Jessica Smith
Queensland Aboriginal woman Jessica Smith is an Indigenous Support Officer at Lourdes Hill College, where she ensures Indigenous girls are supported in their education, home lives and culture.
Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people are advised that this website may contain images and voices of deceased people.
Queensland Aboriginal woman Jessica Smith is an Indigenous Support Officer at Lourdes Hill College, where she ensures Indigenous girls are supported in their education, home lives and culture.
Rachel Perkins is a proud Arrente and Kalkadoon woman, with German and Irish heritage and is one of Australia’s most significant storytellers.
Rachel Perkins is a proud Arrente and Kalkadoon woman, with German and Irish heritage and is one of Australia’s most significant storytellers. She is a writer, director and producer of award-winning television drama, documentaries and feature films, such as; The Australian Wars series, Total Control, Bran Nue Dae, Radiance, Redfern Now, Mabo, Mystery Road, and First Australians. Through her career spanning over 30 years in film and media, Rachel has become an educator, leader, and mentor, inspiring the next generations of First Nations storytellers.
In much of her screen work, Rachel shares our nation’s true shared history through the voices, eyes and stories of our peoples. In 1992, Rachel founded Blackfella Films. A standout achievement for the company was the award-winning 7 part documentary series First Australians. The landmark multi-platform history series, broadcast on SBS Television to over 2.3 million viewers, was accompanied by an internationally acclaimed interactive website. First Australians was awarded Australia’s top honours for documentary including the Australian Film Institute (AFI) and IF Awards, the UN Media Peace Prize, TV Week Logie and Australian Writers and Directors Guild Awards. First Australians has sold throughout the world, and is the highest selling educational title in Australia.
Rachel has contributed to the film and television industry on most of its major boards including the Australian Film, Television and Radio School, the Australian Film Commission, Screen Australia, NITV, Indigenous Screen Australia, the National Indigenous Media Association of Australia and the NSW Film and Television Office. Rachel received the inaugural Contribution to Television IF Award, the Byron Kennedy AFI Award in 2002 and the Australian International Documentary Conference Award in 2011.
Through her on screen storytelling, Rachel takes us on an essential learning journey of shared histories that we were denied in the classroom. Through truth-telling, we are given the opportunity to acknowledge and grieve for countless crimes committed in the name of colonisation and assimilation.
In 2017 Rachel was one of six 'Inspirational Australian Women' to secure funding from Newman's Own Foundation in honour of Paul Newman’s belief that every individual has the power to make a difference. Rachel has always believed in the power of the language of her forbears, and used this funding to enable Dr Veronica Perrurle Dobson AM to update and reprint the 1994 Eastern and Central Arrernte Dictionary. This dictionary is a Keeping Place of Rachel's paternal Arrernte language, identity and cultural knowledge. Every word is contextualised into a sentence to preserve grammar with vocabulary.
Rachel's body of work and achievements include:
Rachel is a media trailblazer for our Mob, and has dedicated both her life and career to truth-telling, ensuring our peoples stories, voices, and histories are heard and seen on screen.
Video created by Blacklock Media.
"The Rainbow Serpent came out of the Dreamtime to create this land. It is represented by the snake and it forms the shape of Australia, which symbolises how it created our lands.
Raise the flag at Griffith City Council Chambers with an Indigenous elder. Listen to this year's messaged delivered to the Community. The ceremony will include a Didge performance and cultural dance. Morning tea will follow.
Rayleen Brown’s story is a story of humble beginnings, hard work and passion.
REACH for Training have partnered with guests speakers to celebrate NAIDOC week. This event includes dancing, smoking ceremony, stories from elders and finishing with a free BBQ. Please join us in celebrating NAIDOC Week!
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.