"Our Landscapes Would Tell Our Stories" -Dhinawan Baker TES Highlight
536
2025-07-14
59
ScienceandNonduality
The map was the song
In one of the film’s most unforgettable moments, Dhinawan Baker of the Gamillaroi Bigambul community & Joe Williams of the Wiradjuri/Wolgalu community remind us that culture isn’t just passed down in words—it lives in the land.
The hills, the rivers, the rocks, the trees: all part of a living archive that sings us back to who we are.
When you listen deepl...
The map was the song
In one of the film’s most unforgettable moments, Dhinawan Baker of the Gamillaroi Bigambul community & Joe Williams of the Wiradjuri/Wolgalu community remind us that culture isn’t just passed down in words—it lives in the land.
The hills, the rivers, the rocks, the trees: all part of a living archive that sings us back to who we are.
When you listen deeply, the land tells you where you belong.
When you walk with respect, every step becomes a remembering.
✨ The Eternal Song is an invitation to return to this way of seeing—where the Earth itself is teacher, storykeeper, and kin.
🌿 Come witness these stories and more in the film.
🎥 Watch the film now at TheEternalSong.org or via the link in bio.
#TheEternalSong #DhinawanBaker #JoeWilliams #LandAsStory #Songlines #AncestralMemory #IndigenousWisdom #TES2025 #RightRelationship #RelationalHealing #EarthAsMap #documentary #independentfilm