Margaret Heffernan (linguist)

Margaret Heffernan (born 1943), is a Central Arrernte linguist, author, interpreter and translator who is now a well respected elder in her community.[1] Heffernan is responsible for developing the orthography of Arrernte.[2]

Margaret Heffernan
Born1943 (age 7677)
Academic background
Alma materBatchelor Institute of Indigenous Tertiary Education
Academic work
DisciplineLinguist

Early life

Heffernan was born at the sacred site of Werlatye Atherre, just north of the Alice Springs Telegraph Station,[3] and is part of the Caterpillar Dreaming. Heffernan is also part of the Water Dreaming as she was conceived at another sacred site, Apmere Yetwernte, near Aileron.[4]

Growing up Heffernan was always told that her birthday was 1 April 1943, but this date was invented when she first came in to contact with white institutions; later records show it being recorded as 1944.[4]

The Heffernan family travelled a lot around Central Australia in Margaret's early childhood for family and ceremony and also for work. Heffernan recalls that, in 1949, her family moved to work in the Jervios Ranges, far east and towards the Queensland border, where her father had gotten a job with Kurt Johannsen working on a copper mine which had been abandoned. The family stayed there for a year, until her now pregnant mother wanted to return to Alice Springs were she would have the support of family, and family midwives, for the birth. Shortly after this they then went to Yambah Station where, again, they stayed for about a year.

Finally, in 1951, Heffernan's family settled, for some time, in Alice Springs where they lived at Middle Camp (on Charles Creek)[5] and it is here where she was forced to start attending school at the former Bungalow at the Alice Springs Telegraph Station, which was by then functioning as an Aboriginal Reserve.[4] Heffernan recalls that: "The old people worried that this school business didn't fit well with our culture. It didn't allow time for ceremony and teaching old ways, But nobody asked them."[4] She was allowed to go home at night.

In 1953 the family were "as good as pushed" into going to live at Santa Teresa (now the Ltyentye Apurte Community) and, once there, Heffernan was forced to live separately from her family in dormitory accommodation associated with the school and was only allowed to visit her family on weekends. Heffernan finished school in the late-1950s.[4]

Following school, in Heffernan's early adulthood, she worked in the Amoonguna kitchens where she met her husband Tommy Dixon, an Anmatyerr man from Napperby Station. In the early years of their marriage, they travelled between Napperby Station and Santa Teresa.[4]

Career

Heffernan started working in linguistics after starting as a bilingual education teacher at Santa Teresa School which inspired her to study a Diploma of Linguistics at Batchelor Institute of Indigenous Tertiary Education. At Batchelor she collaborated with linguist Gavan Breen and, together, they developed the Arrernte orthography.[2]

Following this, she went on the teach at the Institute for Aboriginal Development and Yipirinya School. Additionally she has worked with Margaret James on the Central Arrernte language versions of the Honey Ant Readers.[1]

In 2018, Heffernan published her autobiography, supported by Gerard Waterford and Francis Coughlan with the aim of helping young people maintain their traditions to keep Arrernte families and language strong; the book is: Gathering Sticks: lighting up small fires, and was published by IAD Press.

As of 2019, she lives at Hidden Valley, a town camp of Alice Springs, with her daughters.

Works

Publication list available on Trove.

References

  1. "Margaret Heffernan". Honey Ant Readers. Retrieved 2019-11-01.
  2. "Margaret Heffernan". NT Writers' Centre. Retrieved 2019-11-01.
  3. "A colonial chronology of Alice Springs | Central Land Council, Australia". www.clc.org.au. Retrieved 2019-11-01.
  4. Heffernan, Margaret (2018). Gathering sticks : lighting up small fires. Waterford, Gerard,, Coughlan, Frances. Alice Springs, NT. ISBN 9781864651478. OCLC 1026406939.
  5. Coughlan, Frances Mary (1991). Aboriginal town camps and Tangentyere Council: the battle for self-determination in Alice Springs (Thesis thesis).
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