South Australian Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander women head to Straight Talk

Three strong, proud and purposeful Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander women from South Australia will head to Canberra to share their stories and sit down with women from all sides of politics at Oxfam Australia's Straight Talk National Summit in Canberra later this month.

Held from Sunday 26 November to Thursday 29 November, the 2018 summit will see more than 70 women from around the country head to Canberra to learn about the political process and build on their skills to creative positive change in their communities.

Oxfam Australia Chief Executive Helen Szoke said the annual summit was always more than the sum of its parts for its many attendees, facilitators, guest speakers and trailblazers.

"This November, dozens of incredible Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander women from across the country will again gather in our nation's capital," Dr Szoke said.

"Not only will they get to sit down with Parliamentarians, establish ongoing relationships and develop more tools to engage with the political system, chances are the women will walk away with something far more powerful - a greater voice in the decisions that affect their lives."

The women will attend the summit's official opening ceremony at Parliament House, to be co-hosted by Foreign Affairs Minister Marise Payne, Labor Senator and Shadow Foreign Affairs Minister Penny Wong and Greens Senator and Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander spokeswoman Rachel Siewart.

They will also take part in small group meetings with politicians at Parliament House, attend Question Time, take part in a Senate role play and have the chance to hear from MP Linda Burney, Senator Malarndirri McCarthy, Senator Patrick Dodson and MP Ken Wyatt.

This year, participants will hear from Straight Talk trailblazers such as Karen Driver, the inaugural Faculty Fellow for Inclusive Excellence for Native American Affairs at the College of St Scholastica in Minnesota, who was an appointee of President Barack Obama as the Specialist Assistant to the President for Native American Affairs.

For participant Becky Myers, an Arrente woman originally from Alice Springs who now lives in Adelaide with her partner and four children, attending the summit is something all new to her.

"It grabbed my attention, I want to have a say, Ms Myers said. "I read about others' past experiences of the summit, their experiences have blown my mind.

"I'm looking forward to what we can learn from each other, by coming together from all areas and kinship groups and networking.

"We struggle with all the same things – Stolen Generation, identity – and we want to make a change as strong Indigenous women.

"We all want the best for our people and Indigenous people want to be equal. Getting that recognition, and learning what we can do to better everyone to be happy and safe, this is what matters."

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