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Women have always had an important place in Indigenous Australian society — as child rearers, educators, food collectors, artists, storytellers, healers and decision-making Elders.
Yinalung yenu: women’s journey takes you into the world of Indigenous Australian women, focusing on the areas where women are more influential than men: creating and nurturing, teaching and community, family and health, lore and law, and food gathering and preparation.
Six prominent Koori* women share their stories, revealing how Indigenous traditions are finding new forms of expression today.
*Koori refers to Indigneous people from south-east Australia. It means ‘person’ in many of the local languages.
Why ‘yinalung yenu’?
The words yinalung yenu mean ‘women’s journey’ in the language of the Eora, the first people of the Sydney region.
Much of our knowledge of the Eora language comes from the notebooks of William Dawes, Australia’s first astronomer, who was actually taught much of what he knew by an Indigenous woman. Her name was Patyegarang and she often admonished Dawes for his bad pronunciation and praised him when he got it right.
Talks After Noon
Sunday 13 July, 2pm
Born Black
Zona Smith Wilkinson, Curator Indigenous Art, Penrith Regional Gallery