SGV Newsletter Edition FOUR
Transcription
SGV Newsletter Edition FOUR
8 outh Australia’s Supreme Court has made a landmark decision to award compensation totalling $525,000 to Stolen Generations member Mr Bruce Trevorrow. Mr Trevorrow, 50, took legal action in South Australia’s Supreme Court claiming that his removal from his family as a baby lead to his depression, alcoholism and severing his connection to his family, community and cultural identity. Justice Tom Gray found the state had breached its duty of care to Mr Trevorrow and that it had dealt with him `’without lawful authority’'. Congratulations, Bruce, on this groundbreaking win! S Landmark Compensation Case Helps Restore the Balance In South Australia Artwork Credit: Our beautiful border artwork has been supplied to us by Howard ‘Chocko’ Edwards. Thanks Chock! Too deadly! Image Credits: All pictures in this publication were taken by Bryan Andy and Simone Andy, and Peter Ellis at the Carnival in Shepparton. www.stolengenerationsvictoria.org.au 34 Wurruk Avenue PRESTON Victoria Phone: (03) 9470 4377 Fax: (03) 9470 3499 Victoria Ltd Stolen Generations The next edition of our Newsletter will be released in the New Year. If you would like to offer an article or perhaps some pictures for our next edition please call our office on the number below. Contributions to this newsletter by members of the Stolen Generations are most welcome. WELCOMED CONTRIBUTIONS W hat a busy time we have had since our last newsletter of late June! This fourth edition of our newsletter is the first that comes direct from our new premises in Preston! SGV has been fortunate enough to secure the former VACCA building at 34 Wurruk Avenue, Preston. We now have more space to engage with our clients and to expand on our services. Moving is never an easy thing to do and I must take this opportunity to sincerely thank the Ellis mob who helped make our shift a much easier experience. They did a fantastic job. We encourage all members and friends to pop into the office for a cup of tea to SGV Chairperson Lyn Austin A Message from the Chair www.stolengenerationsvictoria.org.au Stolen Generations Victoria Ltd • • • Continued on page 2… envisaged that an Indigenous person could then be mentored into this role over the twelve month period. Since our last newsletter, and while we have been reviewing and re-establishing the SGV organisation, we have been using a number of casual staff to assist in the smooth running of our office and board meetings. I would therefore like to thank Peter Ellis, Ann Wright, Graeme Kelly, Rebekah Ellis, Jade Johnson and Nathaniel Ellis (better known as ‘Fin’) who have worked with us over the past months. In this edition is a report from our NAIDOC Event along with a few pictures from other NAIDOC events that our staff attended as Landmark Stolen Generations Compensation result in SA SGV’s NAIDOC Event 2007 Indigenous Sports Carnival …and plenty more! In this edition… see our ‘new’ space. We have been excited by the news that Stolen Generations member Mr Bruce Trevorrow was awarded compensation from South Australia’s Supreme Court. As many of you are aware, we have been without a CEO since June this year. The SGV Board agreed at its November Board meeting, to accept an offer from Aboriginal Affairs Victoria for an experienced general manager from the public service to be seconded to act as CEO for Stolen Generations. This person would work closely with a community staff member and the community as a whole to ensure that SGV provides services and support to the community. It was Issue Four December 2007 ‘Restoring to us what is rightfully ours’ 2 part of the week as well as information from Aboriginal Affairs Victoria about the allocation of funds to Stolen Generations services and support. On the 9 November SGV held a joint BBQ with Link Up at Edwards Lake. It was a good day thanks especially to our elders Aunty Alice Thomas, Aunty Winnie Green, Aunty Maria Starcevic , Aunty Shirley, and Ian Hamm from Aboriginal Affairs Victoria (AAV) who attended, and also to Buster and Bear for providing music and entertainment. Thanks too to the Link Up and SGV staff who attended and organised the day. Although attendance numbers were relatively small, those who did attend had an enjoyable time. We look forward to further community events in the New Year. On 5 December three SGV Board members, Lyn Austin, Daphne Milward and Jim Kennan, met with the Victorian Minister of Aboriginal Affairs, The Honourable Richard Wynne. We were pleased to have the opportunity to raise a number of issues with him and the meeting began with Daphne giving an overview of current status of the organisation and Lyn reporting on feedback from SGV members and the community. The following points were taken from the meeting: • Minister strongly supports SGV and the actions being taken to strengthen the organisation over the next twelve months. He stated that we will need to achieve positive outcomes in this time for Stolen Generation members. • Minister supports restructuring SGV and considering re-registering it as a cooperative. This was supported by the board members as it would enable more Indigenous people to come onto the board • The Minister advised that he has had talks with the Minister for Families, Housing, Community Services and Indigenous Affairs, Jenny Macklin, in relation to an apology to Stolen Generations members. • Minister indicated that he would like to see as many SGV members as possible attend the apology in Parliament in Canberra. SGV will need to come up with …Message from the Chair continued from page 1 some recommendations as to how we could do this. • Minister advised that the Victorian Government supported practical responses to Stolen Generation members’ needs as advised by the Victorian Indigenous Stolen Generations Taskforce Report. I look forward to keeping you informed of further progress. The apology will be a historic occasion for this country and internationally. We hope and will work hard to ensure that SGV has a strong presence. I sincerely hope that you enjoy this edition of the newsletter. If you have any contributions (stories, pictures, artwork) that you would like to offer our future publications please contact our office. The SGV office will be closed from Friday 14 December 2007 until Monday 14 January next year. We hope that all SGV members and supporting members have a Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year. Best wishes to all for the holiday season from myself, the Board of Directors, and staff. Happy reading! Blue skies, banners and Blackfullas at the 2007 Melbourne NAIDOC March. The super-talented Nikki Ashby from the Hip-Hop Movement Crew dances up at storm and shares her deadly skills at the Victorian Indigenous Youth Advisory Council’s Art Exhibition at the Aborigines Advancement League. 3KND’s Rio Ellis and Lionel Austin broadcasting LIVE from the ACES Elders Breakfast. Dancer John wows the crowd At Fed Square. Victoria Celebrates! Looking Forward, Looking Black NAIDOC 2007 7 SGV’s Policy & Education Officer Bryan Andy with Ms NAIDOC Jolene Ryan and Mr NAIDOC Mali Ingram at the front of the Victorian Aboriginal Health Service, getting ready to walk the streets as part of the 2007 Melbourne NAIDOC March. Serving up smiles and breakfast, Jaynaya Charles and Jason Tamiru at the ACES Elders Breakfast. St Paul’s decorated with a ‘Make Indigenous Poverty History’ banner. N 6 AIDOC Week 2007 saw thousands of people from across the country pay respect to the vibrancy and survival of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islanders in our country. Under the national theme ‘Looking Forward, Looking Black’, Victoria celebrated NAIDOC 2007 with over sixty events throughout the state. Stolen Generations Victoria teamed up with the folks at the Public Record Office Victoria, the State Library of Victoria, National Archives Australia, Link Up Victoria and the Koorie Heritage Trust to run a half-day forum on the importance of records and archives to Aboriginal communities. The event was attended by over sixty people and gave useful tips on researching resources in each of the represented institutions. Eva Jo Edwards from SGV gave a fantastic presentation about the importance of archival records to members of the Stolen Generations. She also spoke of how SGV assists its members in tracing family and accessing records with the help of agencies like the Koorie Heritage Trust and PROV. Congratulations must go to Simon Flagg from the Public Record Office Victoria for spearheading such a successful, informative and well-attended event. SGV Client Support Officer Eva Jo Edwards talks about SGV’s role at the workshop . PROV’s Simon Flagg welcomes the workshop participants and talks about the types of archival resources and searching assistance available through PROV. SGV Chair Lyn Austin opens the SGV workshop presentation and . Discovering Your Past Through Records NAIDOC 2007 S tolen Generations Victoria (SGV) was the first organisation of its kind to be set up in Australia. The organisation was established in response to the Human Rights and Equal Opportunity Commission’s Report, Bringing Them Home and as part of the Victorian Government’s A Fairer Victoria social policy statement. Since May 2006 when the organisation became fully operational, SGV has provided the community with a range of services to help raise awareness about the stolen generation and to provide healing and support to stolen generation members and their families. SGV has an important formal partnership with Link Up. SGV has also worked in partnership with AAV and the Public Record Office of Victoria to improve access to Indigenous Victorian Records. Specifically, the Records Office was provided with $200,000 to: • finalise guidelines to Indigenous Victorian personal, family and community records; • assist Government and non Government organisations preserve and index stolen generation records; and cultural awareness training for record management staff. The Koorie Family History Service was also provided funding to assist clients find out about their family tree and to provide information kits to community members. SGV is continuing their work in mapping the range of existing services to support stolen generation members and their families with a view to providing a comprehensive guide to services. To better understand and address the issues of separation across generations, SGV has also started work on an education program that will inform policy development and assist access to current support services. SGV will continue to work in partnership with the community, Link Up, Bringing them Home Workers and Government to help and support members of the stolen generation and their families. To date specific Stolen Generation initiatives funded include: • $125,000 available for a range of one-off grants of up to $25,000 per project to be provided to BTH workers and Link Up to manage a Stolen Generations service delivery oriented initiative; • provide Stolen Generations Victoria The Organisation A Proud Achievement 3 to Public Record Office Victoria for the print production of Footprints: The Journey of Lucy and Percy Pepper’s Fascinating Life • $50,000 to the Koorie Heritage Trust for the Koorie Family History Service and Information Kit; •$200,000 to the Public Record Office of Victoria; • $30,000 to auspice Sorry Day activities each year; • $20,000 for a Link-up project; • $30,000 to the Koorie Heritage Trust for a digital archiving project; and • $30,000 to update the service mapping exercise undertaken by the Victorian Stolen Generations Taskforce in 2003. This financial year SGV will be focussing on the follow key activities: • building Indigenous capacity by establishing and supporting Stolen Generation support groups; • identifying opportunities for increasing access to therapeutic services such as group counselling; • service co-ordination; and • education and public awareness. In addition, the Victorian Government funds other services for members of the Stolen Generation, for example, the Koorie Family History Service at the Koorie Heritage Trust received funding to assist community members to access family and cultural information. • $25,000 4 ello Everyone In October I was asked to fill in for Lyn Austin, our Chairperson of SGV at the 2007 Indigenous Sports Carnival at Shepparton to talk to people about the organisation, hand out newsletters and membership forms, and to select the best and fairest player of the Melbourne Warriors Football Team throughout the carnival. It was explained to me that SGV supported the H though I don’t know that much about the rules of the game — but I’m a good barracker! Everything was going alright for the first game and I had my eye on someone who I thought played really well. The Melbourne Warriors after their final match for the season Melbourne Warriors as quite a few of the team members were either from the stolen generation or were children of stolen generation members. I thought this would not be too hard a task even 2007 Indigenous Sports Carnival A Brilliant Event Shepparton The second game, however, presented some problems as there were not enough guernseys for every player, so as one player came off he gave his guernsey to the player going on in his place. This got a bit confusing after a while, but I found a new way of keeping on eye on the players who I thought stood out. They had different coloured shorts to the rest of the team, so they couldn’t change these! In the end I couldn’t make up my mind between Eric Edwards and Ross Dadds, so they both were chosen as the Best and Fairest of the Melbourne Warriors team and received the trophy presented by the Stolen Generations Victoria Organisation for 2007. Unfortunately the Melbourne Warriors just missed out on getting into the Grand Final. I thought the team played really well considering they were not as well equipped as some of the other teams. I hope this can be rectified before the next carnival. Congratulations to Mick Edwards and Rieo Ellis and other members of the organising team for their efforts in getting the football team together. Well done! I was also privileged to The carnival gives Indigenous people from across the state the opportunity to meet, compete and especially to catch up with family and friends. It gave me the opportunity to do this and to talk to everyone about the Stolen Generations Organisation. I hope that SGV will continue to be involved in the carnival as it is one way of contributing to the health and wellbeing of our members and all people from the stolen generations. Daphne Milward 5 Daphne Milward, selector of Best and Fairest and Rieo Ellis, manager of the Melbourne Warriors be asked to present the trophies to the winning teams in both sections of the carnival and some other trophies as well. One of these was presented to Eric Edwards for overall best player for his section, so my choice of Eric as one of the recipients of the SGV trophy was endorsed. This was my first Indigenous Sports Carnival, so I did not know what to expect. I was pleasantly impressed at how well organised the whole carnival was over the two days and congratulate the organisers.