General Entry - Emerging Talent Awards

Photos (15)

Cover
Nunjul finds it hard to remember what her mother looked like, or any interaction they had. In trying to understand Nunjul’s past, we visited her older sister. Living in a caravan park at the time, her sister grabbed a pile of old photos from inside her tent. They were photos of their mother. As homage to Nunjul’s past, we made a collaborative decision to include one of these images.
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Nunjul recently turned 18, and her son BJ is two years old. In Nov 2011 DoCS removed BJ from Nunjul’s custody. She was in a violent relationship with his father. To end the relationship, Nunjul made the decision to move away from her hometown. Rather than being supported in the decision to leave an abusive and unhealthy environment, she describes DoCS reaction to her move as an ‘inconvenience’.
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One hour supervised visit. With no car Nunjul has to travel 100km to visit her son. Seemingly reluctant to reunite Nunjul with her son, DOCS reduced visitations with BJ to one hour, once every two months. No explanation was provided.
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I went to school with Tammara. Her mum was strict, and my friends bullied her because of her frizzy hair. She left high school early, and had her first baby, followed by a second soon after. She wasn’t in a good place; depression, drugs, alcohol and a turbulent relationship resulted in the removal of her first two children. She admits at that stage in her life, she had given up.
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Tammara was a part of my previous project 'We met a little early, but I get to love you longer'. Although Tammara had moved interstate, her circumstances were now even more complex. Seventeen weeks pregnant, homeless, and in a relationship with a partner waiting to be sentenced by the court, I wondered whether this baby would be the catalyst for change in her life.
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Despite her transient circumstances I continued to visit Tammara and her family, and we decided to continue telling her story. Pictured a homemade birthday cake Tammara baked for her daughter Tamika. Tammara was embarrassed by her own efforts. The cake was imperfect and while she was self-conscious of it, we celebrated Tamika’s first birthday, and one year of Tammara being clean from drugs.
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Rowrow’s community experiences entrenched poverty, racism, violence, drug and alcohol misuse, and a range of other barriers to health and wellbeing. Although Rowrow has a strong sense of belonging and connection to her indigenous culture and community, she tries to avoid many of the issues her community faces in order to provide a better future for her children.
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“It’s changed me in so many ways as knowing how to be a parent. To learn the positive things in life… just things I never thought I could be like… not just a mum, like a parent, a councillor, a security guard… yeah you’re not just a mum when they say you’re a mum, you’re everything” (Quote by Rowrow).
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Baby Shane peeks through the curtains as he watches cars pass by. In trying to shelter her children from some of the devastating impacts of substance abuse in her community, Rowrow also faces social isolation.
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Nunjul and her mother.
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Home.
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One hour supervised visit
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Tammara 34 weeks pregnant with her third child.
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"I wish he knew how to treat me the way he writes. I hope he is learning from his time (in prison)."
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© Raphaela Rosella
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