'Storytelling is an integral part of life for Indigenous Australians. From an early age, storytelling plays a vital role in educating children. The stories help to explain how the land came to be shaped and inhabited; how to behave and why; where to find certain foods, etc.
Gathered around the camp fire in the evening, on an expedition to a favourite waterhole, or at a landmark of special significance, parents, Elders or Aunts and Uncles use the stories as the first part of a child's education.
Then, as children grow into young adults, more of the history and culture is revealed. Adults then take responsibility for passing on the stories to the following generations. In this way, the Stories of the Dreaming have been handed down over thousands of years.
All the storytellers you will meet on this site are active in keeping the stories alive and passing them on the next generation.
These are stories of the history and culture of the people, handed down in this way since the beginning of time, since the Dreamtime.'
(Source: Museum Australia: http://www.dreamtime.net.au/dreaming/index.htm, 2004)