Impact in Indigenous literature continues to grow
Danielle Kutchel
The Indigenous Literacy Foundation is marking a year of success in highlighting and supporting First Nations literature.
This Indigenous Literacy Day, the Indigenous Literacy Foundation (ILF) is counting its blessings.
The organisation, which works with First Nations communities to provide culturally relevant books and resources and publishes stories in-language, is marking its years of making an impact on the communities it services.
The ILF?s first Indigenous CEO Ben Bowen told Pro Bono News that Indigenous Literacy Day ? to be celebrated on September 7 ? is cause to celebrate the hard work conducted over previous years.
?Being able to tell stories in language and have literacy that's multi-modal and multilingual? is just huge in our communities, and we just love the opportunity and the privilege that we're being given to be able to celebrate it on the main stage and bring community to the forefront and showcase exactly all the hard work and success that they're having,? he explained.
The day itself will be celebrated with a digital event in collaboration with Sydney Opera House. A second event will see community leaders June Oscar AO and Joe Ross do a live reading of Winthali (Fire), which aims to preserve the Bunuba language from Fitzroy Crossing in WA.
According to Bowen, there are only around 50 fluent speakers of the Bunuba language left.
Winthali, the first book in this language, will help a new generation of speakers come through, he said.
And it?s just the start: several more books in that language are already in the works.
?Ten, 20 years ago, it would have been really hard for us to find someone to write a book or be confident enough with language to put this stuff out there. Now we're finding it's a pipeline? there are so many projects, there are so many voices, there are so many champions in the space that these projects are coming thick and fast now,? Bowen said.
?That's the major success we're seeing. And that's one community out of hundreds of communities that are doing this sort of work at the moment.?
A better way of measuring impact
The ILF has moved away from using terms like Closing the Gap and Naplan results to measure its impact, focusing instead on the strength and resilience of First Nations culture and knowledge. Its 2021 impact report lists achievements like:- Supporting 325 communities with 92,000 books
- Publishing 40 books in 11 languages
- Publishing the foundation?s first graphic novels.