SPELLさんのインスタグラム写真 - (SPELLInstagram)「We are here and we are listening. And seeing for the first time. There is so much we want to share about what we are learning (just by shutting our mouths for one second and opening our ears, eyes and hearts) - but now is not the time to get in the way. We will continue to #amplifymelanatedvoices (June 2-7th) and learn from the experiences and content of people of colour rather than through a white lens 💛 1st image via @ausindigenousfashion | The second image is via @getup_australia who are calling on the Cabinet to make First Nations Deaths in custody a key issue at their next meeting. Sign the petition via @getup_australia  A message from Larissa, Amy, and Nicole for the GetUp team (WARNING: the below text contains names of deceased persons): “Last night, with the help of other Aboriginal community members in Brisbane, I lit 433 candles.  One for George Floyd (whose story I hope you already know), and 432 for every Aboriginal family who has lost loved ones here in custody or because of police brutality.  Because black deaths in custody are not just a US problem. The over-incarceration of black people is not just a US problem. There is an ugly truth we must confront at home – this is a shared struggle.  Despite the loss of 432 black lives, there has not been a single conviction for an Aboriginal death in custody in Australia...” “We lit these candles because when Scott Morrison gets on the radio and declares "we don't want to import things that are happening overseas to Australia", he has absolutely no idea that something is already horribly wrong or just how much we have already lost. "I can't breathe" were not just the final words of George Floyd under the knee of a police officer in Minneapolis – they were among the final words of David Dungay Junior, a 26-year-old Dunghutti man who died from a choking restraint by prison officers in Long Bay prison in 2015.  We are, all of us, fighting for the same future. A future free from racism, discrimination and state brutality.  We cannot remain silent in the face of injustice.  Yours in solidarity,  Larissa, Amy, and Nicole for the GetUp team” (Larissa is a Widjabul woman who leads First Nations Justice at Getup)」6月5日 10時56分 - spell

SPELLのインスタグラム(spell) - 6月5日 10時56分


We are here and we are listening. And seeing for the first time. There is so much we want to share about what we are learning (just by shutting our mouths for one second and opening our ears, eyes and hearts) - but now is not the time to get in the way. We will continue to #amplifymelanatedvoices (June 2-7th) and learn from the experiences and content of people of colour rather than through a white lens 💛 1st image via @ausindigenousfashion | The second image is via
@getup_australia who are calling on the Cabinet to make First Nations Deaths in custody a key issue at their next meeting. Sign the petition via @getup_australia
A message from Larissa, Amy, and Nicole for the GetUp team (WARNING: the below text contains names of deceased persons): “Last night, with the help of other Aboriginal community members in Brisbane, I lit 433 candles.
One for George Floyd (whose story I hope you already know), and 432 for every Aboriginal family who has lost loved ones here in custody or because of police brutality.
Because black deaths in custody are not just a US problem. The over-incarceration of black people is not just a US problem. There is an ugly truth we must confront at home – this is a shared struggle.
Despite the loss of 432 black lives, there has not been a single conviction for an Aboriginal death in custody in Australia...” “We lit these candles because when Scott Morrison gets on the radio and declares "we don't want to import things that are happening overseas to Australia", he has absolutely no idea that something is already horribly wrong or just how much we have already lost. "I can't breathe" were not just the final words of George Floyd under the knee of a police officer in Minneapolis – they were among the final words of David Dungay Junior, a 26-year-old Dunghutti man who died from a choking restraint by prison officers in Long Bay prison in 2015.
We are, all of us, fighting for the same future. A future free from racism, discrimination and state brutality.
We cannot remain silent in the face of injustice.
Yours in solidarity,
Larissa, Amy, and Nicole for the GetUp team”
(Larissa is a Widjabul woman who leads First Nations Justice at Getup)


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