• Australia's Invisible History

  • By: Hope 103.2
  • Podcast

Australia's Invisible History

By: Hope 103.2
  • Summary

  • So many of us Australians don’t know our own history. But that can all change. Join Sydney-based broadcaster and author Katrina Roe and The Outback Historian Paul Roe as they make the "invisible" visible by digging up the buried stories of Australia’s heroes, pioneers and visionaries.

    Here, you'll meet Australians from every corner of the country, the city and the bush including migrants and Indigenous Australians, men and women, nurses, doctors, activists, boxers, athletes, missionaries and ministers. The one thing they all have in common is that their faith inspired them to work for the greater good and put others before themselves.

    Listen to more from our Hope Podcasts collection at hopepodcasts.com.au. And send the team a message via Hope 103.2’s app, Facebook or Instagram.

    2024 Copyright Hope Media Ltd
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Episodes
  • Moses Tjalkabota – Orator and Evangelist
    Dec 19 2022

    Moses Tjalkabota was a charismatic and well-known personality in Central Australia.

    An Arrarnte man, his early years were spent on country in a traditional Aboriginal lifestyle, learning Arrarnte culture from his elders. As a child, he was schooled on the Hermannsburg Mission.

    Known affectionately as Blind Moses, he became an evangelist. Regarded as a master storyteller and public speaker, he attracted large crowds whenever he preached in public.

    Although he was blind, he travelled vast distances over Central Australia to share his message with Aboriginal people in their communities.

    Further information:
    Australian Dictionary of Biography
    Hermannsburg.com.au
    Alice Springs News
    Blind Moses, Aranda Man of High Degree and Christian Evangelist by Peter Latz, IAD Press, 2015

    You can find Dr Paul Roe online at theoutbackhistorian.com.au and Katrina Roe at katrinaroe.co

    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

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    19 mins
  • Edith Cowan: The First Woman in Parliament
    Dec 5 2022

    Share real hope with your family, friends and community!  - Hope 103.2 (hope1032.com.au)

    Edith Cowan made it her mission to see women participating in every area of public life – education, religion, politics, health, the law and social justice.

    She founded and worked for numerous volunteer organisations that promoted the rights and welfare of women and children, including the House of Mercy for unmarried mothers, The Karrakatta Women’s Club, The Children’s Protection Society and King Edward Memorial Hospital.

    She was the first woman to ever sit in an Australian Parliament and today she has a university named after.

    She can be seen on the Australian $50 note.

    Further information:

    Australian Dictionary of Biography
    National Museum Australia
    RBA - People on the Bank Notes – Edith Cowan
    State Library of WA
    Women Australia

    You can find Dr Paul Roe online at theoutbackhistorian.com.au and Katrina Roe at katrinaroe.com

    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

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    19 mins
  • David Unaipon: Australia's Leonardo da Vinci
    Nov 21 2022

    Share real hope with your family, friends and community!  - Hope 103.2 (hope1032.com.au)

    David Unaipon was an Aboriginal preacher, inventor, author and activist.

    Profoundly gifted in several fields, his achievements emphatically disproved the prejudiced preconceptions that existed about Aboriginal people at the time.

    He lectured publicly on science and theology and patented nine inventions, including a shear that turned circular motion into lateral motion.

    He collected the myths and legends of Aboriginal people and was the first indigenous Australian to be published, although his book was not originally published under his own name.

    By the 1920s, he was the most well-known Aboriginal person in Australia and was able to be a public voice on behalf of his people.

    He can be seen on the Australian $50 note.

    Further information:

    Legendary Tales of the Australian Aborigines by David Unaipon, edited by Stephen Muecke and Adam Shoemaker, Melbourne, Melbourne University Press, 2001

    My Life Story, by David Unaipon, Adelaide: Aborigines Friends Association, 1954

    'Aboriginals: Their Traditions and Customs' by David Unaipon, Daily Telegraph, 2 August 1924.

    Australian Dictionary of Biography

    RBA - People on the Bank Notes – David Unaipon 1872 - 1967

    The State Library of New South Wales: Significant Individuals : David Unaipon

    The State Library of New South Wales – Stories – David Unaipon

    Kids Britannica – David Unaipon

    You can find Dr Paul Roe online at theoutbackhistorian.com.au and Katrina Roe at katrinaroe.com

    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

    Show More Show Less
    19 mins

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In the spirit of reconciliation, Audible acknowledges the Traditional Custodians of country throughout Australia and their connections to land, sea and community. We pay our respect to their elders past and present and extend that respect to all Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples today.