Towards reconciliation

Reconciliation is the responsibility of all Australians and there are many steps we can take to grow our understanding and show support for our First Nations Peoples. Below we've listed a variety of actions for moving towards reconciliation.

Support

Visit the Know your Country website to sign a petition calling on federal, state and territory ministers to commit to ongoing funding to employ First Nations Cultural Educators in every primary school across Australia.

Racism. It Stops with Me is a national campaign that provides tools and resources to help people and organisations learn about racism and stand against it. More than 400 organisations – and thousands of people – have pledged their support for the campaign. Visit the website to take a stand against racism.

Learn

Reconciliation Australia aims to provide all Australians with the opportunity to learn about our shared histories, cultures, and achievements and to explore how each of us can contribute to achieving reconciliation in Australia. Visit their website for the latest resources and events supporting reconciliation.

Australians Together aims to bring all Australians together by telling stories to help us recognise where we’ve come from, where we are today and where we go from here. Their website provides an excellent range of resources for schools, workplaces and community groups.

Visit

Visit the Winton Wetlands Lotjpatj Natjan Danak sculpture walk. The walk features works that have been created by 15 Yorta Yorta artists that aim to share stories of First Nations culture.

Experience, understand and connect with local Aboriginal culture through Art by visiting Kaiela Arts, located within the Shepparton Art Museum (SAM). Kaiela Arts is an Aboriginal Community Art Centre and Gallery supporting local Aboriginal Artists. The centre has many artworks in the linear art style, traditional to Kaiela Dungala (Goulburn Murray), Yorta Yorta Country.

The Flats is a significant cultural area located on the floodplain between Shepparton and Mooroopna. Interpretative signage was installed in 2013 to record the history for educational and tourism purposes.

Follow

Shepparton Region Reconciliation Group meets monthly and works closely with community members to organise events such as the Annual Apology Breakfast and Annual Sorry Day Commemoration. SRRG is part of the state-wide network of local Reconciliation groups supported by Reconciliation Victoria.

Rumbalara Football Netball Club (Rumbalara FNC) is an Aboriginal community run sporting club dedicated to strengthening the community and bringing families together through strong, vibrant leadership. It is a place of belonging, a place that people of all ages and backgrounds can call their own.

Shop

Clothing The Gaps is a fresh and dynamic fashion label that celebrates Aboriginal people and culture. It is a Victorian Aboriginal led and controlled, and majority Aboriginal-owned social enterprise, co-founded by Laura Thompson (Gunditjmara) and Sarah Sheridan (non-Indigenous). To tackle the question, 'is it appropriate that I wear that?', Clothing the Gaps labels their clothing with 'Ally Friendly' and 'Mob Only' tags.

Celebrate

NAIDOC stands for National Aborigines and Islanders Day Observance Committee. National NAIDOC Week celebrations are held across Australia in the first week of July each year (Sunday to Sunday), to celebrate and recognise the history, culture and achievements of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples. NAIDOC Week is an opportunity for all Australians to learn about First Nations cultures and histories and participate in celebrations of the oldest, continuous living cultures on earth.

Know

National Reconciliation Week (NRW) is a time for all Australians to learn about our shared histories, cultures, and achievements, and to explore how each of us can contribute to achieving reconciliation in Australia.

The dates for NRW are the same each year; 27 May to 3 June. These dates commemorate two significant milestones in the reconciliation journey— the successful 1967 referendum, and the High Court Mabo decision respectively.

27 May 1967: On this day, Australia’s most successful referendum saw more than 90 per cent of Australians vote to give the Australian Government power to make laws for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people and recognise them in the Census.

3 June 1992: On this day, the Australian High Court delivered the Mabo decision, the culmination of Eddie Koiki Mabo’s challenge to the legal fiction of ‘terra nullius’ (land belonging to no one) and leading to the legal recognition of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples as the Traditional Owners and Custodians of lands. This decision paved the way for Native Title.

Greater Shepparton Lighthouse Project acknowledges and pays respect to the traditional custodians of the Shepparton region on whose lands we are located, the Yorta Yorta peoples and their Elders past, present and emerging. Greater Shepparton Lighthouse Project recognises, respects and supports all community members regardless of race, colour, religion, sex, sexual orientation, gender identity, national origin, ability, or age.

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Contact

Email:  info@gslp.com.au

Office phone: 0419 555 939

Office location: 7715A GV Hwy, Kialla, VIC. 3631

Postal address: PO Box 924, Shepparton VIC 3632