My Survival as an Aboriginal is a 1979 Australian documentary film directed by Essie Coffee and produced by Coffe, Alec Morgan and Martha Ansara. It was the first documentary directed by an aboriginal woman.
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, 53minutes Réalisé parJohn Pilger GenresDocumentaire, Historique ThèmesLa mer, Transport, Documentaire sur le droit ActeursJohn Pilger Note74% The Secret Country: The First Australians Fight Back shows that when British colonists first arrived in Australia, they saw Aboriginal Australians as having no proprietorial rights to their land because they didn't cultivate it. As a result of this, no treaty was ever signed. Aboriginal Australians had no rights under British colonial rule and much of their resistance to British colonisation wasn't recorded. John Pilger aims to document some of the historical struggles of Aboriginal people as they were driven from their lands and he follows some of the major events relating to Aboriginal rights throughout the 20th century.
, 1h18 GenresDocumentaire, Historique ThèmesLa mer, Transport, Documentaire sur le droit Note76% In 1964, a Blue Streak test missile launched from Woomera by ELDO was expected to land in the Percival Lakes area of Western Australia, an area traditionally belonging to the Martu. Two Native Welfare patrol officers, Walter MacDougall and Terry Long, were sent to the area to make sure it was uninhabited. When they arrived, they located a group of 20 Martu women and children in the area. The group had never seen white skinned people before and upon seeing the patrol officers they wanted nothing to do with them, and they ran away from them. Despite the presence of the Martu people in the area, a missile was still fired from Woomera, but it went far off course, landing hundreds of miles away from the lakes.