Aboriginal Creation Myth

 

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The Aboriginal creation myth begins with a flat, desolate world, existing apart from dark and light, life and death. The ancestral spirits of the world were asleep beneath the Earth, until, in their dream of themselves, they awoke from eternity and rose to the surface. The great Father of All Spirits and the Sun Mother, or “Ungambikula” (Brown, 2002) wandered the Earth, changing their outward shapes to mimic the true animals and forms in their hearts and imaginations.
Plants grew in their footsteps as they roamed. Sun Mother’s heat melted the ice formed where Earth meets sky, making the rivers and streams of the world. As Ungambikula walked, they found great round stones upon the ground, so they took up their knives and carved the shape of the first humans. Humans, having come from stone and therefore separate from Ungambikula, were given power over the other creatures of the world. This power came with a great responsibility, for each human owed sacred and individual allegiance to the totem of a different animal or plant.
Sun Mother charged all her creations to live peacefully together and enjoy the world they had received. Pleased with the changes they had brought to the world, the ancestral spirits did not want to return to the emptiness from whence they came. Instead, they transformed themselves into rocks, trees, animals, and rivers, so they might always watch over their creation (Freund, 1965).


 The above is a composite of several creation myths found while researching. Some myths cite humans as being wrought from plants, animal skins, air, or combinations of all these things. One myth found read as follows:

"Life started when a creator woman called Warramurrungundjui came out of the sea and gave birth to the first people and gave them the languages. She carried with her a digging stick and a dilly bag holding yams, water lilies and other important plants. She planted the food and created waterholes with her digging stick on the ground. Other creator beings appeared...After completing her creative act, Warramurrungundj turned herself into a rock."
S. Breeden and B. Wright, Kakadu, Looking After the Country - the Gagadju Way

Several common threads tied all sources found, the main one focusing on the materials of Creation.

 

 

 

 

Christine I. Keller
Copyright © 2001 by University of North Texas. All rights reserved.
Revised: 24 Nov 2007 11:13:56 -0600


Wodjin of the Wandjina
Also known as the Ungambikula
 


Love-Magic
Male and Female united in the Dreamtime