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Copyright © Woomera Aboriginal Corporation

"I was born on Brookdale Station, my father and mother worked there. My father was doing cattle work and my mother worked at a kitchen job, washing and cooking. My parents brought me back to the island and then went back to work, while my aunties and uncles raised me and I started going to school. I used to dance a lot, liked hunting and camping when I was young. I remember going away for my first dance trip when I was twelve years old, we went to Sydney, big city. In my twenty's I was still travelling with the dance troop, I've been to New Guinea a couple of times, America, India, England. It was good travelling round sharing our culture, especially sharing with the American Indians, good to see others dance, a lot of different cultures, makes me feel stronger about mine.

I'm living in my country carrying on from my father, three fathers I've got. There was three old brothers from my country, old Gully, William and Henry Peters, in those days mission days, my father Colin he didn't want that Peters name so he took Williams, that's why I'm Williams, after my Fathers name William Peters. This was the time when the Presbyterian Church came to the island. Now I've got two boys and my wife, we all live at our outstation at Birri. Birri means place of many underground waters. We are showing our body painting, its something to share with our younger people and other people. We keep our body painting, its handed down from our fathers, its good to keep it going, I like painting, I'm a culture man. All this came from the old people way back in the dreaming."

John Williams

John Williams

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