Dhurga language explained

Dhurga
Extinct:1970s
Ref:e25
Familycolor:Australian
Dia1:Tharumba
Iso3:dhu
Glotto:dhur1239
Glottorefname:Dhurga
Aiatsis:S53
Aiatsis2:S54
Aiatsis3:S55
Aiatsis4:S56
Map:Lang Status 20-CR.svg

The Dhurga language, also written Thurga, is an Australian Aboriginal language of New South Wales. It is a language of the Yuin people, specifically the Wandandian and Walbunja groups, but there have been no fluent speakers officially recorded for decades, so it has been functionally extinct for some time. Efforts have been made to revive the language since the 2010s.

Description

The language is tonal, and spoken in the Nowra-Jervis Bay area southwards to Narooma, and possibly as far south as Wallaga Lake. Dharumba and Walbanga/Walbjunja may have been dialects.

Status and revival

No speakers of the language have been officially recorded since before 1975.

In 2015 local Yuin people collaborated with the Tathra Public School in Tathra to create a new app as a teaching aid for both Dhurga and the Thaua language, using old audio recordings of elders as well as documentation created by early explorers and settlers in the region. One of the major contributors to the project, Graham Moore, has also written an Aboriginal language book.[1]

Staff of Vincentia High School, led by Gary Worthy, have carried out research into Aboriginal languages and run community workshops since 2004, and a dedicated languages team teaches the Dhurga language.[2]

Bermagui Public School, a primary school in Bermagui, has taught local Aboriginal languages including Dhurga and the Djiringanj language, along with the associated cultures, since 2019.[3]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Brown . Bill . Yuin elders develop 'message stick' app to teach almost-lost Aboriginal language . ABC News. . 16 October 2015 . 21 June 2021.
  2. Web site: ABED :: Vincentia High School - Dharawal/Dhurga Stage 4 . 2022-05-20 . ab-ed.nesa.nsw.edu.au . en-AU.
  3. Web site: Milton . Vanessa . Bermagui students help reawaken Aboriginal languages . ABC News. . 3 June 2021 . 21 June 2021.