Stories - Truth Telling in Walyalup
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Truth Telling in Walyalup
Casey Mulder
Casey Mulder shares how many cups of tea and an unusual friendship with an elderly couple in the Kimberley taught her the wisdom of creating safe spaces for Aboriginal stories to be told.
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Truth Telling in Walyalup
Phil O'Donoghue
Phil O’Donoghue shares his story of the failure of the Yes for the Voice referendum campaign and advocates for Australians to embrace uncomfortable conversations, political debate and get involved in grassroots activism.
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Truth Telling in Walyalup
Holly Story
Holly Story migrated to Perth, Australia as a ‘ten-pound pom’. As she began to ask more questions about Aboriginal cultures, she was shocked to discover a systematic, forced erasure of Aboriginal people and a more nuanced, complex picture of our history.
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Truth Telling in Walyalup
Jason Hunter
Jason Hunter shares his journey of learning about the true history of his family: stolen land, people massacred, children stolen, lives controlled.
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Truth Telling in Walyalup
Nandi Chinna
Nandi Chinna had no real understanding of Aboriginal people or our colonial history until she moved to Walyalup/Fremantle as a young woman. This is her journey to finding belonging while acknowledging Aboriginal sovereignty.
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Truth Telling in Walyalup
Brendan Moore
Brendan Moore shares his experience of training for the Rottnest Island Swim with an all-Aboriginal team while reflecting on Wadjemup’s (Rottnest Island) painful history.
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Truth Telling in Walyalup
Abid Imam
Born to Pakistani and Fijian parents, Abid Imam always felt like the odd one out amongst his classmates and friends. He started to use a fake name to introduce himself: ‘Steve’.
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Truth Telling in Walyalup
Trish Ratajczak
Trish Ratajczak was born and raised in Walyalup. She remembers a difficult childhood, with a hungry stomach and chaos that threatened to enter her bedroom. When she went in search of her biological father, she discovered she was Aboriginal. This is her journey of finding her mob.
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Truth Telling in Walyalup
Mariela Espino Zuppa
Mariela shares her journey emigrating to the USA and later, Australia. Her deep desire to find a place she could belong to, where she would finally be accepted, is confronted by Australia’s difficult past.