NAIDOC 2021 Poster
Maggie-Jean Douglas, a Gubbi Gubbi artist from South East Queensland, used the 2021 NAIDOC Week theme, Heal Country!, as inspiration for her winning artwork ‘Care for Country’.
Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people are advised that this website may contain images and voices of deceased people.
Maggie-Jean Douglas, a Gubbi Gubbi artist from South East Queensland, used the 2021 NAIDOC Week theme, Heal Country!, as inspiration for her winning artwork ‘Care for Country’.
Make a beautiful set of earrings using a traditional technique.
The Manymak Energy Efficiency Project was successfully trialed throughout six remote communities in East Arnhem Land from 2013 to 2015.
The Maralinga people have lived on their lands for over 60,000 years. Institutionalised in the Ooldea Mission in the 1920s, colonial dispossession of the Maralinga people was further intensified when their lands were used for the British Nuclear Test Program between 1953 and 1963.
March down Beach Road to Family Fun Day, Free BBQ and Aboriginal businesses and market stallholders.
March starting at 10.30am, Soldiers Memorial Garden.
Followed by Welcome to Country and Smoking Ceremony.
Dr Mark McMillan is a Wiradjuri man from Trangie in central west New South Wales.
To mark NAIDOC Week, the Eureka Centre presents ‘Her Name is Nanny Nellie’ - a moving and timely story by Ngarigo and Awabakal film director, Daniel King.
Welcome to NAIDOC.
We acknowledge all First Peoples of the beautiful lands on which we live and celebrate their enduring knowledge and connections to Country. We honour the wisdom of and pay respect to Elders past and present.