In 1966 the wave hill walk off occurred the wave hill walk off was originally meant to provide better wages for the Aboriginal people, however the wave hill walk off gradually turned into a protest for Aboriginal land rights. This report provides an insight to the overall success of these iconic protests.
The wave hill walk-off consisted of a group of Aboriginals or more specifically the “Gurindji” people, the protest was lead by Aboriginal elder Vincent Lingiari. As previously mentioned the wave hill walk-off happened in 1966, specifically the 23rd of August 1996 at Wave Hill in the northern territory. What happened at Wave Hill on the 23rd of August 1993, was: The Gurindji people originally wanted to get equal pay to the white cattlemen working in the Wave Hill cattle station (now known as Kalkaringi), the second largest cattle station in the northern territory, or the 7th largest in Australia. After the Gurindji people confronted their employers and requested to be paid equally, the stockmen were quick to decline the Gurindji people’s requests. As would anyone be, the Gurindji people were not happy about this, remembering over eighty years of torment, massacres and killings, stolen children and other abuses by early
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He, along with over two-hundred other stockmen, went on strike after being declined equal pay by their employers. So, the two-hundred stockmen spawned the “Wave hill walk off”. This iconic protest lasted for a stubborn seven years! After this time the international food company Vestey finally gave in, allowing equal pay, better working conditions and better working hours. But although originally, this is what Langarri and the Gurindji people wanted, their protest took a sharp turn. Instead of asking for equal pay as it started out, the two-hundred cattlemen where all, now protesting for Aboriginal