Be Part of the National Reconciliation Week Breakfast – Your Way
The National Reconciliation Week Breakfast is an opportunity to come together, reflect, and take action—wherever you are. Whether you’re attending the in-person breakfast in Walyalup Fremantle, hosting a community watch party, or tuning in from home, there are many ways to engage in meaningful conversations.
How You Can Get Involved:
🏛️ In Your Council Chambers – Host a Welcome to Country and Yarn with a Local Elder to engage your community.
☕ In Your Board or Meeting Room – Share a morning tea and highlight your RAP achievements.
📚 For Teachers & Schools – Set up mat time for students, tune into the education segment, and read a book together.
📺 Watch On-Demand – Can’t join live? Stream the recorded screening on NITV on-demand at a time that suits you.
🏡 At Home with Family & Friends – Gather around the kitchen table, tune in, and share some yarns.
🤝 Host a Community Watch Party – Partner with like-minded organisations to bring people together, including Aboriginal Elders and leaders in your community and keep the conversation going.
💛 Organisations can contribute with a $50 donation when registering for their watch parties to help make this event accessible for all.
Join us in Bridging Now to Next and making reconciliation a part of everyday action.
Want to get involved? Contact us: admin@recwa.org.au | 6552 6990
More event details here.
Join the movement: #ReconciliationWA #NRW2025 #BridgingNowtoNext
Gather with us at the National Reconciliation Week Breakfast, where truth-telling, leadership, and connection take centre stage.
This year’s event features a dynamic program of live and pre-recorded elements from across WA, elevating regional voices and powerful stories that continue to shape our reconciliation journey. Returning in person to this historic site—a place where many Western Australians arrived on these shores—we continue the truth-telling of last year’s Wadjemup Wirin Bidi Ceremonies, reinforcing the importance of acknowledging the past as we bridge now to next.
The keynote conversation features Patrick Dodson, a Yawuru elder from Broome, Western Australia also known as the Father of Reconciliation, along with next-generation leader Tremane Baxter-Edwards from Wyndham. They embody cross-generational First Nations leadership and the ongoing work of reconciliation. Their voices reflect the strength, wisdom and hope to carry the reconciliation movement forward.
Be at the heart of this powerful and unifying event – join us for breakfast before we broadcast live from NITV across WA from 9:00 AM.