The Conversation: Friday essay: why it’s time to move beyond truth-telling to Indigenous resurgence
In the early 1840s, the first European to invade the country between the Murumbidgee and Galari rivers shot camp dogs at a place called Burrowmunditroy to intimidate Wiradyuri people into leaving their own land.
His niece recorded that within days 1,500 warriors were gathered nearby ready to attack. Painted for battle, the warriors formed a line, then charged the homestead. The terrified white people inside braced for the onslaught.
But when the warriors got 50 yards from the homestead, they suddenly stopped, squatted on the ground and broke into a song.