worked alongside her father and developed skills in shooting kangaroos, trapping dingos, mustering, droving and branding cattle, picking cotton, planting seed crops, driving tractors and bulldozing.[1] Throughout her childhood, her family and visitors talked of political and social issues, which with her natural storytelling ability, assisted her in the rest of her life.[2]
In 1952, at the age of 21, Watson married Harold Bayles, a Wakka Wakka man from Eidsvold, Queensland.[3] Together they had five sons and, in 1970 together with her family, she moved to Brisbane. She joined the growing Aboriginal rights movement and commenced an arts degree at the University of Queensland.[1]
In 1982, along with her brother, Ross, Watson attended and was at the forefront of the Aboriginal protests at the Commonwealth Games in Brisbane.[1] The protesters gathered and marched in Musgrave Park in South Brisbane, because they wanted the Aborigines Act 1971 removed, as Queensland was the last state to retain it. Hundreds of people were arrested, including Maureen who was arrested three times.[4][5][6]
Watson produced an audiobook of numerous children's stories[7] in 1994, called From Dreamtime to Spaceships.[8] She created a children's picture book, Kaiyu's Waiting: An Aboriginal Story, illustrated by David Verral, and published in 1984.[9]
Watson had a strong interest in both theatre and poetry. This helped her create numerous pieces of poetry, her first collection being published in 1982. In her poetry, she describes how Aboriginal people are viewed by the rest of society as well as how they view the modern world.[9]
In 1972, Watson participated in the Six Weeks Performing Arts Training Programme held in Redfern, that later led to the establishment of NAISDA Dance College, among other things.[10] She was involved in the theatre industry as an actor, vocalist, narrativist, adaptor and writer. Performances took her on tours throughout Queensland, New South Wales and Victoria as well as other places around the globe. The plays she contributed to include:
In 1981, she moved to Sydney, where she set up the Aboriginal people's gallery in Redfern.[17] It was difficult to get permission for the gallery. The shop was not aimed at making a profit, it was more for those who wanted to put their work on display and to express who they are through their art work.[18]
Watson was a driving force behind the development of the indigenous broadcasting in Sydney community radio.[17] With her son, Tiga Bayles, she laid the foundation of Radio Redfern in 1981. Radio Redfern was allowed 10 hours of airtime weekly. Radio Skid Row gave them this opportunity because they were allocated a community broadcasting licence in 1984. The station was initially broadcast from the University of Sydney, but then later moved to a terrace house on Cope Street in Redfern, still under the license of 2RSR. The station was considered the voice for Aboriginal people in Sydney. In 1988 it played a big role in co-ordinating political protests against the Bicentennial celebrations and Aboriginal deaths in custody in the early 1990s. Radio Redfern grew to have 40 broadcast hours each week, with all the announcers contributing their time voluntarily.[19]
An experienced and qualified neuro-linguistic programming counsellor, Watson worked with Sisters Inside, an independent support group for women in prison.[1]
Watson was the recipient of numerous honours, including the United Nations Association Global Leadership Prize in 1996, for her labour in contributing to creating a cross-cultural understanding and harmony amongst the community. [20]
In 1996, in recognition of her national and international contribution towards bringing awareness to Aboriginal arts, she was presented the Australia Council's Red Ochre Award,[1] which is presented to an outstanding Aboriginal Australian or Torres Strait Islander artist for lifetime achievement.
On 4 January 2009, at approximately 3 pm, Watson had a stroke which proved fatal. In the days before her death, she spent time with her 24 grandchildren and numerous great grandchildren on Stradbroke Island. Her funeral service took place on 12 January 2009 at Murri School in Acacia Ridge, Queensland.[21]
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