Jul 27, 2023

NT Elders finally receive their own slice of “Little Heaven”

e14737e57e9429a6fdcc9a2382eaa4f4
Yutjuwala Djiwarr’s Centre Cultural Advisor, Robyn Munuŋgurr, with Service Manager, Rosie Breen. [Source: ABC News]

The first culturally-appropriate residential aged care facility and future dialysis unit in the Northern Territory’s Nhulunbuy, East Arnhem Land is finally up and running after more than 20 years of Yolngu Elders fighting for its creation.

Developed in consultation with the Yolngu community, Yutjuwala Djiwarr – translated to “Little Heaven” – supports local Indigenous  Elders to grow old where they have lived, worked and raised their families to order to keep them connected to country. The facility was constructed to prevent Elders from having to move to cities like Darwin to receive end-of-life care. 

An area historically lacking in culturally-sensitive palliative and aged care services, Yutjuwala Djiwarr’s staff and residents have said the facility is a huge asset to the area and the community.

“They miss their family, they die over there [in Darwin], and their family over here in east Arnhem Land they worry, they say, ‘why did they get taken away?’,” Centre Cultural Advisor, Robyn Munuŋgurr, told ABC News

Every aspect of the 33-bed facility was carefully crafted by the community to be as homely and culturally appropriate as possible. It has airy and sun-filled buildings made of local Gumatj timber, bedrooms with sheltered verandas, a “sorry business space” and a ceremony ground to farewell residents who die.

In order for residents to stay connected to how they live, residents are allowed to have pets, create fires in the spacious outdoor areas and practise bush medicine with native plants and shrubs.  

Untitled design (33)
Residents practising bush medicine with local flora species. [Source: ABC News]

Resident Daisy Gonygulu Burarrwaŋa said Yutjuwala Djiwarr was different from other care facilities she’d been in and that the facility had been looking after residents “really well”.

“For food, clothing, housing, you don’t give us a hard time or tell us off, or anything else. I found it’s really good in my life where I’m staying. It’s really good, you look after us men and women,” she also told ABC News.

While the centre is predominantly for Yolngu Elders, it does accept balanda (non-Indigenous) members of the Nhulunbuy community, with two long-term non-Indigenous residents already living there.

The centre’s official opening is expected to take place later this year.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement

Home care: Waitlist grows while hopes fade

Over 87,000 older Australians are now waiting for adequate home care - many unassessed, most under-supported. The Government calls this “progress”. We call it a crisis. Read More

Government support propped up aged care during COVID-19, but it won’t last

  The government’s COVID-19 support packages have propped up the aged care sector’s financial performance, but the gains made will not last, according to new research from an aged care accountancy firm. Independent accounting firm StewartBrown has released its assessment of the financial health of the aged care sector in the September quarter of 2020, when Victoria... Read More

Relocation caveats for PALM scheme workers raise concerns

Experts have expressed concerns over “red flags” in the current Pacific Australia Labour Mobility (PALM) scheme as families of PALM workers prepare to relocate to Australia at their own expense with no access to Medicare. Read More
Advertisement