Latest Episodes for this Channel
Sat November 15 2008
As the Rudd government approaches its first anniversary, Encounter explores one of the trickiest, most sensitive and potentially controversial interse...
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As the Rudd government approaches its first anniversary, Encounter explores one of the trickiest, most sensitive and potentially controversial intersections in Australian public affairs - the
relationship between religion and politics. Taking as a starting point Kevin Rudd's long essay declaring Dietrich Bonhoeffer his hero, the program tracks the influence of religion on Labor and
Coalition polic...
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As the Rudd government approaches its first anniversary, Encounter explores one of the trickiest, most sensitive and potentially controversial intersections in Australian public affairs - the
relationship between religion and politics. Taking as a starting point Kevin Rudd's long essay declaring Dietrich Bonhoeffer his hero, the program tracks the influence of religion on Labor and
Coalition policies. Father Frank Brennan, accused by some politicians as being "the meddlesome priest" describes how his first meeting with Kevin Rudd ended in furious argument and how their
relationship later developed into friendship. Tom Frame, former bishop to the chaplains of the ADF talks of how he saw John Howard's religious beliefs evolving in office.
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Sat November 08 2008
In Papua New Guinea, the health care system is vastly under resourced and the contribution of church organisations to health care is vital. At a small...
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In Papua New Guinea, the health care system is vastly under resourced and the contribution of church organisations to health care is vital. At a small hospital and mission station in the remote west
of PNG, where the white evangelical missionaries first arrived about 60 years ago, the faith of these missionaries and the ancient Indigenous belief systems are still coming to terms with each other.
In Papua New Guinea, the health care system is vastly under resourced and the contribution of church organisations to health care is vital. At a small hospital and mission station in the remote west
of PNG, where the white evangelical missionaries first arrived about 60 years ago, the faith of these missionaries and the ancient Indigenous belief systems are still coming to terms with each other.
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Sat November 01 2008
In his Berlin address last July, Barack Obama talked about partnership and hope. He was enthusiastically received. As the US Presidential election arr...
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In his Berlin address last July, Barack Obama talked about partnership and hope. He was enthusiastically received. As the US Presidential election arrives, how much do these themes define Obama's
beliefs? Wendy Barnaby explores some of Obama's ideas and takes the conversation further to other examples where hope and partnership might be crucial in the lives of communities and individuals.
In his Berlin address last July, Barack Obama talked about partnership and hope. He was enthusiastically received. As the US Presidential election arrives, how much do these themes define Obama's
beliefs? Wendy Barnaby explores some of Obama's ideas and takes the conversation further to other examples where hope and partnership might be crucial in the lives of communities and individuals.
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Sat October 25 2008
The sound of the digeridu, or Yidaki as it's known in North East Arnhem Land, has been adopted as a symbolic part of Australian culture. But how well ...
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The sound of the digeridu, or Yidaki as it's known in North East Arnhem Land, has been adopted as a symbolic part of Australian culture. But how well do non-Indigenous Australians understand the
spirituality of traditional Aboriginal music and its centrality to wellbeing? This Encounter travels from Darwin to North East Arnhem Land to attend the 10th Garma Festival of Traditional Culture.
Held in ...
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The sound of the digeridu, or Yidaki as it's known in North East Arnhem Land, has been adopted as a symbolic part of Australian culture. But how well do non-Indigenous Australians understand the
spirituality of traditional Aboriginal music and its centrality to wellbeing? This Encounter travels from Darwin to North East Arnhem Land to attend the 10th Garma Festival of Traditional Culture.
Held in Yolgnu country on the Gove Peninsula, it draws together over 1,000 people to watch, perform and celebrate traditional culture. Caring for the Soul of the Country examines the idea of cultural
practice as central to wellbeing -- spiritual, social and physical. It looks in particular at ceremony -- a sacred crucible of the broader practice of 'caring for country' -- as vaccination against
illness of the spirit and of the body. And it asks if a clearer understanding of the centrality of 'caring for country' might affect government policy on social provisions for Aboriginal communities.
Note: The music in this program was performed by singers from the Gumatj, Maugn, Anindilyakwa and Kuninjku clans. Special Audio Downloads Download MP3 An extended interview with Tom Calma, the
Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Social Justice Commissioner and Race Discrimination Commissioner.
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