In 1966,
Vincent Lingiari led a
walk-off of the
Gurindji people at the
Wave Hill cattle station, south of Darwin, in protest over wages and conditions which were then a fraction of their non-indigenous counterparts. Although occupied by the international food company
Vestey Brothers, the station was on the traditional land of the Gurindji people. The strikers initially camped on the Victoria River, but the following year moved to Wattie Creek, traditionally called Daguragu by the Gurindji, and changed their demand to one of return of their traditional lands. Before the strike, Manning and other union activists had anticipated industrial action at Wave Hill and arranged that in the event of it the Gurindji would send them a telegram. As a waterside worker, Manning was then a member of the North Australian Workers Union (NAWU), the union which also covered pastoral workers. Working with
Dexter Daniels, the official NAWU indigenous organiser, Manning arranged the transport of supplies from the union to support the strike, initially at Victoria River, using his
Bedford TJ truck. As Manning recounts it, the initial journey was a difficult sixteen-hour journey on the rough corrugated road, travelling at only fifteen or twenty miles an hour at times and putting stress on the truck and occupants. Meeting with Lingiari and speaking with the strikers, Manning and Daniels promised to support them for the duration of the strike, an undertaking significant as a previous strike by the Gurindji in 1953 had failed through lack of support. The truck was used in other ways to support the strike, such as transporting others from Hooker Creek to join the action. Manning recounts how his presence was greeted with hostility from a senior Darwin based Welfare Department executive officer and from the local police officer. Manning used the first visit to organise details of ongoing support. Back in Darwin he organised an ongoing roster using the truck to carry supplies, although he reports that over a dozen or so trips the original timber tray on the truck, "literally shook to pieces". He also worked with the NTCAR to organise wider awareness of and support for the action around the country. He was elected as a delegate to the Waterside Workers Federation’s All Ports Conference in Sydney, where he was instrumental in a decision to levy $1.00 per member nationally to support the Gurindji action. The Gurindji struggle lasted nine years. In Daguragu the Gurindji petitioned the governor-general,
Lord Casey, for return of their land. Although this was refused, they set about establishing a permanent settlement, constructing shelters, planting trees, establishing a vegetable garden and eventually building a store and more substantial housing. In March 1971, the Gurindji formed the Murramulla Gurindji Company to further press their claim. Manning continued to make regular visits of support throughout this period. The strike highlighted for the wider community the poor conditions and discriminatory conditions under which many indigenous people were forced to live. It also provided impetus to the growing
land rights movement Australia wide. The
Whitlam government came to power in 1972 on a platform in support of Aboriginal land rights. On 16 August 1975 Prime Minister
Gough Whitlam travelled to Daguragu and, creating a now famous image, symbolically handed soil to Lingiari, transferring leasehold title to the Gurindji people. In 1985 the Minister for Aboriginal Affairs,
Clyde Holding presented freehold title. Manning was invited to both ceremonies by the Gurindji people. == East Timor ==