TAGGED: First Nations Australians
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The clip begins with a black-and-white photograph of the Murray Island Courthouse taken in November 1898.

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Prime Minister Paul Keating outlines the basic principles of the Mabo legislation, the Native Title Act 1993.

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Djiwul (Jack) Wunuwun cuts bark from a tree in the bush, with an axe. The narrator (David Gulpilil) says the best time to get the bark is in the wet season.

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Jack Wunuwun grinds the red ochre and applies the paint to his bark painting about the Morning Star. Summary by Liz McNiven.

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Dr Plonk (Nigel Lunghi) is accidentally transported 10,000 years into the past and captured by spear-wielding natives.

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The elder is sitting near a rock. His voice-over narration runs atop paintings depicting the relationship between people and dogs.

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The elder walks the country following the steps of the two ancestral dogs Adjumalar and Womarr. As he walks, he tells us the story of the two dogs, and follows in the path they travelled.

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An elder sits beneath an overhanging rock. He begins to tell of the two dogs that created the Dreaming stories in the land where the people spoke Mengerrdji.

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Interspersed with shots of Areyonga community, Frank Djara tells how he communicated health issues through painting, and by talking about sickness to his people.

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Frank Djara talks about playing for the Areyonga football team, and the competitions staged between the communities.