KOCA
Keeping Our Culture Alive
Mona Mona Cultural Centre
Rhonda Brim as a member of the Australian Rainforest Council ARC. She activated this KOCA dream in the early 1990's as an aspect of her leadership development as an Elder of Djabagay Bama Heritage
Rhonda with the support of her mother and elder Winnie Brim and the Duffin Family: have been living and working at Mona Mona for a few years activating the Farm. See links below
KOCA has been using a CDEP work initiative to redevelop this living heritage at Mona Mona. In June 2008 supported by CDEP she ran KOCA training programs where 15 Djabugay apprentices have been trained in Pandanus; Lomandra; Black Palm & Lawyer Cane: their traditional Bama basketry
These basket making practices are the worlds oldest living continuum of traditional rainforest basketry
KOCA was funded by Arts Queensland Oct - Nov 2009 in partnership with CDEP to continue this training program and maintain this basketry renaissance: in the Bi-Cornial half moon lawyer cane basket
Master Weaver Rhonda Brim is holding her Djabugay Material Cultural Knowledge as a living memory for her family and her people
Rhonda presents active living practice of living this dream
Okka Wikka is requesting Govt departments to give their absolute support on a National level for this KOCA business
The dedicated four months of learning how to make these 4 Bama rainforest baskets culminated with their basket collection in the Kick Arts Gallery in Cairns FNQ @ the Wet Tropics Blak Roots Exhibition on 28th November 08 & a photographic exhibition of the renaissance in FN Qld Bama baskets at Umi Arts with Gertrude Yosse February 09
Master Weavers: Abe Muriata Doris Kinjun Evelyn Omeenyo & Ruby Ludwick were the teachers at this Mona Mona renaissance in Bama Basketry.
Priscilla Major Shaun Edwards and her family @ Kowanyama invited Rhonda Brim & 4 weavers to be part of the Baby Festival in July 08.
During these 4 months Waratah Nicholls facilitator @ the Hopevale Art and Culture centre organized a visit of her weavers to the Mona Mona basket weaving workshops so they could meet Rhonda Brim and her student weavers. In collaboration with the Hopevale Weavers there is preparation for the Weave the Web performance at the Laura Dance Festival: 19-21st June 09.
With this initiative coming from the Hopevale weavers: this 09 Laura Festival looks forward to a gathering of all Cape York weavers in a weaving performance called Weave the Web: it is a chance to speak up the renaissance in traditional basketry of FNQ
Arts Qld; Umi Arts; Kick Arts with Wet Tropics; Russell Milledge at JCU; CDEP; Arts Nexus & Okka Wikka/Urub Trust have given support to this KOCA program in 08

"Mona Mona Cultural Centre KOCA: 28 days learning the Bi-Cornial rainforest Bama basket with Master Weaver Abe Muriata"

" Rhonda Brim taught 15 of her Djabugay people to weave the Black Palm basket over 4 weeks"

"Mona Mona Cultural Centre KOCA collection of Lomandra grass & Black Palm baskets"

"Mona Mona Cultural Centre KOCA: the long awaited START of the Bi-Cornial basket."

" Abe is an exceptional teacher who was ready to patiently assist each person's ability to learn this skill"

"There are a 100 pieces of lawyer cane almost a meter in lengh in this Bama rainforest bi-cornial basket."

"Placing of a structural piece of fishtail loya cane along what will become the bottom of the bi-cornial basket"

"Doris Kinjun joined her nephew Abe Muriata as the bi-cornial basket making teachers at Mona Mona 09 "

"Rhonda Brim: This basket demands very fine work quiet concentration & accuracy"

"Each piece had to be painsakenly split 4 ways: from a small piece of fishtail loya cane"

"Abe explaining every step of the way "

"learning to hold the bottom of the basket: once done it will be ready to weave around and create the shape"

"Abe explaining and demonstrating the pattern you weave"

"Abe making sure that the balance between the warp and weft are strong and tight"

"Abe teaching Leanndra the pattern"

"This thick structural piece of loya cane along the bottom of the basket is repeated as you weave up around the basket"

"A team of helpers: Kate & Bindi; Jenny from Circus Arts North; "

"This Bama basket was used to carry things in & to soak toxic plants, nuts & roots that needed leeching in water. "
