Written as an invitation to the Australian people, the Uluru Statement from the Heart aims to bring Australians together to recognise Indigenous Australians in the Constitution.
The Uluru Statement from the Heart in your language
SBS Radio – in consultation with the Uluru Dialogue – is sharing the Uluru Statement from the Heart with multicultural communities by translating it into more than 60 languages, available now as a podcast and in written form.
SBS has made the Uluru Statement from the Heart available in over 60 languages to continue the national dialogue with Culturally and Linguistically Diverse communities in their own languages. In May 2017, Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander delegates came together at the First Nations National Constitutional Convention near Uluru and adopted the Uluru Statement from the Heart. The Statement provides a roadmap for recognising First Nations in Australia’s Constitution, proposing structural reform on three fronts; Voice, Treaty and Truth.
Listen to the Podcast or read it in your language on the SBS website.
The journey to the Uluru Statement from the Heart
Written as an invitation to the Australian people, the Uluru Statement from the Heart aims to bring Australians together to recognise Indigenous Australians in the Constitution. The Journey to the Uluru Statement from the Heart outlines the following:
- 250 delegates from 13 Regional Dialogues (parties involved)
- The Uluru Statement proposes three elements: “Voice, Treaty, Truth”
- The Consultation Process
- What relevant documents and commissions preceded and followed the Uluru Statement from The Heart?
- What key moments in history preceded the Uluru Statement from The Heart?
To learn more go to The journey to the Uluru Statement from the Heart.