Yurlu | Country (Documentary)

Rating:

Director: Yaara Bou Melhem
Producer: Tom Bannigan,James Saunders,Yaara Bou Melhem
Screenwriter: Maitland Parker,Yaara Bou Melhem
Cinematographer: Tom Bannigan ACS
Composer: Helena Czajka
Editor: Francisco Forbes
Featured Subjects: Maitland Parker

Viewer Advice: Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people should be aware that this film contains images, voices and names of deceased persons.


A vivid ode to Country and an intimate, inspiring portrait of a Banjima Elder’s fight to reclaim his asbestos-tainted homeland.

Banjima Elder Maitland Parker calls his yurlu (homeland) in the Pilbara region “poison country”; this haunting truth is etched into his body as he lives with terminal mesothelioma, an aggressive cancer resulting from asbestos exposure. Six decades prior, the Wittenoom mines left behind more than three million tonnes of waste rock laced with deadly asbestos fibres, turning 46,840 hectares of Banjima Country – an area 17 times the size of Sydney – into a toxic exclusion zone. Today, Aboriginal communities in Western Australia have the world’s highest mortality rate from mesothelioma. Yurlu | Country follows Maitland as he confronts government inaction and corporate greed in the hope of allowing his people to reconnect with and heal their ancestral lands.

Directed by two-time UN Media Peace Award and five-time Walkley Award winner Yaara Bou Melhem, who worked closely with Parker and his family, this powerful documentary bears witness to Australia’s very own – albeit largely unknown – Chernobyl-style disaster. Braiding imagery of beautiful yet contaminated terrain with poignant interviews and damning archival footage, the film stands as a testament to First Nations resilience amid ongoing dispossession, and is a rousing call to action to redress the cultural, environmental and physical wounds caused by colonisation and industry.


PRESENTED BY


———

Director Yaara Bou Melhem is a guest of the festival and will be in attendance at both sessions of the film.