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TUFF TUMAS Vanuatu Fundraiser

Australian South Sea Islanders – Port Jackson are holding a charity concert in collaboration with Addison Road Community centre to raise funds for those affected by Cyclone Pam. We invite you to join us in support and solidarity with our brothers and sisters in Vanuatu at the TUFF TUMAS Vanuatu Fundraiser.

When: Sunday 26th April 2015
Where: Addison Road Community Centre, 142 Addison Road, Marrickville
Time: Starts 4.00pm

Internationally acclaimed artists and DJs appearing include:

tt-vfr-011. Sista Agz
Radio Skid Rows very own Sista Agz born on the Torres Strait Islands brings a saltwater fusion of roots rock reggae. One of Australia’s original Indigenous DJs who is also proud of her Women Tanna Island/Vanuatu heritage.
 

 


tt-vfr-012. Kamauri
Sydney based Jamaican Dancehall artist, song writer and producer performs ‘Wife Material’ and others.

 

 


tt-vfr-013. JC Funkdafied
JC grew up in London exposed to the sound of mainstream popular music. It wasn’t until 1982 when a friend introduced JC to ‘Planet Rock’ by Afrika Bambaataa that his love affair with Electro Funk, Hip Hop and vinyl began.

 

 


tt-vfr-014. Shireen Malamoo
A proud Birra Gubba women of Vanuatu descent one of our first Aboriginal / Kanak Jazz – Soul artists will be performing her favourites with the backing of Johnny Nicol band.

 

 


tt-vfr-015. Johnny Nicol
World renowned Indigenous Australian Jazzer and accomplished musician Johnny Nicol performs his greatest hits off his recent album. Nicol has featured as a permanent band member for the infamous Maori Troubadours and The Col Nolan Soul Syndicate.
 

 


tt-vfr-016. Ras Roni
Reggae Master Ras Roni from Barbados via London is one of Australia’s reggae pioneers formerly lead vocalist with Bdos Internationals, The Undivided, Untabu, Mataqali Music, Reggae Movement & Kalabash. He now spearheads for Sydney band The Strides. Ras Roni is renowned for his commitment to First Nations Peoples depicted in his song ‘Corner Stone’.

 

 


tt-vfr-017.Mataqali
These Sydney based wantoks perform a catchy blend of roots reggae, pacific reggae, funk and acoustic music. Band leader JJ Knight has worked with many including Untabu and as a founding member for award winning band Mataqali. He is backed by internationally acclaimed musicians.

 

 


tt-vfr-018. Errol Renaud
Errol is from Trinidad & Tobago and is an institution of Caribbean music in the Australian, Asian and Pacific regions. He has toured Oz with Amral’s Trinidad Cavaliers during their world tour with a vast history of international music platforms.

 

 


tt-vfr-019. Ras Daniel Ray & Roots Odyssey (UK Sound System)
Roots Reggae direct from Jamaica, “Ras Daniel Ray”, Producer, Arranger, Singer, Song Writer, Sound System specialist, and lead man for the legendary Vin Gordon of Studio One fame, and The Real Rock Band, is a power house performer, and is in Australia…
A man of humble beginnings, Ras Daniel Ray is a strong advocate of human rights with an ancestral message through his music of peace and unity, and his Rastafarian roots and culture. Arriving from Paris just yesterday his heart goes out to the people of Vanuatu as the world have been watching the devastation and he was moved to support the call.

more acts to be announced…

Early bird tickets $18 call or text 0416 300 946
TUFF-TUMAS-web-vs2

Artworks by Foundation Board Member, Shireen Malamoo, donated to Vanuatu appeal.

Malamoo-paintings

 

Shireen Malamoo “Plantation Creek series”
As a descendant of Tongoa Vanuatu Shireen is reminiscent of the stoic people she met on her homelands in the 1970’s who have lost virtually everything. Shireen now 79 years was compelled to donate a series precious works that depict her memoirs of growing up in Ayr North Queensland which was home for many who were blackbirded from Vanuatu in the 1800’s to work relentlessly on the sugar cane fields.

“My painting is melting pot for my spiritual estate… the Aboriginal, the Kanak and the European. At the same time it sings up the women of my tribal ancestry. Their belief in culture and their ingenuity gave us the solid groundwork that allowed us to adapt to the European world without losing our self respect … my paintings are a homage to them and to the men who supported them.

My art depicts the political and spiritual experiences of my life… the figures are the spirit people of those who came before us… they’re invisible presences all around us but larger than life… some from the past are of people in trauma; some like those in the community around here… others are heroic, symbolic of courage and vision for Aboriginal and Vanuatu empowerment”.

Malamoo was the fifth child in a family of 11 children. She was born in 1936 and lived in the town camp in the Birrigubba Lands of Plantation Creek in Ayr in Queensland.

All money from sales of donated artworks goes to the Vanuatu appeal. Three paintings are available. Pricing from $3,000. One is framed with glass. postage and handling are an addition to the donation.

LINKS:
Shireen Malamoo Bio
Other works by Shireen Malamoo

Cyclone Pam Fundraising Appeal

Vanuatu disaster - cyclone Pan March 2015

Vanuatu disaster – cyclone Pam March 2015


Dear Community

Please consider supporting the shipment of specific needs for Vanuatu Aid.

Many people and organisations across the nation have done monumental work in ensuring goods get to Vanuatu for the Cyclone Pam Fundraising Appeal safely.

Attached are two documents detailing how you can support Vanuatu even more as we have raised INKIND a further $648,000.00 of content and shipping for 6 shipping containers filled with specific resources (listed).

Overseas Disaster Resources, Neptune Shipping, Sydney Care have been working in collaboration with the Australian South Sea Islander community and ASSI NSW State Alliance to ensure these filled containers meet their departure dates of 30/3/2015 and 15/4/15 and 24/4/15 but we need your help in raising the cashflow of $18,000. If we don’t meet any of these dates we loose the opportunity of these significant resources.

No amount is too great or too small.

Regards
Emelda Davis

Information about Cyclone Pam fundraiser (430kb pdf file)
Letter from Overseas Disaster Resources (180kb pdf file)

Preparing for cyclones Reuben, Solo, Tuni, Ula… and beyond.

nic maclellanNic Maclellan is a correspondent for Islands Business magazine (Fiji). He travelled to Vanuatu last year with support from the Yumi stap redi long klimaet jenis program.

His most recent article, written for the Inside Story website, Preparing for cyclones Reuben, Solo, Tuni, Ula… and beyond. is in response to the devastation in Vanuatu, and underlines the importance of building community resilience before natural disasters.

You can read the Inside Story article HERE

The Faedim Baek Family Association first ever fundraiser.

The Faedim Baek Family Association first ever fundraiser.

Memebers of the Faedim Baek Family Association.

The “Faedim Baek” Family Association Solomon Islands has held its first ever fundraiser at the Art Gallery today.

The aim of the association is to reconnect Solomon Islanders who were taken during the Blackbirding days, to reconnect with their relatives in the Solomon Islands.

Interim Chair of the association, Cecil Ono told SIBC News in an interview the fundraising is to help them trace Solomon Islanders abroad who were taken during the blackbirding days, adding they are expecting the general public to help them raise funds.

“The main focus of this fund raising is to assist the committee and in that respect we are expecting the public to come out and help us so that we can be able to trace our people who have lost 167 years ago. That is the main focus of the committee.”

Mrs Faith Bandler, AO – State Funeral

faith-bandler-gentle-activist

A state funeral will be held for Mrs Faith Bandler at The Great Hall, Sydney University, from 11.00am Tuesday 24th February 2015.

The University of Sydney Science Road, Camperdown NSW 2050 phone: (02) 9351 2222.

Seating will be reserved at the very front only for members of Dr Bandler’s family.

Others will be seated, as they arrive, from the front to the back, with more seating in overflow areas of the hall.

 

great-hall-map

 

Mrs Faith Bandler, AO – Remembering our icon.

Faith Bandler: Activist, author and Inspiration

Mrs Ida Lessing Faith Bandler (née Mussing) died today at the age of ninety-six. Of Australian South Sea Islander and Scottish-Indian descent, Faith Bandler is considered as one of the top ten most important Australian leaders of the twentieth century and is profiled as such in the 1993 Australian Biography, ‘ A series that profiles some of the most extraordinary Australian’s of our time’.

Faith was born in 1918, in Tumbulgum, northern NSW, the second youngest of eight children. At the age of 13, Faith’s father Mr Peter Mussing was kidnapped under Australia’s indentured labour trade from the island of Ambrym, Vanuatu and brought to work as a labourer in the Queensland cane fields at Mackay. Faith always regarded his coming to Australia as slavery, and said that he was never paid.

After 14 years, he escaped from Queensland and settled on the Tweed and married Faith’s mother who was of Scottish-Indian descent. Peter Mussing would later successfully challenge the deportation provisions of the Pacific Island Labourers Act of 1901. This act of mass deportation saw over 7,000 Melanesian labourers deported with minimal notice back to Vanuatu and Solomon Islands. More than eighty islands were affected by the trade.

Professor Clive Moore from University of Queensland said that he was saddened to hear of Faith Bandler’s death. “I regard Faith as one of the greatest Australians of the twentieth century. Marilyn Lake, in the title of her 2002 biography of Faith, described her as a “gentle activist”. Faith was all of this.”

Malcolm Fraser described her “ability to inspire people of all races” to take on the struggle for Indigenous Australian and South Sea Islander Australian rights. Likewise, Fred Chaney, on the other side of politics, said that Faith was a charismatic leader who had a strong sense of justice. Faith knew people in all walks of life and could lobby effectively at the highest levels, but she never forgot her humble upbringing in northern New South Wales.

Faith in her early thirties was a peace activist. She had taken leave from her job as a dressmaker at David Jones in Sydney to attend a Soviet-sponsored youth festival in Berlin. Faith also toured Europe as a political dancer with the Margaret Walker Dance Group and performed at the Berlin Festival. When Faith returned home, skeptical of the communists, the security police confiscated her passport and had her sacked from her job.

Faith’s commitment as a gracious and savvy civil rights activist and leader assisted the establishment of the Federal Council for the Advancement of Aborigines and Torres Strait Islanders and led its successful ‘right wrongs write YES’ campaign in the 1967 referendum that saw the Commonwealth take power over Indigenous Australians away from the States and to have them counted in the national census.

In 1974, Faith decided to direct her energies to the plight of her own people, the 16,000 descendants of South Sea Islanders. She founded the National Commission for Australian South Sea Islanders and, in 1975, made her first emotional journey to her father’s birthplace on Ambrym of which she talks about in a documentary.

On her return, Faith worked closely with the Evatt Foundation and Australian South Sea Islanders leaders to produce the preliminary report on the social and economical status of her people, which triggered the 1992 Human Rights and Equal Opportunities Commission Report (HREOC’s ‘The Call for Recognition’). This report led to her people, the South Sea Islander descendants of the indentured labour trade being recognised as a ‘distinct cultural group’ by the Commonwealth Government in 1994.

Faith was a remarkable women, and she was a friend of many leading people in Australia, like Jessie Street, Charlie Perkins, Doug Nicholls, Oodgeroo Noonuccal, Gough Whitlam, and internationally activists like the singer Paul Robson.

In August 2012 we saluted Mrs Faith Bandler, as did the first woman Governor-General; Dame Quentin Bryce, honouring the daughter of a man taken from his South Sea island home to work as a slave in the Queensland cane fields. Mrs Faith Bandler received the highest honour the nation can award its people, the Companion in the Order of Australia Medal. Many years earlier she refused the offer of an MBE, saying she could never accept such as award from an empire that had enslaved her father.

Mrs Faith Bandler AO, some 22 years on since ‘The Call for Recognition’, ASSIs champion you for your foundation in working towards a united community. You carried the baton for us, and today our people are still fighting for rightful inclusion in programs and services as the rhetoric of recognition lingers. We will never forget Aunty Faith.

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