Belgrave Survival Day

A concert to celebrate survival of indigenous culture locally and nationally

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“Memories – contact with white people” exhibition, talks, films and workshops at Burrinja in Upwey

April 25th, 2012 · Uncategorized

Just letting all our Belgrave Survival Day supporters know about some fantastic upcoming local indigenous events. Coinciding with National Reconciliation Week, Burrinja Cultural Centre is hosting a fascinating collection of art, films, speakers and workshops. All the details can be found at Whats On at Burrinja. Burrinja is located at Cnr Glenfern Rd and Matson Dr in Upwey.

Memories – Contact with White People Exhibition

4 May – 24 June


Based on Patsy Lulpanda’s canvas painting with the same title comes an exhibition of artworks from the Burrinja Collection that explores the theme of contact with white colonisers from the Aboriginal perspective. Depictions of policemen, cattle, prison trees, massacre sites and nuclear test sites tell stories of dispossession, disempowerment and destruction, and yet their telling provides future hope. Entry Free.

Friday 1 June

Indigenous Film Night

Session 1 @ 7pm
Too Many Captain Cooks (1989), Documentary, 18mins
This film seeks to replace the stereotypes promoted by the non-Aboriginal history of white settlement in Australia.
Beneath Clouds (2001), 94 mins
Drama about Lena, the light-skinned daughter of an Aboriginal mother and Irish father and Vaughn, a Murri boy doing time in a minimum security prison in North West NSW.

Session 2 @ 9.30pm
Babakiueria (1986), 30mins
A comic but powerful satire that reverses roles, imagining what it would be like if a black first fleet had arrived in Australia in 1788 to settle an area inhabited by white natives.
Rabbit-Proof Fence (2001), 94 mins
Dramatic feature based on the ‘stolen generation’ theme about three young indigenous girls who are snatched from their mothers’ arms and placed in a settlement 1,500 miles away. They escape and use the rabbit-proof fence to guide their way home, as they are chased by white authorities and a black tracker.
Entry Free

Saturday 2nd June

Toy-Making for Children

11am and 2pm

Kids will combine soft grasses with colourful wool to create their own beautiful animals.
This is a 2-hour workshop by Adrienne Kneeborne, and parents are welcome to stay.
Places are limited so please book online or call 9754 8723. Cost $5

In Words: Eileen Harrison and Carolyn Landon

2.30pm

Aunty Eileen describes herself as a survivor of a failed political push to assimilate Victorian aborigines into the wider community by forcing them off the mission at Lake Tyers, and she talks about her life from a cultural, personal, emotional and political perspective.
This talk is free and will go for approx. 1 hour. Places are limited so please book online or call 9754 8723.

Sunday 3rd June.

In Conversation: Bruce Pascoe and Bill Gammage

Sunday 3 June – 2.30pm

Gippsland resident and author of Convincing Ground, Bruce Pascoe will present his recent book Dark Emu, an examination of the Aboriginal economy as seen by the “Explorers”. Bruce Pascoe will be in conversation with Bill Gammage, who recently published The Biggest Estate on Earth – How Aborigines made Australia, a book that examines land-management strategies used by Aboriginal people around the country prior to colonialisation.
Cost $10/Members Free. This talk will go for approx. 90 minutes. Places are limited so please book online or call 9754 8723.

Basket Weaving for Adults

11am to 4pm

Using coil stitch, thread and locally collected native grasses participants will create one gorgeous basket to take home. Materials provided. Adrienne Kneeborne is an artist from Tennant Creek, NT, living and working in Warburton.
Cost $35/$25 members. Places are limited so please book online or call 9754 8723.

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Great video on Belgrave Survival Day 2012 by Fair Projects

January 30th, 2012 · Uncategorized

A very big thankyou to Fair projects for making this fantastic video that really captures the spirit of Belgrave Survival Day so well. You can find Fair Projects on Facebook.

Fair Projects’ vision is to provide not-for-profit organisations with professional quality services and products in media, marketing, fundraising and communications. Our affordable solutions are designed specifically for not-for-profit groups, enabling them to access expert knowledge and experience in order to extend their causes

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Photos from Belgrave Survival Day 2012

January 30th, 2012 · Uncategorized

Thanks to all who came to this years event and helped make the 2012 Survival Day such a successful day. Our numbers were up significantly on last year, the bands and dancers were “deadly”, the speakers informative and the vibe seemed really good. The day could not have happened without the help of all the volunteers and stall holders or without the generous funding form the Yarra Ranges Council. Below is some great photos of the day taken by Chris Rickard and Tim from Fair Projects. More can be found on our Facebook page. Note photos are copyrighted


To give you a taste of the music on the day – listen to this clip of the Yung Warriors performing

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Belgrave Survival Day honours the 40th anniversary of the Aboriginal Tent Embassy 1972 – 2012

January 11th, 2012 · Uncategorized

In solidarity with the Aboriginal Tent Embassy commemoration in Canberra, we acknowledge and honour the ongoing struggle for genuine indigenous land rights, and the aspiration to once again feel empowered as sovereign peoples within this ancient land.

As Indigenous writer Djarro Lambadgee wrote:

Country is Sovereign Space and Sovereign Space is Country

The Land is Kamerra and Kamerra is The Land

Kamerra is Red Mother Earth and Red Mother Earth is Kamerra              

                               (excerpt from The Kamerra Identity)

Come and join us for the fifth annual Belgrave Survival Day event, which celebrates the survival of the oldest living culture on the globe through live music, storytelling, traditional dance and craft.

The indigenous line up for the 2012 event is:

* Emerging hip hop act, Yung Warriors, comprising Tjimba Possum Burns &  Danny Ramzan (D Boy).   Very talented and both in their 20′s,  they have recently been touring the nation with Coloured Stone and were the live acts at the 2011 ‘Dreamtime at the G’ AFL match between Richmond and Essendon.  A second album, Standing Strong,  is due out shortly.

Lou Bennett – formerly a member of the band, Tiddas, she has been an integral member of the Black Arm Band as well as  venturing into live theatre, a solo musical career and academia.

* Noted historian and academic, Dr. Gary Presland, who has written signficant works on Koori (and natural) life both pre- and post-colonisation.

* Rodney Augustine (Save the Kimberley) will speak about the imminent threats to his beloved lands/seas of the Kimberley.

* Jindi Worobak Dance Group- younger members of the Wurundjeri council peforming traditional dance.

* Gnarnayarrahe Waitairie – he hails from Roeburne in Western Australia and embraces both traditional and modern artistic mediums.  Affectionately known as ‘Little Joey’,  Gnarnayarrahe has appeared in film and stage.   A man of many talents,  he is as competent with guitar as didgeridoo,  traditional dance to Elvis impersonator.

* Our MC for the day is Leila Gurruwiwi from the Marngrook Footy Show (ABC TV).   A well entrenched member of the alternate Footy Show, she recently has turned her attention to co-producing a new ABC TV series shot in the Northern Territory.  Leila is around the same age as the Yung Warriors and they represent a new wave of emerging indigenous performers for whom the sky is the limit.

Wurundjeri elder, Uncle Bill Nicholson, will perform Welcome to Country and smoking ceremonies.  Aunty Dot Peters will also speak on the day. There will also be a range of indigenous craft stalls and a bush tucker BBQ.   The event is FREE and all welcome.

For further information or comment, contact us via email at survivalday@gmail.com

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Belgrave Survival Day Film Showing “Murundak – songs of freedom”

November 29th, 2011 · Uncategorized

 

Belgrave Survival Day proudly presents a showing of “murundak –songs of Freedom” on Tuesday December 13th at Burrinja Cultural Center in Upwey at  6.30 PM. Light refreshments and non-alcoholic drinks will be available. murundak – songs of freedom’ journeys into the heart of Aboriginal protest music following The Black Arm Band, a gathering of some of Australia’s finest Indigenous musicians, as they take to the road with their songs of resistance and freedom. All profits. will go towards the staging of the 2012 Belgrave Survival Day event.  Phone 0488 619 444 for bookings.

More on Murundak
From the concert halls of the Sydney Opera House to remote Aboriginal communities of the Northern Territory, ‘murundak‘ – meaning ‘alive’ in Woirurrung language – brings together pioneering singers including Archie Roach, Bart Willoughby and the late Ruby Hunter, and a stellar lineup of emerging Indigenous talent including Dan Sultan, Shellie Morris and Emma Donovan.

Filmed against the backdrop of Australia’s changing political landscape, ‘murundak‘ charts one of the most significant events in Australian music history as The Black Arm Band sing up the country’s troubled past through their stories of sorrow, anger and hope.

http://www.murundakdocumentary.com/

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2012 Lineup announced!

November 7th, 2011 · Uncategorized

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2012 event funding secured from Yarra Ranges Council!

August 19th, 2011 · Uncategorized

The Belgrave Survival Day committee is thrilled to announce that we have again secured $10,000 in funding from the Yarra Ranges Council as part of their Festival Grants program for the 2012 Survival Day. Rest assured we are currently meeting to organise yet another great Survival Day event. So put January 26th 2012 in your calendar and come along to Belgrave to again celebrate Indigenous culture and survival and to acknowledge that Australia does indeed have a black history.

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Black Beats inspire Belgrave: a report from Survival Day

January 28th, 2011 · Uncategorized

Below is Kristy Henderson’s account of Survival Day

Belgrave’s annual Survival Day expressed a vision to which all could feel part. Healesville’s Indigenous elder Aunty Dot urged the crowd to care for each other, especially children, in order to create a future based on respect, whilst Richard Frankland and The Charcoal Band revved up the audience with the call for a celebration of dissenters – to those who have stood up for Indigenous rights and justice across the ages.

Surrounded by the aged cypress trees of Borthwick Park in Belgrave about 500 people gathered to hear Indigenous performers such as Jessie Lloyd who, following the welcome to country ceremony, filled the valleys and slopes of Belgrave with her beautifully proud voice – a voice that told me, as I arrived, that I was in the right place. Leila Gurruwiwi, a talented young presenter, charmed the crowd as MC, whilst Black Elvis, the Jindi Worobak dance group and Gnarnayarrahe Waitarire entertained, sharing and celebrating their culture with the audience.

Throughout the day adults enjoyed the music and relaxed on the lawns in the unusually cool, but not cold, weather (past Survival Days have been both hot and sunny), whilst children ran hither and dither with homemade Aboriginal flags; their faces painted with Aboriginal designs. After four years running Belgrave’s Survival Day has become the official event for January 26th in the region, with many Indigenous peoples from Healesville and beyond attending.

The Survival Day Committee this year honoured Yorta Yorta man William Cooper who, among other inspiring accomplishments, lead a private protest at the German Consulate in Melbourne against the Nazi’s following the barbarism of Kristallnacht in 1938, in which 91 Jews were killed and a further 30,000 rounded up and sent to concentration camps.

Each January Australia is faced with the opportunity to define itself in the wake of its history, in the same way that Germany was forced to after the Second World War. For Indigenous Australians January 26th is both a day of mourning (Invasion day) and a day of celebration (Survival day). It is a day to celebrate Indigenous culture and the strength of those who have withstood and survived the genocide, and a day for all to reflect on the legacies of colonialism and the lessons that we have learnt as a result.

Unfortunately, Australia still has a long way to go in acknowledging its racist history and in delivering justice to Indigenous people. The life expectancy of Indigenous people is still way below the national average, whilst politically Indigenous people remain under represented with political leaders rarely acknowledging the need for a treaty and reparations. This political situation is what upholds policies like the Northern Territory Intervention, to which many Indigenous community leaders vigorously dissent.

As Aunty Dot reflected, the virtues of respect, care and compassion should be central to our communities in order to ensure a just, equal and peaceful future for all. Belgrave’s Survival Day captured these sentiments and maybe 2011 will be a year in which they are acted upon.

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Aunty Dot put out the call for help maintaining the cemetery in Healesville where her elders are buried. A lawn mower is required. If you can help, contact the survival day committee for her contact details at survivalday@gmail.com.

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Images from Belgrave Survival Day 2011

January 27th, 2011 · Uncategorized

Belgrave Survival Day 2011 was another great day of celebrating, learning and the sharing of indigenous culture which has survived over 230 years of colonisation. All the performers shone (even if the sun did not) including a powerful set from Jessie Lloyd early in the day, some serious moves from Black Elvis and an electric performance from the Charcoal Club that brought much of the audience to their feet. The audience were also privileged to share some traditional Aboriginal culture including some story telling from Gnarnayarrahe Waitairie and dancing from the Jindi Worobak Dance Group led by Bill Nicholson Wurundjeri Elder who also led the crowd in a welcoming smoking ceremony. Healesville’s Indigenous elder Aunty Dot urged the crowd to care for each other, especially children, in order to create a future based on respect, whilst Richard Frankland revved up the audience with the call for a celebration of dissenters – to those who have stood up for Indigenous rights and justice across the age. MC Leila Gurruwiwi from the Marngrook Footy Show also did a great job as the MC of the event. Thanks to all the volunteers, acts, organisations and the audience for helping to make this year another successful day. In particular thanks goes to the Shire of Yarra Ranges and Councillor Samantha Dunn for funding the day. Here are some images from the day

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Live broadcast of event on 3CR

January 21st, 2011 · Uncategorized

Can’t physically be there for Belgrave Survival Day 2011? Not to worry, the event will be broadcast live from 12 noon to 2pm on radio 3CR 855 AM or streaming live from anywhere in the world at www.3cr.org.au

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