The Makassan seafarers from the town of Makassar in South Sulawesi (present day Indonesia) would travel during the monsoon season to the northern coast of Australia to collect trepang sea cucumber and pearls. The Makassan trade network stretched from China, through Makassar (Sulawesi) and Pante Makassar (Timor) to the Kimberley and Arnhem Land coast in Australia.
The oldest known Aboriginal rock art painting of a Makassan prau boat is dated to 1664.
The Makassan trepang industry ended in 1907 under the White Australia Policy. However, Indonesians continued to fish in Australian waters until the Howard government clamped down on ‘illegal’ fishing by the passing of the ‘Border Protection Bill 2001’.
The Makassan seafarers employed Aboriginal labour to dive for trepang and pearls. They traded resources such as pottery, axes, cloth, tobacco, alcohol, rice and knives. Stories of the interactions between Aboriginal and Makassan people have been handed down multiple generations to the present day. Some Aboriginal families established positive relationships with Makassans, so much so that Aboriginal people sometimes traveled back with Makassan people to Makassar in Sulawesi. However, Some Makassan exchanges with Aboriginal communities could be violent and exploitive, including kidnapping and slavery.
Today there are still remnants of Makassan pottery, coins and tamarind trees (Tamarindus indica) and Bamboo (Bambusa arnhemica) still growing at the site of historical Makassan camps and villages in Northern Australia. The influence of Makassan words are still spoken by some Aboriginal language groups and small elements of Islam are still embedded in some Aboriginal cultural practices in Northern Coastal Australia.
REFERENCES
http://press-files.anu.edu.au/downloads/press/p241301/html/ch01.xhtml?referer=&page=3
https://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0011346
https://www.islamicmuseum.org.au/makassans-in-australia/
https://www.nma.gov.au/defining-moments/resources/trade-with-the-makasar
https://ris.cdu.edu.au/ws/portalfiles/portal/27113128/Thesis_CDU_23682078_Franklin_D.pdf
https://researchers.cdu.edu.au/en/studentTheses/ecology-of-the-top-end-bamboo-bambusa-arnhemica