"My ancestors were the first people to walk on this land. Those other girls were always going to come up against my ancestors. Who's going to stop me?"
"I just thought it was about time I shared as much of the whole story and as much of the experience as I could," she said.Her daughter saw a trailer the other day and was a bit confused."Look, you know, you need to understand who I am as a mother, and as a woman, as a person," Mum said.Freeman has known the film's French-Australian director Laurence Billiet for a long time.
"Stephen Page [Bangarra artistic director] was the perfect person for the job in terms of really telling a story and locking into the story and the whole intent of the story."It's absolutely reflected so perfectly. It's a wonderful aspect of the film." "We'll often walk into a schoolground ... and you often hear, 'Cathy! Cathy Freeman!' and it's really beautiful, because we're certainly welcomed into community," she said.
"But if it is about going and chasing dreams elsewhere, we want the young people to know that that's an opportunity that's there for them as well.""We find it inspirational," Ivy Yoren said."Every time when they ask us questions about who would you look up to and who's an Indigenous role model, I would say Cathy Freeman.
"The question of what's next is always right there in the centre of our lives, outside of family life," she said.
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Business owners 'are not being heard at all' by the Victorian government | Sky News AustraliaVictorian small business owner Gry Tomte says she doesn’t feel business owners are “being heard at all” by the state government. \n\nMr Andrews on Sunday announced tentative dates for the easing of restrictions, should new case numbers remain low. \n\nMelbourne metropolitan area will continue with its stage four lockdowns until at least September 28. \n\nMs Tomte, owner of HÜD Skin + Body beauty clinic in Melbourne had been forced to close her shop for the last five months already, which would likely pan out to a total of nine months considering the recent lockdown extensions.\n\n“I just feel like the mental health of business owners is definitely not being explored,” Ms Tomte told Sky News host Chris Kenny. \n\nMs Tomte said there was no way her business could be “classified as an unsafe business”.\n\n“I look at the enormous amount of training that we go through as the aesthetic industry and we re heavily regulated already, with the additional training that we’ve received throughout this whole period, there’s absolutely no reason why we wouldn’t be a safe place to open,” she said.\n\nShe said with the extensions looming, her clinic would likely be closed for a total of nine months, adding she knew many other beauty clinic owners were having to close permanently. \n\nImage: Pexels No one is being heard in this State, what does it take for people to wake up to this dictator Until you realize how easily it is for your mind to be manipulated, you remain the puppet of someone else's game' Evita Ochel Business owners are no more important than anyone else.
Herkunft: SkyNewsAust - 🏆 7. / 78 Weiterlesen »