Will you be joining us on

Walk with us.. Show your support.
By signing our open letter to the Prime Minister

Letter to the Prime Minister on a Kangaroo skin.
Walk for Truth 2026 is a national journey led by Travis Lovett, calling for truth-telling, healing and meaningful change.

Travis Lovett arrives at Parliament House alongside his wife to finish the Walk for Truth. Image: Joel Carrett (AAP). Courtesy National Indigenous Times.
“Everyone is invited”
Lovett, a Kerrupmara Gunditjmara man and Executive Director of the University of Melbourne’s Centre for Truth Telling and Dialogue, will walk from Victorian Parliament on Wurundjeri Woi-Wurrung Country to Parliament House in Canberra on Ngunnawal and Ngambri Country.
Walk for Truth calls on the Federal Government to commit to a national truth-telling process, developed in genuine partnership with First Nations Peoples.
“EVERY VOICE MATTERS THIS IS
OUR CHANCE TO WALK SIDE BY
SIDE AND CALL FOR A
NATIONAL COMMITMENT TO
TRUTH.”
Join the Journey
- In 2025, more than 22,000 people joined the walk across Victoria.
- In 2026, the journey continues, starting from the steps of Victorian Parliament and moving together towards Canberra.
- This is a shared act of truth, listening and national repair.
Walk with us..
Show your support.
BY SIGNING OUR OPEN LETTER
TO THE PRIME MINISTER
Image: Dechlan Brennan. National Indigenous Times.
Add Your Name To The Open Letter
Walk For Truth – The path forward starts with truth.
Dear Prime Minister Anthony Albanese,
The time has come for us to look honestly at ourselves and form an agreed truth about our past.
As Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples and non-Indigenous allies, as community leaders, workers, families and young people, we write together under the banner of Walk For Truth because the story of this country is still unfinished and truth is the missing chapter.
We are a nation built on stories. The ancient stories of this land carried for countless generations and the newer stories that too often begin in 1788 and leave out the violence, dispossession and survival that followed. A country that turns away from the truth of its own beginnings cannot be at peace with itself. A country that silences the voices of First Peoples cannot claim to be fair or just.
Truth-telling is not about blame. It is about healing. It is about finally listening to those who have carried memory and hurt, culture and resistance, through invasion, frontier war, stolen children, stolen land, prisons and policies that have too often treated Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people as a problem to be managed rather than as sovereign peoples to be respected. Truth-telling is an act of respect and an act of national repair.
This is why we are walking.
Walk For Truth is a collective journey that says, with our feet and our voices, that our country needs healing. We walk for those who did not live long enough to see their truths believed, for children who deserve to grow up in a nation that does not lie to them about how it came to be and for Elders who have carried the weight of other people's denial for too long. We are walking because love of country means loving it enough to change it.
Truth-telling cannot remain scattered and fragile, held only in commissions, courtrooms, archives, or the memories of those who remember. It must become national. It must be embedded in our laws, our institutions, our schools, our media and our public life, supported by a clear, resourced process that honours and builds on the work already done, not one that starts over or looks away.
We call on you, Prime Minister, to publicly commit to a national process of truth-telling led in genuine partnership with First Peoples. We ask you to resource it properly and legislate for it. We ask you to ensure that the truths shared through this process are not just heard and shelved but deeply listened to.
We invite you and all Australians, to walk with us. The walk may be literal, on the roads and tracks we travel as Walk For Truth. It is also moral and political. Choosing to hear what is hard to hear, to sit with discomfort and to stay at the table long enough for something better to be born. A nation that can tell the truth about itself is a nation strong enough to heal, to repair and to imagine a different future.
We Walk For Truth because this country is worth the effort of healing. We ask you to meet us on that path.
Signed
Travis Lovett
Walk For Truth
On behalf of the communities, organisations and individuals who Walk For Truth and a healed Australia.
Walk For Truth – The path forward starts with truth.
Dear Prime Minister Anthony Albanese,
The time has come for us to look honestly at ourselves and form an agreed truth about our past.
As Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples and non-Indigenous allies, as community leaders, workers, families and young people, we write together under the banner of Walk For Truth because the story of this country is still unfinished and truth is the missing chapter.
We are a nation built on stories. The ancient stories of this land carried for countless generations and the newer stories that too often begin in 1788 and leave out the violence, dispossession and survival that followed. A country that turns away from the truth of its own beginnings cannot be at peace with itself. A country that silences the voices of First Peoples cannot claim to be fair or just.
Truth-telling is not about blame. It is about healing. It is about finally listening to those who have carried memory and hurt, culture and resistance, through invasion, frontier war, stolen children, stolen land, prisons and policies that have too often treated Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people as a problem to be managed rather than as sovereign peoples to be respected. Truth-telling is an act of respect and an act of national repair.
This is why we are walking.
Walk For Truth is a collective journey that says, with our feet and our voices, that our country needs healing. We walk for those who did not live long enough to see their truths believed, for children who deserve to grow up in a nation that does not lie to them about how it came to be and for Elders who have carried the weight of other people's denial for too long. We are walking because love of country means loving it enough to change it.
Truth-telling cannot remain scattered and fragile, held only in commissions, courtrooms, archives, or the memories of those who remember. It must become national. It must be embedded in our laws, our institutions, our schools, our media and our public life, supported by a clear, resourced process that honours and builds on the work already done, not one that starts over or looks away.
We call on you, Prime Minister, to publicly commit to a national process of truth-telling led in genuine partnership with First Peoples. We ask you to resource it properly and legislate for it. We ask you to ensure that the truths shared through this process are not just heard and shelved but deeply listened to.
We invite you and all Australians, to walk with us. The walk may be literal, on the roads and tracks we travel as Walk For Truth. It is also moral and political. Choosing to hear what is hard to hear, to sit with discomfort and to stay at the table long enough for something better to be born. A nation that can tell the truth about itself is a nation strong enough to heal, to repair and to imagine a different future.
We Walk For Truth because this country is worth the effort of healing. We ask you to meet us on that path.
Signed
Travis Lovett
Walk For Truth
On behalf of the communities, organisations and individuals who Walk For Truth and a healed Australia.