buildim • better lives
Transcription
buildim • better lives
No.5 W in ter 2 0 0 0 buildim• better lives www.bsl.org.au BROTHERHOOD of St LAURENCE Helping people build better lives A newsletter for our valued friends and supporters Poverty grips the lucky country The Brotherhood of St Laurence has a vision of making Australia free of poverty — of contributing actively to a just and fair society. But to achieve this, the community has to acknowledge that poverty is all around us and urgent action is needed to address the underlying causes. The latest Brotherhood research is a vital first step in wiping out poverty. The latest research by the Brotherhood of St Laurence shows that despite poverty being identified as a major problem in Australia, it is largely hidden and therefore, is being overlooked. The Brotherhood’s Social Action and Research national study, reported in “Growing apart: a new look at poverty in Australia” , identified that most people thought of poverty in terms of starving children in third world countries rather than something that was happening and impacting on countless Australians. His Excellency, the Governor of Victoria, the Honourable Sir James Gobbo AC, CVO, launched the report at the Brotherhood’s Melbourne headquarters on the 20th May. The year-long research involved in-depth focus group discussions with a broad cross-section of people from three states. Individual interviews were also held with key political, business, community leaders and the media. In addition, a telephone survey was held with 400 randomly selected Australians with the support of market research company, Millward Brown Australia. Those interviewed were asked to identify the key issues facing Australia, and how they perceived poverty and its impacts. Higher and lower income Australians alike expressed strong concern about a perceived growing divide between the haves and have nots and its consequences for the integrity of our society. Many felt that both the public in general and decision-makers in particular, were turning a blind eye to poverty. They also felt there was a lack of widespread understanding about poverty in Australia and that people felt a sense of powerlessness to do anything. The research also found that the majority of those surveyed believed that eradicating poverty should be given top priority by government and that the community must also take action. They wanted the Australian notion of fairness preserved and they feared that inequity could lead to the creation of a permanent underclass and possibly, community meltdown. In the year ahead the Brotherhood will use the findings of the research to tackle these issues by conducting awareness campaigns and targeting key political, business and community leaders to achieve change. We will also engage with communities to activate social action so people can feel they have the power to make change. Copies of the research ’’Growing apart: a new look at poverty in Australia” can be obtained by contacting the Publications Unit on 03 9483 1386 or e-mail publications@bsl.org.au. A journey of healing I was a guest at Corroboree 2000 in Sydney on the 27 and 28 May on behalf of the Brotherhood of St Laurence. The event aimed to bring Australians together to demonstrate their commitment to reconciliation. Father Nic Frances Executive Director Brotherhood o f S t Laurence I believe this could be a critical crossroad for the reconciliation process and our history as a nation. The urgency of recognising and addressing the inequalities between non-indigenous and indigenous Australians is clear. Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples continue to be the most marginalised and disadvantaged group in our society. I am convinced that if we, as an organisation, are committed to working with those who are most disadvantaged, we must engage with indigenous Australians. If we wish to understand poverty in contemporary Australia, we must address the difficulties many indigenous families and individuals face on a daily basis. As a relative newcomer to Australia, I believe the need for equality for indigenous people, and reconciliation between indigenous and non-indigenous peoples is essential. The Brotherhood of St Laurence is taking some practical steps towards the broader process of reconciliation: ■ In 1999 we introduced Koori-specific Aged Care Packages. Currently 46 Koori elders receive care through this program, which enables them to continue living in their communities. ■ A Koori Cultural Awareness Training program has been introduced for all Brotherhood of St Laurence staff. Run by the Aboriginal Catholic Ministry, the program helps us to be more sensitive, aware and inclusive of Koori issues in our work. ■ We will be supporting Defenders of Native Title by providing office space and shared resources for their newly created Community Education position. The Brotherhood of St Laurence is still a long way from being responsive to indigenous issues in its work, particularly in relation to the employment of staff. However, we have a strong commitment to improving what we do, listening to the needs of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples. Currently, a Reconciliation working group meets regularly to promote the Brotherhood of St Laurence’s involvement in indigenous issues. The journey of healing must take place within the Brotherhood of St Laurence, as elsewhere. Employment Program targets the disadvantaged provides these people with comprehensive and intensive job search assistance to help them find work. We want people to get a job they are happy with. To help achieve this, we first talk about what careers match the person’s experience and interests. We then go on to produce a professional resume, give advice on how and where to look for work, assist with writing job application letters and advise on how to prepare for an interview. We may also link people with work placement programs and training. Unemployed people between the ages of 15 and 24, those over 45 and people from a The purchase of extras such as clothing, multicultural background will receive equipment, special licences and training assistance with their search for work can greatly increase job prospects and we through the recently launched Community try to provide this support where we can Business Employment program (CBE). within our budget. Once people find work, The Brotherhood’s CBE Fitzroy Coordinator we keep in touch for the first three months to make sure that everything is working Bobby Connelly (pictured above with a jobseeker) welcomed the program. “Young out okay with the job.” people, mature workers and those from a Five hundred people from the City of Yarra multicultural background tend to be and Mornington Peninsula Shire areas will overlooked by employers. The CBE program 2 access the Brotherhood’s program, including unemployed people in the Polish community. The Brotherhood of St Laurence is one of a number of community organisations across Victoria who will run this State Government funded initiative. BROTHERHOOD of St LAURENCE Helping people build better lives Brotherhood o f St Laurence 67 Brunswick Street Fitzroy 3065 Victoria Telephone 03 94831183 Facsimile 03 94172691 E-mail fundraising@bsl. org.au iSSN-14424681 A day in the life... Laurence. Guy is more often than not at the service. It is quite touching to observe him because he is genuinely devout and loses his usual impatience and rushed speech. Clients, who at other times can be difficult, partake of the service meticulously, although they vary in their enthusiasm for singing the hymn. After the service I make my way back to the recreation area to find a pool competition is under way. The clients can get very competitive but they enjoy their game. At 2.00 pm a cup of tea and a slice among themselves until four o’clock when they farewell each other until they meet again the next day. ■ The names of clients have been changed to ensure privacy. Brotherhood volunteer, June, works at the Coolibah Centre. Coolibah is a day centre for disadvantaged older people, including those with intellectual and physical disabilities. June recalls her introduction to Coolibah three years ago, when she attended a luncheon and was shown around. She was so impressed with the work being done she decided to become a volunteer. June recalls a typical day at Coolibah. I park my car in Gertrude Street at about 9.30 am and walk around the corner to the centre. Taxis are stopping and dropping off clients and I go in with them. The first to say hello is Veronica. Next Daphne comes up and gives me a kiss. Ben then wanders over and asks if we are going out. Teresa is sure to greet me with a “good morning how are you?” Others like Guy come dashing in, having arrived by tram and go straight to morning tea. I ask the staff about taking clients out for coffee. If we are lucky the bus will be available and we go to McDonald’s in Victoria Parade. Other times we might walk to a cafe in Gertrude Street. Even going for a walk along the street is an 3 adventure in itself. Sometimes I have a small group of clients with me and they are fun to be with although occasionally taxing. As we begin our walk it will always be Guy who goes ahead and presses the traffic button. Veronica is slow and frightened of gutters and steps. Daphne is a performing artist with a volatile personality - she may stop and sulk for a while, then catches up with us. Ben strolls along but has trouble keeping his trousers up and his teeth in. Guy dearly loves cappuccino and dim sims. Mostly he has some money in his wallet; occasionally he hasn’t so we have “an arrangement.” Veronica loves ice cream but rarely has any money. Daphne has money but she does not like spending it, particularly large silver coins. Ben always has money, but he gets angry if I try to help him to select the right coin. At noon, back at the centre, a staff member and myself serve lunch to the clients. The meals are generous and nourishing. We start with orange juice; there is either soup or dessert on alternate days and a choice of main course and three vegetables. At 1.00 pm Father Robert conducts Communion Service in the chapel of Saint Interested in becoming a volunteer at the Brotherhood of St Laurence? Contact Western area Rosa D’Aprano 94831390 or Eastern area Barbara Coleman 9782 0487 BROTHERHOOD o f Sf LAURENCE Helping people build better lives HOME PICK UP SERVICE Prompt pick up of Clothing and Furniture Donations from your home in metropolitan Melbourne Good quality summer or winter clothing, children’s and women’s shoes, well-looked after furniture and small electrical goods in working order needed Call 1300 donate or (1300 366 283) Alternatively take donation to the nearest Brotherhood bin or shop. Volunteering - offering rewards for all PLEASE I* M il P i 'l l t t i t t t < * « U IT Volunteers working at the Brotherhood come from all walks of life and use their skills and interests to support the Brotherhood’s retail stores and welfare programs. They volunteer their time to help make a difference and make new friends and socialise. And for many, it is an invaluable opportunity to develop work skills to enhance their employment prospects. A group of students from Box Hill Institute’s Centre of Health and Community Studies are volunteering at the Brotherhood’s Box Hill and Croydon retail stores. They are gaining valuable work experience as part of an Office Retail course in Work Education. They all hope the course will prepare them for employment in the retail sector or office environment. Box Hill Institute course coordinator, Heather Smith, said “Voluntary work for the students provides them with practical experience, which complements their classroom theory work. They are involved in merchandising the clothes and other donated goods while helping with other retail tasks.” Katrina Chart and lain Paech are both 17 years old and the two youngest volunteers. Katrina said “ My careers teacher at school told me about the course.” lain added, “The work at the Brotherhood store boosts my confidence in the business area and I am hoping to eventually work with children in a sporting environment.” Sera, who is 18 years old, was first referred to the course by the coordinator at her school. “ I was doing Year 11 but I wasn’t going very well. The coordinator found me a place at Box Hill TAFE in the horticulture course, and later I got a job from it. After a while though I decided I wanted to do retail and started in this new course.” Sera hopes to get a job in a supermarket or a Fossey’s store. Pam, 22, the oldest of the volunteers, first tried an automotive course last year. “ I was the only girl left in the course after Student volunteers, (from left to right) Pam, lain, Katrina and Sera two other girls left, so I decided to leave as well. I am much happier doing retail.” Fay Ford who has worked at the Box Hill Brotherhood store for 12 years supervises the student volunteers on Thursdays and thinks the work is great for them. “When they first arrived I had to remind them to smile and say thank you but after a while they do it automatically.” Making history St Mary’s Mission, built in early 1920s is an historic landmark in Fitzroy and is currently undergoing renovations as part of the aged care redevelopment of the Brotherhood’s Fitzroy site. In 1933, the Brotherhood’s founder, Fr Gerard Tucker and Fr Guy Cox were invited to take up residence at the back of the mission. In the 1940s the Mission to Streets and Lanes used it for their pioneering welfare work and in the 1950s it became a Russian Orthodox Church. The buildings took on a different life in the 70s as the Brotherhood’s Action Resource Centre and in 1985 it was converted to rooming house accommodation. Now, part of the building is to be named Sidney Myer House and residents are looking forward to returning here and to Sumner and Millott House once renovations are completed. In the coming months w e will express our thanks and acknowledge the generosity of our Building Better Lives supporters. Dressed to impress She decided she wanted to look into a training course in the hair and beauty industry. Lee-Ann Boyle, coordinator of the Brotherhood of St Laurence Jobs Placement, Employment and Training (JPET) service met Patricia and organised an interview for her. But there was a problem. Because of the difficulties in Patricia’s young life, she did not have suitable clothes for the interview. But thanks to the generous donation of clothes from ‘Chain Reaction,’ a clothing distributor in Richmond, Ms Boyle was able to lend Patricia new clothes, which would suit her and were appropriate for the interview. find it difficult, if not impossible, to dress as others would expect in such circumstances. Ms Boyle was delighted by Chain Reaction’s offer. “The offer was amazing,” she said. “Some of our clients have never worn new clothes let alone had something suitable for a job interview. In the past we could offer them second-hand clothes but often they were not the kind of things these clients would wear.” “ Patricia was so cute when we decked her out. She had lived for so long in track-pants she didn’t quite know how to wear anything else.” “We have the clothes here now and are in the process of establishing a proper lending library where JPET clients can come in and choose what they want, maybe pay a small amount, then return the clothes which we will then launder.” Two months ago, Ms Maria Muratore, Patricia (not her real name) is 16 years-old buying controller at Chain Reaction, allowed Ms Boyle added “ It is great to see a and has spent most of her life in state care. the Brotherhood of St Laurence to choose business like Chain Reaction make such a Now living in a Melbourne refuge and with clothes from its selection of sample stock. practical contribution to the work we do.” only a Year 9 education, she recently arrived These garments are now being used as a at the Brotherhood of St Laurence’s clothing library for young JPET clients who Employment Services in search of need to attend job or school interviews but assistance. A similar lending library, “Wear for Work” has been developed at our Community Services Centre in Frankston. It was established in 1998 with the support of the Sunshine Foundation and assisted by Brown Gouge Dry Cleaning and BP Australia Ltd. 15 minutes of fame ART for - sale- In the last issue of Building Better Lives, Lesley Clark was featured because of his unique ability to play music by clicking his fingers. Mr Clark has now experienced more than his 15 minutes of fame when he recently appeared on national television. Mr Clark was first talent-spotted by the Herald Sun and then by the Channel 9, Today Show. The television producers were so impressed by 76 year-old Mr Clark that an initial interview and performance at the Brotherhood of St Laurence office in Fitzroy turned into an extended feature at his home in Flowerdale among his many inventions. During the past six years Mr Clark has sold more than 9000 cassettes of his unique music and raised $14,000 for charity, including the Brotherhood of St Laurence who appreciate his talent and generosity. Billich A marvellous opportunity to acquire one of a series of Charles Billich’s acclaimed racing series “ Equus 92.” Valued at $2,000, all offers will be considered. ‘Formula Won’ by Charles Billich Blackman “The Journey” , is a striking limited edition Charles Blackman silk screen-print. Valued at $1,500, it is no. 90 of 90 prints. Sale price negotiable. Long A magnificent oil by the renowned Australian Artist, Leonard Long, entitled “ Hills of the Wollondilly near Wombeyan.” Valued at $15,000- sale price negotiable All enquires, or to arrange a viewing please telephone 03 94831397 Celebrating 103 years and still caring Out of curiosity, on a trip to Europe in her early 20’s, she visited a casino in Monte Carlo. “They wouldn’t let us in unless we had some evidence of being able to afford to be there. It’s very different now.” Edna Caroline Curwen-Walker is 103 years old this year. She is a long time committed supporter of the work of the Brotherhood of St Laurence. Edna is passionate about social justice and has strong opinions about the lack of leadership in government and the impact of gambling in society. Growing up on a sheep farming property in the Riverina district, the second youngest of seven children, Edna enjoyed a happy childhood with devoted parents. Her father died when she was eight years-old and the family moved to Melbourne. They lived near the Botanical Gardens - a place that Edna still dearly loves. She attended school at Merton Hall and later went on to train as a nurse. After the family’s move to Melbourne Edna’s older brother enlisted in the Light Horse Brigade. During his service he marched into Jerusalem with General Sir Edmund Allenby - a very proud moment in Edna’s life. Edna remembers happy times at Carrum Downs shared with Fr Gerard Tucker (1885 - 1974), the founder of the Brotherhood of St Laurence. “ My sister and I often used to visit and helped Fr Tucker when we could. Fr Tucker was a cousin of one of my aunts. For a short time, another of my cousins was a clergyman at Lara and he got to know Fr Tucker quite well.” Edna has lived in her local community for 30 years and has made friends with many of her neighbours, but she is very aware of the growing problem of people becoming alienated and disconnected. “ I used to know everyone in the neighbourhood; everyone used to know everyone. But this doesn’t happen now.” BSL joins Edna’s carers and family in celebrating her remarkable life. Act now for the future Edna says, “ I support the Brotherhood’s work but I believe so much is the responsibility of the government. Unfortunately, they just don’t seem to try to make changes to help the poorest of our community.” Edna’s views on gambling are very forthright. She says, “ It’s just no good for the poor and it’s a fact that it’s making us poorer. I am always deeply disturbed when I see and hear about problems affecting children. It makes me very sad.” “Because I care about people, I have included a gift to the Hazel Hawke Patron Brotherhood of St Friends of St Laurence Laurence in my Will. Have you? Please join me in making this very important gift.” Our new brochure tells you how to become a Friend of St Laurence. For a copy call Peter Hannan on 94831399 Yes, I want to help build better lives If you have not made your donation to our May Appeal please act now. □ □ □ I would like to join a “come and see” tour of the Brotherhood Send me information on how to remember the Brotherhood in my will Send me details about how I can be involved in the Brotherhood’s advocacy and policy work BROTHERHOOD o f St LAURENCE Helping people build better lives Name Address...............................................................................................................................................................post code.... □ Please accept my tax deductible donation of $_______ I enclose a Dcheque OR please debit my DBankcard DVisa DMastercard DDinersClub DAMEX ID I__I__I l I Signature___________________________________________________________ Expires________)_____ Telephone (H)______________________ (W)_______________________ E-mail Address_____________ For credit card donations by telephone - ring 9483 1301 or Fax 9483 1336 Return to: Brotherhood of St Laurence, 67 Brunswick Street, Fitzroy 3065 www.bsl.org.au