Yan is struggling to pay the bills for a large family, and like many clients, she is seeking extra hours this year.
Nyaluet Yan is raising eight children — five of her own and three relatives — and needs to boost her income. Source: SBS / Sandra Fulloon
“It’s hard, especially on your own, it is really hard,” Yan says. “Life is very expensive now. All bills are going higher, and feeding five or six teenagers is huge because they always need food on the table.
CEO and founder Selba-Gondoza Luka knows how hard it can be resettling in a new land.
Afri-Aus Care founder Selba-Gondoza Luka says many migrant women, especially those with large families and young children, face multiple barriers to employment. Source: SBS / Craig Hardiman
“When we came here, we lived on one salary and it was very difficult and I didn’t know that I was slowly developing depression. It became worse when I had a premature baby,” Luka says.
“So, when I got a little bit better, I went to university to do a bachelor of nursing and then postgraduate in clinical mental health because I really wanted to understand what happened to me.”
Abraham Kuol works as a project manager at Afri-Aus Care in Melbourne. Source: SBS / Sandra Fulloon
Using academic skills and lived experience, in 2015, Luka set up Afri-Aus Care to support others struggling with loneliness and depression and connect them with jobs.
“If migrants do not speak good English or cannot write well in English, it’s even harder. So, we support women with English classes. And those who can speak English well go straight to resume building,” she says.
Selba Gondoza-Luka aims to improve women’s employment outcomes. Source: SBS / Craig Hardiman
The Afri-Aus Care women’s program called Ubuntu has partnered with the Victorian government’s employment broker initiative, the Victorian African Communities Action Plan (VACAP).
Employment broker Victoria Andrea says for women raising children alone, a job can increase self-esteem, a sense of belonging, and financial independence.
Employment broker Victoria Andrea says it takes hard work to convince employers to consider workers with limited Australian experience. Source: SBS / Sandra Fulloon
“We mostly work with Africans and, in particular, Sudanese, South Sudanese, Somali and some East Africans,” Andrea says.
Andrea is now a full-time staff member at Afri-Aus Care, thanks to a project overseen by Abraham Kuol, who migrated from Kenya with his family in 2004.
Abraham Kuol migrated from Kenya with his family in 2004. Source: SBS / Sandra Fulloon
“My family fled the civil war on foot from Juba in South Sudan to Ethiopia,” 26-year-old Kuol says.
“Conditions were hard with dust everywhere, constant dust storms,” Kuol says.
Abraham Kuol was born in a refugee camp. Source: SBS / Sandra Fulloon
“The aid organisations working within the refugee camps tried their best, but this is not a place where you wanted to get sick. If you got sick, your chances of survival were low,” Kuol says.
“But those experiences in a refugee camp, although sometimes painful and hard and challenging, they’ve made me into the person who I am today — someone who cares about other people.”
He is now an associate research fellow and PhD candidate in criminology at the Alfred Deakin Institute for Citizenship and Globalisation at Deakin University.
Abraham Kuol also mentors youth involved with the justice system. Source: SBS / Sandra Fulloon
Kuol’s research explores post-settlement challenges facing African Australians. A keen soccer player, he also mentors youth in contact with the justice system.
“The main difference is that I was provided with support, which allowed me to be resilient.”
Abraham Kuol hopes to use his PhD to improve outcomes for other African Australians. Source: SBS / Sandra Fulloon
Kuol hopes to use his PhD to improve outcomes for others.
“And most have come here looking for a better opportunity, it’s their last piece of hope. All they need is the chance that Australia provides.”
International Day for People of African Descent is celebrated on August 31. It acknowledges the important contribution people of African descent make to our society.
Source Agencies