<font><font face="georgia,serif">Australian aboriginal canoes help re-launch pride<br><br>By Pauline Askin<br>SYDNEY | Mon Jun 4, 2012 5:21am EDT<br><br>(Reuters) - As light fades on the shores of Sydney Harbour, a group of men finish building a traditional aboriginal canoe using bark from eucalyptus trees. Smoke smothers the strips of bark as heat from a fire below curves the wood into the shape of a canoe.<br>
<br>Just offshore massive container ships and multi-million dollar pleasure yachts anchor on the harbour, a world away from the days when Aborigines paddled bark canoes across the same body of water.<br><br>But now, Australia's Aborigines are trying to revive the ancient skill of canoe building, known as Nawi, and pass the knowledge on to younger men in a bid to instil cultural pride.<br>
<br>"It's a big part of their story. The canoe culture is something they've lost," David Payne, canoe builder and curator at the Australian Maritime Museum, told Reuters.<br><br>Access full article below:<br>
<a href="http://www.reuters.com/article/2012/06/04/uk-australia-canoes-idUSLNE85300B20120604">http://www.reuters.com/article/2012/06/04/uk-australia-canoes-idUSLNE85300B20120604</a><br></font></font>