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Young Journalist Award 2006 Junior Division Runner up
Our country
Daniel Dolatowski, Blackfriars Priory School, Prospect, SA.
Migrants are coming to Australia from many parts of the world. Most
have a story to tell that we don’t often hear. Their stories
sometimes reflect hardships, conflicts and traumas we have never experienced.
One of my school friends endured much pain and suffering before he
came to Australia. His name is Yel Dut, and we attend the same school,
Blackfriars Priory School, at Prospect in Adelaide. He is a Sudanese
migrant who has been in Australia for three years. He is tall, sympathetic
and very kind. Not knowing Yel before, I would never have suspected
that he had been through so much pain.
He describes Australia as being extraordinary. ‘Australians are
wonderful and the climate here is superb. The people are friendly and
I have made many friends.’
Many of us who were born in Australia don’t seem to realize how
blessed we are. Australia does not suffer from civil war, malnutrition,
anarchy or poverty. Sudan is an unfortunate country, which is going
through phases of anarchy. In Sudan, Yel would wake up to the sound
of gunshots above his head. ‘Now that I am in Australia I wake
up by the alarm clock instead of the dreaded sound of gun shot bullets’,
he says.
People in Sudan are constantly living in danger, fearing death, rape
and torture. Some people who disobey the rebel fighters are torched
alive. ‘It is a horrific act to watch and I was in constant fear
for my life. Young children are constantly taken away and trained to
be rebel soldiers.’
Some of Yel’s neighbours were taken away, gagged, robbed and
killed. ‘The sound of those bullets from the AK47 gun was horrible,
the screams gave me nightmares and I wondered when I would die’,
he says.
Yel and his mother were the fortunate ones, for they eventually were
able to leave the troubled country of Sudan. Yel’s mother wanted
her son to have a better future than he would have had back in his
homeland. They left Sudan so that Yel would have promising opportunities
in a peaceful country.
They were illegally transported to Cairo in Egypt, where they were
lucky enough to obtain visas to come to Australia. Caritas (Australia)
welcomed them with open arms and helped them with the transportation
to Australia: ‘The hardest part about leaving Sudan was leaving
the people. Half of my family still lives in Sudan. I pray everyday
that they are alive.’
Caritas Australia works with many other charitable agencies to help
African immigrants to settle into a new country (like Australia) without
the troubles of their homeland.
Yel is now in Year 12 and his dream is to set up a foundation where
he would be able to support Sudanese people who are going through similar
troubles as those he experienced. ‘I want to provide assistance
to those who are scared of the rebel soldiers or those who are in fear
of their lives’, he said. ‘I want to give the troubled
Sudanese community a chance to have a better life, like I have.’
Yel wants the Australian community to know that most migrants in Australia
have a story to tell.
We, as the Australian community, are able to give a helping hand to
others who come to Australia to escape persecution and trauma in their
homelands. We are so lucky in our multicultural society that all Australians
are entitled to equality of treatment and opportunities.
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