NSW government takes major step to protect sacred Butterfly Cave: NIT

Giovanni Torre

The NSW government is protecting a sacred Aboriginal Site, the Butterfly Cave, by acquiring an area of culturally significant bushland in the Hunter, it announced on Tuesday.

The government said this investment is in keeping with their election promise to protect heritage places, including the Butterfly Cave, from threats.

The Butterfly Cave holds profound cultural significance for the Awabakal Aboriginal community. The Cave, a rock overhang and surrounding bushland is a sacred Aboriginal women’s site used by generations of Awabakal women for cultural practices and sacred women’s business.

The site is a safe place for Aboriginal women and children to meet and serves as an area for the education of young girls by female Elders.

The government said that after meeting with and listening to Aboriginal women, it is proud to be ensuring this site will be protected in-perpetuity, honouring the deep connections and ancestral knowledge of the Awabakal people.

The acquisition is the result of a long campaign led by Aboriginal women and supported by members of the broader community to recognise and protect the sacred land.

The 25.74-hectare plot, purchased by the NSW National Parks and Wildlife Service, protects the Cave and the surrounding cultural landscape, including vital elements such as aquifers, traditional journey paths, creeks, stone arrangements and food source areas.

Awabakal woman Aunty Margaret Harvey said the campaign to protect the site “has been a long and painful fight for Aboriginal women”.

“We thank the New South Wales government for listening to us and respected us in allowing our voices to be heard,” she said.

Awabakal woman Aunty Lyn Brown said the decision was “a significant moment for Aboriginal women and especially for Awabakal women”.

“The protection of the Butterfly Cave is a real and positive step towards reconciliation in NSW, and we thank the Minns Labor government for hearing our voices, respecting our voices and working with us to protect our cultural heritage now and into the future,” she said.

The land will be managed by the state’s National Parks and Wildlife Service and permanently protected under the National Parks and Wildlife Act 1974.

The NSW government said it will consult with the local Aboriginal community on future management of the site and protection of the surrounding cultural landscape.

In 2013 the Butterfly Cave was declared an Aboriginal Place under the National Parks and Wildlife Act 1974, which was supported by the landowner. In 2019 the Cave and its surrounds were recognised by the Australian government as a significant Aboriginal Area.

NSW Minister for the Environment and Heritage Penny Sharpe said that “after a 13-year campaign, the Minns Labor government is pleased to permanently protect the Butterfly Cave”.

“I want to thank the Aboriginal women who have never given up their care and protection of this important site so it can be used by generations to come,” she said.

“The Butterfly Cave is a crucial meeting place for Aboriginal women to engage in traditional practices and share cultural knowledge with younger generations, and it is crucial it remains so for generations to come.

 Member of Cessnock, Clayton Barr, said the “beautiful rich culture” of the Traditional Owners of the land “is so important to protect”.

“These incredible women have been fighting for so long; they have met with so many Ministers of Government and Departmental workers that it’s hard to count; their courage and conviction never wavered,” he said.

“The Minns government is finally doing what was always the ‘right’ thing to do, but hadn’t been done.”

Read the original article here on the NIT website