Schools Reconciliation Challenge 2014

19

description

The Schools Reconciliation Challenge is a Reconciliation art project, open for entries during term one (January - April each year). The challenge is open to all young people aged ten – sixteen; Indigenous and non-Indigenous; of all abilities. This year, students are encouraged to create an artwork that reflects the theme ‘Our Journey’. There are many different types of journeys that this could explore such as physical journeys, emotional journeys, spiritual journeys, healing journeys, learning journeys, political journeys and rights journeys. All of these are central to the struggle and understanding that is part of the Reconciliation journey, which all Australians must travel together to achieve equality and mutual respect. To date, young people in NSW have shown an outstanding commitment to Reconciliation. This will be the fifth year the School’s Reconciliation Challenge has been run, over 1000 students participating in 2013.

Transcript of Schools Reconciliation Challenge 2014

Publication & coPyrightThis publication is copyright – NSW Reconciliation Council, January 2014. Apart from any fair dealing for the purpose of private study, research, criticism or review as permitted under the Copyright Act, no part may be reproduced without permission with the exception of photocopying for use by teachers with reproduction maintaining original format and text. This Kit makes use of material produced by the NSW Board of Studies (pg 8). The NSW Board of Studies should be consulted separately on the issues of reproduction.

iSbn 978 0 646 91504 3

note to readerAboriginal and Torres Strait Islander readers are warned that this publication may contain references to deceased persons.

2 entry detailS4 interPreting our journey6 PaSt entrieS8 culturally aPProPriate teaching

10 claSSroom activitieS16 freedom rideS PoSter20 caSe StudieS22 fact SheetS

28 conStitutional recognition29 Significant dateS30 reconciliation road maP31 entry formS

Effort has been undertaken to ensure that the information contained in this book is correct, and the NSW Reconciliation Council regrets any offence that errors or omissions may cause.

Throughout this publication, the terms Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander are used wherever possible. In the interests of readability we use the terms Indigenous and non-Indigenous to refer to the relationship between Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islanders and non-Indigenous Australians. The authors intend no disrespect.

acknowledgementS and contributorS Recognise (Reconciliation Australia), NSW AECG, Aboriginal Affairs NSW, NSW Board of Studies, Aboriginal Disability Network NSW, UGL, Mick Gooda, Lachlan McDaniel, Emma Franklin, Kirsten Gray, and Lucy Simpson.

deSign

alphabetstudio.com.au

enquirieS

Telephone: (02) 9562 6355Email: [email protected],auTeaching Kit is available online: nswreconciliation.org.au

JUMP ON BOARDwhat: The Schools Reconciliation Challenge is an annual art competition for young people. It is designed to engage students in Reconciliation and Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander issues through art.

who: All young people in years 5–10 (or of equivalent age), Indigenous and non-Indigenous, of all abilities. Young people may enter the competition through their school or independently.

when: The competition runs from 3 February – April 2014. It is free to enter and selected artists will be sponsored to travel to Sydney for a showcase event during National Reconciliation Week

how: FIRST, register for the competition by emailing [email protected] with your name, school and position at the school. Then use the activity ideas, fact sheets, case studies and other resources in this Teaching Kit to inspire and inform lessons about Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander issues. Within these lessons, assist students to develop artworks, or one collaborative artwork, which reflects their ideas about Reconciliation and the theme ‘Our Journey’. Submit the artwork/s to the NSWRC by 4 April 2014.

artworks should be 2d and a maximum size of a1. all entries must include a complete artists statement and entry form (found at the back of this kit).

ART & RECONCILIATIONwhat iS reconciliation? Reconciliation is a multi-layered process. In Australia it means bringing everyone together by addressing divisions between Indigenous and non-Indigenous Australians that have been caused by a lack of respect, knowledge and understanding. Reconciliation seeks to ensure equality of health, education, housing and justice for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Australians, and advocate for the maintenance of their cultural identity and recognition of our shared history.

why uSe art to exPlore reconciliation? Art is a great medium through which to explore Reconciliation. It has long been used by Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples to explore and express ideas, tell stories, and pass information. Using art as a vehicle for learning assists students to investigate social realities, explore complex themes and issues, express their ideas creatively, and develop positive attitudes.

Reconciliation is about improving relationships between Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people and the broader Australian community. The Schools Reconciliation Challenge is one way for students to learn about Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Australia and contribute positively to Australian society, whilst expressing themselves artistically, and meeting the objectives of the NSW K-6 and 7-10 syllabuses.

2 3

LEARNINg OUTCOMEsThis Teaching Kit has been developed with reference to the Aims, Objectives and Outcomes of the Visual Arts components of the K–6 Creative Arts Syllabus (NSW) and the Visual Arts Years 7–10 Syllabus (NSW). However, its content is relevant to a range of subject areas, ages and ability levels.

creative artS Stage 3 (yearS 5/6) making• Investigates subject matter in an attempt

to represent likenesses of things in the world (VAS3.1)

• Makes artworks for different audiences assembling materials in a variety of ways (VAS3.2)

appreciating• Acknowledges that audiences respond in

different ways to artworks and that there are different opinions about the value of artworks (VAS3.3)

• Communicates about the ways in which subject matter is represented in artworks (VAS3.4)

Stage 4 (yearS 7/8) & Stage 5 (yearS 9/10)• Use a range of strategies to explore

different artmaking conventions and procedures to make artworks

• Expresses the function of and relationships between artist-artwork-world-audience.

• Investigates the world as a source of ideas, concepts and subject matter in the visual arts

• Investigates and makes informed choices about ways to develop meaning in their artworks

• Demonstrates an ability to select and use different materials and techniques to make artworks

The NSW Reconciliation Council is a non-government, not-for-profit organisation. It is the peak representative body for Reconciliation in NSW. Our purpose is to advance Reconciliation by promoting the development of equitable and just communities that acknowledge and respect Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people, cultures and values.

gETTINg sTARTED

Competition closes 4 April!

the journey to reconciliation is one that all australians must travel together

• Local stories about Reconciliation

• Heroes and champions of Indigenous rights

• Significant events or moments e.g. the Bridge Walk in 2000 or Gough Whitlam pouring dirt through the hands of Vincent Lingiari

• Our journey as a society. How have our attitudes and views changed over time?

these journeys might be physical, spiritual, emotional, cultural or otherwise

• Traditional journeys – corroborees, nomadic hunter gatherer lifestyles, or old trade routes

• Language revitalisation projects and other journeys to recover culture

• The meeting of old and new ways

• The importance of land, culture and language to an individual or community’s identity and life journey

all journeys help shape our identity and make us who we are

• Explore how Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander identities have changed over time

• Journeys of resistance and pride. How has identity been influenced by struggles and challenges? Think Stolen Generations, mission life, family reunification, NT Intervention, assimilation policies etc

• Changing identities that combine the traditional and the contemporary

• The experience of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people today compared to pre-contact life

aboriginal and torres Strait islander people have faced many struggles in the past 200+ years and have fought hard to maintain their culture and way of life

• Social, legal and political inequality and resilience

• The journey towards self-determination

• Activism, leadership & solidarity

• Some key journeys to look at: British Invasion in 1788, Pemulwuy’s resistance, Bennelong, the Aboriginal Tent Embassy, Wave Hill Walk Off, 1965 Freedom Rides, 1967 referendum, Mabo & Wik, The Apology, or journeys to Constitutional Recognition.

what is the future of Our Journey as australians?

• Imagine what the future of Reconciliation between Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples and non-Indigenous Australians might look like

• What does Reconciliation mean to you and what would it involve?

• How has Reconciliation worked in other countries, like New Zealand and Canada?

To be eligible for the Schools Reconciliation Challenge, students’ artworks must address Reconciliation and the theme Our Journey, and explore how these two ideas relate. There are many different types of journeys. For example, physical journeys, emotional journeys, spiritual journeys, healing journeys, learning journeys, political journeys, and rights journeys. All of these are central to the struggle and understanding that is part of the Reconciliation Journey, which all Australians must travel together to achieve equality and mutual respect.

How you interpret ‘Our Journey’ is up to you, but the following may help inspire you!

gETTINg sTARTED

4 5

check out the fact Sheets in this kit for more information. a comprehensive set of fact Sheets is also available on the nSwrc website.

1000 MEN – BLIND LEADINg ThE BLIND blake Parrott, lawrence Public School Second prize, years 5 & 6

My artwork is about blind people leading the blind. Some people have eyesight but are blind to the world around them. Reconciliation relies on seeing people beyond their skin, communicating with one another, and showing respect. I have a vision problem but I can see through colour. Sometimes I want to say “look and help others, they are people too and they have something to say”.

ACTIONs sPEAk LOUDER ThAN WORDsgroup work, fairvale high School First prize, years 7 & 8

Our artwork is about showing respect and bringing everyone together. It reflects on the importance of open communication, and the necessity to act on the things we say in order to genuinely promote and maintain Reconciliation. Within the artwork, we have used our hands as tools to communicate our ideas about Reconciliation.

in schools across nSw, young people are speaking up about reconciliation, and telling their stories. here are some of the outstanding and inspiring artworks from the 2013 Schools reconciliation challenge.

WE'RE LIsTENINgnoah cohen Stoddart, reddam house Second prize, years 7 & 8

My artwork is about how communication between non-Indigenous people and Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people is improving and growing just like the technologies of today. Mobile phones, which are a communication tool used by all different types of people around the world, symbolise this process. Reconciliation means acknowledging the original custodians of this land and going forward together.

Why?molly ruttley, northern beaches Secondary college – mackellar girls campus Year 7/8

this artwork is about how we see and treat the land around us.

DREAM sPIRIT JOURNEy danny gordos, reddam house

My artwork explores the connection all Australians have with the land and how different cultures interpret this connection differently. For many of us land is merely something we possess, or cross over to get somewhere. However, many Aboriginal people have a stronger, deeper connection to land. This artwork looks at the combination of two different interpretations of the land and coming together.

ThE PROCEss Of EvOLUTIONhannah rubinstein & rachel bowen-james, reddam house

This artwork explores how the pursuit of technological advancement in Australia has been undertaken at the expense of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander cultures and rights In today’s world, people are preoccupied with having the newest iPod, the latest computer, and the ability

LOOk TO ThE fUTUREgroup work, St bedes' Primary School First prize, Years 5 & 6

This artwork is about our local region, Yuin country, and the important place of Aboriginal people as the original custodians of the land and the keepers of knowledge and tradition. The artwork is looking towards a positive future for all people and animals; one in which we can move forward and learn together.

to be connected to everyone and everything at the click of a button. However, they do not take the time to learn about the First Peoples of this land, on whose home our society has been built. Our artwork demonstrates the merging of two different cultures, both of which have an important place in Australian society. Rather than letting progress and material things dominate our lives and displace culture, we should utilise technology to bring culture into our lives in new and interesting ways.

AMAROO (BEAUTIfUL PLACE)decoda knowles & abbey bain, barrenjoey high First prize, years 9 & 10

Amaroo means ‘a beautiful place’ in one of the Aboriginal languages local to Canberra. In our artwork, this word is set over a traditional Torres Strait Islander headpiece. Our artwork encourages the audience to appreciate Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander cultures and recognise their beauty and significance. Reconciliation means re-examining our history, challenging our viewpoints, and discussing and encouraging new and honest interpretations of culture. 7

gETTINg sTARTED

6

The following section is reproduced in its entirety with permission from the Board of Studies NSW, and provides a guide for teachers to develop inclusive and culturally appropriate activities.

• Discourage students from copying or using Aboriginal signs or symbols in their own artmaking. This not only causes great offence to Aboriginal people, but also infringes copyright. Students should be encouraged to develop their own symbolic visual language when learning about the systems of symbolic meaning in Aboriginal artworks.

• Ensure that all resources used are culturally sensitive and appropriate. If in doubt, consult with Aboriginal people or the NSW Reconciliation Council.

• Integrate other aspects of Aboriginal art and culture, such as the oral tradition, the performing arts, song, and dance wherever possible.

• Avoid aspects of Aboriginal art containing sacred or secret or ‘inside’ information. It is inappropriate to address this area in classroom situations; most Aboriginal people would find it offensive. However, it is important that students are informed about this issue and learn to respect it. Aboriginal artists or advisors may provide some background to this issue.

• Encourage an understanding of Aboriginal culture as a dynamic living culture, which, like all cultures, adjusts to change and has a history.

• Avoid reference to traditional Aboriginal culture as ‘primitive’, ‘Stone Age’, or ‘simple’, as these terms are highly offensive.

• Follow correct protocols when using works by an Aboriginal artist who has died. Students should be aware that in some communities the mentioning of names and display of photographs of people who have died are signs of disrespect to them and their families. Permission must be sought from families to show images of the deceased.

• Discourage generalised or stereotypical characterisations of Aboriginal art, artists, culture or communities. Make specific reference to place, time, people and events, and draw attention to the rich diversity that exists within Aboriginal societies and the art produced.

• Recognise how contemporary Aboriginal art can adapt Western art forms and new technologies and media, and still communicate cultural knowledge and express Aboriginality.

• Keep informed of significant developments and innovations in the ways Aboriginal art practice, forms and media change over time. There are numerous magazines, catalogues and newspapers that have current information.

StrategieS for teaching aboriginal StudentS• Wherever possible employ an Aboriginal

artist, dancer or storyteller to work with the students in the classroom.

• Acknowledge that Aboriginal students will not necessarily be well informed about all aspects of their cultural heritage. Some will know a great deal while others might know little.

• Enrich the classroom environment by displaying positive affirmations of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander culture and art.

• Provide Aboriginal students with opportunities to enrich and affirm their cultural identity if they choose to do so. Do not assume that all students will have the desire to do this. Teachers need to recognise that Aboriginal students, like other students, learn in a variety of ways, have special needs and come from cultures with very rich and diverse creative arts traditions. Teachers need to be flexible in their delivery of programs and in the way they respond to Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander students’ learning styles.

• Avoid stereotyping Aboriginal students by their physical attributes or the way they learn, as this will have negative effects on them. It is best teaching and learning practice to meet the needs of all students as learners from a variety of cultural backgrounds.

• Acknowledge and recognise Aboriginal English as the home language of many Aboriginal students; use it as a building block within the classroom.

• Develop an awareness of otitis media and other health problems affecting learning outcomes for Aboriginal students.

• Acknowledge that some Aboriginal students will need time for family commitments, cultural traditions and events that affect their daily lives.

• Encourage the Aboriginal Education Assistant to participate in classroom activities; they are able to offer support for the students and teachers.

terminology• Terminology changes over time within

Aboriginal culture and communities. The following is a selection of terms to help teachers with the sensitive implementation of the units of work.

• ‘Aboriginal people’ is the preferred term. Aborigine is an outdated term and can often offend some Aboriginal people.

• In any writing activity, the word Aboriginal should always be written using a capital ‘A’.

• It is unacceptable to use the terms half-caste or full blood when referring to Aboriginal people. This is highly offensive.

• Use terms such as group, nation, language group or cultural group rather than the word tribe, as it is now outdated terminology. Some Aboriginal people refer to themselves as traditional, not tribal.

• Avoid using words such as legends and myths when referring to the Dreaming or Dreaming stories. Dreaming is preferred to Dreamtime as the latter refers to the past, and is not inclusive of the present and the future.

• Torres Strait Islanders do not consider themselves Aboriginal people. There are similarities and differences between Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander cultures.

• Torres Strait Islanders refer to their traditional stories as legends rather than Dreaming stories.

• Aboriginal people will often refer to themselves as Koori, Murri, Noonga etc. These names refer to a particular group or area to which they belong. They are not general terms and should not be used as such.

CULTURALLy APPROPRIATE TEAChINg

8

Classroom Activities 10–15 to stimulate thinking about Reconciliation and the theme Our Journey

Freedom Rides Pull Out Poster 16–17 showcasing a significant Aboriginal journey

Case Studies 20–21 follow the inspiring Reconciliation journeys of Lachlan and Mick

Fact Sheets 22–25 with information about Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander issues

9

aboriginal and torres Strait islander people have travelled many different journeys. Physical journeys across the land; spiritual journeys connecting with culture and history; emotional journeys related to historical and ongoing injustices; political journeys in the struggle for rights and freedoms, and reconciliation journeys hand in hand with non-indigenous people. this is just to name a few!

WONDER• How many different kinds of journeys

can you think of? Create a mind map brainstorming your ideas.

• Sometimes you might experience multiple journeys at once. Can you think of some examples of this?

• What are some journeys that are significant to you? It may be a journey travelled by a family member, someone you admire, or a collection of people, like a community or nation.

LEARN• Look at My Place by Nadia Wheatley and

Donna Rawlins. The book showcases the stories of 21 children, over two decades, which together convey the physical, cultural and emotional journeys of a small pocket of Sydney.

• Watch the documentary Ringbalin. It invites you on a journey along Australia’s great Murray Darling Rivers, with Aboriginal Elders mapping out their stories.

• Research the decade-long journey of the Gurindji people, led by Vincent Lingiari, to achieve fair wages and legal ownership of their own land.

• Check out Accessible Arts, the peak arts and disability organisation in NSW, to see how students with a disability are using art to represent their journeys aarts.net.au

• Look at the political cartoons in Survival: A History of Aboriginal Life in New South Wales by Nigel Parbury.

CREATE• Create a map of a significant journey you

have had, illustrating it with symbols that represent people you met, things you discovered, or lessons you learnt along the way.

• Weave or make a collage that represents your life journey. Use different materials and images to symbolise different aspects of your life.

• Work with your class mates to create a mural in your school reflecting a collective journey. You could use graffiti, paste-ups, paint, or mosaic.

• Think about how different colours can represent different feelings and emotions. Use watercolours to represent an emotional journey you have had, letting the colours blend together to show how you have moved from one feeling to another.

aboriginal and torres Strait islander people have an important connection to their country – the land and Sea that holds their culture. art is often used to reflect this relationship and to tell stories of time and place.

WONDER• Think of a place that is special to you.

How does it relate to your personal journey, your history and your identity?

• How does the land relate to us as a community and tell stories of our shared experiences as Australians?

• How do you think environmental degradation, land clearing and pollution impact Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people?

LEARN• Read Aboriginal Dreaming stories and

Torres Strait Islander Legends. Consider what these say about the importance of Country. Find some at creativespirits.info.

• For an in depth understanding of Aboriginal connection to place, read ‘Country’, Chapter 1 in Nourishing terrains: Australian Aboriginal views of landscape and wilderness (p7-13) by Deborah Bird Rose.

• Google Yiwarra Kuju: The Canning Stock Route – a story of contact, conflict and survival, of exodus and return, seen through Aboriginal eyes, and interpreted through their voices and art.

• Look at the watercolours of Albert Namatjira. His work represents the land through a fusion of European and Aboriginal artistic techniques.

• Check out Bonita Ely’s performance artwork Murray River Punch, commenting on the pollution in the Murray River Basin and its impact on local communities.

• Watch the film, Rabbit Proof Fence – learn about the physical and emotional journeys Molly, Daisy and Gracie embarked on to get back to their Country, family and culture.

• Look at Kevin Gilbert’s artwork, My Father’s Studio. This work shows Gilbert’s father immersed in his country (his studio) and surrounded by his art (rock carvings).

CREATE• Express your own connection to land, and

your own journey. Art ideas: cross-hatching, aerial style paintings, bark paintings and making use of found objects.

• Create different patterns to symbolise different parts of the landscape. Try using repetition.

• As a class, visit a locally significant Aboriginal site. Look at the landscape and learn about its history. Use this to inspire an artwork.

“If you can imagine the one family continuously occupying the same land for 40,000 years or more, using it not just to sustain life but as a place of reverence and worship, where every tree, rock and waterhole had significance, you will get some understanding of the importance of land to Indigenous people”Tania Major

*Remember to explain to students, it is not appropriate to copy Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander art. It should be used as inspiration to develop their own style

“I can look back over 70 years on this part of the land. There was a richness in the relationships between people so you never felt alone. We always said pmerel atnyene…that means country holds you”Rosalie Kunoth-Monks, Alyawarr elder, Utopia homelands

ART ACTIvITIEs fOR ThE CLAssROOM

11

ART ACTIvITIEs fOR ThE CLAssROOM

as marcia langton has noted, most people come to know aboriginal and torres Strait islander people through the media, television and stories, rather than through real relationships. often these representations are based on negative or oversimplified stereotypes that feed bias and racism. Such misrepresentations of identity are dis-empowering. it is important that aboriginal and torres Strait islander people can determine their own identity because this is central to their sense of freedom.

WONDER• As a class, discuss some of the

assumptions you hold about Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people? Why do you think you hold these assumptions?

• Find some examples of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander self-representation (think Koori Mail, Redfern Now, Indigenous films etc.) How do these compare to non-Indigenous representations?

• Discuss the concepts of objectivity and subjectivity – the idea that there are (at least) two sides to every story. How can we use art to break down stereotypes and provide multiple perspectives?

LEARN• Read Mick Dodson’s article ‘The End in the

Beginning: Re(de)finding Aboriginality’ to understand the impact misleading negative representations have on Indigenous identity.

• Look at the artworks of Adam Hill or Destiny Deacon to see some contemporary representations of Aboriginal culture and history.

• Look at Bindi Cole’s, Not Really Aboriginal series 2008, exploring how Aboriginal people come in many shapes and colours.

• Google ABC, The Drum’s satirical article, How to Write about Aboriginal Australia.

• Check out Ricky Maynard’s, Portrait of a Distant Land, 2005 to see how he uses photography to re-tell the story of Aboriginal people in Tasmania.

CREATE• Find a colonial artwork depicting Aboriginal

Australia. Discuss it as a class then reconstruct it, creating a new angle on the subject matter.

• Create a self-portrait using abstract techniques, using what defines you instead of how you look.

• Make a poster or paint a mural in your school to help represent Indigenous Australians in a positive way to your peers.

• Create a new flag for Australia, trying not to use any of the symbols from the current Aboriginal and Australian flags.

• Draw a portrait of someone you admire. Think about the qualities and personality traits you want to represent in them.

aboriginal and torres Strait islander people have a strong oral history tradition. Stories are integral to the transmission of culture from generation to generation. they are used to explain creation, history, spiritual beliefs and values, and give people a sense of identity and belonging. every journey, ceremony and artwork has a story.

WONDER• What are some different ways you can

tell a story?

• Can you think of a story that is important to your identity? It could be one that it often repeated in your family or culture, or one that has had a significant impact on you.

• How is your culture passed down to new generations? How does this compare to Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander practises?

“Self-representations of Aboriginality are always also acts of freedom”Mick Dodson

LEARN• Look at the children’s books of Bronwyn

Bancroft & Elaine Russell to see how they tell stories about their family’s journeys using illustration.

• For a series of animated Dreaming stories from Central Arnhem Land, see abc.net.au/dustechoes

• Check out the colourful, simply told stories in the works of Ian W Abdulla, Roy Kennedy & Jody Broun.

• Barani Barrabugu is a booklet about Sydney’s Aboriginal Journey; explore it for ideas of storytelling over time.

CREATE• Be inspired by the art of Roy Kennedy

and Elaine Russell – draw, paint or collage a picture mapping out your home, neighbourhood, or a special place in order to tell its story.

• Use generator.acmi.net.au/storyboard to create an online storyboard about a contemporary Reconciliation issue, happening or event you think is important.

• Create a class ‘family tree’ that relates to the place the students live. What is shared? Where are the gaps? How many stories are contained in the one tree?

• What are the shared stories in students’ hometowns? Collaboratively, the class creates their own Reconciliation story chart.

“Everyone has their own story to tell, and every one’s story is its own history and its own artwork” Djon Mundine

1312

ART ACTIvITy shEET

Students name/s ………………………………………………………….…………………………………………………………....

use the spaces below to list some words that you associate with the term reconciliation

…………………………………………………………………………

…………………………………………………………………………

…………………………………………………………………………

…………………………………………………………………………

…………………………………………………………………………

…………………………………………………………………………

…………………………………………………………………………

…………………………………………………………………………

this activity sheet is designed to help students think about reconciliation and the theme Our Journey in order to create a meaningful artwork.

…………………………………………………………………………

…………………………………………………………………………

…………………………………………………………………………

…………………………………………………………………………

…………………………………………………………………………

…………………………………………………………………………

…………………………………………………………………………

…………………………………………………………………………

the theme for the Schools reconciliation challenge this year is Our Journey. Create a mind map in the space below to brainstorm some of the ideas you would like to represent in your artwork. You might also find it helpful to discuss these ideas with your friends, family, teachers, or class.

not everything we say is written or spoken. There are many ways to get a message across or communicate an idea. Use the space below to list different ways you might be able to express your ideas:

14

caSe StudieS

aboriginal people were forced to live on reserves and missions in sub-standard housing, with no

plumbing or electricity. children were forcibly removed from

their families and people often experienced racism, segregation

and abuse.

it set off on 12 february 1965. a group of students got on a bus and travelled around

rural nSw to protest inequality between indigenous and non-

indigenous australians.

the freedom rides was a journey to campaign against racial discrimination and the

dispossession, exploitation and unequal treatment of aboriginal and torres Strait islander people

arrernte man charles Perkins led the freedom rides. he

believed his people deserved better and decided to stand

up for their rights!

through the media, australians began to become more aware of the injustices experienced by aboriginal people. more and more people joined the

movement, encouraging and supporting aboriginal people

to fight discrimination.

this journey laid the path for future social action, including

the current campaign for constitutional recognition of aboriginal and torres Strait

islander people.

Port Macquarie

Coffs Harbour23 february

Grafton21 february

Ballina

Lismore22 – 23 february

Warwick (QLD)18 february

Boggabilla18 february

Moree16 – 17, 20 february

Collarenebri16 february

Walgett14 –16 february Inverell

19 – 20 februaryGlen Innes19 february

Bowraville24 february

Kempsey14 –16 february

Taree25 february

Newcastle26 february

Coonamble

Gulargambone14 february

Gilgandra

Dubbo13 february

Wellington13 february

Orange13 february

SyDNEydePart 12 february

return 26 february

Tenterfield19 february

Stanthorpe (QLD)

Goondiwindi (QLD)

Pull out this poster & put it on the wall!

“The Freedom Ride was probably the greatest and most exciting event that I have ever

been involved in with Aboriginal affairs. It was a new idea and a new way of promoting

a rapid change in racial attitudes Charlie Perkins

ART ACTIvITy shEET This activity sheet was written by Lucy Simpson of Gaawaa Miyay for NSWRC

CLAssROOM kIT• Scratch foam printing boards –

scratch foam or a styro foam food tray

• Rubber Rollers

• Non toxic water based block ink

• Baby wipes (to clean printing boards)

• Paper (coloured and white) for printing

• Firm perspex sheets for inking stations

• Paddle pop sticks

• Old newspapers to keep desks clean

• Blunt pencils or ballpoint pens for etching into scratch foam

fOR INsPIRATIONCollect objects of different colours, shapes and textures i.e. leaves, seed pods, twigs, feathers, coral, bark etc.

IN CLAss ACTIvITIEs• Complete visual story telling worksheet

• Discuss Aboriginal culture, Reconciliation, and the theme ‘Our Journey’

• Discuss and develop individual concepts for artwork

• Develop ideas for symbols, design and artistic representations of your message or story

gO!1. Preparation

Collecting inspiration/concept and story development

2. Sketching ideasMap out and draw some ideas to apply to your foam.

3. carving scratch foamIf you want your image to print clearly you need to make your lines quite deep. You can press fairly hard without poking through the back of the foam.

4. inking up & rolling onSpread ink over a flat Perspex board, then run your roller through the ink. If the roller makes a sticky sound and rolls through the ink (rather than sliding across the inking plate) you’ve got the right consistency. Roll your roller over your foam to ink it up. You are aiming for a smooth, thin, velvety-looking coat of ink.

5. Position foam on paperPlace foam face down on paper & apply pressure with your hand to stick it down

6. Print itFlip paper and foam holding both together so the paper is on top and apply pressure evenly across paper to achieve a clear print. You can just use your hands to do this, or something flat like a ruler. Be sure not to let the foam slide around on the paper as you’re rubbing.

7. reveal your masterpiece!Starting at one corner, peel paper or foam (whichever is on top) back slowly

8. hang out your print to dryPin up, place, or hang out your print to dry and admire your beautiful creation!

Take the time to wash your plate while the ink is still wet so you can use it to print time and time again.

a simple art idea to get you on your way!

Sometimes artists use ‘found objects’ in their artworks as part of their creative process. found objects are existing forms that are incorporated and re-worked in some way to create something new. Spend some time at home, school or outside collecting your own ‘found objects’ to use in your artwork that may help to tell your story. In the table below list some of these items, the way you are thinking of incorporating them into your work, and what they represents to you.

object / item how i might uSe it to me thiS rePreSentS

Cockatoo feather As inspiration for a drawing or glued to a collage

The place I grew up, on the land of the Gadigal people

visual communication is a great way to represent Our Journey. Often we use images to relay a story, message or instruction. Can you think of three examples where we use images to communicate something? Use the boxes below to record these examples using photography, cut and paste images from magazines & newspapers, or to draw your own illustrations. Write a short description below each box explaining what these symbols represent.

think about ways you can use drawings to represent places, things, people, or stories that are important to you. In the space below, create & record your own symbols, and what they mean to you.

……………………………….…… ……………………………….…… ……………………………….…… ……………………………….……

19

now it’s time to make your Our Journey artwork!create something that tells the story of the journey/s you would like to convey. use any technique you like – illustration, rubbings from a textured surface, photography, cut outs from newspapers and magazines, stamps, stickers, stencils, prints, or anything you think will help tell your story.

the river at the back of my grandfather’s house

18

CAsE sTUDIEs

People are often shocked to hear that australia is the only nation in the world to have a federal constitution that permits racial discrimination. the constitution also fails to recognise the first Peoples of this land – the aboriginal and torres Strait islanders, despite being our founding political and legal document. the only way to amend the constitution is through a referendum where all australians who are eligible to vote can say ‘yes’ to proposed change. below, lachlan tells us about the journey thousands of australians are currently undertaking to help build support for such change.For a more detailed explanation of racial discrimination in the Constitution, see the Constitutional Recognition section of this Kit.

fAMILy JOURNEyI am a Wiradjuri man, descended from the Thorpes of Euabalong. My family lived on a small mission on the Lachlan River. In Wiradjuri, we call that river Kilari, which is where my name comes from. They moved to Forbes around 1900 and my Great-Grandmother remains there today, along with much of my family. My Dad moved to Sydney later on, and I became the first of my Wiradjuri family to be born and raised here.

JOURNEy TO RECOgNITIONCurrently, I am a Project Officer for Recognise, which is the People’s Movement to recognise Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people in the Australian Constitution. We also seek to rid the Constitution of racial discrimination that may be used to harm people. In order to raise awareness about these issues, the Recognise team, along with thousands of supporters, have embarked on a huge relay across Australia to speak to people about Constitutional Recognition, hear their ideas, and garner support for change. We are travelling around the country by foot, car, bicycle, and even canoe, through big cities like Melbourne, Adelaide and Darwin, and the many small communities in between. In each place we’ve been, we have had wonderful engaging conversations with local people, sharing stories and building momentum for positive change.

I joined the Journey from the border of Victoria and South Australia, travelling across the bottom of the country almost to Adelaide. I also took part in the 1200km bicycle ride from Alice Springs, up through the centre to Katherine. Recently I just returned from a four wheel driving leg, starting from Darwin, heading through Kakadu, and then out to Wave Hill and on to Kununurra. It has been amazing.

RECONCILIATION JOURNEyPeople have many different ideas around what Reconciliation is. Some people think it is largely about making amends for past injustices. While this is very important, for me Reconciliation is also about the future. About establishing better working relationships between Indigenous and non-Indigenous Australians. Constitutional recognition is an important step in this process because it is about offering respect.

I was really moved during the latest leg of the Journey. We stopped in Wave Hill, where Vincent Lingiari led the famous walk off in 1966 to demand equal wages and better working conditions for Aboriginal people. The old people at Wave Hill talked about the need for respect and understanding in the journey towards Reconciliation, and expressed the feeling that without proper recognition in our highest legal document, they were like strangers in their own land. Non-Indigenous people have also been overwhelmingly supportive. When they find out we are the only nation in the world that has a federal Constitution that allows racial discrimination, the response has often been shock and embarrassment. For me, travelling across the country for this campaign is a demonstration of our commitment as a nation to make positive change for a better future.

‘The Journey to Recognition is a journey to greater understanding and respect for all Australians, Indigenous and non-Indigenous.’

Back in those days we didn’t have very high expectations, but I learnt to work hard from my mum and dad. You don’t raise 10 kids without working hard. My first paid job was in the meatworks in Rocky, and I remember my dad saying ‘now you’ve got it made’. See, just having employment, any employment, was considered a success. Thinking about Sydney, or going to university, we might as well have been thinking about Mars.

I lived in Brisbane with my sister for a while when I was in my 20s. Around then, Aboriginal people were having a hard time as a result of government policies and there was a lot of social action happening. I started going to protests and street marches, and I had friends and relatives doing the same. Brisbane was just something else you know. It was a political awakening.

I guess a bit of a turning point was when I started working for this company that looked after the telephone towers in Queensland. I worked with about 30 men, and I was the only blackfella. I saw how these white blokes reacted as they became aware of Aboriginal issues. They really embraced it. We worked in some of the most redneck areas in Australia and they’d be telling people off at the pub for being racist. they were open and fair, and it taught me a lot. it gave me faith that there are a lot of good people out there.

These days, I feel inspired by ordinary people doing amazing things. The best part of my work is having the opportunity to talk to so many good, humble people and find out what they’re doing. They often say things like ’we don’t do anything big like you do in your job’. But they do. It’s the people on the ground, the health workers and community workers, battling away for 20, 30 years, without a whole lot of recognition, who make a real difference.

I also feel inspired by our kids.

what doeS reconciliation mean to you? Reconciliation needs to start amongst ourselves. The thing is, we can’t go back to 200 years ago. White people are here to stay. So we need to ask ourselves, how are we going to move forward from here? We need to accept and acknowledge each other and approach this Reconciliation business with open hearts and minds.

how can young PeoPle contribute to reconciliation? Get educated. It can be hard to get to school sometimes, but our mob has to get educated. Education gives you the ability to look at things critically, to ask what’s right and what’s wrong, and to form your own ideas rather than just accept what you’re told by others. These are the tools that can empower our youth to reshape things the way they want them to be.

A CULTURAL JOURNEyIn 2011 Lachlan spent 3 months hand stitching a Willay Badhang (possum skin cloak), an important traditional Wiradjuri garment. Lachlan wore the cloak at the graduation ceremony for his Arts/Law degree at Macquarie University. Lachlan learnt the art from his father, who sought permission from the Wiradjuri Council of Elders to begin a cloak-making project a few years ago. For Lachlan, wearing the Willay Badhang at this important event symbolised a revitalisation of Wiradjuri culture. The revival of this tradition of cloak-making reminds us that cultural practises people may assume have been lost are alive and well and can be instilled with contemporary meaning.

Mick Gooda is the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Social Justice Commissioner. A descendant of the Gangulu people, he comes from his grandmother’s country – the Dawson Valley in Central Queensland. Mick has spent much of his life advocating for Indigenous rights and promoting respect and understanding among all Australians. Below he tells us a bit about his life growing up, his thoughts about Reconciliation and education, and how he came to work in social justice.

PERsONAL JOURNEyMy journey’s not so different from anyone else’s… When you’re black you grow up knowing something’s not quite right. You’re treated differently to other kids in your class, and your family’s treated differently. But my mum and dad always told us, ‘no one is better than you’. So we grew up with that sense of strength.

My dad was a union rep, and he made sure we were engaged in social justice issues early on. Unions were at the centre of it you know; wages, workers’ rights, and they were big supporters of the Aboriginal movement. I think this was reinforced by my Catholic education, which instilled a strong sense of social justice in me.

As I grew up I started looking around, started to see things more. I began thinking, geez, this isn’t right. In Rockhampton Aboriginal people were being denied housing, mistreated by police, and barred from hotels. the injustices made me feel compelled to step up and do something.

I started getting a little bit active here and there. I joined the legal service and the housing co-op. At that stage they were pretty broke, so it involved really hands on stuff like fixing houses, collecting rents, and doing the books.

“We have such a strong cohort of young emerging leaders and it’s going to be a great ride to sit back and watch them rise.”

fACT shEETs

throughout history art has been an important feature of aboriginal and torres Strait islander culture. it has been used in a huge variety of ways and represents different aspects of social and cultural life. archaeological evidence has revealed aboriginal artwork that is many thousands of years old.

PRE-CONTACT ABORIgINAL ART• Traditional Aboriginal art is very different

to Western notions of art. Rather than creating art to buy and sell, art is used to practise and express culture, tell stories, mark territory, record how people live, and educate younger generations.

• Before colonisation, Aboriginal art largely consisted of paintings, etchings, carvings and drawing, which displayed elements of daily life. It often included images of hunting tools, animals, hunting expeditions and the landscape. Examples of Aboriginal rock art in NSW can be seen in the Blue Mountains National Park and the Wollemi National Park.

• Much Aboriginal art was spiritual in nature, depicting elements of Dreaming stories and belief systems. It was a way of renewing contact with and expressing the Dreaming visually.

WEsTERN DEsERT ART: ThE PAPUNyA TULA MOvEMENT• Many people believe dot paintings are a

traditional form of Aboriginal art. This is not the case. Dot painting emerged from a group of Indigenous men from Papunya in Central Australia in the early 1970s.

• In 1971 the men worked with non-Indigenous teacher Geoffrey Bardon to paint the famous Honey Ant mural. They transcribed body markings and sand drawings onto more conventional painting supports and the so-called ‘dot and circle’ style was born.

• Some also argue that dot painting was introduced as a way of hiding secret and sacred symbols within the artwork, so they could not be detected by outsiders.

• Today the Papunya Tula movement is considered one of the greatest art movements of the twentieth century, with some paintings worth hundreds of thousands of dollars.

CONTEMPORARy ABORIgINAL ART• Aboriginal art forms have grown and changed

considerably over the years, as traditional ways have been influenced by new cultures and contemporary ideas. There are now Aboriginal artists working in every medium imaginable, including painting, print, sculpture, photography, digital media, jewellery, paper-making, and installations.

• Contemporary Aboriginal art is often political, dealing with themes such as the collective struggle of Aboriginal people, discrimination and inequality, resistance and pride. Art is a strong platform through which Aboriginal voices can be heard.

• One technique commonly used in contemporary Aboriginal art is the merging of traditional techniques with more contemporary settings in order to comment on social, historical and political issues.

• For examples see: Brook Andrew, Sexy and Dangerous (1996); Jason Wing, Australia Was Stolen by Armed Robbery (2012); and Michael Riley, Cloud (2000).

• Since the 1960s, Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander voices have also been increasingly heard and represented in film, television, radio, theatre, music, poetry, and literature.

RELATIONshIP TO COUNTRy• Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people

are closely connected to the natural environment. They care for, and are sustained by, the land and sea. In fact, Indigenous people are defined internationally as people belonging to the land or soil of a particular region. Many Aboriginal people refer to their traditional lands as their ‘Country’.

• Connection to Country is grounded in more than the physical elements of a landscape. It is often directly linked to the community of people that occupy that landscape, the stories they tell and the culture that is passed down in that place for generations.

• Deborah Bird Rose has described Country as a ‘nourishing terrain’. A place that gives and receives life. Country is home; it is nourishment for the mind, spirit and heart, and it holds the stories and culture of Indigenous people.

CARINg fOR COUNTRy• Traditionally Aboriginal and Torres Strait

Islander peoples moved often, leaving enough food sources to regenerate for the next season. Waste was avoided by using all parts of plants and animals for a variety of nourishment, tools, and clothing. This nomadic lifestyle looked after the limited resources of the environment, and was led by the changing seasons.

• Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples lived as hunter-gatherers. Men and women usually had different jobs. Men used clubs, boomerangs, and spears to hunt large animals such as kangaroos and emus, while women and children collected fruits, berries, and other plants, and hunted smaller animals.

• Some Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples used fire to increase available food and care for their country for thousands of years. Low-level fires were used to remove undergrowth, encourage the regrowth of plants, and enable the spearing of game animals.

“When we paint, whether it is on our bodies for ceremony or on bark or canvas for the market, we’re not just painting for fun or profit, we’re painting as we always have done to demonstrate our continuing link with our country and the rights and responsibilities we have to it.” Galarrwuy Yunupingu

DIsPOssEssION fROM COUNTRy• Since the First Fleet landed in 1788,

Aboriginal people have been dispossessed of their traditional lands by successive Australian governments.

• Colonial governments forced Aboriginal people into particular areas of land, known as reserves, stations, or missions. They were forbidden to practise their culture or to visit their traditional lands.

• Between the 1880s and 1969, as many as 100 000 Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people were stolen from their families and placed under the control of the state. The people that were taken are now known as the Stolen Generation.

• The homelands movement, begun in the 1970s, involved Aboriginal people moving back to their traditional lands. They sought to escape the social dysfunction and political instability in larger communities and old missions, and to protect sacred sites and maintain customary ways of life.

• Unfortunately, due to a lack of Government spending in Aboriginal Homelands, life on Country can be difficult. Food prices are extremely high in remote areas and there is often a lack of services, including adequate health care, housing, and education.

RECLAIMINg COUNTRy• There is a strong history of Aboriginal

and Torres Strait Islander struggles for land rights. Beginning in the 1920s, and growing in strength throughout the 60s, 70s, 80s and 90s, the struggle continues with vigour today.

• In 1966, Vincent Lingiari led the Gurindji people in a walk off from Wave Hill station and demanded the return of their traditional lands, beginning an eight-year fight, which was ultimately successful! The Gurindji people were granted freehold title over 3250 square km of land, paving the way for the Northern Territory Aboriginal Land Rights Act of 1976.

• On Australia Day 1972, the Aboriginal Tent Embassy was pitched outside Old Parliament House by Indigenous activists demanding land rights and compensation. The embassy remains today and is a powerful symbol of Indigenous protest.

• In 1992, the High Court rejected the concept of terra nullius (land belonging to no one) in the famous Mabo case, legally recognising Indigenous ownership of land, called Native Title. Since this time, many Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people have made successful Native Title Claims.

“The land is my backbone…I only stand straight, happy, proud and not ashamed about my colour because I still have land…I think of land as the history of my nation”

Galarrwuy Yunipingu

Download the 2013 Teaching Kit from Issuu to access eight additional Fact Sheets on Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander history and cultural heritage: issuu.com/nswreconciliationcouncil/docs/nswrec_ecopy_texture

2322

fACT shEETs

INDIgENOUs LEADERshIP• There is a strong history of Aboriginal and

Torres Strait Islander leadership, from early warriors and leaders like Pemulwuy, Windradyne, and Bennelong to more recent leaders such as Charles Perkins and Lowitja O’Donoghue.

• Organisations such as the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Commission (ATSIC), Federal Council for the Advancement of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islanders (FCAATSI) and now the National Congress of Australia’s First Peoples have also played an important leadership role.

• Australia has had a number of Indigenous representatives in both Federal and State parliament, giving a formal voice to issues affecting Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people. These people include Neville Bonner (the first to sit in Federal parliament), Aden Ridgeway (Australian Democrats Senator), Ken Wyatt (first to sit in House of Representatives) and Nova Peris (first woman elected to Federal parliament).

NATIONAL INDIgENOUs REPREsENTATIvE BODIEs • National Indigenous representative bodies

are designed to represent the interests of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples by giving them a say in the decisions that affect their lives and that of their children.

• They are essentially a “voice” for Indigenous people to engage with government, the media, business and other industries.

• Historically, there have been a number of Indigenous representative structures and advocacy bodies (see below left).

NATIONAL CONgREss Of AUsTRALIA’s fIRsT PEOPLEs • The National Congress of Australia’s First

Peoples (Congress) is the current national representative body for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples.

• Launched in 2010, Congress aims to be a national voice for Indigenous peoples, providing leadership, expertise and advocacy on issues such as Constitutional recognition, and closing the gap on Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander life expectancy.

• Congress is the first major representative structure since the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Commission (ATSIC), which was abolished in 2005. Unlike ATSIC, Congress does not have responsibility for delivering services to Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people.

• Check out nationalcongress.com.au

INDIgENOUs REPREsENTATION AROUND ThE WORLD• There are many different types of Indigenous

representative bodies in other countries:

• In New Zealand there are guaranteed seats for Maori people in parliament.

• In Sweden the Sami people have their own parliament.

• In America, Indigenous people are represented by the National Congress of American Indians.

• In Canada the Assembly of First Nations is the national Aboriginal advocacy organisation.

“For the first time in the history of this country there was an Aboriginal voice in the parliament and that gave me an enormous feeling of overwhelming responsibility. I made people aware, the lawmakers in this country; I made them aware of Indigenous people. I think that was an achievement.” Neville Bonner

UNIvERsAL hUMAN RIghTs• Human rights are rights that we are all

entitled to simply by virtue of being human. These are things such as the right to live, the right to have food and shelter and the right to health and education.

• Human rights can also be distinguished from other rights because they are something we are all born with, which means they cannot be taken away from us (unless we break the law) and cannot be violated by government or exchanged for other rights.

• There are three main categories of human rights:

1st Generation Civil and political rights2nd Generation Economic & social rights3rd Generation Environmental, cultural and developmental rights

INDIgENOUs PEOPLEs Historically, human rights have been denied to Indigenous peoples by the processes of colonisation and assimilation. Throughout history in many countries, Indigenous peoples have been forced off their traditional lands, separated from their families and banned from speaking their own languages.

Reconciliation is an important process in moving forward from these events and ensuring they never happen again.

Specific tools and frameworks now exist to protect and promote Indigenous peoples’ human rights.

These include the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples 2007 and the Special Rapporteur on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples.

Indigenous people can also engage directly with the UN system through the annual Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues and Expert Mechanism on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples.

ThE UNITED NATIONs DECLARATION ON ThE RIghTs Of INDIgENOUs PEOPLEs 2007 (ThE DECLARATION) The Declaration is an instrument that outlines basic standards for the survival, dignity and well-being of Indigenous peoples internationally.

It was designed over a number of decades by Indigenous peoples from all around the world.

Some key principles in the Declaration include the rights to self-determination, culture, non-discrimination and equality, and the right to participate in decision-making.

Initially the Australian Government voted against adopting the Declaration. However, in 2009 it gave the document its formal support.

“It is using the Declaration that breathes life into it...the Declaration provides a blueprint for Indigenous peoples and governments around the world, based on the principles of self-determination and participation…It is the instrument that contains the minimum standards for the survival, dignity and well-being of Indigenous peoples all over the world” Mick Gooda, Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Social Justice Commissioner

TIMELINE Of NATIONAL INDIgENOUs REPREsENTATIvE sTRUCTUREs & ADvOCACy BODIEs:• Federal Council for the Advancement of

Aborigines and Torres Strait Islanders (FCAATSI), 1957

• National Aboriginal Consultative Committee (NACC), 1972-1977

• National Aboriginal Conference (NAC), 1977-1985

• Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Committee (ATSIC) 1989-2005

gETTINg ACTIvE IN ThE CLAssROOM: • Watch the Story of Human Rights video at:

ihrna.info/what-are-human-rights

• Discuss this statement some human rights are more important than others

• Check out resources relating to the Declaration here: youtube.com/watch?v=oh3BbLk5UIQ

2524

webSiteS

Accessible Arts NSW aarts.net.au Accessible Arts NSW is the state’s peak arts and disability body. It provides support for teachers and practitioners and develops activities across NSW.

The Art Gallery of NSW artgallery.nsw.gov.au/education The Art Gallery of NSW has developed lots of slides, essays and teaching resources about current collections and exhibitions, including the Indigenous collection.

The Australian Museum australianmuseum.net.au/indigenous-australia This site gives a comprehensive introduction to the diversity of Indigenous Australia.

ANTaR antar.org.au ANTaR is an independent, national network of organisations and individuals working in support of Justice, Rights and Respect for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples. This site contains a vast array of resources and links.

The Healing Foundation healingfoundation.org.au The Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Healing Foundation is an independent Indigenous organisation with a focus on healing in Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander communities.

The Human Rights Commission humanrights.gov.au/education/face_facts/index.html#4 The Human Rights Commission has a vast collection of resources. This link takes you to lesson plans and classroom activities about Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Issues.

Indigenous Law Centre Featured Artists ilc.unsw.edu.au/artists The Indigenous Law Centre is based at the University of New South Wales. This webpage showcases a wide range of colourful contemporary Aboriginal art, with information about the work and artists.

The Little Red Yellow Black Book lryb.aiatsis.gov.au/ provides an entry-point to Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander culture and history and is written from an Indigenous perspective. The website contains mini essays, teaching notes and other resources.

The Macquarie Pen Anthology of Aboriginal Literature macquariepenanthology.com.au/abor-websites.html is both a book and an online database of Aboriginal cultural websites.

National Congress of Australia’s First people nationalcongress.com.au Congress is a national voice for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Peoples. It is owned and controlled by its membership and is independent of Government.

NSW Reconciliation Council nswreconciliation.org.au NSWRC is the peak body for Reconciliation in NSW. Visit this site to stay up to date with events, projects and campaigns across the state.

ReconciliACTION reconciliaction.org.au/nsw/education-kit.r ReconciliACTION is a network of young people who promote Reconciliation. This link takes you to an education Kit about Reconciliation.

Reconciliation Australia reconciliation.org.au/home/resources/school-resources This section of Reconciliation Australia is a resource section for schools.

Recognise recognise.org.au is the nation wide campaign to recognise Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples in Australia’s Constitution. The site contains fact sheets and background information as well as education Kits for schools.

SBS The First Australians Series sbs.com.au/firstaustralians is a series, accessible online, which chronicles the birth of contemporary Australia from an Indigenous perspective.

bookS

2013 Schools Reconciliation Challenge Teaching Kit issuu.com/nswreconciliationcouncil/docs/nswrec_ecopy_texture

Arthur, W. and Morphy, F. (eds) 2005. Macquarie Atlas of Indigenous Australia. Sydney: Pan Macmillan Australia.

Parbury, N. 2005. Survival: A History of Aboriginal Life in NSW. Sydney: NSW Department of Aboriginal Affairs.

“Art has always been integral in terms of creating social change. It is a vehicle through which a conversation can be started” Jason Wing

NExT sTEPs

gET INvOLvED!the need for conStitutional reform Reconciliation means that everyone is treated equally and with dignity and respect. However, this is not possible under the current Australian Constitution, which continues to permit discrimination on the grounds of race and remains silent on the history, rights and contributions of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples.

The Constitution is our highest legal document. It sets out the rules of Parliament and the powers of our legislators and executive government to make and enact laws.

Written over 100 years ago, against a backdrop of racism that led to the White Australia policy, our Constitution had no input from Aboriginal or Torres Strait Islander people. It was drafted by a select group of non-Indigenous Australians, and since its inception has either excluded or discriminated against Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples.

Changing our Constitution is difficult. It can only be done through a referendum, and this requires a great amount of people power. To be successful, a referendum must be approved by a double majority. This means:

• A majority of voters across the nation; and• A majority of voters in a majority states

(4 out of 6 Australian states)

There have been 44 attempts to change our Constitution and only 8 have been successful. One of these was the 1967 referendum, when Australians voted overwhelmingly to count Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people in the census, and allow the federal government to make laws concerning them.

Currently there is a nation-wide campaign, led by recognise, to change the Constitution to better reflect a modern Australia. This would involve removing discriminatory sections and acknowledging the unique place of Aboriginal and Torres Strait peoples and their culture. The Recognise team together with thousands of supporters has been travelling across the country to raise awareness and rally support.

This campaign is something that concerns all Australians and is backed by all major parties. By making this change happen we can all reaffirm our support for equality and experience the sense of belonging that comes from recognition.

“in 1901, the only two constitutional provisions that made reference to aboriginal people did so to expressly deny them their rights and their voice. moreover, torres Strait islander people were entirely excluded” Law Council of Australia

join the camPaign!• Talk about it – Australians of all ages and

backgrounds can discuss Constitutional Recognition and what it means to them

• Follow recognise on Facebook & Twitter

• Bring the campaign to your school!

getting active in the claSSroom:• Check out recognise.org.au for more

information and download the School Learning Guide

• Discuss: Constitutional recognition will create a more equal and united Australia

• Why are Referendums important?

• Discuss: What is discrimination? Can there be both positive and negative outcomes of discrimination?

28

“Each of us is unique. We are different. We are all Australians and call this home. Let us rejoice in our diversity and difference because it is they that will enrich us.”

Patrick Dodson, Yawuru man and National Indigenous leader

26 january This is a celebration of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander cultures

and peoples. Events are held all around Australia showcasing

different aspects of culture including dance, literature, music,

food, language and history.

13 february To mark the anniversary of the

formal apology by the Parliament of Australia to Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander

people, particularly the Stolen Generations, for past injustices.

21 march This is a day of cultural respect for everyone that calls Australia

home. The purpose is to promote belonging and cultural diversity, and to reaffirm Australia as an

inclusive nation.

20 march This is the annual event held to raise awareness about the Aboriginal and

Torres Strait Islander health crisis in Australia, and promote equality

in life expectancy and health status between Indigenous and non-

Indigenous people.

26 may On Sorry Day thousands of Australians

from all walks of life participate in memorial services, commemorative meetings, survival celebrations and

community gatherings to honour and commemorate the Stolen Generations.

27 may – 3 june This week commemorates two significant milestones in the Reconciliation Journey

– the anniversaries of the successful 1967 Referendum and the High Court Mabo Decision. It is a time to celebrate and

learn about our shared histories, cultures and achievements, and explore how

each of us can contribute to the national Reconciliation effort.

3 june This marks the anniversary of the

High Court’s historic decision, led by Eddie Koiki Mabo, which overturned the legal fiction of terra nullius and recognised Aboriginal and Torres

Strait Islander people as the original custodians of this land.

1 july The anniversary of the day the

London Missionary Society arrived in the Torres Strait for the first time. Torres Strait Islanders people mark this day by holding

cultural ceremonies.

6 – 13 july NAIDOC stands for National Aborigines and Islanders Day

Observance Committee. Held from the first Sunday to the second Sunday in July, this week celebrates the history,

culture and achievements of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people.

9 auguSt This day affirms the importance of

protecting and promoting the rights of Indigenous peoples all around the world. It also celebrates their unique contributions and diverse,

rich cultures.

4 auguSt This is a day to reflect on the human rights

of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander children: their right to be educated, cared for, protected, and to have the opportunity to understand and practise their culture.

29

Survival Day

National Close the Gap Day

Mabo Day

National Aboriginal + Torres Strait Islander

Children’s Day

International Day of the World’s

Indigenous Peoples

Coming of the Light

National NAIDOC Week

National Sorry Day

National Reconciliation Week

National Apology Day Harmony Day

NExT sTEPs

School name: ..............................................................................................................................................................................................

to do doing done action: we will….

Develop and implement a Reconciliation Statement

Fly the Aboriginal Flag

Fly the Torres Strait Islander Flag

Celebrate NAIDOC Week

Celebrate Reconciliation Week

Participate in National Apology Day

Participate in National Sorry Day

Enter the Schools Reconciliation Challenge

Make a mural in our school to represent Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people in a positive way to the school community

Invite Aboriginal Artists, story tellers and cultural practitioners to visit our school

Develop and display a plaque to recognise the Traditional Custodians at the entrance of our school

Connect with Elders in our local community and invite them to talk at our school

Organise school excursions to local Aboriginal sites of significance

Invite a Traditional Owner to perform a Welcome to Country in our School for important assemblies and events

Conduct an acknowledgement to Country at the commencement of our important school events and assemblies

Investigate and learn about our local Aboriginal languages with the assistance of our local Aboriginal community, and consider re-naming parts of our school environment

SchoolS reconciliation challenge 2014 entry form

For teacher to complete and attach to artwork. Only one entry form should be submitted per artwork.

artwork detailS

Artwork Title: ……………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………..….

Number of contributors: ………

Year: ………

How many: …… Female …… Male ……*Indigenous ……*Non-Indigenous

*This information is optional.

Artist name/s: ……………………………………………………………………………………………………………………............................

(FOR CLASS ARTWORKS, PLEASE ATTACH A CLASS LIST TO THIS FORM WITH THE NAMES OF ALL CONTRIBUTORS)

I declare the submitted artwork is original and I have read and agree to the competition conditions of entry on page XX of the Teaching Kit.

School detailS

School Name:……………………………………………...........……………………………………………...........…….

Town/Suburb:……………………………………………..... Postcode:……………………………………………..........

Contact Teacher:………………………………………..….. Teacher Email:*……………………………………………...

School Phone Number:…………………………………...... Teacher Mobile:*…………………………………………….

*Please provide teacher’s direct details, not the generic school information. Details will only be used to contact you in relation to the Schools Reconciliation Challenge.

Parent/guardian detailS

Parent/Guardian Name:…………………………………. Email:…………………………………… Mobile:………………………………….

Survey

These answers will not affect the result of the competition.

how did you hear about the competition?

email received Kit in the mail social media NSWRC Website other……………………................

how many lessons were spent on this unit?

1 2–5 5+

what parts of the teaching kit did you find most useful?

Activities Fact Sheets Case Studies Next Steps

Pull out Poster Teaching Protocols other…………………

what else would you like to see included?

……………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………......

………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………...

Send to: Schools reconciliation challenge nSw reconciliation council 11-13 mansfield Street glebe nSw 2037

Or by email with digital artwork: [email protected]

cloSing date 4 aPril 2014

Building Reconciliation in your school shows your respect for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people. You can take the Schools Reconciliation Challenge further by evaluating Reconciliation in your school and developing your own Road Map to Reconciliation. For advice on how to conduct a Welcome to or Acknowledgment of Country, or what to write on your Reconciliation plaque, see p26 of the 2013 Teaching Kit: issuu.com/nswreconciliationcouncil/docs/nswrec_ecopy_texture

31

For students to complete and attach to artwork. Only one artist statement should be submitted per artwork.

Artist Name/s:........................................................................................................................................................................................................

Year:......................................................................................................................................................................................................................

School:..................................................................................................................................................................................................................

Teacher’s Name:....................................................................................................................................................................................................

Artwork Title:..........................................................................................................................................................................................................

PleaSe addreSS the following three PointS in your artiSt Statement:

what is your artwork about?

how does it relate to reconciliation?

how does it relate to the theme Our Journey?

..............................................................................................................................................................................................................................

..............................................................................................................................................................................................................................

..............................................................................................................................................................................................................................

..............................................................................................................................................................................................................................

..............................................................................................................................................................................................................................

........................................................................................................................................................................

................................................................................................................................................................

...........................................................................................................................................................

..........................................................................................................................................................

..........................................................................................................................................................

...........................................................................................................................................................

..........................................................................................................................................................

By completing and submitting the 2014 Schools Reconciliation Challenge entry form, each participant agrees to be bound by the following terms and conditions:

eligibility

1. To participate in the Schools Reconciliation Challenge, students must currently be enrolled in grades 5–10 at a primary or secondary school in NSW, or be the equivalent age of a grade 5–10 student. Students may participate independently or as part of a class project.

2. Entries must be entirely the work of the entrant and must never have been published, self-published, featured on any website or public online forum, broadcast, nor have been entered or won a prize in any other competition.

3. A completed entry form must accompany the document or artwork to indicate agreement to these terms and conditions.

4. Artists who are placed First, Second or Third will receive sponsored travel to attend the awards ceremony and exhibition showcase* in Sydney for themselves and one guardian. Collaborative entries must delegate one representative and their guardian to attend the ceremony.

5. Artists who are placed Highly Commended may have their work exhibited in Sydney but will not receive sponsored travel.

6. The artwork must reflect the 2014 theme Our Journey.

7. Entries must meet the competition requirements and formats, outlined in ‘size and material of works’ below.

8. No corrections can be made after the entry is received by the NSWRC.

9. Entries which are not nominated may be returned at the expense of the artist or school within six months of competition close. Nominated entries may be held for up to 12 months before being returned to the artist.

10. Closing date for receipt of entries is 4 April 2014.

11. Whilst all care will be taken to protect original artworks, NSWRC takes no responsibility for loss or damage.

Size and material of workS

• Artworks must be 2D. Students may use any material for their artwork, such as collage, paint, pencil or still digital media such as photography or Photoshop

• Entries may be a maximum of A1 size (or 60 x 84cm).

• Artworks must be submitted on a flat surface such as paper or board, but not canvas

• Clearly write, name, class, school and title of work on the reverse. Paper clip or Blue-Tack entry form to artwork. Do not glue entry form to the artwork.

• Artwork must not be framed or mounted behind glass

digital entrieS

• The file name of digital entries must be the title of the artwork

• Email either a digital photograph or scanned version of the artwork. Preferred file types are .jpg, .gif, or .bmp.

• The original artwork of entries must be available and submitted to the NSWRC office within seven days of notice (the NSWRC will provide assistance with these arrangements).

coPyright

By signing a completed entry form, and accepting the award offer, the nominated authors/artists:

1. Agree to grant royalty-free, worldwide, non-exclusive, licence to reproduce and publish work in all media of expression now known or later developed and in all languages in the nominated artwork to the NSWRC without reservation including, but not limited to, all intellectual property rights to reproduce and publish the nominated entry on the NSWRC website and to change and/or reproduce any part of the nominated artwork in relation to other promotional activities;

2. Agree that the NSWRC may publish, on the NSWRC website and in relation to other promotional activities, any personal information provided by the nominated artist in connection with their entry including, but not limited to, the nominated artist’s name, age, community and state/territory of residence; and warrants that there is no cultural or religious reason or any other impediment that prevents the nominated artwork from being exhibited, published or reproduced.

judging

All entries will be viewed and judged by a subcommittee of the NSWRC. The decision of the judges will be final and absolute. No correspondence concerning decisions will be entered into.

*Subject to funding.

3332

sUBMITTINg ENTRIEs

11–13 Mansfield Street, Glebe NSW 2037 Phone: (02) 9562 6355 Fax: (02) 8456 5906 [email protected] nswreconciliation.org.au facebook.com/nswreconciliation

Download a copy of this Teaching Kit at: nswreconciliation.org.au/schools-reconciliation-challenge

Join us on Facebook: facebook.com/schoolsreconciliationchallenge

© NSW Reconciliation Council Inc. 2014 ABN 583 759 527 94 ISBN 978 0 646 91504 3

The NSW Reconciliation Council acknowledges and pays respect to the Traditional Owners and custodians of Country throughout NSW and Australia.