
COMMENT | 23 years after the first Sorry Day, I can’t help but wonder if much has changed since the days when Aboriginal families such as mine had our children forcibly removed, says Nellie Green.
Both present opportunities to reflect on and acknowledge the generations of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Peoples that have been affected by past government policies.
Learn how to apologise in informal and formal settings. Plus find out how various cultures view the act of apologising.
OPINION: On this National Day of Healing, let’s recognise that starting point of 'sorry'. Empathy is a virtue vital for Australians to reach reconciliation, writes Luke Briscoe.
When a writer’s world is turned upside down by her husband’s death, she must rediscover who she is without him, but grief stands in her way.
Celebrated director Ken Loach turns his attention to the modern workforce, in a compassionate drama about a family on the brink.
COMMENT | 'Why should I say sorry?' exists in this country as a constant groan, a low roar that reaches its crescendo every year on the 26th May, otherwise known as Sorry Day. It is a cry that rings out with all the petulance and immaturity of a child asking why they have to help do the housework;…
Despite a final-round meltdown at Augusta, Jordan Spieth's caddie Michael Greller has urged fans not to feel sorry for the Masters runner-up.
On 26 May every year, ceremonies, marches, speeches and presentations are held around the country to commemorate Sorry Day, the day on which Australians express regret for the historical mistreatment of Aboriginal people.
With Labor's decisive electoral victory last month, it no longer has any excuses not to act on the shameful rates of child removals and imprisonment, writes Lidia Thorpe.
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