‘No truth-telling, no healing’, advocates say

A woman holds an Australian Aboriginal Flag

A woman holds an Australian Aboriginal Flag Source: AAP

National Reconciliation Week is celebrated across Australia each year between 27 May and 3 June. This year the focus is on truth telling and what role it can play in reconciliation.


It's a week dedicated to reconciliation between Indigenous and non-Indigenous Australians.

The dates celebrating Reconciliation Week in Australia remain the same every year, that's because two significant milestones occurred in the same week.

The first was on May 27 1967, the date a referendum was held which saw more than 90 per cent of Australians vote to give the federal government power to conduct programs for Indigenous people, and for them to be counted in the census.

While on June 3, 1992 the High Court Mabo decision overthrew the legal fiction of terra nullius, that is, land belonging to no-one, on which British claims to possession of Australia were based.

Along with remembering history, National Reconciliation Week also focuses on a different theme every year.

In 2019 it's truth-telling.


Share
Follow SBS Korean

Download our apps
SBS Audio
SBS On Demand

Listen to our podcasts
Independent news and stories connecting you to life in Australia and Korean-speaking Australians.
Ease into the English language and Australian culture. We make learning English convenient, fun and practical.
Get the latest with our exclusive in-language podcasts on your favourite podcast apps.

Watch on SBS
Korean News

Korean News

Watch it onDemand