Goulburn Mulwaree Truth Telling and Reconciliation Group

Goulburn Mulwaree Truth Telling and Reconciliation Group We are a local reconciliation group supporting truth-telling, equity, healing and Caring for Country. We are based in Goulburn NSW on Gundungurra Country.

We live together on the Mulwaree and Wollondilly Rivers. Let’s walk together for reconciliation.

14/10/2024

A year ago the Australian electorate rejected an opportunity to advance reconciliation and reset relationships between the Australian state and First Nations peoples.

Despite the efforts of the largest volunteer army ever assembled in Australia, on 14 October 2023 the Voice to Parliament referendum failed, causing disappointment and hurt in the hearts of First Nations people and their allies across the continent.

Throughout the campaign, Reconciliation Australia consistently reminded supporters that regardless of the result, our work towards reconciliation and justice would continue.

After all, First Nations people having a say in their own affairs has been central to reconciliation since the beginning of the formal reconciliation process more than 30 years ago.

The referendum result shone a very bright light on the harsh truth that Australia has a long way to go on its reconciliation journey. This was starkly illustrated in the ignorance and racism that characterised a large amount of the public discourse during that time.



But it is also true that, despite a huge misinformation campaign, six million Australians voted ‘Yes’.

60,000 people volunteered their time and support to the campaign and many First Nations communities voted in favour of the Voice to Parliament.

Unprecedented numbers of organisations, schools, community groups and sports teams also pledged their support.

Support for First Nations justice and self-determination continues after the referendum. In May 2024 international polling company Ipsos found that 78% of Australians still believe First Nations people should have a say in the laws and political decisions that affect them.

We are encouraged by increasing participation in our Reconciliation Action Plan (RAP) and Narragunnawali: Reconciliation in Education programs. There are currently over 3,300 active RAP partners, and over 2,000 schools and early learning services have joined us in actively promoting reconciliation in education.

We are encouraged by the way Australians embraced the 2024 National Reconciliation Week theme, Now More Than Ever, stressing the vital importance of staying engaged, connected, and committed to reconciliation; and by the more than 500 choirs across Australia who joined us in singing the Warumpi Band classic Blackfella/Whitefella.

We are heartened by the innovation, ingenuity and sheer determination of the applicants to our Indigenous Governance Awards 2024; organisations who exercise their self-determination to successfully build better lives for their families and communities.

Like these groundbreaking organisations our work did not stop after the referendum; like them we have been getting on with the job.

Rather than slowing the historical trend towards reconciliation the referendum defeat demanded that those who advocate for reconciliation and First Nations self-determination must work harder for justice, anti-racism and truth-telling.

We acknowledge our collective power to support, engage and invest in Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander voices and continue to centre First Nations aspirations and self-determination.

We will remain active in supporting and promoting truth-telling to ensure Australians understand and accept the wrongs of the past and the impact on Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples, and that Australia makes amends for past policies and practices and ensures these wrongs are never repeated.

In short, the referendum loss has not discouraged us but strengthened our will to work harder and better for a just, equitable, and reconciled nation now and for future generations.

To do less would be to dishonour the ancestors of First Nations people and non-Indigenous allies who with enormous courage started and led our struggle for reconciliation and justice over decades.

📌Reconciliation Australia statement: https://bit.ly/404j061

14/10/2024
13/10/2024

One Year, Still YES ❤️💛🖤

13/10/2024
09/10/2024

Almost one year on from the Voice referendum, several books have been released that investigate and dissect what happened in both the lead up and aftermath.

If you are looking for a way to help make sense of the result and the important reconciliation work that has and will continue regardless of the result, check out one of the following books:

📕 Always was, Always Will be: The campaign for justice and recognition continues by Thomas Mayo
📌 https://bit.ly/3U4Abkm

📕 Reflections on the Voice: During and After the Campaign by Andrew Gunstone
📌 https://bit.ly/3U54OpB

📕 Broken Heart: A True History of the Voice Referendum by Shireen Morris
📌 https://bit.ly/3zQcaXf

Images via: Hardie Grant Books, Australian Scholarly Publishing, Black Inc.

09/10/2024

Stay with us as we continue to share our thoughts, feelings, stories, and the strength we've held onto through this past year. 🖤💛❤️

To all the awesome Goulburn for Yes23 volunteers, supporters and friends. Please join us to reconnect for a special get ...
02/10/2024

To all the awesome Goulburn for Yes23 volunteers, supporters and friends. Please join us to reconnect for a special get together on the 1-year anniversary of the Yes23 campaign.

Saturday 12 October 2024 on Gundungurra Country, Belmore Park Goulburn NSW 2580, 11.30 am to 1.30 pm

26/09/2024

On October 14, 2023 we discovered 6.2 million friends we didn’t know we had. We want to keep yarning with you all about Constitutional Recognition and staying true to Uluru.

We’d love to be able to do that directly, without always relying on paid or social media. So if you haven’t done so already, please go to: https://ulurustatement.org/newsletter-sign-up/ and sign up for our email updates.

Amongst other things, we seem to have accidentally started a bit of a Book Club and we’re not mad about it 🧡

19/09/2024

Don't miss your chance to help inform the First Nations agenda.

📣The closing date for written submissions has been extended to 30 September.

Surveys close 23 September 2024. Face-to-face and online consultations coming soon.

Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Social Justice Commissioner Katie Kiss is wanting to hear from First Nations people across the country to help inform her agenda for the next five years.

To make a submission: https://loom.ly/Va1CTKM
To complete the survey: https://loom.ly/OhxFLw4

Queensland's (QLD) Truth-Telling and Healing Inquiry will continue public hearings in Brisbane this week, then travel to...
19/09/2024

Queensland's (QLD) Truth-Telling and Healing Inquiry will continue public hearings in Brisbane this week, then travel to other parts of QLD.

The inquiry aims to examine the impact of colonisation on Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people and will make findings, recommendations and provide advice to the QLD government.

The public hearings are part of the QLD government's Path to Treaty Act and is the first of its kind in QLD, co-designed between the Interim Truth and Treaty Body and the QLD Government. This Act, among other things, provides the legal framework to commence truth-telling and healing in QLD. You can find out more here: https://www.qld.gov.au/firstnations/treaty/truth-telling-healing/about-the-inquiry

Witnesses have given evidence to the Truth-Telling and Healing Inquiry about growing up in Cherbourg, a government-run Aboriginal mission that still evokes traumatic memories for many First Nations survivors.

13/09/2024

13 September is the anniversary of the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples (UNDRIP).

The Declaration is the most comprehensive international instrument on the rights of Indigenous peoples. It establishes a universal framework of minimum standards for the survival, dignity and well-being of the Indigenous peoples of the world.

It elaborates on existing human rights standards and fundamental freedoms as they apply to the specific situation of Indigenous peoples including colonisation, dispossession and denial of cultural practices.

Indigenous peoples around the world, including Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples, were involved in its drafting.

In 2007, a majority of 143 states voted in favour with 4 votes against (Australia, Canada, New Zealand and the United States) and 11 abstentions. Australia later endorsed UNDRIP in 2009 but there has been no implementation of Declaration principles in Australian law or policies.

First Nations people in Australia are more likely to die younger than non-Indigenous Australians, face systemic racism and a higher rate of incarceration, and right now First Nations children are 10.5 times more likely be in out-of-home care than non-Indigenous children.

Australia must take steps to finally implement UNDRIP into domestic law and policy making to strengthen and protect the human rights of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples.

Read more via ANTAR: https://antar.org.au/issues/undrip/australia/

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Goulburn, NSW

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