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The SAIL Program - The Melbourne Anglican Newspaper, June
2005
By Jane Still
In 2000, Melbourne University student Matthew Albert, and his friend Anna
Grace Hopkins, answered a request on a noticeboard to help a Sudanese family
who had recently arrived in Australia. A few weeks later that first family
invited their cousins along, and five years later, Matthew is now one of
250 volunteers at the Sudanese Australian Integrated Learning (SAIL) Program,
a non profit organisation that aims to meet the needs of the single fastest
growing ethnic community in Victoria.
Every week, over 400 Sudanese SAILors attend the six mini programs offered
by the SAIL Program, including English as a Second Language tutoring for
children and adults, playgroups for 0 – 5 year olds, extra-curricular
short courses for school-aged children, excursions, Home Help for Sudanese
single mother families, and camps.
“It’s more about exposure to activities than quantified achievement,” says
Matthew. The program provides what may be for some children the only English
language social interaction they get. Some of the children speak Arabic, the
'official' language in Sudan, while others speak their tribal language or Swahili.
The team of volunteers, who come from all age groups, give between three
and twenty five hours each a week to the programs, which run every week from
February to December.
“All of the SAIL students are refugees from Sudan,” says Matthew,
explaining that while the Darfur crisis has attracted headlines in recent
times, the civil strife has been raging for decades, costing nearly two million
lives and crippling the economic and social development of the nation. Four
and a half million Sudanese have been displaced. The camps through which
most Sudanese refugees have passed before coming to Australia are violent,
subject to attack, and rife with disease.
“Almost all Sudanese SAILors have experienced some kind of trauma,” he
says.
As well as helping the Sudanese arrivals to integrate into the community,
the SAIL Program offers Community Talks designed to inform and empower the
community about issues pertinent to them including housing, health, migration,
tracing lost family members and job-hunting.
“Our ultimate aim is to be obsolete,” Matthew told TMA. He finds
it exciting to be part of an organisation that is helping the most recent arrivals
to Australia tofind their feet in the community, and he is encouraged and inspired
by the strength and determination of the Sudanese who attend the program.
“They are so motivated to make it work. They are so resilient,” he
says.
The relationships built up between SAIL volunteers and refugee families are
such that “the one to one relationship means that the ‘tutors’ get
as much out of it as the ‘students’.” Matthew and Anna
Grace still spend every Christmas with the first family they helped.
The SAIL Program is a strictly secular organisation, and assists people
of various religious traditions, so Matthew is delighted by the support the
Anglican Church has given since the very beginning.
“The Anglican Churches have been so welcoming of the project,” he
says.
The SAIL Program has campuses at All Saints Footscray, St James Dandenong,
and St Eanswythe’s Altona. “The Vestries of the churches involved
have been very supportive, and so have the Melbourne Anglican Foundation
and Irene Donohoue Clyne [Diocesan Coordinator of Cross-Cultural Ministry]” he
says. Prospective volunteers can apply online on the SAIL website
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