Australian Aboriginal elder
First day of the Aboriginal Tent Embassy outside Parliament House in Canberra on 17 January 1972. Left to right: Billy Craigie, Bert Williams, Ghillar Michael Anderson and Tony Coorey.
Ghillar Michael Anderson (born 1951), or Michael Ghillar Anderson , is a Euahlayi Elder and activist from Goodooga , New South Wales , in Australia.[ 1] [ 2] [ 3]
In 1972 he was one of the four men who set up the Aboriginal Tent Embassy in Canberra , as a protest in the struggle for the recognition of Indigenous land rights in Australia ,[ 4] [ 5] eventually becoming its High Commissioner.[ 6]
As a participant in the Australian Aboriginal Astronomy Project , Anderson has collaborated[ 2] with academic astronomers Robert Fuller and Duane Hamacher[ 7] in sharing and documenting traditional star knowledge .[ 2] He has been pivotal in researching the Emu in the sky astronomical interpretation, that recognises the space between the stars in the Milky Way as containing ancestral figures,[ 3] [ 8] the inspiration for the title of Bruce Pascoe's Dark Emu .[ 9]
Anderson was featured in a documentary film about Aboriginal Australian astronomy , which was widely shown, including in schools.[ 2]
Anderson has sat on a UN Committee in Geneva addressing the repatriation of cultural material .[ 10]
In 2013, Anderson with other leaders, proclaimed a republic in Dirranbandi, Queensland . He was elected his nation's head of state and informed Queen Elizabeth II .[ 11]
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^ a b c d Lysaght, Gary-Jon (6 July 2021). "Asteroid named in honour of Ghillar Michael Anderson for the Aboriginal elder's contribution to astronomy" . ABC News . Updated 8 July 2021. Australian Broadcasting Corporation. Retrieved 16 July 2021 .
^ a b Fuller, Robert S.; Anderson, Michael G.; Norris, Ray P.; Trudgett, Michelle (2014). "The emu sky knowledge of the Kamilaroi and Euahlayi peoples". Journal of Astronomical History and Heritage . 17 (2): 171–179. arXiv :1403.0304 . doi :10.3724/SP.J.1440-2807.2014.02.04 . S2CID 53352158 .
^ Dow, Coral (4 April 2000). "Aboriginal Tent Embassy: Icon or Eyesore?" . Parliament of Australia . Canberra: Parliamentary Library. Archived from the original on 17 October 2013. Retrieved 6 July 2010 .
^ "The Aboriginal Tent Embassy 20 years on" . Canberra Times . 27 July 1992. p. 30. Retrieved 7 July 2021 .
^ "Aboriginal Embassy" . Tribune (Sydney, NSW : 1939 - 1991) . 2 May 1972. p. 10. Retrieved 7 July 2021 .
^ Duane Hamacher, Associate Professor of Cultural Astronomy University of Melbourne. Retrieved 6 July 2021.
^ "Star Knowledge of First Australians" . Cosmos Magazine . 19 January 2021. Retrieved 7 July 2021 .
^ Pascoe, Bruce (2014), Dark Emu: Black Seeds: Agriculture or Accident? , Magabala Books, ISBN 978-1-922142-43-6
^ Fairley, Gina (9 June 2021). "Is custodianship outdated thinking for museums and galleries?" . ArtsHub Australia . Retrieved 7 July 2021 .
^ Debra, Jopson. "Boomerang republic: One man's struggle to restart his country" . SBS . Retrieved 7 July 2021 .