Monday, 2 July 2018
NAIDOC Week 2018 - Sunday 8 July to Sunday 15 July
Under the theme -
Because of Her, We Can! - NAIDOC Week 2018 will be held nationally from Sunday
8 July and continue through to Sunday 15 July.
As pillars of our
society, Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander women have played – and continue
to play - active and significant roles at the community, local, state and
national levels.
As leaders,
trailblazers, politicians, activists and social change advocates, Aboriginal
and Torres Strait Islander women fought and continue to fight, for justice,
equal rights, our rights to country, for law and justice, access to education,
employment and to maintain and celebrate our culture, language, music and art.
They continue to
influence as doctors, lawyers, teachers, electricians, chefs, nurses,
architects, rangers, emergency and defence personnel, writers, volunteers,
chief executive officers, actors, singer songwriters, journalists,
entrepreneurs, media personalities, board members, accountants, academics,
sporting icons and Olympians, the list goes on.
They are our mothers,
our elders, our grandmothers, our aunties, our sisters and our daughters.
Sadly, Indigenous
women’s role in our cultural, social and political survival has often been
invisible, unsung or diminished.
For at least 65,000
years, Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander women have carried our dreaming
stories, songlines, languages and knowledge that have kept our culture strong
and enriched us as the oldest continuing culture on the planet.
Aboriginal and Torres
Strait Islander women were there at first contact.
They were there at the
Torres Strait Pearlers strike in 1936, the Day of Mourning in 1938, the 1939
Cummeragunja Walk-Off, at the 1946 Pilbara pastoral workers' strike, the 1965
Freedom Rides, the Wave Hill walk off in 1966, on the front line of the
Aboriginal Tent Embassy in 1972 and at the drafting of the Uluru Statement.
They have marched,
protested and spoken at demonstrations and national gatherings for the proper
recognition of our rights and calling for national reform and justice.
Our women were heavily
involved in the campaign for the 1967 Referendum and also put up their hands to
represent their people at the establishment of national advocacy and
representative bodies from the National Aboriginal Congress (NAC) to ATSIC to
Land Councils and onto the National Congress for Australia’s First Peoples.
They often did so while
caring for our families, maintaining our homes and breaking down cultural and
institutionalised barriers and gender stereotypes.
Our women did so because
they demanded a better life, greater opportunities and - in many cases equal
rights - for our children, our families and our people.
They were pioneering
women like Barangaroo, Truganini, Gladys Elphick, Fannie Cochrane-Smith, Evelyn
Scott, Pearl Gibbs, Oodgeroo Noonuccal, Celuia Mapo Salee, Thancoupie, Justine
Saunders, Gladys Nicholls, Flo Kennedy, Essie Coffey, Isabel Coe, Emily Kame
Kngwarreye, Eleanor Harding, Mum Shirl, Ellie Gaffney and Gladys Tybingoompa.
Today, they are
trailblazers like Joyce Clague, Yalmay Yunupingu, Evonne Goolagong Cawley, Nova
Peris, Carol Martin, Elizabeth Morgan, Barbara Shaw, Rose Richards, Vonda
Malone, Margaret Valadian, Lowitja O’Donoghue, June Oscar, Pat O’Shane, Pat
Anderson Jill Milroy, Banduk Marika, Linda Burney and Rosalie Kunoth-Monks – to
name but a few.
Their achievements,
their voice, their unwavering passion give us strength and have empowered past
generations and paved the way for generations to come.
Labels:
anniversary,
Australian society,
indigenous culture
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