The Mulka Project is a Yolngu Aboriginal multimedia archive and production centre in Yirrkala, northeast Arnhem Land, Australia. Ever since Yirrkala was founded as a mission station in 1935 on the edge of Yirrkala creek, outsiders have visited and taken film, audio and still images of Yolngu People, and taken these away to museum, academic and personal collections or produced them as documentaries or feature films. Launched on 3 August 2007, the Mulka Project is here in Yirrkala for two reasons; 1) to get back all the film, sound and images we can into a digital library accessible to the community and 2) to train the current generations of Yolngu to be creative and employable multimedia professionals who tell their own stories for themselves.
This page will be good practice for the staff and a good chance to share our work. We're going to put up... whatever we feel like sharing at the moment, new and old.
Miss you Georgie, regret all that shit that happened between us bro hope you can forgive me. I prey to God you'll see this ma brother, if it wasn't for them girls bro we would've been all good, just wishing I could say sorry.
Yolngu people don't have knife before it's all about Macassar. the Macassan give knife to yolngu people to trade and that's how they got the song line made.
Manymak message to all the yolngu people right across the Arnhem land region lets care each other and show respect one another and show good role model to all young kids/ manymak song brother 👊❤️🖤💛
I enjoyed this Elders story about his ancestors.Every Australian needs to learn about The indigenous people and not let the white man way of thinking get in the way.