Leprosarium violin

Instrument
The leprosarium with an orchestra

From the early 20th century in Australia, the 'Big Sick' was a most feared, incurable and darkly mysterious disease. Stigmatised from biblical times, the bacterial infection known as leprosy, or Hansen’s Disease, began sweeping through the Kimberley. With strict and forced quarantine the only option, the Derby Leprosarium, ‘Bungarun’, was built in 1936 to isolate leprosy sufferers. The fifty years of its operation witnessed one of the most significant dislocations of Kimberley people with one in every ten Kimberley families affected by the disease. In March 1937, the Sisters, as government employees, took up the nursing at Bungarun and remained at Australia’s longest running leprosarium until its closure in 1986. A classical pianist, Sister Alphonsus Daley, in an early form of physiotherapy in 1944, began teaching patients, many of whom had never been to school, to play the violin. More instruments began arriving at the Leprosarium from all over the country and in its heyday, the near 50-piece, classical, Aboriginal leper orchestra played Beethoven, Mozart and Rock’N’Roll with a joyfulness that reached well beyond the spectre of their isolation and stigmatisation. This violin is testament to the resilience of a community formed by people from all parts of the Kimberley, forced to isolate together with the Sisters, the doctors and the staff who cared for them under the harshest form of isolation and quarantine, for the 50 years of operation. The original violin is currently on display in the WA Museum Boola Bardip, Perth, and this replica will take its place for the six-year term of loan. The original and haunting sounds of the Bungarun Orchestra can be heard outside in the Garden of Healing, adjacent to this 1926 Old Convent.

Available at:

SSJG Heritage Centre Broome

A social history of the Kimberley

The SSJG Heritage Centre’s award winning Relationships exhibition is housed in the 1926 Old Convent, one of three remaining Japanese ‘Shinkabe’ buildings. The engaging displays offer a unique window...

Address:

9 Barker St
Broome WA 6725
Australia

Open Hours

February to November
Mon to Fri 9am-12 Noon

 

May to August
Saturdays 10am-12 Noon

More from the SSJG Heritage Centre Broome

The best of care for the people who needed it the most

Broome was a town of excesses during the roaring days of the pearling industry. Prostitution, brothels and opium dens operated in the boarding houses and laundries of Sheeba Lane and drinking and...

While you're in the area

Filter
Cable Beachside Villas
Accommodation
Cable Beachside Villas
Relax in one of 16 spacious two or three bedroom villas at Cable Beachside...
2 Murray Road, Cable Beach, WA 6726
Broome Bird Observatory
Attraction
Broome Bird Observatory
You can discover more than a third of Australia’s bird species, over 300...
Crab Creek Road, Roebuck, WA 6725
Yane Sotiroski Photography
Attraction
Yane Sotiroski Photography
Yane is a well known Broome photographer who strives to capture the true...
17 Carnarvon Street, Broome, WA 6725
Seashells Broome
Accommodation
Seashells Broome
Seashells Broome is located just 600 metres from Cable Beach, Broome in...
4-6 Challenor Drive, Cable Beach, WA 6726