The preparation of this document was commissioned by Drama Australia to foster access and participation in learning, taking in the broader context of Indigenous educational perspectives and redefining their relevance in the study of Contemporary Indigenou
Born Kathleen Jean Mary Ruska on 3 November 1920, Kath Walker was a poet, children's author, educator, artist, political activist and member of the Noonuccal people of North Stradbroke Island, Queensland.
From an interview conducted in May 1981 by Bruce Dickson, on the eve of the first public exhibition of her art at the Brisbane Community Arts Centre (now Metro Arts Centre), staged as part of NAIDOC Week.
A video clip from the documentary series and website 'First Australians', produced in 2008 by Blackfella Films for SBS Television. Includes background information, classroom activities and resources.
"This moving portrayal of scenes in the life of Australia's most famous Aboriginal poet consists of a dreamtime-style series of flashbacks to events in her past, centring on a dramatic incident in which Walker was a passenger on a British aeroplane seized by Palestinian hijackers in 1974."
"Visually, Oodgeroo captures the imagination. Placing this vast story under a starry sky, designer Helen Jacobs creates a dreamtime world simply but emotively."
"It is to Sam Watson's credit that he has managed to compress so much into the ninety minutes of this very important piece of theatre."
"Within Aunty Kath's heart, she always saw herself primarily and most importantly as a teacher, an educator."
Video interviews, from the Courier Mail, with actor, Roxane McDonald and playwright, Sam Watson.
AUDIO AND TRANSCRIPT: This Encounter tells the story of the play and Sam Watson's own experience of Aunty Oodgeroo for her time and his own.
Playwright, Sam Watson, talks about the events that inspired his play, when a British aircraft was hijacked in Dubai by Palestinian terrorists in 1974.
In this clip, Oodgeroo Noonuccal reads her poem ‘We Are Going’ in full to an appreciative audience at the Harold Park Hotel in Sydney in 1986. Warning: contains names, images or voices of deceased Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people.
In this three part series, Oodgeroo Noonuccal tells of the inspiration for her poetry, and its role in personal and political resistance to white oppression.
A comprehensive collection of published, archival and digital resources covering the life and work of Oodgeroo Noonuccal.
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