Mandawuy-Yunupingu-Obituary

Mandawuy Yunupingu

Obituary

SYDNEY (AP) - Mandawuy Yunupingu, the former lead singer of Australian indigenous band Yothu Yindi and one of the country's most famous Aborigines, has died, Australia's prime minister said Monday. He was 56.

Yunupingu, who gained worldwide fame in the 1980s and 1990s with his hits "Treaty" and "Tribal Voice," died Sunday night at his home in a tiny Outback Aboriginal settlement in the Northern Territory, Indigenous Health Minister Warren Snowdon said. Officials haven't released a cause of death, but Yunupingu struggled for years with kidney disease.

"We have lost a uniquely talented musician, a passionate advocate for Aboriginal people and a truly great friend," Prime Minister Julia Gillard said in a statement.

Yunupingu began his career as a teacher, and became the first indigenous Australian to be appointed a school principal. He developed what he called the "both ways" educational philosophy, which utilized both Western and Aboriginal te aching techniques.

His penchant for blending cultures carried over to his music career, with the formation of his band Yothu Yindi in 1986. The group included both Aboriginal and white musicians and won fans with its unique combination of traditional indigenous sounds and modern pop and rock. Yothu Yindi, which released six albums, toured the United States and Canada as a support act to Midnight Oil and toured Australia with Neil Young.

The band's most famous song, "Treaty," was written in response to an unrealized promise then-Prime Minister Bob Hawke made in 1988 - the bicentennial of European settlement in Australia - to formalize a treaty between the government and Aborigines. In 1992, Yothu Yindi performed the song in New York at the launch of the United Nations' International Year of the World's Indigenous People.

"He was able to lead a band that performed and played its songs and expressed very strongly his culture in all parts of the world," Educatio n Minister and former Midnight Oil frontman Peter Garrett told reporters. "His legacy is immeasurable but the loss is great."

Yunupingu was named the 1992 Australian of the Year for his role in "building bridges of understanding between Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal people."

In recent years, he was forced to undergo dialysis three times a week as he struggled with kidney disease. In 2009, Yunupingu told Australian Broadcasting Corp. television that he had battled alcoholism before he was diagnosed. Alcohol was not the direct cause of his kidney failure, but worsened his other health problems.

"I had the whole world in front of me, and this small, little kidney problem got me right where it hurts," he told the ABC. "I have to be dependent on a machine. I never thought it would happen to me."

Aborigines, who make up 2.3 percent of Australia's 23 million people, die more than a decade younger than other Australians. They are four times more likely to die of chronic kidney disease than other Australians, and are far less likely to receive an organ transplant, according to a 2011 report by the government's Australian Institute of Health and Welfare.

"This is one of the real problems in modern Australia - too many Aboriginal people die too young," opposition leader Tony Abbott told reporters. "He was obviously a very significant cultural figure to the wider Australian community as well as amongst Aboriginal people and it's tragic that he's gone."

Yunupingu is survived by his wife Gurruwun Yunupingu and six children.

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KRISTEN GELINEAU, Associated Press

Associated Press writer Rod McGuirk in Canberra contributed to this report.


Copyright © 2013 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

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I met this man and spent the greatest day of my life as the band will one day tell you we dreamed together and made a future for you at the festival of festivals

Missing you so very much, Yirrkala and the world will never be the same again.

enjoy your walk in the sky

Deepest condolences to Yalmay, her daughters and families on the loss of your beloved husband and father. Lets hope that we can continue to move forward on closing the gap on the many issues between indigenous and non-indigenous Australians. Thank you for permitting the whole of Australia to share with you at this time of great grief, through the State Memorial Service. It has given me much food for thought.

May this great civil rights advocate and leader be remembered always. He was a sweet and caring man who had an awesome talent not only with music but with his fellow human beings. My condolences to his family and village.

let God's words bring you comfort "happy are those who mourn,since they will be comforted."....matt.5:4..please accept my sympathy....```~~

THE WAYS OF A WISE MAN SEEMS STRANGE TO A FOOL!!