

Race Matters
FBi Radio
Race Matters is an anti-racist show that explores the values and complexities of race, culture and identity. In-depth interviews and unique story telling and spanning arts, music, politics, global and local events, plus experimental audio and community takeovers.
Listen back to all our episodes on fbi.radio including radio exclusives, and stay up to date on our instagram
Listen to our Solidarity Syndicate series - sharing across airwaves and borders and our Liquid Homelands series - an experimental, queer audio offering
We honor all hosts, producers, storytellers that have made this work possible as well as the long tradition of storytelling, resistance and resilience that has taken place on Gadigal Country, where fbi.radio broadcasts out of.
Our logo design by Jessica Mulet, our theme songs was composed by Mateo Baskaran
Race Matters is made possible thanks to the Community Broadcasting Foundation
Listen back to all our episodes on fbi.radio including radio exclusives, and stay up to date on our instagram
Listen to our Solidarity Syndicate series - sharing across airwaves and borders and our Liquid Homelands series - an experimental, queer audio offering
We honor all hosts, producers, storytellers that have made this work possible as well as the long tradition of storytelling, resistance and resilience that has taken place on Gadigal Country, where fbi.radio broadcasts out of.
Our logo design by Jessica Mulet, our theme songs was composed by Mateo Baskaran
Race Matters is made possible thanks to the Community Broadcasting Foundation
Episodes
Mentioned books

Jul 8, 2025 • 52min
#181 Holding Breath
“Breath. Something we all have in common, yet most take for granted” An invitation to listen in, attune to, hold breath and be in solidarity with those in our community living with Long Covid. In collaboration with Dr Poppy de Souza, we bring you stories gathered from her Holding Breath exchange and from the Race Matters community, reflecting on their experiences and responding to: what do we carry with us? what do we leave behind? Together, these voices bring collective wisdom, and offer ways of living with/in embodied discomfort and crip ways of moving through the world. Continue to learn more about Poppy’s work, and to listen in solidarity and connect with Long Covid in our racial justice struggle: Holding Breath project Jenna Bitar’s essay in Sick Times “Instead of supporting people with Long Covid, our government funds a genocide” Still Here podcast from The Sick Times Breathing 4 Justice - exploring the intersections of long Covid and disability justice (U.S.) The Colour of Long COVID series, supported by the Disability Visibility Project This episode was facilitated by, co-produced and edited by Samantha Haran. Scripting, piano composition, invitations and co-production by Poppy de Souza. Supervising production and creative contributions by Shareeka Helaluddin. Graphics for our community call-out by Judy Ko, arranged by Sehej Kaur Sehmbhi. Image is from contributor Jody Haines, from Tommeginne Country, their ancestral lands where they can breathe most deeply. Holding Breath Episode Transcript With gratitude to all those who contributed to this episode and gave us the trust to uplift your narratives of Long Covid, and our love to those impacted by its grief and loss.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Jul 1, 2025 • 42min
#180 The energy of the moment
"We are in a decolonial moment, we need the energy to keep going" A conversation between Shareeka Helaluddin and astrologer, spirit worker for the liberation, Ra Life. Hear them on what it is to use their gifts in the toolkit for revolution, guiding people to tap into their capacity and ancestral wisdom as tactic for political organising. Less woo woo, more depth and fury. Produced, hosted and sound designed by Shareeka HelaluddinSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

May 27, 2025 • 31min
#179 Find Me at the Jaffa Gate
"... and in truth it is a story that is not mine nor hers; I am searching for the shape of what is ours." Hear Sara and Joannie are in conversation with Palestinian writer and academic Micaela Sahhar. Together, they discuss Micaela’s gorgeous new memoir, 'Find Me At The Jaffa Gate,’ which aims to assemble and reclaim the story of her family through fractured memories, objects and places. This conversation explores how both objects and music can hold and preserve memory, the complexity of being heard amidst censorship and the importance of the anti-colonial archive. Produced by Shareeka Helaluddin and Samantha Haran. Podcast edited and sound design by Shareeka Helaluddin. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

May 23, 2025 • 48min
#178 A Cacophony of ancestors
How do we understand hope as something within ourselves, and not as a far off horizon? A conversation with anti-oppressive therapist and educator Leah Manaema Avene on their expansive practice rooted in abolition, love, repair and the strategies to transform harmful power dynamics in bodies, relationships and systems. A sprawling dialogue spanning themes of rupture, hope, and the will to keep moving towards revolution. Image: Leah Avene by Amos Gebhardt part of an interview series MÅNGATA and photography exhibition. This episode was hosted, produced and edited by Shareeka Helaluddin. Podcast edit by Yvonne Hong. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

May 20, 2025 • 29min
#177 77 Years of Resistance
"You have to speak the truth, even if your voice shakes" What does it mean to commemorate Nakba, not as a singular historical act, but as a way to honour the resistance that has continued long before October 7th? A conversation with Dana Kafina from 3ain Radio and Toobs Anwar. This episode was hosted and produced by Toobs Anwar, with final audio editing by Shareeka Helaluddin. Live broadcast producing by Alicia Zhao. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

May 9, 2025 • 44min
#176 Unsettling Zionist Funding in the arts
Without truth, what ground is there to stand on? We started this piece into Creative Australia's appalling decision to rescind Lebanese artist Khaled Sabsabi's position from the Venice Bienele, however over many weeks this piece evolved beyond one act of silencing. We are watching the normalisation of this genocide, enabled by imperial mechanisms of censorship, and as creatives how do we grapple with our responsibilities to this while honoring the fight of Palestinian liberation? This episode brings together four artists, organisers and truth-tellers, who have been sounding out the call of institutional collapse so we can see these structures for what they are, and resist. Each conversation offers us clarity on the humanity that is at stake and strategies to ground in resistance, alterity and refusal. Episode creditsSehej Kaur and Sara El-Youghan speaking with Palestinian artist Feras Shaheen, and poet Omar SakrAlicia Zhao with illustrator and organiser Matt ChunToobs Anwar in conversation with poet, educator, and arts worker Hasib HouraniScripting and narration by Janey LiSupervising Producer Allison ChanCreative direction, final mixing and additional Sound design by Executive Producer Shareeka Helaluddin Above all we honor the martyrs, the fighters and the families of Palestine. We remain committed to the sacredness of all Palestinian life and liberation. We hear the Palestinian call - “We will not be silenced" Image: Samar Abu Elouf via The Sunday PaperSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Apr 21, 2025 • 40min
#175 To be the songline that outlives the corroded disk
We’re not just data, we are storytellers. Sometimes, the most radical thing we can do is speak, loudly and deliberately, into futures we get to shape ourselves. Ethan and Janey are joined by Nyungar technologist and futurist Kathryn Gledhill-Tucker to traverse the world of machine tech and human autonomy, learning how their work reimagines the embodied and expansive possibilities of a First Nations practice in tech. Across her poetry, speculative-fiction and tech justice advocacy reminds us that even in systems built to monitor, there’s power in reclaiming how we’re heard. This episode was co-produced and co-hosted by Ethan Lyons and Janey Li. Supervising Production and sound design by Shareeka Helaluddin. Podcast edited by Yvonne Hong. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Apr 4, 2025 • 38min
#174 Kanaky Rising
“We only have wood and stone to fight with to preserve our life” The words of young activists from Kanaky (so-called New Caledonia) who are engaged in fights to reclaim their land from French occupation, fighting for life and independence. Ethan and Shareeka speak to Roscoe, a special rapporteur for Radio RATA, a decolonial media, culture and mutual aid network, operating across the Pacific. Roscoe has been pivotal in establishing networks and connections with the Indigenous people of Kanaky. Through his work we learn that colonial systems are not the only thing that can duplicate and expand borders -- so can Indigenous knowledge and solidarity. This episode was co-produced and co-hosted by Ethan Lyons and Shareeka Helaluddin. Audio editing by Ethan Lyons, sound design by Shareeka Helaluddin. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Mar 25, 2025 • 29min
#173 Strength in prayer, in spirit
"We're holding hope for other people and each other, and that's what the peer model is." Content Note: this episode contains mentions of suicidality. Queer Muslim baddie takeover ~ in dedication to Imam Muhsin Hendricks - Allah Yerahmo. The intersections of queerness, religion, and ethnic identity are so heavily intertwined and (sometimes) difficult to reconcile. Join Host Sara El Youghun, Mohammad and Aiysha of the Multicultural Peers Project to speak on queerness and Islam, the struggle with mental health and synergising these values to emerge into adulthood in queer, Muslim pride. Multicultural Peers Project is a Western Sydney initiative aimed at helping queer and trans youth from Middle Eastern, North African, South Asian and Muslim backgrounds in NSW. You can connect with them on Instagram at @multiculturalpeersproject - a bastion of ethnic, empathetic therapy. This episode was hosted by Sara El Youghun, supervised by Shareeka Helaluddin, produced by Yvonne Hong, and Janey Li assisted on social media.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Mar 25, 2025 • 44min
#172 A menace to our enemies
Can writing be a political practice? How do you write in a way that serves liberation, the making of better worlds? Today Samantha and Bipasha are in conversation with Fabliha Yeaqub, a queer Bangladeshi writer, artist and community organiser based in so-called New York. We are talking about her journey with writing as catharsis and as rebellion, how it relates to her political work, and what it means to forge community connections amidst the individualist culture of the West. This episode is grounded in June Jordan's timeless words: I must become a menace to my enemies. Connect with Fabliha’s work Fabliha’s piece 'muslim girlhood is a knife. you kill us, and yet we will live forever’: https://fablihayeaqub.substack.com/p/muslim-girlhood-is-a-knife-you-kill Website: https://www.fablihayeaqub.com/ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/fablihayeaqub/ Marigold Seeds Collective: https://www.instagram.com/marigoldseedscollective/ Amader Dawat: https://www.instagram.com/amaderdawat/ June Jordan’s I Must Become a Menace to my Enemies: https://poets.org/poem/i-must-become-menace-my-enemies This episode was co-produced and co-hosted by Samantha Haran and Bipasha Roy, Audio editing by Bipasha Roy, Supervising Producer was Tanya Ali, Executive producer and final mixing by Shareeka HelaluddinSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.


