World Speech Day – The Power of Words told through our Mercy Connect Sydney student, Fadi

World Speech Day is the celebration of speech and the power of words. A speech can heal a broken heart, bring a community together and mend unforeseen bridges.

On World Speech day 2022 – the personal theme is “A New Harmony; finding reconciliation after personal trauma or loss”. Here at Mercy Works we wanted to especially thank Parra Leagues Club Grants for their support of our Mercy Connect Program which operates in schools in Parramatta and other Sydney local government areas providing reconciliation and healing after such trauma for our refugees and asylum seeker students.

Our specially trained volunteers assist vulnerable refugee and asylum seeker students with regular in-class mentoring support to build their emotional and academic confidence.

One such Mercy Connect Sydney student, who touched our hearts with the power of his words, is Fadi Esho, a 22-year-old from Iraq who completed his HSC at at Bankstown Senior College last year.

Fadi (R) and Fatima (L) who are both part of the Mercy Connect Sydney program. Fadi completed Year 12 at Bankstown Senior College in 2021 and spoke of his journey from Iraq via Turkey and the challenges he faced as a student arriving in this country. 

Fadi was invited to share his speech with us in December of last year at our Mercy Connect gathering, but had to cancel when his work as security guard at Canterbury-Bankstown City Council called him in at the last minute. Fortunately, the power of his words were still heard when he wrote his speech for us to read out loud. It touched us all.

Here is his story: 

“My name is Fadi Esho, I am a 22 year old from Iraq and currently a Year 12 student at Bankstown Senior College. I arrived in Australia on the 19th of March in 2019 after many difficulties in Iraq and Turkey.

My journey started in 2015 when I left Iraq and went to Turkey as a refugee. My family and I left Iraq because of the war: There was no future, most of the time there was no electricity and very poor living
conditions.

Despite all this struggling, in Iraq I was doing well at school and I was already in Year 12; but my family decided to flee to Turkey because the situation in our beloved country was very dire. We moved to Turkey (Istanbul) hoping for an Australian visa. The life in Turkey was very hard, harder than what we expected: I worked as a cleaner, salesperson and even as an English tutor for a 10-year-old boy.

I couldn’t complete my studies in Turkey because I had to work and help my family to pay for the rent and other basic living expenses. We stayed in Turkey for three and half years until we received our visa to come to Australia. When I arrived in Australia, I was already over 18 [and] really disappointed and sad because I thought no school would accept me due to my age. But lucky for me at Bankstown Senior College they do accept older students. I completed 3 terms at the IC and then I went directly in Year 11.

My living conditions in Australia are surely better than in Turkey, but our overall income is barely enough for the rent, bills and food. To study I have very limited internet access at home, and I share a laptop with my two siblings.

At the beginning of this school year, I had decided to go to TAFE and do the Certificate IV in Real Estate, but the career advisor made me realise that my marks were good enough to apply to go to Western Sydney University, where I can do a Diploma in Business and then, if possible, continue with the Bachelor in Business.

My biggest supporter is my mum who thinks now is really my chance to study. At the moment, I am working as security guard at Canterbury-Bankstown City Council where I use my Arabic language skills a lot. Accomplishment is very important for me because I want my family to be proud of me, so they know that each sacrifice they did for me wasn’t for nothing.

My long-term goal in Australia is to get a job that I like and help my family financially. I want to become a productive citizen of Australia, a person helping other people in this country that offers so much to me and I want to be a person who will leave a positive mark in this world.”

And the good news? Fadi did well enough in the HSC to study a Diploma in Business at The University of Western Sydney. Congratulations Fadi! And thank you Parramatta Leagues Club for your continued support of our Mercy Connect program.

Special thank you to Parra Leagues Club Grant for their support of our Mercy Connect Program across Parramatta and surrounding areas.

Reflect. Respect. Thoughts from our Board Director Steven Collins on the date January 26

Here at Mercy Works we stand in solidarity with our First Nations sisters and brothers. We are taking some time today to reflect and celebrate our culture diversity, but also to recognise the truth of our past.

Mercy Works has seven First Nations projects, where we partner with the most vulnerable toward opportunity, dignity and self reliance in the spirit of Catherine McAuley.

Little girl on Bathurst Island is from one our of former projects, a pre-school for Tiwi People to support closing the gap in education.                                     Photo Credit: Sr Anne Foale RSM

This little girl is from one of our past projects where we supported a pre-school on Bathurst Island, home to the Tiwi people, approximately 80km north of Darwin. It was taken by our outgoing Program Manager for Overseas and Indigenous Projects, Sr Anne Foale RSM, on one of her visits there. 

Helping children to have access to early education is so important to closing the gap. Here the Mercy Works community funded three teacher’s assistants to complete their Cert 3 in Early Education as well as extending the capacity of the building, the length of day, the pre-school program and medical attention to create a strong chance for 4-5 year olds to enter Kindergarten.

Our other projects around Australia include:

The Baabayn Aboriginal Corporation in Mt Druitt NSW – a childcare project with 25 Indigenous young mums and 20 babies and toddlers who gather each week to enjoy culturally sensitive programs;

Prospering After Prison – Port Augusta in SA where Aboriginal women are supported by dedicated caseworkers to help them build personal & financial resilience after prison;

The Miewi (Spirit) and Cultural Matters, Adelaide, SA where we support healing from trauma by rebuilding ties between community and country and celebrating culture and traditions;

Salt n’ Pepper, Adelaide, SA where we support for Aboriginal women released from prison returning to family;

Our Adelaide First Nations Advocacy, Adelaide, SA is where we advocate with the Department of Child Protection for family and community placement for children and awareness-raising with the Aboriginal community of child protection issues.

The Cape York Girl Academy in Cairns is Australia’s first boarding school for young mums and their babies where the focus is on holistic, healing mentoring of young women to reconnect with their education for hope-filled futures

Special Measures, Brisbane, QLD addresses two aspects of human rights: the right to empowerment and self-determination, and special measures to overcome racism through establishing an effective training centre through building a website.

Our new Board Director, Steven Collins, is Indigenous.

Steven has written his thoughts on the range of emotions January 26 can stir up for many. He says:

“This day seems to stir up a range of complex emotions and strong feelings for many, if not all, of us. For me, it reminds me of the importance of truth telling, and its critical role to the ongoing process of healing and reconciliation in Australia.

“The reality for Aboriginal Australians is that day forever changed our way of life. The history, tradition and culture of Aboriginal peoples and their experiences of injustices following colonisation has been largely unknown. However, there is a growing momentum among Australians to develop a fuller understanding and awareness of our history.

“Truth telling is not just about acknowledging the atrocities of the past, but is also an opportunity for Aboriginal peoples to share their culture and language with their communities. Our Aboriginal cultures are amongst the world’s oldest – something to be proud of, practised and celebrated every day.”

COVID-19 Emergency: Responding to an Unfolding Tragedy on our Doorstep

The Mercy Works ethos: “Leave Mercy Works ethos: “Leave No One Behind” became a reality for our nearest neighbours in PNG when an Emergency Relief Appeal was made for urgent donations due to the growing COVID-19 health crisis. From the initial stage of the Emergency Response, through to its preparation, planning, execution, and distribution the call for help was answered. 

The call out was swift and the response immediate: A heart-felt letter from Sr Maryanne Kolkia RSM, the In-country Coordinator of Mercy Works in Papua New Guinea, to Executive Director Sr Sally Bradley RSM came in April with the simple plea: We need your help. 

In her letter, Sr Maryanne expressed the escalating need for Mercy Works Simbu, where she had begun work with Janet Andrew RSM, to address the food shortage in response to the COVID-19 pandemic. “The purpose is to feed oneself and the neighbour,” she wrote. “Marginalised people are the vulnerable senior citizens, those living with HIV/AIDS, those living with disability, and families with many children are the neediest at this time. All I am thinking is to feed the locals within clans, districts and towns, connecting people in the rural villages as well as families living in the settlements around the townships of Kundiawa.”

Maryanne requested an extra 30,000 kina (approx. $12,200) to support the process.

It was all that Australians needed to make a response. Within weeks Sr. Sally, together with Kathleen Donnellon (Board Chair) and the other directors, agreed to send an Emergency Relief Appeal Letter to all donors and supporters 

Overwhelmingly, the Mercy Works network responded instantly. Donors, supporters, and friends of Mercy Works dug deeply and sent donations in response to the catastrophe besieging our nearest neighbours. 

To our delight, we received $116, 847 which was distributed across the Highlands (Goroka, Mt Hagen and Simbu), The Western Province (Kiunga and surrounding remote areas along the Fly River), and to the East Sepik Province (Wewak and outlying remote areas including Walis and Tarwai islands). 

By July, $48,158 was sent as Emergency Relief to the Highlands, where efforts were made to transport produce to communities who would normally attend daily markets. Due to the virus, people were reluctant to attend markets in townships where it is more likely to contract COVID-19. 

The ferocity of the outbreak exposed government corruption, economic mismanagement, and a fragile health care system. When the Government declared a nationwide lockdown in April, people were prevented from trading their agricultural products and for the unemployed, the vulnerable, the sick, people living with a disability, children and older people in squatter settlements and rural communities, accessibility to food was scarce. 

The Mercy Works team on the ground set about mobilising food distribution through church and already established networks. Wholesalers and farmers from community organisations negotiated the selling price of vegetables, root crops and fruits.

The method was effective. Families, individuals, and groups who Mercy Works was already in partnership with, took ownership of supplying garden produce to increase food production and supply. Word of mouth invitations to partner for food distribution were sent to village leaders which was “both exciting, encouraging, and inspirational,” said Sr Maryanne. “The public expressed a deep sense of gratitude and appreciation. Receiving food from Mercy Works was indeed a surprise, leaving them speechless.”

In Simbu, a verbal agreement was made between MW and the owners of truck drivers to mobilise people in their communities to transport garden food. 30 farmers from 15 villages, drivers of 10 trucks and three business houses and churches worked tirelessly towards meeting the demand. 90 ‘heaps’ of food for each clan, or organisation was distributed evenly to “shouts of joy and dance”  when their names were called. 

In the Western Highlands Province, the Sisters distributed the food to the vulnerable and needy. Embracing the idea that ‘no one goes without’ the key was to “collaborate toward promoting no poverty, zero hunger, good health and well-being for all”. The successful mission saw every group fed, easing the burden, stress and anxieties of many who were unable to help themselves. 

“Community mobilisation, collaboration and participation created an environment for people from all walks of life to work together in meeting each other’s needs in time of emergency,” said Sr Maryanne. “Sharing is a sign of caring for each other”.

Clans and family groups line up in Simbu for their supplies

Meanwhile, along the International border and remote Iowara areas, the Emergency Relief support in Kiunga was also implemented. Here, Mercy Works Coordinator Steven Dude with the parish priest, community leaders and the village health volunteer developed an action plan to roll out the approved relief of $42,107 which encompassed supplies for water tanks to access clean and safe water. Tinned fish and staples were purchased for distribution.

Over in the East Sepik Province, eleven communities were identified by the Sisters to receive rations and materials for the emergency response of $26,582. Afraid to come near Wewak for marketing, in fear of the virus, access to clean water was hampered. Many women usually walk daily, quite a distance, to access water. 

Here, Sr Rachael organised bulk buying to secure discounts for nine, 3,000 Litre water tanks. Boats were hired to transport the tanks to the two Island communities as well as road travel and boat hire to get to the Chambig Village on the Sepik River. The Sisters worked in pairs to take the tanks to their destination. Over a couple of weeks, bulk supplies of noodles, milk powder, tinned fish, rice and other groceries were loaded onto mini-buses and taken to places accessible by road. People worked together to distribute the supplies and set up and connect the water tanks to the roof of the building to collect rainwater.

In Wewak, Sr Rachael Waisman and Sr Merelyn accompany the 3,000 Litre water tank to Walis Island
In Wewak, Sr Rachael Waisman and Sr Merelyn accompany the 3,000 Litre water tank to Walis Island

The COVID-19 Emergency relief helped meet the urgent needs of 247,370 people. “Mercy Works lived up to its name,” smiles Sr Maryanne. “Communities were overwhelmed by the offer of support and expressed much gratitude.”

“A mutual respect among all people was established,” agrees Sr Rachael. “Emergency Relief makes people feel they are loved and taken care of in their needs.”

 

Mercy Connect Morning Tea

It was an exciting day at Mercy Works on Tuesday, as we hosted our first morning tea in the building again for the first time in a long time!

We had the chance to host some of our wonderful (and patient) volunteers and donors from our Mercy Connect Sydney Program which places students who are asylum seekers and refugees adjusting to a whole new life in Australia, which as you can imagine presents many challenges, with volunteers who assist and mentor with this transition.

Being placed in a school after lengthy periods in a refugee camp or a place of refuge can be a very stressful time for these young people who can often feel isolated and anxious as they try to settle into a new culture and school system. Many of them arrive in Australia after having experienced lengthy periods of dislocation, grief and trauma. Add to that a lockdown with very little English and often little access to laptops and wifi, well it is important to stay connected.

This morning Fatima, a student from Iran with Afghani background, who was studying law in her home country, spoke to the volunteers of how important the help has been while getting her HSC (which she will complete next year) at Bankstown Senior College. Fatima hopes to continue to study law in Australia, and spoke of the challenges and how important a program like Mercy Connect is and the difference it can make.

“The nice teachers and volunteers at Bankstown Senior College helped me to find my way and start my steps again… When you are new in a country of course it is language [which is difficult], but it is like you are born again.”

Emma from Dooleys Lidcombe Catholic Club and Fatima at our Morning Tea
Emma Roach, Community Relations and Grants Co-Ordinator  from Dooleys Lidcombe Catholic Club and Mercy Connect Sydney student Fatima at our Morning Tea at Mercy Works

Special thanks to our donors for coming including Emma Roach, Community Relations and Grants Co-Ordinator  from Dooleys Lidcombe Catholic Club – from Dooleys Lidcombe Catholic Club, who give so much generous support for our Mercy Connect Sydney program. Also special thanks to our incredible volunteers who can’t wait to get back into schools when they open up next year and do what they do best; nurture, support and explain difficult maths equations!!

Mercy Connect is now operating in five cities across Australia, – Sydney, Melbourne, Ballarat, Bendigo, and Perth, – with more than 300 volunteers supporting over 1400 students in 116 primary and secondary schools.

If you would like to know more about our programs, or volunteer to work with students like Fatima, please click here

Mely’s Story: One Survivor’s Story

Healing the Harm from Human Trafficking

As an 8-year-old, Mely was abused by her stepfather in the Philippines. He threatened her at knife point after she watched him rape her sister. When she confronted her mother and neighbours about it, she was placed into a Jesuit-run orphanage for seven years.

As a teen, she accepted an offer of laundry work and a free education from an “elegant woman visitor” who arranged transportation to Cebu, a city distant from her hometown.

Within hours of arriving in Cebu, she was forced to dress up and prostituted. “I cried, when she explained our real work,” says Mely through tears. “I asked her to take me back, I had no idea how this had happened.” She was forced to use drugs to stay awake all night and “improve the glum demeanour” she was told discouraged customers.

Mely begged for release but was told she had to pay for the transportation and other expenses incurred by her traffickers. She resigned herself to a life of prostitution.

“I felt hopeless and worthless. I felt already ruined,” Mely says.

One day she woke up still high on drugs in her room and made herself a promise; she would have a future. She had met a compassionate man, who helped her escape. He had introduced her to the Good Shepherd Welcome House in Cebu and she knew she was finally ready to trust in others. With their help and five years of effort, she overcame her drug habit, finished high school, and trained to be a nurse’s aide. “I had to learn how to forgive myself and the people who caused me pain,” she says.

Mely is now an activist and survivor of sex trafficking in Cebu. She graduated from her bachelor in Science in Social Work and now serves as the Project Coordinator of Good Shepherd Welcome House for trafficked women. She has also spoken to the UN of her experiences alongside Sr Angela Reed RSM.

“I want to give them hope. I want to be an inspiration and give voice to all the abused women out there. I want to show them that if I could change my life, they can too,” she says.

“Four nights a week, I visit different areas to walk with girls, greet them, build relationships and tell them about our programs and services.

“I want to raise awareness and tell the world that my story isn’t just a story, it’s a reality.”

 

 

Give Hope this Christmas and HELP end human trafficking in the Philippines

Our Mercy Works Christmas Appeal this year is to support our new project in Cebu city in the Philippines.

I had the privilege of visiting the Good Shepherd Welcome House in Cebu (pre-pandemic). Hearing the young women who had survived human trafficking share their stories of recovery was both shocking and yet hope-filled.

The memory will stay with me for the rest of my life.

Of 10,000 women working as prostitutes in Cebu, half are aged between 11- 17 years old. Mely (pictured right) is one such survivor whose story has stayed with me. Hers is a distressing journey of abuse, exploitation, survival but ultimately hope. But it’s not just a story – as she says: “It’s a reality.”

How you can help this Christmas?

Mercy Works is hoping to raise $46,000 to support this project.

We have partnered with the Villa Maria Good Shepherd Sisters to deliver the “Creating Change for Women through Advocacy project” which offers ongoing healing, safety, education and ways to give a confident voice to women who have exited from prostitution and are survivors of human trafficking.

Survivors like Mely are forming a strong support network in policy, research and advocacy training to change unjust structures in society and to help end human trafficking.

Together, with members of inter-faith-based organisations, these survivors are finding their voice as they prepare to make recommendations for new legislation to government entities. They hope to improve mental health supports for vulnerable, trafficked women.

In taking hold of their lives, we believe joy and new opportunities are opening up to them.

You can help break the crippling cycle of human trafficking this Christmas.

With your generosity Mercy Works can continue to support the women in Cebu city as they work together to rebuild their lives and replace fear and sorrow with newfound joy and hope.

Donate and make a difference!

– Sally Bradley RSM
Executive Director, Mercy Works

Simon’s Story – The Joy Your Help Brings

It was one afternoon in 2015 that Simon Tulkopni says his life changed forever. The second youngest of four children, living with their single mum in the West Highland Province of Jiwaka, Simon was the only member of his family to continue his education past Grade 7. 

With the continued help of his uncles and his mum, who had sold the family pig to pay for his university fees, Simon studied paramedics at Divine Word University, and then completed his residency training at Mt. Hagen General Hospital.

Driven by a desire to help combat the high maternal mortality and morbidity rates, his dream was to become an obstetrician. But without further financial support, Simon realised there was little chance of ever being a doctor.

“It was on one afternoon in 2015, that I glanced through a newspaper, that was bought by my uncle, and I saw the advertisement for new intakes for the new medical school in Divine Word University,” Simon recalls. “I cut that page [out] and placed it on my room wall, made from bush materials and I asked my mother, who was a faithful catholic mum, to ‘pray for it’,” he says.

In their prayers Simon and his mum prayed to God that it was “your will” he would be accepted to study medicine and surgery. Their prayers were answered. Simon was accepted, but the fees were so high, he realised it was still not a reality. “I couldn’t afford that and also I already owed my family,, so I had to work and pay [that off].”

Deep down he knew his fate was not sealed.

“Down in my heart I knew that God would rescue me,” says Simon who during that time met a young nurse Kate, his now wife. Kate paid for his food every fortnight while he studied as a non-residential student and in 2018, he decided he had to withdraw from the university all together because the financial stress was too much.

It was in that very hour of need; Mercy Works came to help. “I couldn’t believe it! I later realised that the greater plan our Creator had for me was revealed!”

For two years Simon completed his studies under a Mercy works scholarship. “Sr Anne was sent by God to help me,” he says. “If it wasn’t for Mercy Works, I couldn’t become the person I am today, helping mothers and children and sick people.”

In 2019 Simon married Kate, adopting a daughter, Joy, 7. But after their wedding a pregnant Kate left to work in a remote area only accessed by plane In the Gulf Province.

Then, tragically, in May 2020 his beloved mum was diagnosed with cervical cancer and despite surgery the cancer metastasized to other organs. “She was all I have in life,” Simon says of the unbearable time.

In August, a month before she passed away, his and Kate’s “Covid” baby was born. Coupled with COVID-19 lockdowns, remote logistics and completing his studies in a different Province, Simon missed the birth. 

His mother’s parting gift was to name the grandson she would never meet. “She called him Emmanuel,” says Simon of the name which means ‘God with us’. “Even though she never met her newborn grandson.”

Kate, Simon and their children Emmanuel and Joy in Madang in 2021

In his grief, Simon thought about withdrawing from medicine to be with his family. But it was his family who pushed him to continue. “That was the toughest situation I’ve come across,” he admits. “I changed my mind and continued my studies after resting her.”

Desperately missing his children and wife who he had not seen for two years, Simon asked Kate to resign from her job to stay with him.

She arrived in June 2021 to his working residential area and the couple were able to live as a happy family for a month. He says the visit meant everything. Fuelled with the family time, he has now settled into his first-year residency, which he will complete in 2022. To date he has completed anaesthesia and surgery and is currently doing his residency in obstetrics and gynaecology – the field of study he had always dreamed of. 

“Every day I enjoy my work, but I still have a missing feeling in my life and that is my mum. She would have stayed with me and enjoyed the life I’m living now. But it was God’s plan, and he took her away from me.”

Simon says life has come full circle. “Since she passed away from cervical cancer, I’m planning on becoming an obstetrician to help save mothers who are going through this problem.”

The icing on the cake? His wife will come and work as an emergency worker in the same Modilon General Hospital in Madang, in the Marobe Province. 

Simon says without the help of the Mercy Works sponsorship, none of this would have become a reality.

“It was impossible for me to complete my studies without their help,” he says of the K9,000-K12,000 university fees. The family annual income is less than K3,000. Mercy Works also helped with books, soap, lunch money, medical tools, and equipment. 

“Sr Anne came on board and Mercy Works sponsored me with all the quality medical tools like, stethoscope, auroscopes, ophthalmoscope and a Blood Pressure machine. To date, I’m using it to serve the patients now.

“Because of Mercy Works I have become the person I am today, serving the sick people of PNG. As long as I live, I will still remember the input Mercy Works and Sr Anne put into my life and with all my heart, I’ll try all my best to serve the needy souls of PNG in terms of medical care.”

 

Shining a Spotlight on our staff: Sr Anne Foale RSM

There is little doubt our Overseas Program Manager (and up until Dec 1st, our Indigenous Program Manager), music lover and amateur bird watcher, Sr Anne Foale RSM, truly embodies the spirit of a “walking nun” and a Sister of Mercy in Action. She has dedicated her life to assisting others.

In October Anne was proudly announced as one of four “Shining Light Award recipients” who were celebrated by The Friends of Tenison Woods College and recognised for “significant contributions made by former students to the local and global community in order to inspire current and future students”. She accepted the award in an online ceremony.

Born in Mount Gambia, Anne attended a Mercy school and says she always felt a calling. Her great aunt was a Sister of Mercy in Mt Gambia and – being the eldest of nine children – she laughs that “by 16 I felt I’d had my days of babies and child rearing!”.

She always saw Sisters of Mercy as women who have lived a fulfilled life. “They live with purpose, faith and compassion,” she says. Inspired by her music teacher, Anne was encouraged to study nursing first, which she did at Royal Adelaide Hospital.

In 1974 she worked as a lay missionary nurse in the Broome Diocese and completed her midwifery training in Perth before joining the Sisters of Mercy in 1978. She spent the next 30 years working on the ground in supporting women in early motherhood, at Coolock House in Morphett Vale, south of Adelaide; supporting Aboriginal women in communities in the Kimberley (WA)  Port Augusta (SA), and later in East Timor with the Jesuit/Mercy Refugee Service.

“Mothers and baby nursing was where I felt at home. I had watched my mother struggle with many babies in terrible isolation with little support and very little information. And I reckon all women deserve better than that. … That was the driving force for me to support women in early motherhood and make it an experience of empowerment for them.”

With an innate love for the bush, Anne says she learned the “importance of civil disobedience in the face of inhumane government policies” while working to support refugee and asylum seekers at the Baxter Detention Facility near Port Augusta, until the facility was closed.These people were from Afghanistan, Iran, Iraq, and Africa – often they were stateless, and their misery was used for political purposes.”

Staying on at Port Augusta, she worked with a team in a dedicated birthing program for Aboriginal women to hopefully have a more empowering experience of birth and motherhood. Since starting with Mercy Works in 2016, and up until COVID-19 forced her return home, Anne has largely been working in Papua New Guinea and Timor, away from the cities and traffic! “We work to give people a hand up rather than a handout, and I really enjoy the cultural diversity.”

With COVID having such a huge impact on Anne’s work over the last two years, with zoom calls rather than trips to disadvantaged villages, Anne says she can still see the impact and difference to people’s lives through the Mercy Works projects and is looking forward to a trip to Adelaide in December to check in on several Aboriginal Advocacy projects particularly for women and their children.

“Life is worthwhile when we focus on the needs of others rather than just ourselves and this was a big motivating force for me. In life, I believe it’s important to develop a sense of gratitude for all that we’ve been given – to be empathetic to others and to work with compassion for those who have less than ourselves.”

Her advice for a fulfilled life? “Figure out what your gifts are and what you have a passion for – and use them to make a difference for others whether they are people or our planet.”

 

 

 

Exiting Modern Day Slavery – Healing the Harm from Human Trafficking

Human trafficking is real. It has destroyed countless lives and families; it is a violation of human dignity, a crime, and a result of a complex set of circumstances. In the Philippines, human trafficking for sexual exploitation is especially prevalent among young women and girls, with Cebu City a major destination for sex tourism and international and domestic trafficking of children aged from 11 to 17 years old. 

About 10,000 women are engaged in prostitution in Cebu and half are underage. They often suffer varied effects of abuse including repeated abortions, become HIV positive, suffer psychologically, experience violence and low self-esteem – all which makes them more vulnerable to further abuses. They are often recruited or taken against their will, forced into debt and drugs by perpetrators, are undocumented and threatened with imprisonment or deportation and can’t see a way to escape the cycle they are trapped in.

This year Mercy Works is proud to have expanded to partner with two new projects with women and girls who have experienced prostitution and human trafficking. One is in Mindanao, Balay Banaag, a residential centre run by the Marist Sisters to provide care and support for the daughters of females working in prostitution. 

The other is the Creating Change for Women through Advocacy project in Cebu City in partnership with the Villa Maria Good Shepherd Sisters, who established Welcome House in 2007, and now have four centres that aim to raise the leverage of women who have exited from prostitution and survived human trafficking.  

They offer temporary shelter, conduct outreach on the streets of Cebu and the red-light district, they refer clients to their long-term recovery center and help women re-integrate back into the community and gain employment. Their success rate is high.

However, this advocacy program, which started in September, hopes to give women a voice, to engage the community and raise awareness and educate future generations to end this modern-day slavery and create their own opportunities for development utilising advocacy. 

Human trafficking usually occurs as a result of a process over the life course of the women and children, not the Hollywood stereotype so often depicted. Factors that push women and girls to become the victims of traffickers include poverty, rural isolation, violence and sexual abuse, lack of education and employment, dysfunctional family, cultural factors, and lack of information. The victims are vulnerable and exploited.

 “My dream is for these women, who are victims of human trafficking for sexual purposes, to be heard,” says Arianne Nadela, social worker of 14 years and Program Coordinator at Good Shepherd HEART.

“Our hope is to be one as a group and heard because they are voicing out what they need through their own voices, so they can represent their situation and their life stories.”

The goal, says Sr Virgo RGS, the Ministry Development Coordinator of the project, is “to raise the level of society’s response on human trafficking and safeguard the right of women and children to live and enjoy a peaceful and secure environment”.

And while advocacy is an old strategy, the expression on how it will be conducted evolves. It is the women themselves who design, implement, and decide intended outcomes. Those who have experienced trafficking are our best teachers, that is what makes this project different. 

“Change is empowerment,” says Sr Virgo. “This is changing the narratives from being project beneficiaries to project conceptualisers and implementers…if there is a chance to bring the women to a wider arena to other parts of the Philippines and even to the United Nations, to other countries to ensure that women’s voices will not only heard locally but also through the world since human trafficking is a worldwide phenomenon and needs the alliance from all people around the world.” 

The advocacy is divided into six components including training women to become strong advocates against human trafficking; to spearhead a coalition of like-minded non-government organisations to recommend, reform and legislate; to engage stronger dialogues with local city officials and government institutions; to provide a mental health wellness program; to do research and really address the needs of victims and survivors and produce advocacy materials which better communicates their message.  

In Cebu, Mercy Works seeks to listen to the experiences of these persons, accompany them in their personal journeys and develop with them holistic programs to meet their needs. We support women and girls in healing, self-sufficiency through employable skills, economic and personal growth opportunities, and reconciliation with often estranged families, adhering to our vision to partner with the most vulnerable toward opportunity, dignity, and self-reliance. 

ONE SURVIVOR’S STORY: THE ROAD TO RECOVERY and ADVOCACY

As an 8-year-old, Mely was abused by her stepfather in the Philippines. He threatened her at knife point after she watched him rape her sister. When she confronted her mother and neighbours about it, she was placed into a Jesuit-run orphanage for seven years.

As a teen, she accepted an offer of laundry work and a free education from an “elegant woman visitor” who arranged transportation to Cebu, a city distant from her hometown.

Within hours of arriving in Cebu, she was forced to dress up and prostituted. “I cried, when she explained our real work,” says Mely through tears. “I asked her to take me back, I had no idea how this had happened.” She was forced to use drugs to stay awake all night and “improve the glum demeanour” she was told discouraged customers.

Mely begged for release but was told she had to pay for the transportation and other expenses incurred by her traffickers. She resigned herself to a life of prostitution. “I felt hopeless and worthless. I felt already ruined,” Mely says.

One day she woke up still high on drugs in her room and made herself a promise; she would have a future. She had met a compassionate man, who helped her escape. He had introduced her to the Good Shepherd Welcome House in Cebu and she knew she was finally ready to trust in others. With their help and five years of effort, she overcame her drug habit, finished high school, and trained to be a nurse’s aide. “I had to learn how to forgive myself and the people who caused me pain,” she says. 

Mely is now an activist and survivor of sex trafficking in Cebu. She graduated from her bachelor in Science in Social Work and now serves as the Project Coordinator of Good Shepherd Welcome House for trafficked women. She has also spoken to the UN of her experiences alongside Sr Angela Reed RSM.

“I want to give them hope. I want to be an inspiration and give voice to all the abused women out there. I want to show them that if I could change my life, they can too,” she says.

“Four nights a week, I visit different areas to walk with girls, greet them, build relationships and tell them about our programs and services.

“I want to raise awareness and tell the world that my story isn’t just a story, it’s a reality.”

Chair’s Report 2021

KATHLEEN DONNELLON | Chair of the Board

Over the last twelve months, Mercy Works has continued to adapt to rapid change. 

We haven’t been able to visit our programs in Papua New Guinea or Timor Leste, or our new programs in the Philippines.  We have had limited opportunity to visit our Australian programs.  Some, such as Mercy Connect, have gone into hibernation for much of the pandemic, although our volunteers are ready to head back to school whenever the schools are ready to have them. Others, such as our nutrition project for expectant mums in Maucatur, Timor Leste, have continued unabated.  Staff have spent weeks working from home and the board has not had a face-to-face meeting since the pandemic began.

Yet, there have also been blessings.

New projects have begun. In the Baucau district of Timor Leste, we have partnered with Australian Marist Solidarity (AMS) to bring hope and opportunity to children and adults with disabilities.  In the Philippines, our new program partners provide support to very vulnerable women and their children, who have been affected by human trafficking and prostitution.

In Australia, we have commenced new programs in partnership with our First Nations people.  These include supporting local communities to provide an alternative educational model for young Indigenous women (at Cape York Girl Academy, Cairns) as well as strengthening ties for vulnerable women between community and country (The Miewi (Spirit) and Culture Matters Project, Adelaide, SA).  World leaders have recently finished meeting in Glasgow to discuss action to address climate change, and there is considerable irony in Australia being a recalcitrant international player on this front, when we are surrounded by the wisdom and experience of our Indigenous people, in living as one with the land.

Unfortunately, the pandemic has caused delay in the roll out of our new program in Simbu, in the highlands of Papua New Guinea.  I am very conscious, as I write this, of the extreme pressure that Covid-19 is placing on our Papua New Guinea staff and volunteers, their families, friends and community members.  The current rate of double-dose vaccination in PNG is less than 2%.  Timor Leste is currently at about 35%. Meanwhile, my son, who is a front-line health-care worker in Melbourne, has received his third dose of Pfizer. It’s impossible to understand how this extraordinary inequality can exist between these neighbouring nations.  This avoidable disparity in vaccination coverage is deeply frustrating, especially because for a time there was genuine hope that appropriate assistance would be given to developing nations, to ensure vaccine availability.

This year, Mercy Works staff and directors took time to revisit our Mission, Vision and Values, as part of our strategic planning process.  Our new Vision statement is:

Mercy In Action.  Partnering with the most vulnerable, toward opportunity, dignity and self-reliance.

Catherine McAuley, who founded the Mercy Congregation in Dublin in 1831, gave shelter and nurture to women and children in need at a time when the only alternative for the sick, homeless, poor or otherwise vulnerable, was the workhouse.  She provided them with education and ‘built capacity’, generations before that phrase became jargon for developing a person’s skills and abilities.  Mercy Works seeks to walk in Catherine’s shoes.

On occasion, however, our long term aims need to give way to short term necessity.  This was the case in Papua New Guinea this year.  Our appeal in April for emergency relief for PNG followed a plaintive call for help from Sr Maryanne Kolkia in Simbu, where serious disruptions to the food and water supply chains in remote areas of the Highlands resulted in food shortages. The generosity of you, our supporters and donors, to this appeal was overwhelming.  It resulted in food, water and water tanks being supplied to people throughout the Highlands, and in Kiunga and Wewak.  Sincere thanks must go to the extraordinary team of volunteers on the ground in PNG, who undertook the huge task of rolling out the deliveries to all those people in need.

I am finishing my time as Chair of Mercy Works this year.  There have been significant challenges over my time in the role, not the least of which was being part of an international development organisation during a world-wide pandemic.  There have also been significant structural and organisational changes within Mercy Works, to strengthen our sustainability into the future.  What has not changed, however, is the need for continued support of people who are marginalised and vulnerable, and the extraordinary commitment to the mission of that work, by all the people who work or volunteer for Mercy Works.

Many thanks to the Members of Mercy Works Ltd, who are the four Congregations of the Sisters of Mercy in Australia, namely The Institute of the Sisters of Mercy in Australia and Papua New Guinea (ISMAPNG), The Paramatta Congregation, The Brisbane Congregation and The North Sydney Congregation.

To all of our generous supporters, heartfelt thanks.  This essential work cannot continue without your ongoing generosity.

I would particularly like to thank all the very hard working and committed Board directors and Committee members I have worked with throughout my time at Mercy Works. I have felt proud to work with such a highly skilled, thoughtful and mission focused group.  I do want to offer particular thanks to Travis Bowman and Frank Elvey, as Chairs of the Finance Risk and Audit Committee and the Program Committee respectively.  They are both wise, experienced, and generous men, and I am very grateful to them for their unerring support of the organisation, and of me personally.

Deep thanks also, to the Mercy Works staff and to the many volunteers, all of whom are in their roles because they are moved by Catherine’s call to walk with those in need.  Huge thanks must go to Sally Bradley RSM, for her strong, insightful and energetic leadership.  It has been such a joy and privilege to work closely with Sally.

Finally, I want to wish Mercy Works all the very best as it heads into the future.  I have felt honoured to Chair such a mission-filled ministry.  I know that Joe Zabar, as the new Chair, will bring great, new gifts to the role, and I know that he will be well supported by a highly capable board and Executive Director.

While processes and people will continue to change along the way, what does not change is the Mercy Works mission.  Catherine’s call that ‘The poor need help today, not next week’ continues to resonate at the heart of all we do.  I feel so very fortunate to have had the opportunity to be part of this earthy, people-focused and highly effective organisation, which will remain very close to my heart.

Christmas blessings to you all.