Topics: Culture
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Central - view
Redfern Oval on Saturday nights used to be a big meeting place, recalls Uncle Allan Madden . Sometimes people were “charged up” and it was also the place where planning for many of the big organisations was discussed: the Aboriginal Medical Service and Legal Service. The Palms Milk Bar , just up the road, was another gathering place. Related videos: You don't have to be a pisshead to be Aboriginal
West - view
Currently Chris works as a cultural interpreter for NSW National Parks . For Chris Tobin, his identity gives him heritage, responsibilities and a deep sense of belonging.
North West - view
fight to protect a local art site
West - view
Uncle Neddy , who cared for him and shared old stories and knowledge with him and his mother
Central - view
Uncle Gordon Briscoe remembers The Greek Café in Redfern as a place of continuity for Aboriginal people. It was a convenient meeting place for families where they could have tea or a milkshake and then hop on a tram and explore the rest of Sydney.
South West - view
Auntie Frances Bodkin describes how stories travelled across the continent, tracing trade routes
North Coastal - view
a recent ceremony and re-understandings have brought them together again .
South West - view
Auntie Glenda Chalker discusses the history of known remains from the Appin Massacre of 1816, which some of her ancestors survived and some may not have
Central - view
the power of creating and letting all Aboriginal people dance in their own way, be that traditional or contemporary.
South West - view
Auntie Frances Bodkin explains how Aboriginal science, unlike Western science, has always highlighted the importance of connections
North Coastal - view
Women’s and Men’s Business that is all through this country
South West - view
Auntie Glenda Chalker describes her relationship to country
West - view
Uncle Dennis shares their stories and his memories of the individuals and families and the connections between them, giving an insight into what they meant to each other.
Central - view
To imbue the college with practices and values and principles that are truly Aboriginal
South West - view
tells of traditioinal stories that teach of the near and distant past . She also explains the differences between D’harawal peoples depending on which waterways they are most connected to, yet how they are all linked by these waterways.
North Coastal - view
Songlines that go across present day Sydney, into Queensland and across to Central Australia
North Coastal - view
sacred sites