Mission There has been an
Aboriginal community at Yirrkala throughout recorded history, but the community increased enormously in size when Yirrkala
mission was founded in 1935, with people from 13 different Yolngu clans moving to Yirrkala. Mission superintendents included founding superintendent Wilbur Chaseling, Harold Thornell, and
Edgar Wells, who wrote about their experiences there. The residents were free to come and go as they wished, and the interaction was on the whole positive in those early days, with a lack of dogmatism by the missionaries, and the Yolngu people accommodating Christianity within a version of their own beliefs.
Church panels and bark petitions Yirrkala played a pivotal role in the development of the relationship between Indigenous and non-Indigenous Australians. In early 1963, clan elders came together to paint the
Yirrkala Church Panels, which documented the Yolngu
claim to the land through ancestral stories. Consisting of two sheets of
masonite, eight elders of the
Dhuwa moiety painted one sheet with their major ancestral narratives and clan designs, and eight elders of the Yirritja
moiety painted the other sheet with Yirritja designs. A series of four petitions, attached to decorated bark panels, were created at the mission in 1963 and sent to the
Federal Government to protest the Prime Minister's announcement that a parcel of their land was to be sold to a
bauxite mining company. Although the petitions were unsuccessful in the sense that the
bauxite mining at
Nhulunbuy went ahead as planned, it alerted non-Indigenous Australians to the need for Indigenous representation in such decisions, and it prompted a government report recommending compensation payments, protection of
sacred sites, creation of a permanent parliamentary
standing committee to scrutinise developments at Yirrkala, and also acknowledgments of the Indigenous people's moral right to their lands. This marked an important moment in the history of
Indigenous land rights in Australia and
native title in Australia. One of the Bark Petitions is on display in the
Parliament House in
Canberra.
Outstation status The settlement was funded as an
outstation during the 1980s. ==Location and description==