WELCOME TO YEAR 10 RELIGION
TERM 3 2016
UNIT TITLE: Prayer
TERM 3 2016
UNIT TITLE: Prayer
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indigenous Australian Spirituality
Am I Spiritual?
Spirituality can be a state of mind, emotion , a person or a symbol in which connects with in a persons mental state. Spirituality is a another way in which can connect you with nature or with Gods spirit other then following a religion.
Spirituality is a desire for connectedness, which often expresses itself as an emotional relationship with an invisible sacred presence. - spiritual Task
In understanding spirituality we must first recognise that we are all spiritual. Our spirituality is innate to who we are, it is natural to our inner being.
Answer the below questions - save to home drive
1..What do you understand by the term sacred presence?
2. How do you define the sacred presence in your life?
3. If spirituality is a desire for connectedness, to what and to who do you think we desire to connect with?
Answer the below questions - save to home drive
1..What do you understand by the term sacred presence?
2. How do you define the sacred presence in your life?
3. If spirituality is a desire for connectedness, to what and to who do you think we desire to connect with?
indigenous Australian spirituality TASK
WATCH THE BELOW CLICKVIEW VIDEO. ANSWER THE QUESTIONS THAT APPEAR ON THE BELOW POWERPOINT. SAVE ANSWERS INTO YOUR HOMEDRIVE.
https://online.clickview.com.au/libraries/videos/46014/kanyini (Interactive Video option)
kaynin_worksheet_to_accompany_clickview.docx | |
File Size: | 83 kb |
File Type: | docx |
kanyini_powerpoint.ppt | |
File Size: | 1660 kb |
File Type: | ppt |
FOUR ELEMENTS/PILLARS OF indigenous SPIRITUALITY - kANYINI
kanyini_study_guide.pdf | |
File Size: | 1242 kb |
File Type: |
kANYINI TASK - DOWNLOAD EACH OF THE FOLLOWING TASKS - ELEMENTS/PILLARS OF indigenous SPIRITUALITY.
EACH DOCUMENT CONTAINS THREE COLUMNS - Your task is to fill in each column. Save your work into your home drive.
For Example - NGRUA (place of belonging)
1. 1ST COLUMN HAS BEEN FILLED IN FOR YOU - WHAT NGURA LOOKED LIKE PRE-INVASION
2. Add did Ngura looked like after contact i.e. colonisation?
3. What does Ngura look like now in contemporary society?
For Example - NGRUA (place of belonging)
1. 1ST COLUMN HAS BEEN FILLED IN FOR YOU - WHAT NGURA LOOKED LIKE PRE-INVASION
2. Add did Ngura looked like after contact i.e. colonisation?
3. What does Ngura look like now in contemporary society?
ngura.pdf | |
File Size: | 45 kb |
File Type: |
kurunpa.pdf | |
File Size: | 65 kb |
File Type: |
tjukurrpa.pdf | |
File Size: | 68 kb |
File Type: |
walytja.pdf | |
File Size: | 51 kb |
File Type: |
indigenous our father
Aboriginal Our Father
You are Our Father, you live in heaven We talk to you, Father you are good (repeat) We believe your Word Father We your children, give us bread today (repeat) We have done wrong, we are sorry Help us Father not to sin again (repeat) Others have done wrong to us And we are sorry for them, Father today (repeat) Stop us from doing wrong, Father Save us all from the evil one (repeat) You are Our Father, you live in heaven We talk to you, Father you are good (repeat) The Lord’s Prayer from the “Missa Kimberley” Copyright applies. Diocese of Broome, Western Australia. |
A few Key Beliefs?Key Beliefs
Key Festivals
WWW Links
Indigenous Religion in Secular Australia
Research paper by Dr Marion Maddox, Consultant, Social Policy Group
"Indigenous Religion in Secular Australia", 14 December 1999.
Message Stick - ABC Online
ABC Online's Gateway to Australia from an Indigenous point of view.
Indigenous Protocol
Looking at how you report on Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Protocols.
Indigenous Links
Message Stick selection of Indigneous Links.
ATSIC Website
Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Commission.
- The earth is eternal, and so are the many ancestral figures / beings who inhabit it.
- These beings are often associated with particular animals, for example Kangaroo-men, Emu-men or Bowerbird-women.
- As they journeyed across the face of the Earth these powerful beings created human, plant and animal life; and they left traces of their journeys in the natural features of the land.
- They also connected particular groups of people with particular regions and languages.
- Some groups held belief in a supreme being.
- The Dreaming continues to control the natural world.
Key Festivals
- Ritual ceremonies involving special sacred sites, song cycles accompanied by dance, and body painting, and even sports, invoke these mythic and living beings and continue to provide the means to access the spiritual powers of The Dreaming.
- At important stages of men and women’s lives, ceremonies are held to seek the assistance of spiritual beings. This makes them direct participants in the continuing process of the Dreaming.
- Other ceremonies are known as increase rites, in which the willingness of ancestral beings to release the land’s fertility depends upon humans continuing to perform certain rituals.
- Recent years have seen major indigenous festivals emerge, including Stompin’ Ground, Yeperenye Dreaming, Barunga Festival, Laura Festival, NARLA Knock Out, Survival, Coming of the Light, CROC Eisteddfod, NAIDOC and Reconciliation Week.
WWW Links
Indigenous Religion in Secular Australia
Research paper by Dr Marion Maddox, Consultant, Social Policy Group
"Indigenous Religion in Secular Australia", 14 December 1999.
Message Stick - ABC Online
ABC Online's Gateway to Australia from an Indigenous point of view.
Indigenous Protocol
Looking at how you report on Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Protocols.
Indigenous Links
Message Stick selection of Indigneous Links.
ATSIC Website
Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Commission.