Podcasts about national aborigines

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Best podcasts about national aborigines

Latest podcast episodes about national aborigines

Mafalda
SEMANA NAIDOC - NAIDOC WEEK

Mafalda

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 12, 2024


TEMAS DE CONVERSACION:- Celebración de NAIDOC = National Aboriginal and Islander Day Observance Committee,   Originalmente llamado:  National Aborigines and Islanders Day Observance Committee. - Racismo en Australia hacia la gente de color en general.- Vinculo con la Violencia Familiar.- Anuncio de la creación de vacantes para mujeres escapando violencia de género.- Perpetradores de violencia tomando responsabilidad de sus acciones.- Números telefónicos de servicios de ayuda. Canción: La Mujer de Zaweso♀♫♀♫♀♫ MUCHAS GRACIAS POR ESCUCHARNOS ♫♪ 

SBS Tamil - SBS தமிழ்
“Get Up! Stand Up! Show Up!” - எழுந்து நில்! துணிந்து சொல்! இணைந்து செல்!

SBS Tamil - SBS தமிழ்

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 8, 2022 5:55


This is NAIDOC week - NAIDOC is the acronym for National Aborigines and Islanders Day Observance Committee. - உலகின் மிக மூத்த கலாச்சாரம் என்று அறியப்படும் எமது பூர்வீக மக்கள் கலாச்சாரம் நீண்ட, தொடர்ச்சியான, வரலாற்றைக் கொண்டது. நாட்டு மக்கள் அனைவரும் அதன் சிறப்பைக் கொண்டாடுவதற்கு NAIDOC வாரம் ஒரு சிறந்த தருணம்.

SBS Tamil - SBS தமிழ்
NAIDOC Week - Heal Country! - பூர்வீக மக்களோடு பல ஆண்டுகளாக பணியாற்று நம்மவர்

SBS Tamil - SBS தமிழ்

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 8, 2021 12:23


Dr Gokula Chandran who is a welfare worker who works with indigenous people in Darwin shares his experience and journey with them during this NAIDOC week. - இது NAIDOC வாரம். National Aborigines and Islanders Day Observance Committee, என்பதன் சுருக்கம் தான் NAIDOC. பூர்வீக மக்களின் கலாச்சாரத்தையும் பாரம்பரியத்தையும் நினைவு கூரும் நாளாக கொண்டாடுவதற்கு ஜூலை மாதத்தின் இரண்டாவது வாரம் தேர்ந்தெடுக்கப்பட்டு NAIDOC வாரம் கடைபிடிக்கப்பட்டு வருகிறது.

The Dementia Podcast
Talking First Nations: The importance of culturally and spiritually aware care

The Dementia Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 6, 2021 41:41 Transcription Available


Join Colm in his special episode of ‘The Dementia Podcast' held in recognition of Australia's NAIDOC week. NAIDOC or, National Aborigines and Islanders Day Observance Committee week, is held as a celebration of the history, culture and achievements of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples. Joining us in this episode is HammondCare CEO Mike Baird who shares some introductory remarks and an expert panel that explore the care considerations for First Nations peoples. Members of this panel include; Professor Dawn Bessarab, a Bard/Yindijibarndi woman, Director of the Centre for Aboriginal Medical and Dental Health at the University of Western Australia and lead researcher for the Good Sprit Good Life Centre for Research Excellence at the University of Tasmania,  Stephanie Charlesworth who is Dementia Consultant from SA  that has worked with a number of Aboriginal communities and organisations in the NT, as well as completed her studies at Charles Darwin University in Yolngu Studies and Meghan Heatrick who is also a Dementia Consultant that has extensive career history working in greater Sydney, Alice Springs and other communities and is currently studying a master's in Indigenous health. Together this group, discusses the current environment of care of First Nations peoples, what quality of life and care means for First Nations peoples and how this can be different from the general Australian population. This episode is sponsored by Dementia Support Australia (DSA).DSA has developed culturally appropriate communications cards and helpsheets as free downloadable resources for use when caring for a First Nations person living with dementia. You can access here the ‘Good Sprit Good Life' assessment tool developed by Dawn and the team at ‘Aboriginal Ageing Well Research' as well as information on how to be involved in their research and further validation of this tool. The 'Little Red Yellow Black Book' is a suggested resource by the panel as a guide to the rich cultures and histories of Australia's First Peoples.This resource provides evidence of the higher susceptibility of dementia in First Nations people as well as other information on First Nations health founded by the Australian Government. For all feedback please email hello@dementiacente.com.au 

Breakfast with Elliott Lovejoy  - Triple M Cairns 99.5 Podcast
National Aborigines and Islanders Day Observance Committee

Breakfast with Elliott Lovejoy - Triple M Cairns 99.5 Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 2, 2021 4:37


NAIDOC week kicks off this Sunday and you can get along to a jam-packed week full of events! Learn more about this year's theme 'Healing Country' at naidoc.org.au and head to Cairns Naidoc to check out the full program! See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

SBS Thai - เอสบีเอส ไทย
สืบสานภาษาพื้นเมืองของชาวอะบอริจิน

SBS Thai - เอสบีเอส ไทย

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 9, 2020 7:32


โปรเจกต์รวบรวมคำศัพท์ 50 คำในแต่ละภาษาของชนพื้นเมืองในออสเตรเลีย เป็นส่วนหนึ่งของการสืบสานภาษาและวัฒนธรรมของชาวอะบอริจินและชาวเกาะช่องแคบทอร์เรส ในสัปดาห์ระลึกถึงชาวอะบอริจินและชาวเกาะในออสเตรเลีย (National Aborigines and Islanders Day Observance Committee) หรือสัปดาห์ไนดอก (NAIDOC) เพื่ออนุรักษ์ภาษาและวัฒนธรรมของชนชาติแรกในออสเตรเลีย

australia naidoc naidoc week national aborigines
Come Along for the Ride
Black Lives Matter Pass the Mic

Come Along for the Ride

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 16, 2020 75:36


As you will all be aware there is a movement finally getting the air time it deserves, it’s the #blacklivesmatter movement and it’s important to take a moment to talk about it.As a white woman I have stayed quiet for some time as it is so difficult to know what to say. I want to speak up and out for black lives in both the US and Australia, but I don’t want to say the wrong thing or disrespect anyone. So I’ve donated to gofundme legal accounts for 3 Indigenous court cases looking to find answers to black deaths in custody. I post a lot on my personal social media pages and always speak up to those who post racist comments or get in on the all lives matter argument.I’ve since reached out to African American people in the horse world but they seem to be inundated at the moment and I don’t get any replies. I will keep trying, this does not have a time limit. If you know of any people of colour working with horses in any way please let me know.Usually I only interview people working in gentle and ethical ways with horses but I believe that there is racism in the horse world and it runs deep and that people of colour are not given the opportunities that we as white people have been given. They may not even know that our way exists. I also believe that in order to make change in the world we need to invite everyone in, especially those who are in the minority in the horse world. We can’t make change by excluding people because we see pain in the eyes of their horse or because we don’t like the way that they train. We make change by inviting those people in and with love and respect, hearing their story and introducing them to the possibilities.So if you know of anyone who would like to be heard and tell their story here on the podcast then please get in touch with me.You will notice in the intro of this podcast I do an acknowledgement of country. This is one way that I show respect at all times to the first Australian’s and their culture and people. I wanted to do it from the outset of my podcast but didn’t know exactly how to do it respectfully, so I waited until I interviewed Dr Tauri Simone and asked her advice.I do the acknowledgment of country as it is an aboriginal Australian creation that they use and have shared with us as white Australian’s, I believe that when you are given a gift of the culture of your land, the least you can do it use it with respect. I don’t make huge changes or do it my way. I show it the respect it deserves and deliver it in the way they have done for thousands of years.I searched for a long time when I started this podcast for indigenous horse trainers and found absolutely no one. In 2018 NAIDOC week which is an acronym for National Aborigines and Islanders Day Observance Committee the theme was Because of her we can.This is where I saw the work of Dr Tauri Simone where she researched the influence of aboriginal women on the Australian pastoral industry. It took me weeks to find a contact for her as she is not on social media, I had to go through her university website then finally found her on linkedin. She then months later when she logged onto LinkedIn agreed to an interview and we arranged a time. It was always tricky as she lives on a station in Western Australia and may or may not have internet coverage on any given day or may be out bush working. But we got there eventually.I wanted to replay this interview once again as it is the one I am most proud of, in all the interviews I have done being able to bring the culture of the land I live on to the world makes me very proud.It is also important to hear what first Australian women endured when colonisation occurred. Tauri and I talked off mic about how she kept the interview and the story positive but the research and interviews and accounts she read during her research were heart breaking and she almost gave up so many times as the pain was so strong for what her ancestors endured at the hands of white man.So as you listen to this please know that while things are better for aboriginals today, they’re not that much better really and slavery and the stolen generation are the grandparents of young adult first Australians today. They carry a lot of trauma and some still have no idea where their family is.On a positive note in the podcast you can imagine what kind of women they were and how on earth they were able to ride horses at night to round up cattle who were on a blind run.It’s an amazing story on every level and I thank you for taking the time to listen to this episode. I’d also ask that this is the episode to share with friends, share the story of horse Australia was built and the extraordinary skill of these indigenous women.May we all come together and look back on this time as the moment we remember that the world truly changed to a kinder place and a safer place for all people of colour.If you'd like to support this podcast you can by going to www.patreon.com/comealongforhteridepodcast where you can become a subscriber and help me to keep this podcast going.© Copyrighted

Xchange Revolution
Kylee Stone - Leading Women Campaign and International Women's Day 2020

Xchange Revolution

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 5, 2020 28:28


Ludwina Dautovic, founder and CEO of The Room Xchange, has a conversation with Kylee Stone, CEO The Performance Coach and Founder of Team Women Australia.Kylee is a proud Wakka Wakka woman and descendant of the stolen generation. She is a Consultant, Coach and Mentor specialising in leadership transformation, resilience and wellbeing.An executive leader with over 25 years’ working for Australia’s leading media brands and 18 years in leadership, Kylee has a reputation as a resilient and courageous leader who embraces disruption and empowers people to realise their self-expression as a leader.Described as "one of the most engaging and authentic leaders of our time" and an "effervescent force of nature”, it’s Kylee’s compassionate and non-nonsense approach that earns her the trust and respect of others.In 2014 she founded TEAM Women Australia - a nonprofit specialising in storytelling to bring women together from different backgrounds, cultures and experiences to advance as leaders while taking care of their financial health and wellbeing.In 2018 she featured as one of 13 Indigenous Female Leaders in the National Aborigines and Islanders Day Observance Committee (NAIDOC) “Because of Her We Can '' campaign for her role as an Indigenous Female Leader in business.Kylee is a consummate storyteller, a mother of three children, an ambassador for Flexible Working Day (June 10, 2020) and The Mentor Evolution. Her mission is to disrupt the status quo on our traditional view of leadership and empower people to realise their self-expression as courageous, compassionate and confident leaders.In this episode we talk about:International Women's Day 2020#EachforEqual - equality for allMen need to be a part of the conversation for women to have equalityThe power for storytelling#LeadingWomen Campaign highlighting women leaders across various sectorsTaking time to listenHow Kylee is changing the way she worksHow to connect with our host, Ludwina Dautovic and The Room XchangeTo connect with Ludwina Dautovic - Linkedin, Facebook, Twitter and Instagram.To connect with The Room Xchange - Linkedin, Facebook, Twitter and Instagram.To join the conversation join our private Facebook group - Xchange RevolutionThe show is listed on all podcast directories where you can subscribe, rate and review._______________________________________________________________________________Would you like to be on the show?If you are revolutionising how we live, work and play, you're a great communicator and are happy to cross promote the interview, then email: admin@theroomxchange.com. In the subject line write: Potential Podcast Interview. Tell us in 50 words or less how you could add value to our listeners, which of our existing episodes you like and why.

National Library of Australia
NAIDOC Week: Voices For Change with Elizabeth Burrows

National Library of Australia

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 13, 2019 33:55


NAIDOC Week celebrations (NAIDOC originally stood for ‘National Aborigines and Islanders Day Observance Committee’) on 7-14 July are held across Australia each July to celebrate the history, culture and achievements of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples. NAIDOC is celebrated not only in Indigenous communities, but by Australians from all walks of life. The week is a great opportunity to participate in a range of activities and to support your local Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander community. Join Dr Elizabeth Burrows in part 1 of this presentation as she discusses her research. Carry on to Part 2 with Shannan Dodson, Lynette Riley and Diane Riley-McNaboe for a seminar about the struggles of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples in campaigning for their rights and recognition of their cultures.

National Library of Australia
NAIDOC Week: Voices For Change

National Library of Australia

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 13, 2019 57:42


NAIDOC Week celebrations (NAIDOC originally stood for ‘National Aborigines and Islanders Day Observance Committee’) on 7-14 July are held across Australia each July to celebrate the history, culture and achievements of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples. NAIDOC is celebrated not only in Indigenous communities, but by Australians from all walks of life. The week is a great opportunity to participate in a range of activities and to support your local Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander community. We were joined by Dr Lynette Riley, Aunty Diane Riley-McNaboe and Shannan Dodson for part two of our NAIDOC Week event. They discussed the struggles of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples in campaigning for their rights and recognition of their cultures.

National Library of Australia
NAIDOC Week: Voices For Change

National Library of Australia

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 9, 2019 91:38


NAIDOC Week celebrations (NAIDOC originally stood for ‘National Aborigines and Islanders Day Observance Committee’) on 7-14 July are held across Australia each July to celebrate the history, culture and achievements of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples. NAIDOC is celebrated not only in Indigenous communities, but by Australians from all walks of life. The week is a great opportunity to participate in a range of activities and to support your local Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander community. Join Dr Elizabeth Burrows, Dr Lynette Riley, Aunty Diane Riley-McNaboe and Shannan Dodson as they discuss the struggles of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples in campaigning for their rights and recognition of their cultures.

SBS Pashto - اس بي اس پښتو
What is NAIDOC? - نايډوک، د بومي اسټراليايانو پيژندنې اونۍ

SBS Pashto - اس بي اس پښتو

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 12, 2019 8:45


The longstanding desire of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islanders to have an enhanced role in decision-making in Australia underpins this year's NAIDOC [[nay-dok]] week, that runs from July 7th to the 14th.Organised by the National Aborigines and Islanders Day Observance Committee, NAIDOC has its roots in activism that took place in the 1920s and 30s.On Australia Day in 1938, protesters marched through Sydney in what was called a Day of Mourning.Its success led to the Day of Mourning being marked each year on the Sunday before Australia Day, in what became known as National Aborigines Day.That day of remembrance was eventually shifted to the month of July so the day of protest could also be one of celebrating Aboriginal culture.In 1975, it was decided to turn the annual commemoration into a week-long event marked from the first to the second Sunday in July.Please listen to the full report in Pashto. - اسټراليا کې بومي خلک له ډيرې مودې راهيسې غواړي ترڅو اسټراليا کې د سترو پريکړو برخه شي.د بومي اسټراليايانو تاريخ ۶۰،۰۰۰ کاله پخوا ته رسيږي او له لسيزو راپديخوا خپلو حقونو لپاره مبارزه کوي.سږ کال د بومي اسټراليايانو حقونو په برخه کې کلنۍ پوهاوي کمپاين چې د Naidoc په نامه ياديږي د جولای د مياشتې له ۷ نيټې څخه پيل تر ۱۴ نيټې پورې پر مخ اچول کيږي.داچې ولې هر کال د Naidoc تر نامه لاندې يوې اونۍ لپاره د بومي اسټراليايانو پيژندو او د هغوی حقونو ترلاسه کولو اونۍ لمانځل کيږي پدې اړه بشپړ رپوټ ته غوږ شئ.

SBS Ukrainian - SBS УКРАЇНСЬКОЮ МОВОЮ
THE NATIONAL NAIDOC WEEK - ВСЕНАЦІОНАЛЬНИЙ ТИЖДЕНЬ ПОШАНИ І ПІЗНАННЯ

SBS Ukrainian - SBS УКРАЇНСЬКОЮ МОВОЮ

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 10, 2019 7:35


The longstanding desire of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islanders to have an enhanced role in decision-making in Australia underpins this year's NAIDOC week, that runs from July 7th to the 14th.Organised by the National Aborigines and Islanders Day Observance Committee, NAIDOC has its roots in activism that took place in the 1920s and 30s. On Australia Day in 1938, protesters marched through Sydney in what was called a Day of Mourning. Its success led to the Day of Mourning being marked each year on the Sunday before Australia Day, in what became known as National Aborigines Day. That day of remembrance was eventually shifted to the month of July so the day of protest could also be one of celebrating Aboriginal culture. In 1975, it was decided to turn the annual commemoration into a week-long event marked from the first to the second Sunday in July...https://www.sbs.com.au/learn/naidoc - Давнішнє бажання аборигенів і остров'ян Протоки Торреса мати значнішу роль у суспільстві та, зокрема, в ухваленні рішень в Австралії лежить в основі тижня NAIDOC (найдок) цього року, який проходить з 7-го по 14-е липня - ВСЕНАЦІОНАЛЬНИЙ ТИЖДЕНЬ ПОШАНИ І ПІЗНАННЯ. Давайте подивимося, з чого ж взагалі розпочалася історія тижня NAIDOC, і що вона означає. NAIDOC - це Національний комітет зі збереження Дня аборигенів і остров'ян, початки якого йдуть в 20-і і 30-і роки минулого століття, коли зародився рух активістів. У 1938 році в день Австралії марші протесту пройшли у Сіднеї, позначивши це як день жалоби...https://www.sbs.com.au/learn/naidoc

SBS Armenian - SBS Հայերէն
What is NAIDOC - Ի՞նչ է NAIDOC-ը

SBS Armenian - SBS Հայերէն

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 9, 2019 9:08


Organised by the National Aborigines and Islanders Day Observance Committee, NAIDOC has its roots in activism that took place in the 1920s and 30s. The longstanding desire of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islanders to have an enhanced role in decision-making in Australia underpins this year's NAIDOC week, that runs from July 7th to the 14th. - Ի՞նչպէս սկսաւ NAIDOC-ը, եւ ի՞նչ է ներկայիս:Կազմակերպուած Ազգային Ապորիճիներու եւ Կղզիներու Յարգանքի Օրուայ Յանձնախումբին կողմէ՝ NAIDOC-ի արմատները կը գտնուին 1920-ական եւ 30-ական թուակններուն տեղի ունեցած շարժումներուն մէջ:Աւստրալիոյ եւ Թորոսեան Կղզիներուն՝ Աւստրալիոյ որոշումներու կայացման մէջ ուժեղ դերակատարութիւն ունենալու երկարատեւ ցանկութիւնը կը տիրէ այս տարուան NAIDOC շաբաթը, որ տեղի կ'ունենայ 7 Յուլիսէն 14 Յուլիս:

SBS Burmese - SBS ျမန္မာပိုင္း အစီအစဥ္
What is National Aborigines and Islanders Day Observance Committee (NAIDOC) - အမ်ဳိးသား အာဘိုဂ်ီနလ္နဲ႔ ေတာ္ရစ္ေရလက္ၾကား ကၽြန္းသားေတြေန႔ ေစာင့္ထိန္းတဲ့ ေကာ္မတီ (NAIDOC) ကဘာပါလည္း။

SBS Burmese - SBS ျမန္မာပိုင္း အစီအစဥ္

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 29, 2019 13:48


The longstanding desire of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islanders to have an enhanced role in decision-making in Australia underpins this year's NAIDOC week that runs from July 7th to the 14th. - အခ်ိန္ၾကာျမင့္စြာ အာဘိုဂ်ီနလ္နဲ႔ ေတာ္ရစ္ေရလက္ၾကား ကၽြန္းသားေတြ ေတာင္းတေနတဲ့ ကိုယ္ပိုင္ဆံုးျဖတ္ႏိုင္ခြင့္က ဒီႏွစ္ ဇူလိုင္လ ၇ရက္ကေန ၁၄ရက္ထိ ျပဳလုပ္မဲ့ NAIDOC အပတ္ကို ေက်ာေထာက္ေနာက္ခံျပဳေနပါတယ္။

Community Connect
NAIDOC 2019 - Voice. Treaty. Truth. Let's work together.

Community Connect

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 26, 2019 51:19


Today we start another year of Community Connect having a yarn with Ebony Hickey about National Aborigines and Islanders Day Observance Committee (NAIDOC). 2019 theme - Voice. Treaty. Truth. Let's work together . We find out about events around the traps, catch up on what has been happening at The Gathering Place, learn why it is called Caracaramigen, and so much more. For more about NAIDOC - www.naidoc.org.au Numbers and contact info - Ebony - 0449 948 475 & Hayley Couzens at Wathaurong - 52 77 00 44 -or www.wathaurong.org.au

Wednesday Breakfast
NAIDOC week, Tim Jones, QC2018, Songs of Satire

Wednesday Breakfast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 3, 2018


7:00 Acknowledgment of country.7:02 Featured song Nitty Gritty by Shirley Ellis.7:05 Alternative News.7:17 Featured song Black Smoke by Emily Wurramara.7: 22 Songs of Satire, breaking down the meaning behind this weeks song “Black Fella White Fella” by the Warumpi band.7:33James speaks with Phoebe Le Brocque, a bisexual woman and a member of the Queer Collaborations Organising Committee (QCOC) for QC2018, the national Australian queer student conference. They discuss the vital role of the conference, queer student activism, and collective changes.The conference runs July 1 – 7 in Brisbane. For more information, visit qcbrisbane2018.com.7:47 Featured Song Australia Does Not Exist by band DRMNG NOW.7:52 Beyond Bars information and discussion.8:00 Featured song A-WA by Habib Galbi.8:05 Tim Jones speaks on the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse and the government's responses, especially the National Apology scheduled for October.8:20 Information about upcoming NAIDOC week (National Aborigines and Islanders Day Observance Committee) running from the 8th- 15th and the events that will be going on.8:25 Awareness for Chris Lawton’s gofundme page. Chris Lawton has subject of workplace racial discrimination.8:28 Featured Song Shake that Thing by the Yung Warriors.