Annual event
POPULARITY
26 мая в Австралии отмечается Национальный День покаяния (Sorry Day). SBS Russian поговорили о значении Дня Покаяния с Еленой Говор, историком и исследователем из Австралийского национального университета.
In this enlightening episode of Educator Yarns, we sit down with Aaron Johnston, recipient of the Primary School Teacher of The Year Award at the Koori Curriculum Educator Awards in 2024. Aaron, an Assistant Principal at a K-6 school on the Central Coast of NSW (Darkinjung Country), shares his profound journey of becoming an active ally for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander education. From his awakening during the Black Lives Matter movement to supporting a student discovering their Aboriginal heritage, Aaron candidly discusses how his ignorance transformed into passionate advocacy. As the leader of his school's Aboriginal Education team, creator of Mr. J's Learning Space on social media, and co-host of the Teacher Takeaway podcast, Aaron demonstrates how educators can authentically embed First Nations perspectives in their pedagogy and influence their communities. This conversation offers practical insights for early childhood educators seeking to begin or deepen their journey of embedding Aboriginal perspectives in their teaching practice. Key Takeaways: Aaron's journey began with acknowledging his own ignorance about First Nations histories and cultures, highlighting the importance of personal reflection for all educators. How being approached by a family seeking to reconnect with their Aboriginal heritage became a catalyst for deeper engagement with First Nations education. Why starting small with "one authentic thing a week" provides a practical approach for educators beginning their journey of embedding Aboriginal perspectives. Consultation with First Nations educators and community members is essential before implementing Aboriginal education initiatives. Supporting children's cultural identity and sense of belonging should be a central focus, particularly for Aboriginal children who may be disconnected from their culture. Reciprocity in relationships with First Nations educators and communities creates sustainable partnerships. Children's literature, such as "Sorry Day" and "Walking Together" by Coral Vass and Dub Leffler, offers accessible entry points for teaching complex historical topics. Social media platforms can be powerful tools for amplifying First Nations voices and sharing practical educational resources. School leadership positions provide opportunities to champion Aboriginal education across entire school communities. The importance of breaking cycles of ignorance to ensure future generations grow up with knowledge and appreciation of Aboriginal cultures. Aaron Johnston's journey from a place of acknowledged ignorance to becoming a recognised ally in Aboriginal education offers a powerful model for educators across Australia. His practical approach emphasises starting small, building genuine relationships, seeking guidance from First Nations educators, and consistently working to amplify Aboriginal voices and perspectives. Whether you're just beginning your journey or looking to deepen your practice, this episode provides valuable insights and practical strategies. Listen now to be inspired and equipped to make meaningful changes in your educational setting that honour and celebrate the world's oldest living cultures. Access the episode resources here.
On this week's episode of Moorditj Mag, Nick Abraham and Jodi Hoffman bring us the latest in First Nations current affairs. The team discuss Reconciliation Day and Sorry Day, while they look back on an interview with former Australian rules football player, Eddie Betts. Moorditj Mag airs live every Thursday on RTRFM 92.1 at 11am. You can also catch Moorditj Mag on 100.9fm Noongar Radio and Great Southern FM on Fridays
Ang mga epekto ng pwersahang pag-alis sa mga katutubong bata mula sa kanilang mga pamilya - sa ilalim ng mga patakaran ng pamahalaan - ay patuloy hanggang sa araw na ito. Kaya naman may mga panawagan ang biktima ng Stolen Generations.
The Albanese government launches a 12-month national consent campaign, Indigenous healing services receive extra funding as Australia marks Sorry Day, and in football, Manchester United claim a shock 2-1 win in the FA Cup final against local rivals Manchester City.
Elena Govor, Ph.D. from the Australian National University, researches Australian Indigenous culture and history. She talks about the significance of Sorry Day and how the country's Indigenous population was treated centuries and decades ago. - Доктор наук Елена Говор из Австралийского национального университета исследует культуру и историю Коренных народов Австралии. Она рассказывает о значении Дня покаяния и о том, как переселенцы обращались с Коренным населением страны столетия и десятилетия назад.
National Sorry Day, or National Sorry Day, is a day to recognize the survivors of the Stolen Generation and reflect on how we can all play a part in the healing process for our communities and nations. - Hari Maaf Nasional atau National Sorry Day, adalah hari untuk mengakui para Penyintas Generasi Tercuri dan merenungkan bagaimana kita semua dapat berperan dalam proses penyembuhan bagi masyarakat dan bangsa kita.
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On this week's episode of Moorditj Mag, host Jim Morrison is joined by producer Jayda Corruna to talk Sorry Day and National Reconciliation Week. They also speak with David Collard, CEO of Whadjuk Aboriginal Corporation, about his experience as the inaugural CEO of Whadjuk Aboriginal Corporation. Later, they chat with filmmaker Penelope McDonald and her lifelong friend, Audrey Napanangka, the subject of a new film also called Audrey Napanangka, which tracks the story of the Warlpiri woman's marriage to a Sicilian man and their unique family dynamic. Find screening details for Audrey Napanangka at [audreynapanangka.film](https://www.audreynapanangka.film/). Moorditj Mag airs live every Thursday on RTRFM 92.1 at 11am. You can also catch Moorditj Mag on 100.9fm Noongar Radio and Great Southern FM on Fridays.
Miaka sita baada ya kutangazwa kwa Kauli ya Uluru kutoka moyoni, viongozi wa jamii ya kwanza na serikali kwa mara nyingine wame toa wito kwa kuanzishwa kwa sauti yawa Aboriginal na wanavisa wa Torres Strait bungeni kupitia mafanikio katika kura ya maoni.
National Sorry Day နေ့နှင့် နှလုံးသားမှ Uluru ထုတ်ပြန်ချက် ခြောက်နှစ်မြောက်နေ့တွင် တိုင်း ရင်းသားခေါင်းဆောင်များက မြောက်ပိုင်းနယ်မြေတွင် ထပ်မံစုရုံးကာ ဩစတေးလျများအား ဌာနေတိုင်းရင်းသားအသံဖြင့် လွှတ်တော်သို့ ဆန္ဒခံယူပွဲကို ထောက်ခံရန် တောင်းဆိုခဲ့သည်။
Survivors of the Stolen Generations and their descendants have come together to acknowledge the atrocities they and so many others faced - as they marked the 25th annual National Sorry Day. More than 20 survivors from the Cootamundra Girls Home travelled from around the country to reflect on the past, and to share their visions for a better future.
A coalition of Australian community groups came together on May 26th, 1998 for the country's first “National Sorry Day”, an annual day of atonement for the social-engineering policy that ripped an estimated 50,000 Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander children from their families between 1910 and the 1970s. The first Sorry Day was marked with 300 events around the nation, and more than 1,000 people attended a ceremony in Parliament House, Canberra, but it took Australia's government another decade to utter an official apology. In this episode, Arion, Rebecca and Olly explain how in the Year 2000, skywriters turned the heavens into the biggest billboard of apology ever; speculate on whether Australia Day will be abolished due to its colonial associations; and discover that there is in fact one word that is harder to say than “sorry”… Content warning: This episode contains discussion of the Stolen Generations, which may be distressing to some listeners. Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people should be aware that the episode also contains mentions of deceased people. Further Reading: • ‘From the Archives, 1998: Thousands say sorry, but not PM' (The Age, 1998): https://www.theage.com.au/national/from-the-archives-1998-thousands-say-sorry-but-not-pm-20210521-p57tyr.html • ‘Peter Dutton says it was a 'mistake' walking out on the apology to the Stolen Generations' (The Daily Mail, 2022): https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-10866871/Peter-Dutton-admits-mistake-boycotted-national-apology-Stolen-Generations.html • ‘This Is Why Australia Has “National Sorry Day”' (Time, 2015): https://time.com/3890518/national-sorry-day/ • ‘Australia's first “Sorry Day” (1998)' (ABC Australia, 2021): https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0OKsoqqXttE #1990s #Australia #Indigenous We'll be back on Monday - unless you join
On the show today, we're going to take a look at how the stinging plant might take the sting out of pain. Then we'll travel around Australia with a man on a special scooter. Next, we'll meet a white echidna. After that, we'll say Sorry and talk about Reconciliation. nd then we discover how human hair can help plants grow. QUESTIONS: What is another name for the stinging tree? What is a paraplegic? Why is Raffie the echidna white? What is Sorry Day? What can hair be recycled for? BONUS TRICKY QUESTION: Why is human hair good for soils? ANSWERS: The Gympie-Gympie tree. A person who can't move their legs because their spine has been damaged. It is an albino echidna. Sorry Day recognises the pain and hurt suffered by Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples. To make compost BONUS TRICKY ANSWER: Each tiny strand of hair is packed with nutrients like nitrogen, carbon and protein and once it's broken down, it feeds the soils and makes plants grow big and strong.
Historian and researcher Dr Elena Govor discussed with SBS Russian the signifance of National Sorry Day. - 26 мая в Австралии отмечается Национальный День покаяния (Sorry Day). SBS Russian поговорили о значении Дня Покаяния с Еленой Говор, историком и исследователем из Австралийского национального университета.
Six years after the Uluru Statement from the Heart, Indigenous leaders and the government have again called for the establishment of an Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Voice to Parliament through a successful referendum.
Every year on 26 May, National Sorry Day remembers and acknowledges the mistreatment of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people who were forcibly removed from their families and communities, which we now know as ‘The Stolen Generations'.https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/National_Sorry_Day
Squiz Kids is an award-winning, free daily news podcast just for kids. Give us ten minutes, and we'll give you the world. A short podcast that gives kids the lowdown on the big news stories of the day, delivered without opinion, and with positivity and humour. ‘Kid-friendly news that keeps them up to date without all the nasties' (A Squiz Parent) This Australian podcast for kids easily fits into the daily routine - helping curious kids stay informed about the world around them. Fun. Free. Fresh. LINKS National Sorry Day & National Reconciliation Week https://www.reconciliation.org.au/national-sorry-day-2020/ https://www.reconciliation.org.au/our-work/national-reconciliation-week/ The Voice Referendum https://www.aec.gov.au/referendums/ https://voice.gov.au Cow on a motorway https://www.bbc.com/news/av/world-us-canada-65642955 Olympic ESports series https://olympics.com/en/esports/olympic-esports-series/ Exeter Public School Podcast https://exeterpublic.podbean.com/ Kids + Media Survey Results: https://www.squizkids.com.au/aussie-kids-media-results/ Squiz Kids Book Club: https://www.squizkids.com.au/book_club/april-2023/ Classroom Companion: Teachers! Want to access free, curriculum-aligned classroom resources tied to the daily podcast? Sign up to be a Squiz Kids Classroom and download the Classroom Companion each day. Made by teachers for teachers, differentiated to suit all primary school ability levels. And did we mention it's free? Newshounds Get started on our free media literacy resource for classrooms www.squizkids.com.au/newshounds Stay up to date with us on our Squiz Kids Instagram! Got a birthday coming up and you want a shout-out? Complete the form on our Squiz Kids website. Link: SHOUT OUTS or / send us an email at squizkids@thesquiz.com.au
This National Sorry Day, we have brought back a previous episode and it's probably best for upper primary school students. Miss Thea's awesome class talks about racism, respect, empathy and curiosity. During the Meet The Experts section we hear from a bunch of truly wonderful kids from Gawura School, a Kindergarten to Year 6 school for local Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander children in Sydney's CBD. They share some interesting facts about their culture, as well as some words from their various language groups and they also read a powerful dreamtime story about listening and talking less. We thank and have huge respect for all the people having brave, awkward and important conversations with their children and communities. This episode was inspired by the words of Austin Channing Brown about being a better human and the joyful attitudes of the Gawura School kids. Additional resources Grab a print - out student reflection journal to further enhance the messaging of each episode. And download your free colouring-in sheet for students or kids to colour in while they listen. Production Script & song lyrics - Alice PeelProduction, editing & sound - Lisa Taylor Music production, vocals & additional lyrics - Moody Copyright Grow Your Mind 2023. All rights reserved. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Background of National Sorry Day and discussion on the Voice
This interview first aired on Thursday the 25th of May, 2023 on ONE FM 98.5 Shepparton. One FM Breakfast announcer Terri Cowley talks to Diedre Robertson from the Shepparton Region Reconciliation Group who talks about Sorry Day and how they will be commemorating it. It will be held at Monash Park (the corner of Welsford St and Fryers St, Yorta Yorta Country.) Please arrive at 10:10am. All are welcome. Listen to One FM Breakfast with Terri Cowley live on weekday mornings from 6am-9am. The ONE FM 98.5 Community Radio podcast page operates under the license of Goulburn Valley Community Radio Inc. (ONE FM) Number 1385226/1. Contact the station on admin@fm985.com.au or (+613) 58313131 PRA AMCOS (Australasian Performing Right Association Limited and Australasian Mechanical Copyright Owners Society) that covers Simulcasting and Online content including podcasts with musical content, that we pay every year. This licence number is 1385226/1
AUSTRALIANS could have access to a new jab to protect against Omicron by August, and a single vaccine is in the works to target Covid, the flu and Respiratory Syncytial Virus. Guy Sebastian denied “all liability” and displayed “breathtaking double standards” when he diverted money and “stole” from his former manager, a court has heard. The profits of energy generators during this month's power crisis will be probed by the consumer watchdog, as soaring prices force another electricity retailer to tell their customers to leave. SCHOOLS will be strongly encouraged to hold welcome to country celebrations, fly the Aboriginal flag, mark Sorry Day and recognise the “significant trauma” of colonisation under new state government laws. For updates and breaking news throughout the day take out a subscription at heraldsun.com.au. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Wake Up with Fr Jim (01:05) Sorry Day (04:07) Hi Deacon Adrian! (08:29) Power Parable (13:13) Our Lady Help Of Christians (16:44) A Joke? (19:17) Our Lady of Fatima (23:35) --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/grace2020/message
National Sorry Day is an annual event that has been held in Australia on 26 May, since 1998, to remember and commemorate the mistreatment of the country's Indigenous population. We bring to light the experiences of few who are working very closely with the Indigenous population. Segment by Praba Maheswaran. - நாட்டில் திருடப்பட்ட தலைமுறையினரை நினைவு கூரவும் பூர்வீக மக்கள் தவறாக நடத்தப்பட்டதை உணர்த்தவும் மே 26ம் நாள் தேசிய மன்னிப்பு தினமாகக் கடைப்பிடிக்கப்படுகிறது. தேசிய மன்னிப்பு தினத்தை நாமும் நினைவுகூரும் நோக்குடன், பூர்வீக மக்களுடன் மிகவும் நெருக்கமாகப் பணியாற்றிவரும் சிலரின் அனுபவங்களை எடுத்துவருகிறோம். நிகழ்ச்சியாக்கம்: மகேஸ்வரன் பிரபாகரன்.
La giornata di oggi, 26 maggio, contrassegna i 25 anni da quando il rapporto 'Bringing Them Home' venne presentato al Parlamento australiano. Si trattava del frutto di un'inchiesta sulla separazione dei bambini Aborigeni e isolani dello Stretto di Torres dalle loro famiglie di origine.
Archie Roach is one of the country's most loved and essential voices.
Danny Teece Johnson invites Teela Reid & Patricia Thompson on … Continued
Moorditj Mag is proud to present a two-part extended edition in recognition of the National Sorry Day and Reconciliation Week 2022. Part One broadcasts live from the Wellington Square Memorial, where Jim Morrison invites Reverend Mitchell Garlett, The Hon Dr. Tony Buti, and many more prominent First Nations figures to recognise and pay respects to the Stolen Generations. Part Two switches back to the studio with G*Rey and Moorditj Mag producer Sharlene Baloch, as they spark discussion on what Sorry Day means to Indigenous Australians, including talks with filmmaker Alec Morgan on his recent documentary surrounding Indigenous filmmaker and political figure Bill Onus.
This interview first aired on Thursday the 26th of May, 2022 on ONE FM 98.5 Shepparton. One FM breakfast announcer Terri Cowley talks to Dierdre Robertson from the Shepparton Reconciliation Group, who talks about today's commemmoration of the 25th anniversary of National Sorry Day. Listen to One FM Breakfast with Terri Cowley live on weekday mornings from 6am-9am. Contact the station on admin@fm985.com.au or (+613) 58313131 The ONE FM 98.5 Community Radio podcast page operates under the license of Goulburn Valley Community Radio Inc. (ONE FM) Number 1385226/1. PRA AMCOS (Australasian Performing Right Association Limited and Australasian Mechanical Copyright Owners Society) that covers Simulcasting and Online content including podcasts with musical content, that we pay every year. This licence number is 1385226/1
Sorry Day marks the day in 1997 that the Bringing them Home Report was tabled in Federal Parliament. The landmark report made 54 recommendations to bring about a process of healing. But, 25 years on, Stolen Generations' survivors and Indigenous rights groups say a majority of those recommendations are yet to be implemented. Can Australia take new steps in the right direction?
#Australia Indigenous Peoples Celebrate February 13 "Sorry Day", since 2008 where Kevin Rudd, Apology passes in Parliament. Across 3 Kontinents Sea1 [61,262] Ep12 Copyright Charshee Links 2022-2082 Episode 17 Australia "Sorry Day" February 13. #AustraliaSorryDay, #AustraliaApologyDay, #Koori, #IndigenousPeoples, #FirstPeoples
Say You're Sorry; Day 5 of 7 Habits of Holiness from YouVersion read by Brian Hale
Say You're Sorry; Day 5 of 7 Habits of Holiness from YouVersion read by Brian Hale
Dr Mishel McMahon, a Yorta Yorta First Nations woman from Australia, draws from 60,000 years of Aboriginal cultural experience to discuss what she terms ‘Relational Ontology' - ontology meaning how we understand reality, what's real and what's not real. She says “Relational ontology is a view of reality that all entities; plants, animals, elements, seasons, skies, waterways, the land, the spirit world and humans are in relationship, like a web. First Nations peoples and many other groups around the globe have held relational worldviews for thousands of years”. The relational worldview contrasts with the European/Westernised mindset which places humans at the centre of knowledge creation. Mishel discusses the importance of equality between all things, and how country, community and Ancestral knowledge are all infused and animated with spirit. This rich discussion raises many questions and hopefully inspires us to see the world, and to live in it differently. BIO Mishel McMahon is a proud Yorta Yorta woman, she grew up in a large family in the Murray river region of Victoria, Australia. Mishel completed her undergraduate degree of Bachelor of Human Services and Honours in Social Work in 2012 at La Trobe. Mishel has worked at various First Nations organisations, including Indigenous Academic Enrichment Advisor at La Trobe organising Sorry Day and NAIDOC events. Mishel began her PhD, undertaking research that revealed principles of First Nations childrearing, using methodology informed from a relational worldview, and Yorta Yorta language. Mishel recently won Premier's Research Awards for Aboriginal Research 2019, Fellowship for Indigenous Leadership 2019 and recently worked as Social Work lecturer at Shepparton La Trobe, campus. Mishel is in the last stages of developing a First Nations Health & Wellbeing mobile app, and shorts films from her Fellowship. Currently Mishel is Victorian Aboriginal Research Accord Co-ordinator at VACCHO and lives in Elmore, Victoria on the Campaspe river.
Il tasso di rimozione di bambini aborigeni e isolani dello Stretto di Torres dalle famiglie di appartenenza è di 11 volte superiore al tasso degli allontanamenti di minori appartenenti a nuclei familiari di diversa origine.
To acknowledge Sorry Day and Reconciliation week 2021, NITV Radio had a yarn with Kutcha Edwards. A proud Mutti Mutti man, singer, songwriter, activist and stolen generations survivor.
This week was yet another packed week on The Clive Holland Show– and you can catch the full show Monday to Thursday 2-4 on Fix Radio. Clive has been busy this week, talking through the IEA's decision to ban gas boilers by 2025 with the HHIC and UEA. He also went on to discuss the best ways to finish a job, chatting about the upcoming Champions League and Play Off Finals this weekend with Matt Nash from the Metro. The big guy also tackled national sorry day as well, as he was joined by Behavioral Psychologist Enda Murphy while also going on to chat about the weird and wonderful finds on site! Enjoy
Indwi yahariwe guhariranira ni gihe abanye Australia bakwiye kwemanga kahise hamwe n'imico n'akaranga bityo bakubaka imishikirano myiza hagati y'abasangwabutaka bazwi nka Aboriginal n'aba Torres Strait Islander.
የተሰረቁት ትውልዶች ጉስቁልና በነባር ዜጎች ላይ የኅሊና ጠባሳ አኑሯል። አያሌ ነባር ዜጎች ያልሆኑ አውስትራሊያውያንን ልብም አድምቷል። ሲልም፤ በጠቅላይ ሚኒስትር ኬቨን ራድ ዘመን በመላው አውስትራሊያውን ስም ይቅርታን አስጠይቋል። ከቶውንም ሕፃናቱን ከቤተሰቦቻቸው የመነጠሉ ሁነት በመጪዎቹ አምስትና አሥር ዓመታት በእጥፍ ያድጋል የሚል ስጋትን አሳድሯል።
Hnub thov txim yog hnub dab tsi thiab Australia cov keeb cag neeg xav tau dab tsi?
Đã 23 năm qua kể từ ‘Ngày Xin Lỗi’ đầu tiên, khi mọi người dân Úc được yêu cầu nhớ lại sự ngược đãi với Thế Hệ Bị Đánh Mất. Thế nhưng những nhà vận động cho biết, trẻ em Thổ Dân và dân bán đảo Torres vẫn còn bị tách rời khỏi gia đình.
Email us at calm.creations21@gmail.com Audio message or email Rayah for the new title of Cookie Time! Tell us your birthday so we can put your birthday and international day in the episodes! Or do it at yourself nationalday.com! Have a great safe sun week! --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/calm-creations/message
Interview with Dr Elena Govor from Australian National University about the history and significance of the National Sorry Day. This podcast is available in Russian only. - Сегодня в Австралии отмечается Национальный день покаяния (Sorry Day). Доктор наук Елена Говор из Австралийского национального университета уже много лет занимается исследованиями культуры и истории Аборигенных народов, и в первой части серии наших бесед она рассказала о значении Дня покаяния.
It's been a year since the words "I can't breathe" were broadcast around the world, as George Floyd was murdered by a police officer. It sparked a huge movement which is still going - but has it changed anything for First Nations people in Australia? Melbourne's experiencing another COVID-19 outbreak but this time around we have vaccines! Hack pops down to a vaccination hub to see how many people are getting the jab. Plus - where and when to get the best view of the Super Blood Moon.
Hoy 26 de mayo se conmemora el Día Nacional del Perdón (Sorry Day), importante para las comunidades aborígenes e isleñas del Estrecho de Torres en todo el país, pero también para todo Australia.
It's 23 years since the first 'Sorry Day', when all Australians are asked to remember the mistreatment of the Stolen Generations.
Facts About ! Credits: Executive Producer: Chris Krimitsos Voice: Jimmy Murray "Minima","Path of Goblin","Winner Winner!" Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com) Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0 http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/ Facts from Wikipedia Licensed under Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License
Van Badham and Ben Davison look at how Morrison's failure on COVID vaccinations and quarantine might have blown Australia's head start and left Victoria facing another lockdown. The Canberra cover-up culture continues as Morrison's three seperate investigations into the Brittany Higgins allegations devolve into farce, outright sabotage and total misdirection. Meanwhile the senate estimates processes is being obfuscated by Liberal appointed senators trying to help Michaelia Cash and security advisors pretending that Morrison's QAnon mates being used as a pipeline for misinformation for Russia, China, Iran and Saudi Arabia isn't really a problem. It is Sorry Day and we say sorry to first nations Australians for their mistreatment at the hands of successive Australian governments. The good news is about a combined ANZAC effort on plastic waste. Germanicus is super excited to have us back in the shed and we once again thank our show sponsor, Australian Unions.
7.00am Acknowledgement of Country 7.05am Update on new Covid-19 safety restrictions in Victoria, acknowledgement of National Sorry Day. 7.12am Reconciliation Week discussion and events roundup. 7.22am Claudia speaks with Professor Roianne West, CEO of the Congress of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Nurses and Midwives about the barriers to achieving equity in health outcomes for First Nations people, birthing on Country, and the importance of education around cultural safety. 7.50am Eiddwen talks to Andrew Morrison from the Philippines Australian Solidarity Association (PASA) about the alleged human rights and environmental abuses of Australian-Canadian mining company Oceana Gold at the Dipido Gold and copper mine in the Philippines northern Luzon province. (Part 1 Interview) 8.03am Gideon Obarzanek, co-director of the Rising Festival, joins the show to tell us about the events and art installations taking over the city May 26-June 6. 8.14am Eiddwen continues her discussion with Andrew Morrison from the Philippines Australian Solidarity Association (PASA) about the alleged human rights and environmental abuses of Australian-Canadian mining company Oceana Gold at the Dipido Gold and copper mine in the Philippines northern Luzon province. (Part 2 Interview) Music Took the Children Away - Archie RoachBetter in Blak - Thelma Plum Better Things - Kee'ahnMiss Shiney - Kaiit
Missed the Show this morning (26th May 2021) Well Aunty Jenny slept in but made it eventually! Also talking about Sorry Day and More! Catch Aunty Jenny in this Podcast! ----- It's Official! Wake Up with Aunty Jenny every Wednesday from 7am only on OneMob Radio!!! Aunty Jenny is a much loved Elder of the Coffs Harbour Area! Living life to the absolute fullest every single day! Her energy and loving spirit will win your heart every Wednesday! LIVE every Wednesday at 7am only on OneMob Radio!!
In the lead up to Reconciliation Week and National Sorry Day, we look at the reality of ongoing intergeneration trauma among the Stolen Generations. The fact that indigenous children are still being removed and taken into out-of-home care, or foster care, for example, is another cause for great concern. If we go back to a statement from the Bringing Them Home Report (20 years on) published in 2017, it says that: “The laws of those times are still impacting on our people today”.
The Royal Society of Tasmania and the Tasmanian Museum and Art Gallery have apologised ahead of the return of 14,000-year-old Aboriginal artefacts to their original site. - Συγγνώμη στους ιθαγενείς Αυστραλούς για την μεταχείριση που είχαν από την πολιτεία, έστειλαν δύο οργανισμοί της Τασμανίας.
This episode of Dja Dja Wurrung Radio is a compilation of three episodes. The first is an interview with Historian Marguritte Stephens, discussing historical records that reveal tiny glimpses of what life was like as Central Victoria was being colonised. Then Uncle Rick and Allie discuss Sorry Day and what it means. Finally a recording of Aunty Julie McHale's speech at International Women's Day with reflection on Reconciliation and what women's business involves. This is part 4 of a series called Dja Dja Wurrung Radio. It was made possible by a community grant from the Mount Alexander Shire Council and was created for MAINfm to be aired as short 5-10 minute segments in 2015 and 2016. For ease of listening we have edited them together and have linked episodes by theme rather than representing the order they were originally broadcast in. The series was shortlisted for the 2016 Reconciliation Victoria Community Hart Awards.
Thursday Night Live! ‘Always Was – Always Will Be?’ Join facilitator Dhinawan Baker in conversation with Janine Dunleavy - Director of Teaching and Learning, and Lecturers Rachel Lynwood, and Rod Williams. After the Sorry Day destruction by Rio Tinto of the Juukan Gorge ancient sacred site in Western Australia, and the strong response to the Black Lives Matter movement across Australia and the world, join us in what would normally be NAIDOC week, to hear from the Academics of Southern Cross University's Gnibi College of Indigenous Australian Peoples, discussing ‘Always Was – Always Will Be?’
This week we talk about why National Sorry Day is so important, plus we hear about shooting stars, quiet oceans and a new dino discovery...
This week we talk about why National Sorry Day is so important, plus we hear about shooting stars, quiet oceans and a new dino discovery...
This week we talk about why National Sorry Day is so important, plus we hear about shooting stars, quiet oceans and a new dino discovery...
Writer Jack Latimore explains the continued significance of Sorry Day; Justin ‘Digga' Calverley talks about growing green and black tea plants; Gez encounters a huntsman spider; Sarah announces that the rabbit died (or: she's pregnant!); Dr. Alistair Evans from Monash talks about the new discovery of an old mammal; comedian Laura Dunemann gives an update on the trials of the Royals in Iso; Filmmaker Warwick Thornton chats about new documentary The Beach; and comedian Colin Lane talks about the online exclusive Lano & Woodley Singin' Some Songs. With presenters Sarah Smith, Daniel Burt, and Geraldine Hickey. Website: https://www.rrr.org.au/explore/podcasts/breakfastersFacebook: https://www.facebook.com/Breakfasters3RRRFM/Twitter: https://twitter.com/breakfastersInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/breakfasters/?hl=en
يصادف اليوم السادس والعشرين من شهر ايار مايو اليوم الوطني للاعتذار، National Sorry Day ويأتي هذا العام خلال زمن فيروس كورونا، فهل قامت الحكومة بما يكفي من أجل حماية السكان الأصليين من الإصابة بهذا الفيروس؟
With strip clubs and brothels forced to remain closed through all three stages of the government's roadmap to recovery, sex workers are having to find new ways to serve their clientele to earn a living. Plus, medical experts respond to the alarming rise of anti-vaxxers. And triple j artist Kobie Dee on what Sorry Day means to him and his family.
Since 1998, the 26th of May is commemorated as National Sorry Day - a day that speaks of the loss and grief experienced by the Indigenous Stolen Generation. - На данашњи дан пре 22 године, 26. маја 1998, први пут је у Аустралији обележен "Sorry Day", односно Дан жалости.
Twenty years ago, 250,000 Australians walked across Sydney's Harbour Bridge in solidarity with First Nations Peoples.
With strip clubs and brothels forced to remain closed through all three stages of the government's roadmap to recovery, sex workers are having to find new ways to serve their clientele to earn a living. Plus, medical experts respond to the alarming rise of anti-vaxxers. And triple j artist Kobie Dee on what Sorry Day means to him and his family.
National Sorry Day offers the community the opportunity to acknowledge the impact of the policies spanning more than 150 years of forcible removal of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander children from their families. The first National Sorry Day was held on 26 May 1998 following the Human Rights and Equal Opportunity Commission report, Bringing Them Home: The 'Stolen Children' report (1997) which recommended that a national day of observance be declared. Kulasegaram Sanchayan takes a look at the history of National Sorry Day and its current state. - 150 ஆண்டுகளுக்கும் மேலாக பூர்வ குடி மற்றும் டோரஸ் ஸ்ட்ரெய்ட் தீவு மக்களின் குழந்தைகளையும் சிறுவர்களையும் அவர்களது குடும்பங்களிலிருந்து வலுக்கட்டாயமாக அகற்றும் கொள்கைகளின் தாக்கத்தை, மனித உரிமைகள் மற்றும் சம வாய்ப்பு ஆணையம் மே 26, 1998 அன்று வெளியிட்ட அறிக்கையைத் தொடர்ந்து, பாதிக்கப்பட்ட சமூகங்களிடம் மன்னிப்புக் கேட்க வேண்டும் என்ற சிந்தனையில் உதித்தது தான் “தேசிய மன்னிப்பு தினம்.” இதன் வரலாறு குறித்தும் அது எவ்வாறு அவதானிக்கப்படுகிறது என்பது குறித்தும் கருத்துகளை முன்வைக்கிறார் குலசேகரம் சஞ்சயன்
We got a long one this week because there's been so much Devonish Behaviour in Parliament this week, with second and third helpings of sports rorts, Labor voting for Llew O'Brien, and the Otis group. We also have a long First Nations story as we get into Sorry Day, Apology Day, the Bringing them Home report and Closing the Gap.We're also serving up a new segment for pos-vibes emanating, a tasty potluck, and of course, a side of crispy memes.Go see Broriginals live: https://www.eventbrite.com.au/e/broriginals-live-tickets-81641886079Stories of the Stolen Generation: https://bth.humanrights.gov.au/our-storiesSupport the show: www.patreon.com/AuspolSnackpod
In this episode, we shine a spotlight on some of Australia's supremely talented Indigenous kids' book creators. First up, we meet author/illustrator Dub Leffler, who illustrated the CBCA Eve Pownell Award-winning picture book, Sorry Day, written by Coral Vass. Hear about his fortuitous start in the world of kids' books, his illustration process (some fascinating methods!) and all about his upcoming releases in 2020 plus future projects. In Kids' Capers, the kids interview graphic novelist Brenton E. McKenna. Find out more about what 'country' means to him, his Ubby's Underdogs books and much more. We announce another epic book giveaway, chat what's on our radar, and review our latest reads. Read the show notes: https://www.onemorepagepodcast.com/episode-41 Email us at: onemorepagepodcast@gmail.com Find us on Facebook: www.facebook.com/onemorepageAU Twitter: www.twitter.com/onemorepageau Instagram: www.instagram.com/onemorepageau
On Sunday 26 May, the Moorditj Mag team of Jim Morrison, Nick Abraham, Jodi Hoffmann and Ebony Garlett presented a special Sorry Day broadcast from the final game of the AFL Sir Doug Nicholls Round at Perth Stadium. Four hours of interviews and conversation about language, music, football, history and politics marked a very special day to remember the Stolen Generations and celebrate the resilience of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples. The program was broadcast live on Noongar Radio in W.A. and proudly supported by RTRFM 92.1. Part Eleven - Jodi Hoffmann interview with WA Treasurer & Minister for Aboriginal Affairs, the Honourable [Ben Wyatt ](https://www.wa.gov.au/government/people/ben-wyatt)
On Sunday 26 May, the Moorditj Mag team of Jim Morrison, Nick Abraham, Jodi Hoffmann and Ebony Garlett presented a special Sorry Day broadcast from the final game of the AFL Sir Doug Nicholls Round at Perth Stadium. Four hours of interviews and conversation about language, music, football, history and politics marked a very special day to remember the Stolen Generations and celebrate the resilience of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples. The program was broadcast live on Noongar Radio in W.A. and proudly supported by RTRFM 92.1. Part Ten - Ebony Garlett and Nick Abraham talk about mentors, role models, football and more.
On Sunday 26 May, the Moorditj Mag team of Jim Morrison, Nick Abraham, Jodi Hoffmann and Ebony Garlett presented a special Sorry Day broadcast from the final game of the AFL Sir Doug Nicholls Round at Perth Stadium. Four hours of interviews and conversation about language, music, football, history and politics marked a very special day to remember the Stolen Generations and celebrate the resilience of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples. The program was broadcast live on Noongar Radio in W.A. and proudly supported by RTRFM 92.1. Part Nine - Jim Morrison and Nick Abraham interview advocate and lawyer, Kim Farmer, about Sorry Day and the impact of her father, Graham '[Polly'](https://www.afl.com.au/news/2018-06-01/how-graham-polly-farmer-changed-the-game) Farmer, on Australian Rules football. Sharon Kenney shares stories about the [Djinda Falcons: West Perth FC Aboriginal Football & Leadership Program](https://www.facebook.com/djindafalcons/)
On Sunday 26 May, the Moorditj Mag team of Jim Morrison, Nick Abraham, Jodi Hoffmann and Ebony Garlett presented a special Sorry Day broadcast from the final game of the AFL Sir Doug Nicholls Round at Perth Stadium. Four hours of interviews and conversation about language, music, football, history and politics marked a very special day to remember the Stolen Generations and celebrate the resilience of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples. The program was broadcast live on Noongar Radio in W.A. and proudly supported by RTRFM 92.1. Part Eight - Jodi Hoffmann and Jim Morrison interview [Tjalaminu Mia](http://hosw.com/speaker/tjalaminu-mia/), CEO with the Sister Kate’s Home Kids Aboriginal Corporation (SKHKAC) and Ron Ronan rocks Broadcast Box 3 at Perth Stadium.
On Sunday 26 May, the Moorditj Mag team of Jim Morrison, Nick Abraham, Jodi Hoffmann and Ebony Garlett presented a special Sorry Day broadcast from the final game of the AFL Sir Doug Nicholls Round at Perth Stadium. Four hours of interviews and conversation about language, music, football, history and politics marked a very special day to remember the Stolen Generations and celebrate the resilience of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples. The program was broadcast live on Noongar Radio in W.A. and proudly supported by RTRFM 92.1. Part Seven - Jodi Hoffmann and Jim Morrison talk about the [Kimberley Stolen Generation Aboriginal Corporation](https://www.kimberleystolengeneration.com.au/), [Bringing them Home](https://bringingthemhomewa.com/), [Yokai ](https://yokai.com.au/board-member/jim-morrison/)and the impact of governmental policies of the past and the present.
On Sunday 26 May, the Moorditj Mag team of Jim Morrison, Nick Abraham, Jodi Hoffmann and Ebony Garlett presented a special Sorry Day broadcast from the final game of the AFL Sir Doug Nicholls Round at Perth Stadium. Four hours of interviews and conversation about language, music, football, history and politics marked a very special day to remember the Stolen Generations and celebrate the resilience of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples. The program was broadcast live on Noongar Radio in W.A. and proudly supported by RTRFM 92.1. Part Six - Ebony Garlett and Nick Abraham interview singer and songwriter [Gina Williams](http://www.ginawilliams.com.au/), about language and music.
On Sunday 26 May, the Moorditj Mag team of Jim Morrison, Nick Abraham, Jodi Hoffmann and Ebony Garlett presented a special Sorry Day broadcast from the final game of the AFL Sir Doug Nicholls Round at Perth Stadium. Four hours of interviews and conversation about language, music, football, history and politics marked a very special day to remember the Stolen Generations and celebrate the resilience of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples. The program was broadcast live on Noongar Radio in W.A. and proudly supported by RTRFM 92.1. Part Five - Nick Abraham and Jim Morrison interview with writer [Kim Scott](http://kimscottauthor.com/bio/).
On Sunday 26 May, the Moorditj Mag team of Jim Morrison, Nick Abraham, Jodi Hoffmann and Ebony Garlett presented a special Sorry Day broadcast from the final game of the AFL Sir Doug Nicholls Round at Perth Stadium. Four hours of interviews and conversation about language, music, football, history and politics marked a very special day to remember the Stolen Generations and celebrate the resilience of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples. The program was broadcast live on Noongar Radio in W.A. and proudly supported by RTRFM 92.1. Part Four - Jim Morrison interview Former Fremantle Dockers footballer [Michael Johnson](https://www.fremantlefc.com.au/news/2018-08-24/johnson-well-be-brothers-forever) and Ebony Garlett talks about youth identity and opportunity with Nick Abraham before the game.
On Sunday 26 May, the Moorditj Mag team of Jim Morrison, Nick Abraham, Jodi Hoffmann and Ebony Garlett presented a special Sorry Day broadcast from the final game of the AFL Sir Doug Nicholls Round at Perth Stadium. Four hours of interviews and conversation about language, music, football, history and politics marked a very special day to remember the Stolen Generations and celebrate the resilience of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples. The program was broadcast live on Noongar Radio in W.A. and proudly supported by RTRFM 92.1. Part One - Jodi Hoffmann and Nick Abraham begin the Special Moorditj Mag Broadcast for [National Sorry Day](https://www.humanrights.gov.au/about/get-involved/events/national-sorry-day) and the AFL [Sir Doug Nicholls](https://www.afl.com.au/video/2017-05-18/sir-doug-nicholls-the-story-of-legend) Round from Perth Stadium.
Part Two - Nick Abraham and Jim Morrison interview Dennis Eggington, CEO of [Aboriginal Legal Service WA.](https://www.als.org.au/)
Part Three - Jim Morrison and Jodi Hoffmann interview [Narelda Jacobs](https://nit.com.au/trailblazer-bursts-onto-national-tv-scene/), TV News Journalist. On Sunday 26 May, the Moorditj Mag team of Jim Morrison, Nick Abraham, Jodi Hoffmann and Ebony Garlett presented a special Sorry Day broadcast from the final game of the [AFL Sir Doug Nicholls Round](https://www.afl.com.au/video/2017-05-18/sir-doug-nicholls-the-story-of-legend) at Perth Stadium. Four hours of interviews and conversation about language, music, football, history and politics marked a very special day to remember the Stolen Generations and celebrate the resilience of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples. The program was broadcast live on Noongar Radio in W.A. and proudly supported by RTRFM 92.1.
Today is Sorry Day and the first day of Reconciliation Week and I sing masquerade and talk about the tendrils of whatever I had a relationship with my darling Darique and just a general update about where I'm living. https://www.reconciliation.org.au/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/ra-nrw-2019-guide_v8.pdf --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/ethicalslut/message
In this Blaknoise radio program you'll hear audio recorded at the recent Stolen Generations marker launch held at Atherton Gardens on 26 May 2018. This local community day commemorated the 20th anniversary of Sorry Day. This podcast features highlights from the launch day with the MC Deborah Cheetham and community members and you'll also hear a deadly musical set by Kutcha Edwards featuring a duo with Uncle Jack Charles. Thank you to the City of Yarra council for allowing Blaknoise radio to record the community event in Fitzroy.
Doin Time spoke to Uncle Jack Charles about Sorry Day and the stolen generation. Then we spoke to Vickie Roach about prison abolition and the stolen generations.
In this Blaknoise radio program you'll hear audio recorded at the recent Stolen Generations marker launch held at Atherton Gardens on 26 May 2018. This local community day to commemorate the 20th anniversary of Sorry Day. This is the 1st podcast of this community event and features highlights from the launch day with the MC Deborah Cheetham and community members.Thank you to the City of Yarra council for allowing Blaknoise radio to record the community event in Fitzroy.
On National Sorry Day, Palestine Remembered speaks to Kutcha Edwards, a member of the stolen generation and an indigenous community worker, about his life and work and the similarities between the settler colonialism enterprises in Australia and Israeli, as well as the eerie parallels between the Letters Patent (Kings Patent or King's Seal) and the Balfour Declaration.
National Sorry Day Edition of the DOGS- $250 million found by ScoMo to fund the anti-constitutional chaplaincy program! Pastoral care program prohibits proselytizing yet providers MUST be Christian (whose directives explicitly demand conversion). Long term negative social and emotional impacts of school closures.Great State School of the Week- Cairns' Woree State Schoolwww.adogs.info
21 years since the Bringing Them Home report was tabled in parliament, we mark Sorry Day by featuring Aunty Hazel Collins who initiated the group Grandmothers Against Removals (GMAR) in 2014. The GMAR movement is fighting against the systematic removal of Aboriginal children from their families and calling out what Aunty Hazel calls the mispractice of child welfare officials. Thanks to Tegan Hughes from CAAMA.
We interviewed Ian about the violations of human rights for Asylum seekers and Refugees. Ian gave an update about what's happening on Manus Island. We also interviewed Lidia Thorpe about Having a Treaty in Victoria, and the importance of Aboriginal Elders being included and properly resourced, and consulted. Lidia spoke about a bill for Treaty that will be debated in Parliament very soon. She also talked about Sorry Day coming up on 26 May, and the Stolen generation.
Marisa and Peter interviewed Sam Watson Aboriginal activist and Elder from Queensland about his reflections on Rudd's apology. He spoke about the history of colonisation, stolen generation, stolen wages, and the ways in which we can improve things through Treaty and also having good Programmes for aboriginal people.Marisa and Peter then spoke to Lidia Thorpe, Greens Mp and proud Gunnai woman from Victoria. She spoke on behalf of her Aboriginal sisters, citing examples where some women are hoping that they reach 50 years old. It was discussed that Aboriginal people have low life expectancy, and that much healing needs to bcppen for all Aboriginal people. Lidia's reflections about Sorry Day and Keven Rudd's apology were also discussed.
Anarchist World This Week 31-5-17 . Joe greatly appreciates all your warm wishes and your thoughts. . The Ellen Jose organised 25th anniversary celebration for Marbo day at Federation Square Saturday 11.30 am June 3rd on the corner of Flinders St and Swanston St. It will mark the end of the historical fiction this land was uninhabited before it was colonised by the British Crown in 1788. . Midday 3rd of June Federation Square authorities and the Koori heritage trust will hold a community picnic for the for Marbo Day at the Birrarung river terrace from 12pm till 3pm, there will be live Torre Strait perfomers including music and entertainment. . Reconciliation week begins on Sorry Day the 26th of May, marks the 67 referendum on the 27th of May and ends on Marbo Day on the 3rd of June. Dr Joe Toscano 0439 395 484 anarchistmedia.org pibci.net defend and extend public housing
Jack Latimore is a Goori man of the Birpai nation. He's a journalist and researcher who covers indigenous affairs, media, culture and politics and his work has appeared in The Guardian, Indigenous X, Koori Mail, The Citizen, medium, SBS and Overland. In the past week we've marked Sorry Day and the 50th anniversary of the 1967 Referendum and witnessed 300 Indigenous leaders gather in Uluru for a summit on what constitutional recognition for Australia's First Peoples might look like. Here I ask Jack what he made of the summit's Statement from the Heart, how recognition and/or treaty could work and media representations of Indigenous peoples, from First Contact to Stan Grant to Bill Leak's cartoons. Listen To Love is on Audible Problematic is coming to Edinburgh Fringe 2017 SAVE THE DATE: June 22nd for a charity gig for Refugee Legal at Howler Bar in Melbourne @LatimoreJack @IndigenousXLtd jacklatimore.online Jack's writing for The Guardian Article: Noel Pearson's model for recognition wins support Article: Five factors that will shape the outcome for Recognise at Uluru Article: Indigenous Leaders Call For A Treaty In The Landmark "Uluru Statement From The Heart" Article: Uluru forum to pursue Makaratta instead of symbolic recognition Jack's piece on First Contact Jack's piece on the ABC's Recognition: Yes Or No Jack's piece on Bill Leak's cartoon Nyunggai Warren Mundine's piece on Bill Leak's cartoon This week's Q&A: 1967 and Mabo - Moving Forward John Newfong on wikipedia Cause of the Week: Indigenous X (indigenousx.com.au), Seed Mob (seedmob.org.au) & Koorie Youth Council (yacvic.org.au)
In this mini episode I am joined by Kate as we read Hansard from 1967. The moment 50 years ago when the Australian parliament granted a referendum to count Aboriginal people as part of the Commonwealth. The referendum ultimately received an overwhelming YES vote (90.77% in fact). This week also included Sorry Day, the 25th anniversary of […]
Discussion on the Manchester bombing in the UK.Discussion on the constitutional regognition of the first nations people of Australia.Manus Island detention centre begins to close Moreland Council recognises Peter Norman's anti-racist standInterviewsSteve Adams president of Melbourne University branch of the NTEU on the victory of work conditions and job security for staff. Listen here.Belinda Duarte, CEO of Culture is Life talks about Sorry Day. Listen here.
In this show, we report on last Monday’s Reception at Government House, Victoria in recognition of International Day Against Homophobia, Bi-, Intersex-, and Trans-phobias (IDAHOBIT). We include some grabs from the speech of the Governor […] http://media.rawvoice.com/joy_beentheredonethat/p/joy.org.au/beentheredonethat/wp-content/uploads/sites/90/2017/05/2017-05-23-BeenThereDoneThat-GovernmentHouseWalkVigilSorryDayExhBuildingKylieM.mp3 Podcast: Play in new window | Download (Duration: 43:17 — 19.8MB) Subscribe or Follow Us: Apple Podcasts | Android | Google Podcasts | Spotify | RSS The post Government House, Walk, Vigil, Sorry Day, Exh Building, Kylie M appeared first on Been There Done That.
It's been 7 years since Prime Minister Kevin Rudd made an historic apology to members of the Stolen Generation - but how much has changed? Rudd himself has said that the apology has achieved little. Justine Toh speaks to Brooke Prentis of the Waka Waka people - an activist for indigenous rights, Christian pastor, and accountant - about the deep injustices of the past and her hopes for the future.
National Sorry Day is held on 26 May each year to acknowledge and recognise members of the Stolen Generations. We asked our listeners the meaning of this celebration. - Si celebra oggi in tutta Australia National Sorry Day. giornata dedicata al ricordo della Stolen Generation. Abbiamo chiesto ai nostri ascoltatori se è una celebrazione di cui condividono il significato.
IL NATIONAL SORRY DAY raccontato da Daniele Scaglione