ILP Partners

The Indigenous Literacy Project is a partnership between:



Indigenous Literacy Project : Patron & Ambassadors

The Indigenous Literacy Project is delighted to announce our Patron and Ambassadors for 2009.

Thérèse Rein : Patron

"Shared children's stories and rhymes are the foundation of culture. 

The Indigenous Literacy Project not only provides much needed resources to remote communities and promotes the joy of reading in the broader population ... it provides a new generation of Indigenous children with the passion and pride in their stories that I hope will flow to the general community in the form of beautifully written and illustrated books. This project is a real opportunity for all Australians to get involved in a simple, effective and meaningful community activity. I encourage you, your school, your bookclub or your organisation to be involved."

Thérèse Rein's life's work of assisting people into independence through employment grew out of her own personal family experience. After suffering a crippling injury, Thérèse's father was told he would never work - yet he graduated from university, became an aeronautical engineer and raised a family. Inspired by his tremendous courage and determination, Thérèse Rein founded and is managing director of the Ingeus group of companies - an international welfare to work provider which assists unemployed people to find suitable, lasting employment. Thérèse is married to the Hon Kevin Rudd, the Prime Minister of Australia.

Thérèse Rein, ILP Patron
Geraldine Brooks : Ambassador

"When I was growing up, books were everything: the passport to a much wider world than the simple and limited suburban landscape of my childhood.  It is wonderful that the Australian book industry has embraced the Indigenous Literacy Project so warmly.  As more books are placed in avid young hands, who knows what journeys will begin."

 

 

Geraldine Brooks is author of the Pulitzer Prize winning and internationally bestselling novel March Her first novel, Year of Wonders published in 2001, is also an international bestseller.  Geraldine's latest book People of the Book was published in 2008.

Kaz Cooke : Ambassador

"Reading is a free ticket to fun and the future, to history and memories, to the computer world, the thrill of science, the beauty of art, the crazy joy of comedy; the possibility of change; the embrace of feelings; the exchange of experiences; the power of truth; and the simple satisfied sigh at a happy ending. "

 

Kaz Cooke is an Australian writer and cartoonist whose books include Up The Duff, Girl Stuff,  and many more. Her two picture books for kids are The Terrible Underpants and Wanda Linda Goes Berserk. She has lived and worked as a reporter and author in Melbourne, Darwin and Sydney. She cannot walk in high heels without wobbling or do Sodoku.

Kate Grenville : Ambassador

"Most of us take reading  (and writing) so much for granted that it’s almost impossible to imagine life without that form of communication. Literacy opens so many doors that otherwise stay closed:  doors into education and jobs, but also into the minds and imaginations and hearts of other humans all over the planet.  Verbal literacy isn’t the only door, by any means – but  having access to it is a choice that no one should miss out on."

 

Kate Grenville was born in Sydney.  Her novels include Lilian’s Story, The Idea of Perfection, The Secret River and most recently The Lieutenant. Several of these books attempt to explore some of the history that indigenous and non-indigenous Australians share.

Kate is currently writing a third novel about colonial Australia.

Andy Griffiths : Ambassador

"Imagine a world in which everybody has clean air, fresh water, healthy food, someone to love and someone who loves them, a roof over their head, and, most important of all, a good book to read and the ability to read it ... sure, you might say I'm a dreamer, but I'm not the only one ..."

 

 

Andy Griffiths Andy Griffiths is one of Australia’s funniest and most successful writers. His books have sold over 3 million copies worldwide, have featured on the New York Times bestseller lists, and have won over 30 Australian children’s choice awards. Andy's books include the Just! series.

Dr Anita Heiss : Ambassador

Dr Anita Heiss is a member of the Wiradjuri nation, and is an author, poet, satirist and social commentator. Anita’s published works include the adult novel Not Meeting Mr Right, the historical novel Who Am I? The Diary of Mary Talence, Sydney 1937, kids novel kids novel Yirra and her deadly dog, Demon, poetry collection I’m not racist, but… and non-fiction text Dhuuluu-Yala (To Talk Straight) – Publishing Aboriginal Literature. In 2004 she was listed on the Bulletin /Microsoft ‘Smart 100’.

David Malouf : Ambassador

"There was a time, not so long ago, when people who could not read or write learned all they needed to know of the world by show and tell; by looking hard, asking questions of their elders, and then listening hard to the answers. But that time is past. Today we learn how the world works, and how we work in it, through reading as well as through watching and listening. A lot of the information we need is in books, or in newspapers or magazines, or on the Internet. Even to send an SMS on a mobile phone we need to be able to read. Reading brings the world to us. But reading can also open up a new world of people and events we have never imagined but which we can enter and become part of. This kind of reading takes us out of ourselves into other times and places, into other skins. Reading is a form of magic. It gives us access to a world that has no limits and where everyone is welcome and can be at home".

David Malouf is an acclaimed poet and novelist. David's books include JohnnoRemembering Babylon, which won the first International IMPAC Dublin Literary Award and was shortlisted for the Booker Prize, and Every Move You Make which won both The Age Book of the Year Award for Fiction and the Queensland Premier's Literary Short Story Collection Award.

 
Sally Morgan : Ambassador

"When I was young my family never had any money, so my Mum couldn't afford to buy us books. She did, however, haunt secondhand shops and whenever she came across anything she thought was interesting she would buy it and bring it home. This meant the books in our house were mainly volumes of fairy stories or books about the natural world. I learnt a lot about insects, snakes and dinosaurs. I love reading, it is a wonderful way to learn new things and to travel to other worlds where exciting things happens. It also helps you to think about the stories you would like to tell yourself."

 Sally Morgan  belongs to the Palkyu people, from the Pilbara in the north west of Western Australia. She is a writer and an artist, but is best known for her book My Place, which documents her family's journey back to their country and their people. Sally is employed in the School of Indigenous Studies at the University of Western Australia.

Leonie Norrington : Ambassador

'As humans we understand ourselves, and our potential, through story; the stories we live (personal experience) and the stories we hear, read, and see around us during our lives. The only way Indigenous people can experience the most exciting part of reading, the part that most Australians take for granted, the joy of finding your culture, your experiences and your thoughts in the literature you read, is if the books they read have Indigenous heroes and are steeped in modern day Indigenous culture."



Leonie Norrington was born in Darwin, the third of nine children, and grew up at Barunga Aboriginal community, south of Katherine.  Leonie's published books include Woman’s Talk, Under the Mango Tree, The Barrumbi KidsCroc Bait and You and Me : Our Place.

May O'Brien : Ambassador

May O'Brien was born in the Eastern Goldfields of Western Australia, and at the age of five, was taken to Mount Margaret Mission where she spent the next twelve years. She taught in Western Australian rural and metropolitan primary schools for twenty-five years. May served in a number of other positions before being appointed Superintendent of Aboriginal Education, a position she held until her early retirement in 1988. Her total service with the Western Australian Ministry of Education was thirty-four years. May is currently National Indigenous English Literacy and Numeracy Strategy Ambassador for the Department of Education, Science and Training, and Patron of the Australian Principals Associations Professional Development Council’s ‘Dare to Lead: taking it on’ Project.

Josh Pyke : Ambassador

Josh Pyke is an ARIA award-winning singer and songwriter. In 2009 Josh will launch his BUSKIN FOR CHANGE to mobilise support for The Indigenous Literacy Project.

Felix Reibl : Ambassador

"Storytelling has always been an integral part of my life. I grew up in a family where music and books where considered among the greatest treasures, and have since dedicated my time to writing songs. I understand the need for books and reading not just in developing musical ideas but for understanding my world and ultimately being able to communicate with my audience. The Indigenous Literacy Project is making a difference by providing access to books and programs for reading. It reaches some of the most disadvantaged and remote areas, where literacy - and the life spark that learning how to read generates - is most needed. "

 

Felix Reibl is a founding member of the internationally renowned band 'The Cat Empire'. Felix has written songs for the band, composed music outside the band, and had a remarkable journey traveling with music.

Samuel Wagan-Watson : Ambassador

"When I was a kid, I learnt of a man who couldn’t read or write. He was sent to jail for a crime he didn’t commit, yet the police forced him to sign a statement that incriminated him. He did several years in jail until the real culprit was found…How could he have been convicted, when he couldn’t even write, let alone read his own apparent confession? When I see Indigenous writers in front of an audience and the punters are hanging off their every word, I think of that man and similar correlations of today’s society and how literacy can save an individual’s life. That’s why I write, and that’s why it’s important for my children to be able to grasp the written word and to understand what reading and comprehension can do for them…no one should ever have to pay for the crime of being illiterate…”

Samuel Wagan-Watson is an award-winning poet and professional raconteur. Samuel began his writing career in Grade 7, when a teacher entered one of short stories in a Queensland-schools competition. The judges remarked that it was the worst writing they’d ever encountered!

Samuel’s 4th collection of poetry, Smoke Encrypted Whispers  won the 2005 NSW Premier’s Award for the Book of the Year and the national Kenneth Slessor poetry prize. He has performed his poetry throughout the world and was recently commissioned by the Japanese Aeronautical Exploration Agency to write haiku for the pleasure of the astronauts on the International Space Platform. He was also the poet-in-residence on the ABC’s Sunday Arts show before his current position as the principle writer for Brisbane’s 98.9FM

Samuel Wagon Watson
Tara June Winch : Ambassador

"The Indigenous Literacy Project has helped give voice to a world, given a language an opportunity to reach out to other readers. It has helped make a path to the merging of two worlds, two languages, two people. The ILP is not only an act of charity; it is an act of reconciliation. It is a healing path, which you all have paved.

If you’re going to be a writer you have to come from some place and if you’re going to be a writer you have to be a reader first.  What these literacy programs create are readers first.  In the hope, I hope, of writers next. And these writers will come from some place. Stories from an Aboriginal place, a place that needs more and more voice and more and more ears.".

Tara June Winch is an Indigenous Australian writer.  Her first novel Swallow the Air won the David Unaipon Award for Inidigenous Writers, the Victorian Premiers Literary Award for Indigenous Literature, the NSW Premiers Literary Award for New Writing and the Dobbie Award for Womens first writing.  Tara sits of the Australia Council Board for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Arts, works as a freelance writer and lives with her darling daughter, Lila on the beach.

 
Alexis Wright : Ambassador

Alexis Wright is from the Waanji people from the highlands of the southern Gulf of Carpentaria. Her books include Grog War, a study of alcohol abuse in the outback town of Tennant Creek, and the novel Plains of Promise, which was shortlisted for the Commonwealth Prize, the Age Book of the Year Award and the NSW Premier's Award for Fiction. Her second novel Carpentaria won the Miles Franklin Literary Award, the Australian Literature Society Gold Medal, Victorian Premier's Literary Awards, the Vance Palmer Prize for Fiction, Queensland Premier's Literary Awards, Best Fiction Book, and the Australian Book Industry Awards (ABIA), Australian Literary Fiction Book of the Year.