Stories

Celebrating Warrior Women

This piece is a beautiful reflection on the power of Black women and a celebration of that power and its healing capabilities.

Media misses the point of Inquiry into anti‑vilification protections

The response by national mainstream media to a report tabled last week by the Victorian anti vilification protections inquiry, completely missed the point and instead we saw sensational headlines of Nazi Swastika banned or Nazi flags banned.  

Parliament house sexual assaults, Australia you have a problem

Meriki powerfully points to the toxicity and racism that is rife in our power structures and speaks of the necessary change required before women can ever feel safe and calls upon white women for intersectionality.

Painful road to answers for Danny Boy

Danny's staunch family continue to call for answers and justice for Danny Boy, they want to make sure this never happens again. Their strength honours Danny.

Public Statement – First Nations voices restricted by Facebook

First Nations Media Australia calls for the immediate reinstatement of First Nations media organisation Facebook pages blocked overnight in response to the Government’s proposed Mandatory…

Silencing victims compounds the violence of racism

Tony Birch offers us a personal reflection on the violence of racism and how this is compounded through a culture of erasure and silencing.

The labour of death and the radical tradition of burying our own

To remember our people when all this country seems to want us to do is forget is resistance.  This work of grief and remembrance has a radical tradition.

Black Women Confronting Racism and Sexism

In the storm, look to the calm. All of the Black women and men in the AFL industry trying to change things are the true warriors.

When Collingwood Football Club take the High Ground, Literally

The sovereign Black women insists on not forgetting the lies of this place, and in particular the lies of white men. And it is not because her memory is longer, but it is because her body knows too well the violence they have inflicted.

10 things you should know about systemic racism

A brief anti-racism 101 crash course for those throwing rocks at Collingwood from the safety of their glass house.

Stop the empty gestures and start listening to First Nations people. We are the experts

Punitive laws are destroying our children’s futures. Changing a word in the national anthem won’t help.

High Ground highlights the power of storytelling to heal our history

Wiradjuri and Wailwan woman, lawyer and storyteller, Teela Reid, discusses the importance of story telling and honest conversations.

7 more things you should know about Invasion Day

Luke Pearson provides 7 more things you need to know about Invasion Day so that, you know, people can stop undermining our calls for change!

If your child asks why Australia is celebrating a day of invasion, what will you tell them?

Children ask vital questions of the world which expose accepted ‘truths’. On 26 January, we contrast Australian displays of amnesia with Aboriginal truth-telling

What’s pride in a country without pride in ourselves?

Taryn discussed the necessity of contending with the truth, in all its brutality, to be in a position to reckon with who we are as a nation, as peoples and whether we can truly come together in meaningful co-existence.

Strategies for caring for our community during Invasion season

Dominic calls for the care of mob on the frontlines of organising and protests to receive priority care from Aboriginal health organisations, particularly during the heightened period of January where the amplified racism takes a serious toll.

Honouring the resistance of Black families and speaking truth to children

Renowned and award winning journalist, Amy McQuire, has authored a children's book that speaks truth to children while honouring the Black resistance that starts within our families.

The Vigil – the night before … January 25th

Reflections of the night before, what is known as the last day of freedom to many in the movement of resistance, give us a tapestry of what was and what was irreparably disturbed.

An IndigenousX Anthology – Reconcile This

A collection of reflections on perspective, resistance, advocacy, work and life written by a diverse range of past IndigenousX hosts.

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An IndigenousX Anthology - Reconcile This

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