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Thomas Mayo

Thomas Mayo is an Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander man who lives on Larrakia land in Darwin. He is the elected Assistant National Secretary of the MUA, a best selling author, essayist, orator and a signatory to the Uluru Statement from the Heart. His advocacy and leadership in the push for the rights and recognition of Indigenous peoples spans over twenty years. Thomas is currently serving on the board of Australians for Indigenous Constitutional Recognition and the Indigenous Literacy Foundation.

Thomas Mayo is a Kaurareg Aboriginal and Kalkalgal, Erubamle Torres Strait Islander man. He lives on Larrakia land in Darwin and is the elected Assistant National Secretary of the MUA.

 

Thomas has more than twenty years of experience in leadership and advocacy, including the development of the Uluru Statement from the Heart in May 2017. He is a signatory to the Uluru Statement and has been a leading campaigner for its proposals for a Voice to Parliament and a Makarrata Commission.

 

Thomas has been a board director at Australians for Indigenous Constitutional Recognition since 2019, and the Indigenous Literacy Foundation since January 2024. He is also on the steering group for the First Nations Clean Energy Network, influencing clean energy policy and supporting the Indigenous peoples and their communities in policy development, energy access and negotiations. 

 

Thomas is the author of seven books published by Hardie Grant and has many articles and essays published across the major media providers.
In 2024, Thomas will be publishing two new books; a children’s book about the Torres Strait Islands flag will be published in May by Magabala Books, and a book about how the campaign for peace and justice for Indigenous people continues after the referendum was lost in 2023.

 

Thomas was inspired to write his first book: Finding the Heart of the Nation – the Journey of the Uluru Statement towards Voice, Treaty and Truth, after being entrusted to carry the sacred Uluru Statement from the Heart canvas to Australians from all walks of life, soon after its creation in the heart of the country in 2017. This best-selling book is now in a paperback second-edition.

 

He travelled throughout the nation for eighteen months with the Uluru Statement, taking it to the smallest of communities to large city gatherings, playing a key role in building the peoples movement for a constitutionally enshrined First Nations Voice to what it is today. His first children's book: Finding Our Heart, is a children's book about the Uluru Statement. It has enjoyed success because of its contemporary art and powerful truth telling with a uniquely clear call to action.

 

Thomas’ other recent works are a children’s book about the Gurindji Wave Hill Walk Off, Freedom Day – Vincent Lingiari and the story of the Wave Hill Walk-off, co-authored with Lingiari’s granddaughter, Rosie Smiler; and Dear Son – Letters and reflections from First Nations fathers and sons.

 

In Dear Son, Thomas invites twelve other First Nations men to join him, writing about life, love, masculinity and racism. Thomas writes that Dear Son is a celebration of First Nations men – an act of defiance against everything they were taught about themselves, and the stereotype taught to all Australians.

 

With respected journalist and author, Kerry O’Brian, Thomas published The Voice to Parliament Handbook that was published by Hardie Grant in May 2023. The book made a significant impact, selling more than 100,000 units in around 6 months, topping the charts for 2023 across many bookstores and online booksellers. 

 

Thomas continues to passionately advocate for workers rights and for a constitutionally enshrined Voice.

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