POPULARITY
Cultural Initiatives, Storytelling, and Connection. Join us as we take the hangar to the National Convention Centre Canberra for the Air and Space Power Conference 2024 and chat to Indigenous Liaison Officer Flight Lieutenant Steven Warrior, proud Kuarna, Narungga, and Kokatha man. This episode is hosted by Group Captain Glenn Orton. Please note: This episode of Hangar 46 was recorded at the National Convention Centre Canberra during ASPCon24, there may be background noises or a difference in audio quality.
On this ep, we are chatting about Yitpi Yartapuultiku, meaning in English 'the Soul of Port Adelaide', which is a new Aboriginal Cultural Space being built in the heart of Port Adelaide by the local council, the City of Port Adelaide Enfield.Yitpi Yartapuultiku aims to heal Country, bring the community together and provide a place for events and tourism.The space was collaboratively designed by the council alongside local Aboriginal Custodians, Wax Design and Ashley Halliday Architects, and it is expected to be open to the public in early 2025.Our host Melissa Martin is joined by Narungga man Rodney Welch from the City of Port Adelaide Enfield council and landscape architect Warwick Keates from Wax Design to chat about this project and the environmental considerations of this future Green Star certified building. See the design here: https://participate.cityofpae.sa.gov.au/yitpiyartapuultiku Subscribe to the Green Adelaide Podcast for new episode alerts!
At the 2024 Adelaide Festival, we visit theatre foyers, dressing rooms and the city's famous gardens to meet the artists bringing theatregoers to the edge of their seats.We speak with artistic director Ruth Mackenzie, who is delivering her first full program this year, we meet acclaimed choreographer Elizabeth Streb, whose 'Action Hero' performers in Streb Extreme Action will push their bodies to the limit in Time Machine, we visit the Narungga artists and cultural custodians sharing the creation stories of their country on the Yorke Peninsula in Guuranda, and we learn how acts of creative thievery can become a joyful paean to the performing arts in Grand Theft Theatre.
In this episode of The Lawyers Weekly Show, host Jerome Doraisamy is joined by Scott McCartney, a Wotjobaluk man and chief executive of the Kinaway Chamber of Commerce Victoria, and Matthew Karakoulakis, a Kokatha and Narungga man and principal solicitor of AMK Law, to discuss the issue of black cladding. Black cladding refers to businesses that falsely represent themselves as Indigenous-owned when they are not. Mr McCartney and Mr Karakoulakis discuss the negative consequences of black cladding and its impact on the Indigenous business community and the broader community. They highlight the need for proper certification and education to address the issue, as well as the role of lawyers in advocating for regulatory and legislative changes to prevent black cladding. If you like this episode, show your support by rating us or leaving a review on Apple Podcasts (The Lawyers Weekly Show) and by following Lawyers Weekly on social media: Facebook, Twitter and LinkedIn. If you have any questions about what you heard today, any topics of interest you have in mind, or if you'd like to lend your voice to the show, email editor@lawyersweekly.com.au for more insights!
The South Australian Premier's NAIDOC Awards recognise the achievements of extraordinary Aboriginal South Australians who have made a significant contribution to the lives of Aboriginal people in this state.In this segment, we hear from Nerida Saunders, a proud Murri woman from the Kamilaroi Nation. Tahlia Wanganeen, a proud Narungga, Kaurna and Ngarrindjeri woman who has been an advocate for her communities working as a lawyer and then moving onto strategic policy. Jeffery Newchurch is a Narungga / Kaurna man who was born at Point Pearce.
South Australia's inaugural Commissioner for First Nations Voice Dale Agius joins us to discuss how South Australia's Voice to Parliament can be used as a template to understand the need for our national referendum. Dale talks about how in his more than 40 public community consultations he is hearing the call from indigenous people to "give us enough autonomy and self-determination in our legislation for our people to feel safe” and to feel they have the ability to talk straight to the parliament.Dale Agius is South Australia's inaugural Commissioner for First Nations Voice. Dale is a Kaurna, Narungga, Ngadjuri and Ngarrindjeri person with connection to communities and Country across South Australia. Sharon Bessell is Professor of Public Policy and Director of both the Children's Policy Centre and the Poverty and Inequality Research Centre at ANU Crawford School of Public Policy. Arnagretta Hunter is the Human Futures Fellow at ANU College of Health and Medicine, a cardiologist, physician, and a Senior Clinical Lecturer at ANU Medical School.You can find full show notes at policyforum.net. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Lisa Daniel hosts Word for Word and her guest is Chris Orr. Chris is of European and Narungga decent. After studying art & design and graphic design at a tertiary... LEARN MORE The post Chris Orr appeared first on Word for Word.
The Regional Australia Institute this week highlighted the Yorke and Clare Valley combined region as a job vacancy hotspot rising 33 per cent on the latest monthly data and as the Malinauskas Labor Government's cabinet visits Wallaroo to listen to the local community, we spoke with the local MP Fraser Ellis about local labour and housing demands and a disturbing incident this week at the Wallaroo hospital
The independent MP for Narungga talks about improving regional health services, attracting and retaining doctors via a parliamentary inquiry - if he can initiate it with 10,000 signatures.
Posmrtni ostaci tisuća pripadnika Prvih naroda se još uvijek drže u muzejima i drugim kulturnim instutucijama diljem svijeta. Zajednica naroda Narungga iz južnoaustralske regije poluotoka York je godinama tražila one koji su nestali. Kao rezultat te potrage, zajednica je uspjela vratiti u zemlju posmrtne ostatke 38 predaka i prirediti za njih tradicionalni pokop u Nacionalnom parku Dhilba Guuranda Innes.
The dingo is often referred to as a pest - at least to farmers - but it is also a significant living feature in First Nations culture and important within the Australian ecological system.Wild Dog is the first artistic outcome of a multi-year cultural maintenance and revival project that will connect the dingo story from Kaurna and Narungga country in South Australia to Lardil Country in Mornington Island, Qld, including cultural links stretching to the Wild Dog story for the Bunun people in Taiwan.Kaurna/Narungga artist Jacob Boehme conceived this project and artistically directed artists and communities across five Nations: Narungga (SA), Kaurna (SA), Lardil (Qld), Kaiadilt (Qld) and Bunun (Taiwan) in order to preserve and maintain the wild dog story. This included extensive consultation with with more than 50 Narungga and Kaurna Elders and community members.The result is an immersive exhibition and installation at Tandanya National Aboriginal Cultural Institute presented by Tarnanthi Festival as part of Illuminate Adelaide, produced by Country Arts SA and Insite Arts International.
Join Adam, Ellie and David for an exciting talk about this new work, looking at their inspirations for developing this book, their creative process and their journeys as storytellers. "Welcome to Our Country" is a collaboration between Adnyamathanha and Narungga man Adam Goodes, political advisor and former journalist Ellie Laing, and Barkindji illustrator David Hardy.The first book in the series, Somebody's Land introduces readers to the term ‘terra nullius', a Latin term meaning ‘nobody's land' – applied to the colonisation of Australia by white settlers. The book invites children and their families to imagine themselves in Australia's past, to feel the richness of our First Nations' history, and to acknowledge that our country was never terra nullius.-Watch other children and family videos on Stream. The new streaming service from the Sydney Opera House. Register for free now and start watching.Follow the Sydney Opera House on: Instagram, Twitter and Facebook. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Severe storms and fire are a part of life on Kangaroo Island. But the firestorms that blasted across the Island's landscape in January 2022 were unlike anything ever seen before, and forbode of a changing climate. Two years on, birds and mammals are only just starting to return to fire-ravaged habitats, and a question looms over the community - what will come when the fire siren rings again? When Lightning Strikes Twice is made in Tribute to Sarah Strong- Law. Content warning this feature contains stories from the 2019/2020 Fires. Guests: Jayne Bates Brenton Davis Sabrina Davis Margi Prideaux Sarah Strong-Law Alice Teasdale Credits: Producer: Lisa Burns Executive producer and sound design: Sarah Mashman Engineer: Tegan Nichols Theme composer: Oliver Beard Management: Abe Killian and Sime Knezevic In co-operation with KIX FM, Kangaroo Island This podcast was made on lands of significance to the Ngarrindjeri-Ramindjeri, Kaurna and Narungga peoples and the land of the muwinina people from Country around nipaluna. These lands were never ceded. From the Embers Season 2: Phoenix is supported by The Judith Neilson Institute for Journalism and Ideas, The Paul Ramsay Foundation, Monash University's Fire to Flourish program and The Minderoo Foundation Fire and Flood Resilience Initiative and broadcast across Australia via the Community Radio Network See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Fraser Ellis is hopeful of a positive reception within the South Australian parliament of his attempt to legislate recommendations of a select committee inquiry into conflicts between farming and mining land use, as metropolitan urban sprawl reaches into farming land nearer to Adelaide. The former Liberal turned independent MP says he's had a good working relationship with re-elected federal Liberal member Rowan Ramsey as his main reflection on the 21 May federal election, and says farmers are hopeful in Narungga after opening rains on the 28-29 May weekend.
For Word Up this week we hear some of the traditional language of South Australia's Yorke Peninsula, Narungga.
For Word Up this week we hear some of the traditional language of South Australia's Yorke Peninsula, Narungga.
The independent candidate for Narungga says someone must be using WD40 to shift rusted voters in her direction for the Saturday March 19 state poll, with the independent-held seat potentially a king-maker with multiple independents standing for re-election and neither major party possibly able to form majority government. Diana talks about the farming and mining conflicts on the Yorke Peninsula particularly centring on the Rex Minerals project south of Ardrossan, preserving natural assets and adaptation to climate change
Tom Michael is a family farmer from Barunga West standing for the Liberal Party in the electorate of Narungga covering the Yorke Peninsula and Wakefield region, seeking to displace the man elected as a Liberal at the last election, now independent Fraser Ellis.
Miners' access to farmland shouldn't be a bargaining chip for independents on who is elected in minority government deliberations, the Chamber of Mines and Energy's Rebecca Knol told FlowFM, singling our regional independent MPs and potential king-makers Fraser Ellis on the Yorke Peninsula seat of Narungga and Geoff Brock running for the outback and Port Pirie seat of Frome, both of whom played a lead role in a parliamentary inquiry seeking to control miners' access to prime agricultural land. South Australians started voting on Monday 7 March with in-person voting on election day, Saturday 19 March
This little grouping of images is on top of a diamond. The diamond shape features a lot in Kaurna carving, but also this one's referring to a specific cultural object that is quite a sacred object, but I can represent it in this format as a diamond. At the center of the installation is a work with Pintingga. Pintingga refers to Kangaroo Island, which used to be part of the mainland at the last ice age but had got cut off somewhere between 12,500 years ago and had become completely cut off by about 9,000 years ago. It used to be a place where Kaurna people used to live, as well as Ngarrindjeri people and Peramangk, and Narungga used to have connections to it, and Barngarla, too. These days we just have connections to it; it's a place we call. So Pintingga directly means “the place of the dead,” and so no one really lived there since the island's been cut off. There's evidence people might have been living on there or visiting there ‘til up to about 2,500 years ago. But it's a very sacred place for us. We're allowed to visit it but we're not allowed to live there. It's a space that we associate with mourning. The people who live there now are not indigenous people. And it was the site where the first whalers and sealers colonized because it was not inhabited and it was a good place to set up before colonizing the mainland. When the British arrived after the whalers and sealers, they set up a town at King's Cove at this site of Kangaroo Island. So we have multiple names for Kangaroo Island; we can call it Karta which means island, or Lap, or Pintingga “the place of the dead,” so in long-form sometimes we call it Karta Pintingga. I wanted to acknowledge this place in the photograph, so it's overlaid with text referring to that space.
The currently independent member for Narungga leaves open the door to returning to the Liberal fold even if elected as an independent in the Yorke Peninsula seat at the March 2022 State Election, as he targets improving country health coverage in the seat - and addresses the extent of pandemic powers - in this interview with Rikki on Flow
Welcome back to Aboriginal Way, brought to you by SA Native Title Services. Narungga and Kaurna man, Les Wanganeen won Kinship Carer of the Year at the inaugural SA Child Protection Awards after five years of caring for his grandson. Les shared his story with Aboriginal Way and has advice for prospective kinship carers.
Today we chat to Sinead, the Founder of Idigenous owned skincare line, Lowanna Skincare. At just 24-years-old Narungga woman from South Australia, Sinead, was pursuing a tourism career when COVID hit and left her losing her corporate job. With the industry at an all time low, she instead pivoted and used the time in lockdown to pursue her other passion of natural beauty. It's now been a year to the day since she launched Lowanna Skin Care - a natural skin care line focused around using native Australian plant-based ingredients. These are ingredients that Indigenous Australians have been using for years, and Sinead wanted to share the benefits of these powerful plants by creating skin care that is natural, ethical & vegan and embodies her connection to her Narungga culture. We chat about her journey of juggling a full time job and returning to work after covid, the importance of ethical, natural skincare, and her tips for anyone looking to get started on their ideas and goals! Hit subscribe and follow @lowannaskincare and @jess.williamson8 over on Instagram!
Start your day the right way, with a stimulating discussion of the latest news headlines and hot button topics from The Advertiser and Sunday Mail. Today, hear from Louka Parry, Lee-Ann Tjunypa Buckskin and Sean Fewster. Louka Parry Louka Parry is a learning strategist, education futurist and social entrepreneur working at the global forefront with schools, systems and organisations to help them adapt for the future. As a school teacher, he was promoted to Principal at 27 years old and was named Inspirational Public Secondary Teacher of the Year for South Australia. Now as Founder + CEO of The Learning Future, he works internationally to support positive change with a focus on innovation, future skills, leadership, wellbeing, technology and organisational culture. A rapid learner, he holds two Masters Degrees, speaks five languages and recently completed a fellowship at Stanford's school. You'll normally find him nerding out on ideas, running trails, playing music and generally exploring with a rather insatiable and problematic curiosity. Lee-Ann Tjunypa Buckskin Lee-Ann Tjunypa Buckskin is a Narungga, Wirangu, Wotjobaluk woman and lives in South Australia. Lee-Ann is well known throughout the Australian and international Indigenous and arts communities and has worked across many major events and festivals, and she has been at the forefront of developing and delivering strong Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander arts and cultural programs for public audiences in Australia. Lee-Ann is the appointed Deputy Chair of the Australia Council for the Arts, an advisory member of The Art Gallery of South Australia and for Tarnanthi, the Festival of Contemporary Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Visual Arts in Adelaide. Sean Fewster Sean Fewster is The Advertiser's chief court reporter, and has covered most of Adelaide's major criminal trials for the past 18 years. He is the author of the bestselling true crime book City of Evil, which was adapted into a top-rating TV miniseries by Channel 9 and Foxtel in 2018. Sean also provides analysis of the criminal justice system every week on FiveAA. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Yves and Clare are joined by Dr Natalie Harkin, a Narungga woman, writer, poet, and author of Archival-Poetics (Vagabond Press, 2019). How do we weave our histories, our stories? Natalie talks about piecing together her family narrative through state Aboriginal records and archives in order to make sense of a fractured history and create a new space in Archival Poetics. The group considers the paradox of Natalie's archive fever, rebuilding the archival container, the dual voices of oppression and resilience, entering the archive with rupturing intent, and weaving your way back out.
Every week on The Nasty Woman Club I will be releasing a BONUS episode called MY THOUGHTS ON. Every Tuesday myself and/or a special guest will be talking about a taboo or controversial topic relating to intersectional feminism.This week on My Thoughts On I will be talking to Sianna Catullo of the Narungga people. She is the project officer and chief creative officer of Clothing the Gap - a brand made from the Aboriginal led business Spark Health.The business was recently served a 'Cease and Desist' notice from WAM Clothing for celebrating the Aboriginal Flag on the Clothing the Gap products. WAM Clothing is a non-indigenous company that has world-wide licensing of the Aboriginal flag. Clothing the Gap have started a petition to raise awareness of the unfairness of the licensing agreement of the Aboriginal flag. For more details go to www.clothingthegap.com.au and www.change.org/pridenotprofit This podcast was hosted and produced by myself Demi Lynch.Make sure you LIKE or SUBSCRIBE wherever you listen to this podcast. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.