Quaden Bayles - the Indigenous schoolboy with dwarfism who became famous worldwide after his mother shared a video of him in tears after being bullied - has attended an Invasion Day rally.
The 10-year-old was among the thousands at the Brisbane rally on Tuesday, and was photographed in an Aboriginal flag t-shirt and raising a fist as the protesters called for a change to the date of Australia Day.
His model sister Guyala Bayles, 21, also joined the rallies, which were held in cities across the country, as did his mother Yarraka and aunt Mara Bayles - each posting pictures to their social media.
Death of grandmother who fell on Stagecoach bus as it slowly pulled away ruled an accident
Dorothy McLaren, 88, was on the number 12 bus when she fell over as it slowly pulled away in 2018
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The photos were taken by Dinanda Nooney between January 1978 and April 1979
The photographer took 576 photos in around 200 homes in various Brooklyn neighborhoods in a near daily project that criss-crossed the borough
She specialized in taking pictures that captured the lives of ordinary people
One of the families she photographed was that of Jean-Michel Basquiat, then 18, who would go on to be one of the most celebrated painters of the 20th century
Nooney also worked on George McGovern s campaign in 1972 against Richard Nixon, photographing his rallies in Brooklyn
She donated the images to the New York Public Library in 1995. Nooney died at 86 on November 26, 2004