Monday, 2 April 2012
Day 3 "What might life be like for an Aboriginal person in Alice Springs"
Had a great sleep last night, exhausting days and itinerary but wouldn't want it any other way! Such rich experiences. So didn't wake up until 8am! Uploaded my long and made a phone call home to speak to my lovelies, who are having a terrific holiday also!
The itinerary can have slight changes as we go and because of my late start, thinking that we were meeting at 9am thought I had plenty of time for breaks but there was a change so missed the visit to a local high school to see their new hall. Wandered the town to Woolies to pick up lunch supplies for tomorrows visit to Santa Theresa School, and had a lovely coffee. Funny comment to make but lots of Aboriginal men around this morning which have been noticeably absent over the past two days. We have seen plenty of women and children of all ages but not so many men.
One of the stall holders we were talking with yesterday, the one who'd been part of the stolen generation was telling us that the men in the immunity have been displaced over the years and have lost their role in the community and as such are lost themselves. She said that they traditionally the main decision makers and disciplinarians, but those roles have been taken away as they have very little to do with the decisions that are beIng made about them. Communication or lack of it is a major issue and having an enormous impact on the Aboriginal people in Alice Springs and the NT. Because the men have lost their role and are seemingly removed they don't discipline the young ones when they are wayward and the women cannot do this as traditionally it is not their role. Unlike white women who can tell there children off and step in to discipline, aboriginal women can't. This is causing big problems as any of the young men have no direction. She felt that all parties in the community need to come together and talk to each other for a solution to be found. We asked if she thought this would happen and she said it would have to happen as their society is disintegrated bit is becoming worse and worse. Her symbol for community is ever present in her artwork, at the heart of it.
Theresa was saying that she has set up groups in the common nifty centre so that young girls can learn to gather and make bush medicine, learn skills that have begun to be lost. There eare groups for the young men also to learn skills to make spears and hunt etc. They have groups for elderly people particularly there women on how to look after themselves, their health and their spirit. Theresa has used white education to educate herself and is in a piston. Where she can use both and see both views to stag then her culture. he believes that education is the key!
We want up to the Anzac Lookout and had a 360 degree view of Alice Springs. very hot say todAy 39 degrees! The heat is tricky because you feel hot but don't really sweat so I've ended up with headaches....sneaks up on you have been drinking about 4bottles of water plus water wherever you go.
We then visited the Indigenous Early Learning Centre, part of OLSH school. this is a no fee paying centre for a indigenous children which has previously not received any government funding, until Julia Gillard visited last year and has now approved funding of the next two years. They were finding that although there were plenty of centers of Aboriginal children to go to, they weren't. So they set up this centre and a bus goes to the houses and cAmps and collects the students every morning. The kids are brought to the centre, fed morning tea and lunch and there clothes are washed. they participate in programs as we would have n our schools. they as then dropped home via the mini bus after 12.30pm. Such beautiful kids! We played in the home corner, making food for the babies. we built towers from blocks and glued pictures and then sang songs on the carpet together. They can take 18 children. The children were very happy to have us there and demanding of our attention. they loved having their photo taken and then viewing it. A few of us then had the privilege of taking these children back to their homes on the bus. This was the difficult part, to take them from a safe and healthy environment to such poverty, violence and neglect. only 3 of the 18 children went to a home which we would consider to be ok in a poverty stricken environment. only 1 child as welcomed with a hug. these children don't know what they will face when they get he. Most of the family don't even come out to greet them. one child can hardly speak because he has suffered abuse where he is never spoken to. The positive thing is that these kids get to experience school and understand how to operate within a school environment because the Only way out for them is education. They will go to the school that is closest to them and the current statistics show that most will drop out by Yr 10. The average number of Aboriginal students who graduATe from OLSH is 5!
The camps that these children live in have to be seen to be believed.. many don't have electricity, some no running water..one of the students, Elizabeth, sleeps on a mattress in the open air with a mosquito net in a camp called White Camp. The government don't want them to live there so they don't provide them with any services, in the hope they'll leave.
These are truly fourth world conditions!
very disturbing!
we were back late from this so the schedule went out the window todAy. we made a visit to Imparja, the local indigenous tv station.
4of us had the opportunity to help with the St Vinnies soup van at 5pm. I wasn't sure how that would go or what people to expect. If you approached an aboriginal person in the street they wouldn't speak to you as a rule. The people who came to the van wanted to talk and share their stories. The first older Aboriginal man was funny, he didn't like my hair, he was asking me why I had my hair short like that, that women should have long hair like him, he liked that better. it was all good natured and I laughed and told him it would grow again. Which it really is growing! another lady had a very sad story, which is quite reflective of the situation faced here by most Aboriginal people, one of poverty, violence, hardship and sadness. She has four sons, 2 are in jail, 1 just got out of Juvenile Detention, he's on his last chance and then she has a 14 yr old. her husband is in jail and she misses him terribly, and struggles to look after her other children financially and emotionally. Her concern was at she wasn't going to have food to feed her son on his community service and she wanted us to give her some sandwiches to take home with her. Which we did. There were about 30 or. More people who came, mainly mores and children and teenage youth. A young boy was calling to me that he'd seen me in his community at church the day before, I guess I stand out in a crowd with my hair at the moment. Another girls who was helping with the van has lived here for 6 yrs and said that when she came it was a thriving, bustling happy town. In the last few years with the intervention and Tiger airlines pulling out, the town is now dying and a totally different place. She said businesses are closing, no new businesses are closing to town and people don't go out and socialize any more. was a great chance to talk to Aboriginal people which is where the learning in this experience is.
We had dinner at the pub up the road. it is unsettling to walk around at times. It is a true dichotomy in Alice Springs. Inside the pub a different world from outside. Beautiful food, sad images outside and a power walk back to our hotel.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment