Wisdom Man: Banjo Clarke
Author: Camilla Chance
Reviewer: Judith Woolcock Colombo
Publisher: Penguin Group (2003)
ISBN: 0670040789
Rating: * * * * Quills
www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/asin/ISBN/scriquil
 
Wisdom Man is an oral history of Australian aboriginal life as seen and experienced through the eyes of one man. Raised in the bush by the old people of his tribe, Banjo Clarke learned to live off the land and survive as his people have for centuries.

As he grows to manhood, he finds himself caught between two cultures, his and the white man's. As the years pass the Australian regional government seizes more aboriginal land and many natives are forced to seek work from whites that view them as lazy blacks.
 
Despite this, Banjo grows into a remarkable man who, years later, becomes a preserver of his native culture and wisdom. Over the years he helps many people, opening his house to troubled youth of all races and cultures. He becomes a philosopher, teacher, spiritual advisor and foster father to generations of people who leave his company the better for having known him.
 
Camilla Chance, who recorded Banjo's life, is mentioned often in his narrative as an admired friend who understood and respected the aboriginal way of life. At the end of Banjo's narrative, Chance, in turn, describes how they met and their friendship developed throughout the years. She tells of going to the Framlingham Aboriginal Settlement with other members of the Bahai Faith. Chance also speaks about her faith and how it is in accordance with aboriginal principles. We learn of the deep and abiding friendship Banjo had with Chance and her family and his spiritual connection to her son David.
 
I thought Banjo's narrative interesting. It reminded me of the old storytellers of my own Caribbean culture. I enjoyed reading it and found Banjo's perception of his world to be Zen like. He did not seek to control and change his environment only to live in it with respect.
 
At the back of the book there are other brief essays and poems by members of Banjo's family and some of his friends. All this adds to the quality of the work and helps to make this man real to people who are not familiar with Aboriginal or Australian culture. I recommend this book to anyone who enjoys learning about other cultures and places, or students of nature both in the broad and narrow sense.

 

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