She wrote many books, beginning with
We Are Going (1964), the first book to be published by an Aboriginal woman. The title poem concludes: The scrubs are gone, the hunting and the laughter. The eagle is gone, the emu and the kangaroo are gone from this place. The bora ring is gone. The corroboree is gone. And we are going. This first book of poetry was extraordinarily successful, selling out in several editions, and setting Oodgeroo well on the way to be Australia's highest-selling poet alongside
C. J. Dennis. Critics' responses were mixed, with some questioning whether Oodgeroo, as an Aboriginal person, could really have written it herself. Others were disturbed by the activism of the poems, and found that they were "
propaganda" rather than what they considered to be real poetry. Oodgeroo embraced the idea of her poetry as propaganda, and described her own style as "sloganistic, civil-writerish, plain and simple." She wanted to convey pride in her
Aboriginality to the broadest possible audience, and to popularise equality and Aboriginal rights through her writing. Walker was inaugural president of the committee of the
Aboriginal Publications Foundation, which published the magazine
Identity in the 1970s. In 1972 she bought a property on
North Stradbroke Island (also known as
Minjerribah), which she called Moongalba ("sitting-down place"), and established the Noonuccal-Nughie Education and Cultural Centre. In a 1987 interview, she described her education program at Moongalba, saying that over "the last seventeen years I've had 26,500 children on the island. White kids as well as black. And if there were green ones, I'd like them too ... I'm colour blind, you see. I teach them about Aboriginal culture. I teach them about the balance of nature." Oodgeroo was committed to education at all levels, and collaborated with universities in creating programs for teacher education that would lead to better teaching in Australian schools. 's King George Square, March 1975 In 1974 Noonuccal was aboard a
British Airways flight that was
hijacked by terrorists campaigning for
Palestinian liberation. The hijackers shot a crew member and a passenger and forced the plane to fly to several different African destinations. During her three days in captivity, she used a blunt pencil and an airline sickbag from the seat pocket to write two poems, "Commonplace" and "Yusuf (Hijacker)". In 1986 she played the part of Eva in
Bruce Beresford's film,
The Fringe Dwellers. == Personal life and family==