The Djiringanj, also spelt Dyirringañ, are an Aboriginal Australian people of the southern coast of New South Wales. They are one of a larger group, known as the Yuin people, who all speak or spoke dialects of the Yuin–Kuric group of languages.
Language
Robert M. W. Dixon classifies the Djiringanj language as distinct from both
Thaua language and
Dhurga language. They are all Yuin–Kuric languages.
Country
The Djiringanj's tribal lands encompassed roughly southwards along the coast from Cape Dromedary to beyond Bega. Their inland extension ran up to the scarp of the Great Dividing Range east of
Nimmitabel. They were wedged between the
Walbanga to their north and the
Thaua to their south, while their western limits touched those of the
Ngarigo.
Wallaga Lake
In early 2020, men from the Bermagui Wallaga Lake Djiringanj men's group were able to resume their traditional practice of
fishing net on
Wallaga Lake for the first time in decades. After obtaining a special cultural fishing permit, that allows them to fish once a week using a specially built boat and handmade traditional net, young men from the community will target species like flathead,
bream, and mullet, and hand over their catch to local
Aboriginal elder.
They see it as a way of helping people who live below the poverty line, and suffer from poor nutrition, particularly lack of iodine, and diseases such as heart disease and diabetes brought on partly by poor nutrition.
Alternative names
-
Dyirringan
-
Jeringin
-
Yuin (term used collectively by Alfred William Howitt to denote both the Yuin and the Thaua)
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