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Australia’s 16-day celebration of Asian cultures held in a remote beach town – welcome to Broome

  • The Shinju Matsuri, an amalgamation of Chinese, Japanese and Malay celebrations, attracts thousands of visitors each year to Broome in Western Australia
  • The 52-year-old festival, to be held this year from August 20 to September 4, also encompasses Aboriginal heritage, including Indigenous art, music and film

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A float parade at the Shinju Matsuri festival, a celebration of Asian cultures that has been held in Broome, Western Australia, since 1970. Photo: Shinju Matsuri

Since 1970, Chinese dragons, Japanese lanterns and Malaysian flags have marked a unique festival in a remote Australian outback community.

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Two thousand kilometres (1,240 miles) from Perth, the nearest city, Broome is renowned for its 22km-long beach, seaside resorts, rugged interior and annual Shinju Matsuri Festival, a celebration of its Asian and Aboriginal heritage.

In the far north of Western Australia, Broome has a significant population of Asians, their ancestors initially having come in the 19th century to join the town’s pearling industry. Shinju matsuri means “pearl festival” in Japanese.

A spokesperson for the wider Shire of Broome doesn’t know exactly how many people in the town have Asian ancestry, but according to Doug Fong, a retired teacher and amateur historian who is an influential member of Broome’s Asian community, more than 2,000 of its 16,000 people have Asian blood.

A musical procession at Shinju Matsuri. Photo: Shinju Matsuri
A musical procession at Shinju Matsuri. Photo: Shinju Matsuri

Fong, who says his family came to Australia from southern China a century ago, was born and raised in Broome, which he describes as probably the most multicultural small town in Australia.

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