100% Locally Owned, Independent and Free

100% Locally Owned, Independent and Free

After almost two centuries, island returning to its Indigenous title.

Do you have a news tip? Click here to send to our news team.

AI scraping is eroding regional journalism

Country Press Australia (CPA) has welcomed the federal government’s decision to rule out a copyright exemption for AI companies, but says urgent action is More

Work starts on $8m park but some locals question priorities

Construction has begun on an expansive park in a booming master-planned community, but some locals say there are more pressing needs for investment. Work is More

Road extension set to reduce congestion

A new stretch of road is expected to help reduce travel time for motorists in a busy neighbourhood. Sunshine Coast Council is progressing plans for More

Five-storey unit block with beach views planned

A multi-storey apartment block with 15 units has been proposed for a major road along a stretch of scenic coastline. A development application has been More

Police appeal to locate missing girl

Police are seeking public assistance to help locate a 16-year-old girl missing from the Sunshine Coast. The girl was last seen at a Banya residence More

Serious motorbike crash on main road

A motorcyclist has been involved in a severe crash on a major Sunshine Coast thoroughfare. The Queensland Ambulance Service stated that the man was rushed More

The traditional place-name K’gari is officially back on the map almost 200 years after being replaced by Fraser Island in a sordid set of events.

The world’s largest sand island, 300km north of Brisbane, was the scene of a ceremonial celebration on Wednesday attended by Queensland Premier Annastacia Palaszczuk and the Butchulla Aboriginal Corporation.

K’gari, the white spirit who was sent from the sky to help make the land and the seas, was officially welcomed home by generations of Butchulla people and guests with a smoking ceremony, traditional songs and dances.

“It was through disrespect to the Butchulla people that her name, K’gari – the home of the Butchulla people – was taken away,” the corporation’s chair Gayle Minniecon said.

“Thankfully, it is now through respect to the Butchulla people that K’gari, her name, has been reclaimed.

“Our oral history, our creation story, will now be told and learnt as it should be.”

Butchulla people Bruce Waia, Ruben Mason and Conway Burns, who are the Traditional Owners of K’gari. Picture: AAP

In 1836, after the ship her husband captained was wrecked on the reef, Eliza Fraser and several sailors landed by leaking lifeboat on the island.

Butchulla people fed the shipwrecked visitors and attempted to integrate them into the community, assigning them food preparation and other tasks and trying to treat their sunburn.

Captain Fraser did not survive and is variously described as dying from disease, malnutrition or spear wounds.

Some of the other sailors made it to the colony and sent a rescue party for Mrs Fraser.

When she arrived in the colony, she told authorities she’d been tortured and kept as a slave, writing an account – debunked by other survivors – that depicted Aboriginal people as barbaric, cannibalistic savages.

Over following decades, the colony massacred Butchulla people, rounded up survivors and forced them onto missions.

Mrs Fraser parlayed her misadventures into a lucrative speaking career, embellishing and changing her story multiple times after she remarried and returned to the UK.

Lake McKenzie on K’gari. Picture: Shutterstock

Ms Palaszczuk said as Queensland moved towards treaty with Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples, the government would continue to recognise Indigenous languages through place names, in the spirit of truth-telling and reconciliation.

“While steps like this can’t change the wrongs of the past, it goes a long way to building a future where all Queenslanders value, trust, and respect each other,” she said.

“This always was and always will be Butchulla Country.”

Butchulla Aboriginal Corporation language and cultural coordinator Aunty Joyce Bonner said the K in K’gari is silent, meaning that it is pronounced ‘GUR-rie’ or ‘Gurri’.

“K’gari means to me, home,” she said.

“Home amongst my people, the descendants, the ancestors, the Midiru (traditional owners).

“It’s our place.

“It’s what we call home.”

Sand for miles at K’gari. Picture: Shutterstock.

In 2017, the Fraser Island section of the Great Sandy National Park was renamed K’gari (Fraser Island) and in 2022, the island’s World Heritage Area was renamed K’gari (Fraser Island) World Heritage Area.

To coincide with the restoration of K’gari, more than 19 hectares of land was transferred to the Butchulla Aboriginal Corporation.

K’gari is a popular destination for domestic and international visitors.

“The experience that tourists will have now is something no one’s ever experienced on K’gari because no-one’s ever had the chance to sit down with the Butchulla people and been shown the beauty of K’gari, along with the hidden spiritual belief,” Ms Minniecon said.

“People around the world will know that the Butchulla people fought and won to have the name of their home, their country, put on the world map as it should be, K’gari.”

Do you have an opinion to share? Submit a Letter to the Editor at Sunshine Coast News via news@sunshinecoastnews.com.au. You must include your name and suburb.

Subscribe to SCN’s free daily news email

This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.
This field is hidden when viewing the form
[scn_go_back_button] Return Home
Share