House debates

Wednesday, 15 May 2013

Adjournment

Our Stories : 52 Stories in 52 Weeks

7:24 pm

Photo of Anthony ByrneAnthony Byrne (Holt, Australian Labor Party) Share this | Hansard source

Last Thursday, on a balmy autumn night at the Narre Warren Bowls Club, a hundred people came together to celebrate the end of a journey—a journey that chronicled the very best of our community. That celebration was the completion of the Our Stories: 52 Stories in 52 Weeks project.

As I have often stated in this House, the Our Stories project came about because I felt our local community had been frequently and unfairly represented in both the local and mainstream media. I wanted to provide a vivid and real contrast to these stories and, in doing so, bring forward to this chamber and elsewhere those amazing people that live and positively contribute to the local community in my federal electorate of Holt.

The Our Stories project has enabled the stories of many local heroes to be heard by the wider community. In fact, there were so many stories in our local community that we could easily have had 104 stories in 104 weeks—we just had to draw the line somewhere.

Again, as I have stated, it is the people in our region that make it a great region and a great part of the world. Each year I attempt to highlight our community and the achievements of our local heroes. We do this via the Community Spirit and Leadership Awards and the Holt Australia Day Awards. However, with the onset of social media tools, such as YouTube, and the power of film to tell wonderful stories, it seemed only natural to develop our own project to tell the stories of some of our local heroes via a series of short films. The aim of this project was to chronicle the lives of those who take time out of their lives to make the local community and our neighbourhood a better place; to recognise those who are so often unrecognised and unheralded for the work they do; and to acknowledge the sacrifices that they make. We often did that via a third person.

We recognise people like Brittany Leo, who is a talented, gifted young local singer who routinely donates her time and talent to perform at charity concerts; Judy Davis—the Spirit of Cranbourne—who has spent years assisting and promoting local business and the community; and Rob Wilson, who is spending his retirement developing and promoting over-60s cricket. I want now to acknowledge each of the participants who made up this project: Erica Maliki, Jeffrey Ware, Stephen Hallett, Leanne Petrides, Ron Webb, Juan Carlos Loyola, Anne Atkin, Mladen Krsman, Murray MacGregor, John Laughton, Chris Drysdale, Ben Phillips, Pam and Elvis D'Sa, Tess and Mairi-anne Macartney, George Nicol, Michele Halsall, Eric Wieckmann, Judy and Russell Owen, Grace Woltanski, Tony O'Hara, Les Boyes, Dale Sheppard, Elizabeth Anning, Susan Bergman, Val Motta, Hector De Santos, Warren and Larraine Calder, Thomas Niazmand, Father Abanoub Attalla, Brian Oates, Vanassa Gerdes, Steve Hill, Justin Yeo, Ken and Joy Reedy, Barbara Maggs, Anthony Jenner, Bob Barker, Dani Rothwell, Rahimi Baryalai, Larry Sebastian, Ruth Murray, Jenny Colvin, Rob Wilson, Debbie Nobbs, Judy Martin, Shaun Trotter, Dale McInnes, Brittany Leo, Radenko Mihailovic, Sarah Ferrante, Father Michael Protopopov, Wendy Murphy, Judy Davis, Dean Moroney, Thomas Moroney, Jacqui Taranto, Blossom Leonard-Fox and Ai-Lin Chang. It is a long list of names.

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