Paul Cornish is the only undertaker in a wild and remote region the size of a small European country. He deals with snake bites, croc attacks, road train crashes, you name it, but his work has also given him unique insight into the Aboriginal ways of life and death.
Read MoreRoelands Village: Healing the stolen generations
Roelands Mission was a terrible place. This was where forcibly removed Aboriginal children were brought up the Catholic church in the latter half of the 20th century. But in the early 2000s, when the church put the mission up for sale, a group of those ex-residents saw an opportunity to transform a terrible past into a brighter future.
Read MoreMeet the Acehnese lifeguards working to eliminate tsunami trauma
“If Lampuuk Beach is safe again, our lives can return to normal.”
As featured on BBC Indonesia
Read MoreAboriginal elders use culture to save kids
It’s 10am on Monday morning, and Yiriman Project co-ordinator Scott Herring is squinting at a scorching grid of dusty red streets through his Land Cruiser’s windscreen.
Featured in The West Australian.
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