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Every year, hundreds of thousands of didgeridoos are sold
around the world. The sad thing about this is that less than
0.01% of these didgeridoos could be called authentic... even
sadder is the fact that the didgeridoo industry is now worth
millions of dollars and traditional Aboriginal custodians
of the instrument hardly get to see a cent of it.
iDIDJ Australia wants to do something about this and we would
like you to help us! Please study our Cultural Indications
(CI) Index below. This is basically a system for differentiating
didgeridoos on the basis of origins and cultural integrity.
Whenever possible, we educate consumers in the benefits of
supporting the traditional Aboriginal custodians of the didgeridoo
- and we explain why CI 4 instruments are the best.
We strongly discourage consumers from spending their didgeridoo
dollars on manufactured or mass-produced instruments which
fall into the CI 0, CI 1, and CI 2 categories. Note, however,
that good quality product and ethical instrument makers can
be found in these categories... many hobby craftsmen, in the
USA and Europe for example, hand-make excellent quality didgeridoos
from a variety of materials and methods and these can be purchased
at a reasonable price. These craftsmen - and you'll find out
who they are with some research - do not represent their creations
as something they are not.
Some mass-producers and manufacturers, on the other hand,
are alleged to have breached trade practices laws by labelling
their didgeridoos as authentic or Aboriginal-made when they
clearly are not... and others have been caught illegally cutting
and mass-harvesting trees without the proper permits... sometimes
on Aboriginal lands!
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