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Deliver an Acknowledgement of Country that really means something | Shelley Reys | TEDxSydney 

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For 70,000+ years, First Nations Australians have been caring for the lands and waters on which we live and rely. The popular practice of offering an Acknowledgement of Country was conceived to enable non-Indigenous Australians to observe this role and the special place that First Nations peoples hold in the life of the nation. But over the last two decades this script has become rote, and seen as something that we 'have to say' before we get to the 'real' reason we are here.
In this powerful talk, Shelley Reys AO explains how to simply and meaningfully give your own Acknowledgement of Country and ensure this important cultural practice continues to be a powerful moment to honour and connect with First Nations culture and country Shelley Reys AO is a Djiribul woman of far north Queensland, Australia, and a respected Indigenous specialist, strategist and service provider. Shelley has been a leader in the reconciliation space for 30 years and as CEO of Arrilla Indigenous Consulting, has been helping the Australian workforce to work in the Indigenous space with greater skill and confidence. This talk was given at a TEDx event using the TED conference format but independently organized by a local community. Learn more at www.ted.com/tedx

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6 авг 2024

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Комментарии : 53   
@StephanusCecilBarnard
@StephanusCecilBarnard 2 месяца назад
"When it is personal, it is meaningful" - beautifully said. Thank you
@booksalive8521
@booksalive8521 Год назад
Thank you Shelley for giving me clarity and helping me to understand my mixed reactions to the delivery of Acknowledgement to Country. I intend to pass the link to your TEDx Talk onto friends and colleagues. I too will make my delivery my own, personal and meaningful.
@darylgilchrist9612
@darylgilchrist9612 2 года назад
Thank you Shelley for helping make the acknowledgement a more meaningful sentiment. I found your delivery beautiful, really friendly, and believe I have a new confidence. I particularly liked the permission to link ourselves (and our children) in a respectful way to the story of time.
@juanitabaly2318
@juanitabaly2318 2 года назад
I absolutely loved this meaningful acknowledgment this has taught me to be confident to make acknowledgment to country my own …personal. Thank you I showed my 6 year old daughter this video too.
@tonymacdonald4131
@tonymacdonald4131 2 года назад
Kia ora Shelley, thank you so much for teaching me how to acknowledge the traditional owners of these lands we now call Sydney in a meaningful and purposeful way. I learnt so much watching this video. Nga mihi. Thank you. I’ve never seen anything like this Welcome to Country and it is very special and motivating.
@ms.hjohnson6820
@ms.hjohnson6820 Год назад
Needed that. How beautiful. I’m hosting a fundraising event today and I’m now more relaxed about the acknowledgment and thanks because it’ll come from my heart.
@LifeintheBush
@LifeintheBush 2 года назад
Fantastic Shelley, thank you for making this video and sharing. I acknowledge the traditional custodians of the land where I film my RU-vid videos and do my best to make it heart felt and respectful, but I think I will make it more personal now.
@taniamatthews9063
@taniamatthews9063 2 года назад
Thank you Shelley, genuine, patient, educational.
@robvilensky9166
@robvilensky9166 2 года назад
Nice one Shelley, making things easier and more meaningful at the same time
@RemotePossibilities1
@RemotePossibilities1 2 года назад
Loved this, and how appropriate for Australia Day! Also found the map at 3:01 (and the comment about there being many more communities than shown on it) very educational. Great visuals, and comparison with Europe. Nice job!
@erinnagel3412
@erinnagel3412 2 года назад
Love this! So educational and very inspiring. Thank you!
@considerthis6889
@considerthis6889 Месяц назад
We should not feel ashamed for living in Australia. As Australian's this is our country and our ancestors have worked hard to create a place that is one of the best places in the world. I'm proud to be Australian.
@stuartandsuemillgate5758
@stuartandsuemillgate5758 2 года назад
This was really informative and helpful - thank you!
@kirstenrichardson2993
@kirstenrichardson2993 11 месяцев назад
Thank you Shelley, food for thought! :)
@lanibauer498
@lanibauer498 2 года назад
I have watched this 5 times over. You are so inspiring. I am working on an Innovate RAP and I will be sharing your video with the team, and wider. Can I please ask, as I get asked this alot, if there are monthly meetings held virtually across the state, how can those Executives stop sounding boring in their Acknowledgement as the same one is spoken every month.
@James-kv6kb
@James-kv6kb Год назад
Did you know that the welcome to country speech was invented by Ernie dingo the traditional ceremony was about wiping armpit sweat on each other
@n0mes333
@n0mes333 2 месяца назад
straight up!
@pauljohns8215
@pauljohns8215 Год назад
Fantastic topic I live in Newcastle
@corporateculcha5230
@corporateculcha5230 2 года назад
As a Cultural Capability facilitator my self, i have been sharing this video to my clients lately, particularly for its practical, respectful and thoughful application. It builds context, therefore building confidence and capailities for those who are entrusted or sometimes thrusted with the duty. Thanks Shelley !
@James-kv6kb
@James-kv6kb Год назад
Are you aware that any dingo invented the welcome to country speech in the 70s the traditional ceremony was simply wiping armpit sweat on each other I wonder if you're aware of that
@majorlaff8682
@majorlaff8682 10 месяцев назад
'capailities'?
@Andrea-kg1hl
@Andrea-kg1hl 5 месяцев назад
Really apprecaite this. I am writing my first land acknowedgement and a very good friend told me to get out of my head, and write from my heart. This Ted Talk just solidified this advise and I really appreciate it.
@redsword1659
@redsword1659 Год назад
There are no eggshells if you have a mind. Yindyamarra.
@Kenny-md2zf
@Kenny-md2zf 10 дней назад
When we acknowledge the past, how far do we have to go back tho? Also what if the people of the past hated and killed each other for the land, do we acknowledge the victims or the victor tribes? Also if the tribe was an oppressor in the past, do we condemn or acknowledge and condemn them?
@jamo5468
@jamo5468 Год назад
My great great great grandfather arrived in Australia in 1805 so to the majority of Australians “welcome to my country’
@echelon2k8
@echelon2k8 Год назад
Surprise! The majority of Australians don't need to be welcomed to your country as it's their country as well.
@downandout992
@downandout992 9 месяцев назад
@@echelon2k8 That is his point.
@samoak123
@samoak123 8 месяцев назад
welcome to my country, only landlords have a right to say this. People who rent have no country.
@DiamondTaimana
@DiamondTaimana 4 месяца назад
Its in English for one the very colonising language that was beaten into indigenous People.
@Bootlosophy
@Bootlosophy 2 года назад
Im not Indigenous. In my RU-vid channel I introduce my videos with an acknowledgment of country as a sign of respect and reconciliation. I’ve received negative comments, not on the content, but on the fact I recognise the Traditional Custodians of the land I work on! Sad and infuriating at the same time.
@Derek-ds6sh
@Derek-ds6sh 28 дней назад
Very poor explanation of Welcome to Country supposedly from a person that delivers cultural competency training to big corporates.
@thommo6331
@thommo6331 6 месяцев назад
Sorry I disagree. I’m fine with a welcome to country when appropriate (opening a new facility etc) but acknowledgements are a waste of time and disingenuous. Having to sit thru 114 acknowledgements in 2 days at a conference was the straw that broke the camels back. It is my country just as much as any one else’s. If not where is my country and who acknowledges my ancestors existence?
@sirloin869
@sirloin869 5 месяцев назад
nope...
@Ozymandias83
@Ozymandias83 11 месяцев назад
You can force me to say it but you can't force me to mean it.
@samoak123
@samoak123 8 месяцев назад
who's forcing you to say it?
@retyroni
@retyroni Год назад
So we're up to 70,000 years now. That figure just keeps growing, like a fisherman's story. Good thing it doesn't actually mean anything, otherwise someone might ask you to prove it.
@pgn1993
@pgn1993 8 месяцев назад
You’re missing the point.
@downandout992
@downandout992 9 месяцев назад
Hopefully this will disappear into the Dustbin of History where it belongs.
@gabrielzachary9704
@gabrielzachary9704 Год назад
Just like money has no owners, either does land. There is only the conquerors and the conquered.
@nexgen1701
@nexgen1701 5 месяцев назад
1984…comply
@JustinJ73
@JustinJ73 Год назад
Saying acknowledgement means we agree that being citizen of this country we are still foreigner..
@halleys.comett
@halleys.comett 5 месяцев назад
Literally how
@nigelpar
@nigelpar 2 года назад
Why acknowledge country anyway? We all live here. No one thanked me for paying my taxes for the past 30 years.
@timtambishop
@timtambishop Год назад
Cos the land was stolen from Aboriginal people over 200 years ago
@JacintaShipley
@JacintaShipley Год назад
Because it always was and always will be Aboriginal land 😊
@JustinJ73
@JustinJ73 Год назад
Now you'll have to pay your rent for Aboriginal land..
@pgn1993
@pgn1993 8 месяцев назад
Educate yourself on the matter and you might change your mind. I hope.
@majorlaff8682
@majorlaff8682 10 месяцев назад
Here it is: Welcome to my country. I'd like to acknowledge the early pioneers who came to this country over two hundred years ago and developed an almost uninhabitable land by establishing farms, roads, schools, hospitals, towns and cities, railways, ports and harbours, universities, health clinics, telecommunications, factories and industries, warm (or cool) comfortable homes, shopping centres, a reliable abundant food supply, libraries, clean water, electricity and gas, airlines, the mining industry ... the list goes on. Welcome to my country. The copyright of the above 'Welcome ...' belongs to me. Certain members of the community will allowed to use it at a fee of $5,000. White-fellas may use it for free.
@KillaWizardry
@KillaWizardry 3 месяца назад
I didn't do that!! Not my fault. Nobody said it was you. But that 40 000 acres was never yours. Read a book and leave the pub.
@Conici_AU
@Conici_AU 6 месяцев назад
I acknowledge the elders by voting no
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