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Lake Bolac Eel Festival Forum features in March Festival | The Stawell Times-News

Explore eel migration, environmental history, and First Nations culture at the Lake Bolac Eel Festival Forum featuring Prof. Eleanor Bourke and more.

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Lake Bolac Eel Festival Forum features in March Festival | The Ararat Advertiser

Lake Bolac Eel Festival Forum features in March Festival | The Ararat Advertiser
araratadvertiser.com.au - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from araratadvertiser.com.au Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

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Actor Rob Collins journeys back in time in The First Inventors

Tiwi Islander and in-demand actor, Rob Collins, takes us on a spectacular, and historic, journey of discovery in The First Inventors.

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"Accidental" Destruction of Aboriginal Stone Arrangement in Australia


“Accidental” Destruction of Aboriginal Stone Arrangement in Australia
A private landowner has damaged a 1,500-year-old stone eel arrangement near Lake Bolac, Australia. The Kuyang stone monument was shaped into an eel and created before the Europeans arrived in Australia. Kuyang means eel in South West Aboriginal language. The eel stone arrangement has been on private land and owned by one family for 150 years. The site was protected under the Aboriginal Heritage Act which includes considerable penalties for damage to Aboriginal cultural heritage, but Aboriginal representatives demand the government do more to protect their cultural heritage.
Part of the Kuyang stone arrangement site (Neil Murray)

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Racism test most Aussies would fail


Uncle Johnny and Tyson Lovett-Murray are part of the Deadly & Proud campaign.
News
by Rohan Smith
8th Feb 2021 5:34 PM
An Aboriginal elder from Gunditjmara country in Victoria's southwest says most Australians would fail a simple test that proves they hold racist views.
Uncle Johnny, who is telling the heartbreaking and brutal story of his people's dark past for a new Victorian Government campaign, says Australians have a guilt complex about what white people did to Indigenous Australians.
He says that guilt gets in the way of truth-telling about what really happened. It's why Australian students were never taught about things like the Eumeralla Wars - bloody conflicts between the Gunditjmara people and settlers in the 1830s and 1840s that led to more than 10,000 Aboriginal deaths.

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Victoria's Deadly & Proud campaign remembers Indigenous victims of Warrigal Creek massacre in South Gippsland


Today, few Victorians know about this slaughter of as many as 150 people – a crime for which no one was arrested. There are no plaques at the now peaceful spot on a farm 40 kilometres south of Sale and 200 kilometres east of Melbourne.
But there are more than a dozen monuments in Gippsland to pastoralist Angus McMillan, who is widely believed to have led this and other massacres. Until 2018, a federal electorate was named after him.
Also in the early 1840s, at Tambo Crossing, north-east of Bairnsdale, Mr Thorpe’s great-great-great grandfather, William Thorpe, and another boy survived a massacre of about 70 Gunnai people (committed by perpetrators that Aborigines’ “chief protector” George Augustus Robinson termed “Christians”) by hiding in a log.

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