Published in Overland Issue 239 Winter 2020 · Poetry / Nakata Brophy Prize Runner-up, Nakata Brophy Prize: sweet smoke Jazz Money it starts with smoke it always starts with smoke mothers burred at the belly swollen as the great trees come to this place painted and slow with a gasping gift canopy medicine to welcome the person on hands and knees whose new blood makes magic makes the earth anew the grunting sweat almost terror turns to bliss as sweet cries wake the bush wake first eyes sweated face becomes pure like rain like day break when the world shifts from two set wet heartbeats the wet orange womb glow to bright white light and the gasping bub of day break cries there is white smoke to clear the bush to cleanse the air to welcome wrinkled and furled as a new leaf sweet medicine in the coolamon carried wet and green and old hands born here too know the way to ash tie belly knots clever hands don’t forget this place where life begins tell it to the bubs to pass onto theirs when strangers come when other trees fall here in a vast hollow medicine tree this is where life begins a tree so great has a memory so long can feel the way the air has changed hard rivers have formed in this bush black flat tar where great steel fish swim smoke turned dirty and the river of destruction comes closer white hands white hats white clipboards avert their gaze from her mark on gridded maps to bring death here to a place of life and so it starts new with smoke and familiar camp fire sweet smoke for birth for fight textures change and languages combine the old words remain return medicine remembered fires built the proper way people gather paint bodies paint signs she waits she sighs remembers the thousands she birthed here sees them return carrying ancestors carrying bubs carrying the weight of police and policy and time together carrying sweet smoke to keep her safe *this poem is dedicated to the humbling work of the Djab Wurrung Embassy, with their blessing Image from Justin McManus. More information on how to support the Djab Wurrung embassy can be found here: https://docs.google.com/document/d/1-GTkdfwZDfvW26yvRuOMmx4p4hM73Im5dxk-GMElSJI/edit Jazz Money Jazz Money is an award-winning poet, filmmaker and educator of Wiradjuri heritage. Her poetry has been published widely across Australia and reimagined as murals, visual art and video art. Jazz is grateful to live on the beautiful sovereign lands of the Darug and Gundungurra nations. More by Jazz Money › Overland is a not-for-profit magazine with a proud history of supporting writers, and publishing ideas and voices often excluded from other places. If you like this piece, or support Overland’s work in general, please subscribe or donate. Related articles & Essays 18 December 202418 December 2024 · Nakata Brophy Prize Dawning in the rivulet of my father’s mourning Yasmin Smith My father floats words down Toonooba each morning. They arrive to me by noon. / Nothing diminishes in his unfolding, not even the currents in midwinter June. / He narrates the sky prehistorically like a cadence cutting him into deluge. 8 November 202418 December 2024 · Nakata Brophy Prize Announcing the final results of the 2024 Nakata Brophy Prize for Young Indigenous Writers Editorial Team After careful consideration, judges Karen Wyld and Eugenia Flynn have selected first place and two runners-up to form the final results of this year’s Nakata Brophy Prize!