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Centralised First Nations Documentary Australia Fellowship recipient 2022

First Nations filmmaker Travis Akbar to write, direct and co-produce his documentary with a development grant of up to $30,000.

South Australian First Nations filmmaker Travis Akbar has been awarded the Centralised First Nations Documentary Australia Fellowship.

He will write, direct and co-produce his documentary Kuta New Wiltja (Toward New Camp) with a grant of up to $30,000 for professional development and mentoring, as well as up to $10,000 of in-kind support to attend training opportunities at AFTRS.

“Being selected as the Centralised First Nations Documentary Australia Fellow is an honour,” he said. “Kuta New Wiltja is a personal project and to be awarded the opportunity to explore and develop it couldn’t have come at a better time. I have worked tirelessly for the last four years, with the support of my wife and children, to chase my dream, and the last few months have really shown me I am on the right track. But all of that, of course, has meant spending less time with my family, so to receive a fellowship for a project with the theme of family is not just a huge reward, but an incredible show of confidence in my ability. So thank you to Documentary Australia, the South Australian Film Corporation and all the program partners.”

Kate Croser, CEO, South Australian Film Corporation said “The SAFC congratulates Travis Akbar on being awarded this prestigious Fellowship. Travis is an extremely talented emerging screen creative and the SAFC is pleased to support his ongoing development, and to support this exciting Fellowship program as part of our commitment to grow, highlight and support South Australian First Nations voices and stories on screens locally and globally.”

Now in its third year, the Fellowship is an unparalleled career-boosting opportunity for First Nations documentary filmmakers in the Northern Territory and South Australia presented by Documentary Australia (DA), Screen Territory, the South Australian Film Corporation, National Indigenous Television (NITV) and the Australian Film Television and Radio School (AFTRS Indigenous).

Travis is a Waljen man from the Wongutha First Nation from the Eastern Goldfields of Western Australia, and was raised on Wirangu country near Ceduna, South Australia. His documentary Kuta New Wiltja (Toward New Camp) will retrace the journey of his great grandparents, Lali, a tribal Wongutha woman, and Afghan cameleer Jack Akbar, whose love was deemed illegal under the policies of the circa 1920s Western Australian Government’s “Chief Protector of Aborigines” A.O. Neville.

Aiming to learn more about their great grandparents, Travis and sibling Skye Akbar take to the highway to re-create the journey Jack and Lali took to escape the violent police who wanted to arrest them for being in love. Beginning in Kalgoorlie, Western Australia, Travis and Skye will visit their family and Elders to yarn about the story of their ancestors before hitting the highway to camp where Jack and Lali camped, visit the places they visited, and see what they saw. The film will also explore Jack’s time teaching R.M Williams how to weave, Jack’s work in Renmark and Jack and Lali’s move to Lyndhurst in remote South Australia.

The Centralised First Nations Documentary Australia Fellowship is presented as part of the Centralised initiative, developed by the SAFC and Screen Territory together with collaborating partners Screen Australia’s First Nations Department, Documentary Australia (DA), AFTRS Indigenous (Australian Film, Television and Radio School), ABC Indigenous and NITV to deliver a range of opportunities for First Nations screen creatives in South Australia and Northern Territory, creating clear pathways for emerging talent including mentoring, workshops, attachments and internships through the centre of Australia.

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