Australia's 'first Aboriginal attorney-general' who underwent a mysterious desert initiation ceremony breaks his silence on family tree research casting doubt on his Indigenous ancestry

  • South Australian Attorney-General says he is Indigenous 
  • Research found no Aboriginal ancestry in his family tree
  • He underwent an 'initiation' ceremony in the SA desert 
  • Do you know more? Email stephen.gibbs@mailonline.com 

A senior Labor politician who says he is proudly Aboriginal by birth and later underwent an 'initiation' ceremony now claims he never brought his ancestry 'into the public arena'.

Kyam Maher, South Australia's Attorney-General and Minister for Aboriginal Affairs, has brushed off questions about research purported to show he has no Indigenous forebears.

Mr Maher has for at least the past seven years boasted about his Aboriginality and has been photographed wearing face paint and the traditional red headband of an initiated Anangu man.

Genealogical researchers for the Dark Emu Exposed website recently completed a family tree for Mr Maher going back up to six generations and found no Aboriginal ancestors.

Each line of Mr Maher's family was traced to European immigrant men and women who were born in Ireland, England or Germany and came to Australia in the 19th century.

South Australian Attorney-General Kyam Maher says he is Aboriginal but now claims he never brought his ancestry 'into the public arena'. He is pictured left wearing a traditional headband with senior Anangu lawman Murray George and South Australian premier Peter Malinauskas

South Australian Attorney-General Kyam Maher says he is Aboriginal but now claims he never brought his ancestry 'into the public arena'. He is pictured left wearing a traditional headband with senior Anangu lawman Murray George and South Australian premier Peter Malinauskas

Mr Maher, who has ignored questions from Daily Mail Australia and others about his heritage, was grilled about his silence in an interview on ABC Radio Adelaide last Friday.

Morning presenter David Bevan asked Mr Maher if he was going to respond to 'challenges' about his identity during a discussion on South Australia's First Nations Voice Bill.

'No, no I'm not, David,' Mr Maher said. 

Bevan: 'You're not going to?'

Mr Maher: 'No'.

Bevan: 'You're not going go dignify them?'

Mr Maher: 'Absolutely not.'

Bevan: 'Are you going to sue?'

Mr Maher: 'Umm, I'm just not going to dignify... it has been exceptionally disappointing some of the things in a whole range of areas we've seen some of this debate descend into.'

Mr Maher, who is also South Australia's Minister for Aboriginal Affairs, has ignored repeated requests to answer questions about his Indigenous ancestry. Mr Maher, pictured wearing face paint, says he underwent initiation as an Anangu man on South Australia's APY Lands

Mr Maher, who is also South Australia's Minister for Aboriginal Affairs, has ignored repeated requests to answer questions about his Indigenous ancestry. Mr Maher, pictured wearing face paint, says he underwent initiation as an Anangu man on South Australia's APY Lands

Bevan then said given that Mr Maher and Premier Peter Malinauskas had spoken about his ancestry, 'doesn't it follow that you should be open to questions about that, as unpleasant as it is?'

'It's not something I've brought into the public arena, David,' Mr Maher said. 'It's others who have brought it in.' 

Mr Maher appears to have first publicly spoken of having Aboriginal bloodlines about 2015, when he revealed his mother Viv had recently discovered she had Indigenous ancestors from western Victoria.

'Our family includes Indigenous heritage but for two generations it's not something families discussed a lot,' he told NITV. 

'It's only later in life my mum became acquainted with her heritage. It's not something that played an active role in my growing up… but it's something that I'm very proud of.'

'Aunty' Viv Maher, a social worker and advocate, died in 2017.   

One obituary stated: 'Later in her career, Viv found and acknowledged her Aboriginal heritage through a male forebear of hers married to an Aboriginal Tasmanian woman.'

'The name of that "wonderful woman" was unrecorded, Viv said.'

Genealogical researchers for the Dark Emu Exposed website have recently completed a family tree for Mr Maher going back six generations and found no Aboriginal ancestors. Mr Maher is pictured with Aboriginal elders while wearing the traditional red headband of an Anangu 'wati'

Genealogical researchers for the Dark Emu Exposed website have recently completed a family tree for Mr Maher going back six generations and found no Aboriginal ancestors. Mr Maher is pictured with Aboriginal elders while wearing the traditional red headband of an Anangu 'wati'

Last year Mr Maher repeated he had Tasmanian Aboriginal ancestry and 'it's always been known in my family that we have Aboriginal heritage.' 

Daily Mail Australia, which has obtained a copy of Mr Maher's family tree, is not suggesting he has no Aboriginal ancestry, only that research has not identified any. 

Mr Maher has often been described as the first 'initiated' Aboriginal man to be appointed an attorney-general in the nation's history. 

Daily Mail Australia understands he underwent some sort of initiation ceremony in South Australia's remote Anangu Pitjantjatjara Yankunytjatjara region, known as APY Lands, about July 2020.

Mr Maher was born in Papua New Guinea and grew up in Mount Gambier in South Australia's south-east, about 1,500km from the APY Lands in the state's north-west. 

In June 2021, Mr Maher, a 50-year-old father-of-three, was quoted telling CityMag he was 'initiated on Yungkunjara [Yankunytjatjara] country in regional South Australia'.

In March last year when Mr Maher was sworn in as Attorney-General a Nine News report described him as 'the first initiated Aboriginal man in that position in Australia's history'.

Mr Malinauskas was quoted saying: 'That is a big deal.'  

Two of the South Australian APY Lands' most senior elders have now come forward to say Anangu initiation would normally only take place after years of cultural education. One of them is Trevor Adamson (pictured)

Two of the South Australian APY Lands' most senior elders have now come forward to say Anangu initiation would normally only take place after years of cultural education. One of them is Trevor Adamson (pictured) 

The precise location of Mr Maher's initiation cannot be disclosed for cultural reasons but he appears to have posted pictures of himself camping in the desert about the time of the ceremony. 

Two of the APY Lands' most senior elders have come forward to say such an initiation would normally only be performed after years of cultural education. 

What defines whether a person is Aboriginal

The accepted definition for an Indigenous person in Australia includes three components. First, they must to be of Aboriginal or Torres Strait Islander descent.

They also need to self-identify as an Aboriginal or Torres Strait Islander person and be accepted as such by the community in which they live.

Roger Karge, editor of the Dark Emu Exposed website, cited the three-part definition in calling for Kyam Maher to prove his Aboriginal ancestry.  

'That's the definition,' Roger Karge said.

'When someone comes along and says I recognise I'm Aboriginal, my mum and dad think I'm Aboriginal, other people recognise I'm Aboriginal, therefore I am - but the genealogy is not there - well the onus is on this guy to prove it.

'Working class Aboriginal people have to do it to get their kids in TAFE but how come the highest law maker in South Australia doesn't have to do it?' 

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Donald Fraser, a respected Pitjantjatjara elder who has been a leading figure on APY Lands for decades, wrote to Mr Maher last year asking for further details of his initiation.

Mr Fraser, a former chair of the APY executive board, is still waiting for a response to his letter.

'Tjilpis (local elders) are concerned by public statements made by you and repeated by the SA Premier Peter Malinauskas that you are an initiated Anangu wati,' Mr Fraser wrote.

Mr Fraser referred to Mr Maher being regularly photographed wearing a traditional red headband, which Daily Mail Australia has been told Mr Maher donned when visiting remote communities. 

Wearing such a headband on APY Lands signifies a man is recognised as a wati.   

'Tjilpis wish to meet with you urgently on-Lands to discuss this situation, ascertain the state of your cultural knowledge, and if appropriate set out a program of training and cultural induction should it be the case you genuinely wish to become a wati in our culture,'  Mr Fraser wrote.

Mr Fraser's correspondence was accompanied by a cover letter from Trevor Adamson, an APY executive board member and former chair from the Pukatja community.

'I understand... Kyam is being called to account under Anangu Lore,' Mr Adamson wrote of the initiation ritual. 

Mr Adamson said Murray George, the senior APY lawman, had tried to call Mr Maher to 'underscore the gravity' of the situation.

'Kyam is to telephone Mr Fraser to arrange to attend the Lands to sit with a select select group of tjilpi senior watis,' Mr Adamson wrote.

Mr Adamson told Daily Mail Australia he was 'really frustrated' with Mr Maher's lack of communication with senior Aboriginal men on APY Lands. 

If Mr Maher considered himself a wati, he should regularly be attending APY Lands to address Aboriginal 'business', Mr Adamson said.

William Pratt was Mr Maher's mother's mother's father. He was born in England and died in Victoria
William Kellam, Mr Maher's mother's father's father's father,  was born in England and died in Victoria

Research conducted by the Dark Emu Exposed website traced Kyam Maher's ancestors back to England, Ireland and Germany. One of his mother's grandfathers was William Pratt (left) and one her great-grandfathers was William Kellam (right)

Mr Fraser told Daily Mail Australia he too was frustrated Mr Maher had not responded to his concerns about the initiation ceremony.

'It's not a fight, it's just sorting it out and helping him to understand,' he said.  'He needs to listen and understand - that's all we want.'

Rex Tjami, another prominent APY player and one of the men involved in Mr Maher's initiation, told Daily Mail Australia he could not discuss the ceremony but it was done properly.   

Roger Karge, the scientist behind Dark Emu Exposed, says he was commissioned to conduct research into Mr Maher's genealogy by 'interested Aboriginal people and associated organisations'. 

Mr Karge has not received a response since he wrote to Mr Maher in late January to report the findings of research into his parents' ancestry.

'We are genealogical and historical researchers and we have been commissioned by a number of third parties to provide the family trees and genealogy of Mr James Maher and his late wife Viv Maher,' Mr Karge wrote.  

Genealogical research conducted by the Dark Emu Exposed website found no Aboriginal ancestors in Mr Maher’s family tree. Mr Maher is pictured with his parents Viv and James

Genealogical research conducted by the Dark Emu Exposed website found no Aboriginal ancestors in Mr Maher’s family tree. Mr Maher is pictured with his parents Viv and James 

'Specifically, we were commissioned by interested Aboriginal people and associated organisations to determine if James and Viv Maher were of Aboriginal descent... 

'Our research appears to show that, based on the publicly available records, that neither Mr James Maher, nor his late wife Viv Maher, appear to be of Aboriginal descent. 

'We could identify no ancestors, in either of their family trees, who were of Aboriginal descent.'

Mr Karge then asked Mr Maher if he wished to make any comment on his findings or suggest any corrections to more than 200 pages of supporting documents. 

The amateur historian said the private or unrecorded adoption of an Aboriginal child into Mr Maher's family line could still mean he had Indigenous ancestry. 

A relationship out of wedlock between one of Mr Maher's ancestors and an Aboriginal person could also have produced a child who was incorporated into the family. 

'You've always got to allow for that,' Mr Karge said. 

Australians seeking Indigenous-specific grants, Centrelink assistance, employment or access to school scholarships and university courses can be asked to prove their Aboriginal heritage.

The first of three criteria for a person to be considered Indigenous in Australia is that they actually be of Aboriginal or Torres Strait Islander descent.

They also need to self-identify as an Aboriginal or Torres Strait Islander person and be accepted as such by the community in which they live or formerly lived.   

Last month Mr Maher introduced a First Nations Voice Bill which he said would provide 'a body that is chosen from Aboriginal people, by Aboriginal people' to advise South Australia's parliament. 

Those who seek to vote in the Voice or stand for election must be a 'First Nations person', according to the Bill.

The legislation uses the standard three-part criteria to define a First Nations person but also provides a definition for someone being 'of Aboriginal or Torres Strait Islander descent'.

'A person will be taken to be of Aboriginal or Torres Strait Islander descent if the person is biologically descended from the persons who inhabited Australia or the Torres Strait Islands... before European settlement,' it states.  

Australians will this year face a referendum to change the Constitution and introduce a similar Indigenous Voice to advise federal parliament. 

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