Sunday, May 19, 2024
HomeNewsLocalsTenth anniversary for Glebe Community Development Project and launch of the Cultural...

Tenth anniversary for Glebe Community Development Project and launch of the Cultural Space

Set up as a fairground expo-style event complete with bunting, a magician and films projected onto the wall, the celebration showcased the numerous projects that the Glebe CDP has made happen and provided an opportunity for guests to learn about these projects from the community facilitators, groups and members themselves. This included the Concerned Older Women’s Group and their recently published historic booklet, photos from the archives from events such as Mitchell Street Fete and NAIDOC week, as well as a presentation of the Stop Motion Animation films made with students from Glebe Primary School. The event also highlighted the project’s important role supervising social work students from Sydney University on their placements. Students, past and present, were in attendance to join in the festivities. The event was kicked off with a beautiful and moving Welcome to Country by long-term Glebe resident Aunty Millie Ingram. Guests enjoyed an exhibition within the Cultural Space of photographs and paintings by children from Centipede at Glebe Public School, which were created as part of workshops with local photographer, Barb McGrady and resident painter Aunty Kath Farawell. HSC students from Sydney Secondary College also submitted works for display, creating an exhibition in which artworks by local people of many ages were celebrated, as well as works from the recent Glebe Community Photography Competition. The Cultural Space emerged last year as an initiative of the Glebe CDP and a group of Aboriginal residents of Glebe. Community workers from Sydney University hope the space will be accessed and utilised by a broad range of people from the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander community, as there has long been a need for Aboriginal people to have their own space in Glebe. It is somewhere people can hold events, workshops, meetings and run programs, as well as have free access to the resources and space of the recently refurbished Glebe Town Hall. This year the Cultural Space has been running a Women’s Yarnin Group meeting at 4pm every Thursday, a Koori Murri Men’s Group meeting every Wednesday at 3.30pm and is hosting a weekly meditation session and regular film nights. The anniversary and launch was a fantastic celebration of Glebe’s resilience and diversity. Community members reminisced with workers about projects they had collaborated on together and reflected on future work to be done. In this very important year of acknowledging 40 years of community housing in Glebe and when threats to public housing are being felt very strongly throughout the inner west, it is more important than ever to band together as a community to celebrate our strengths and recognise the power in the work we do together.

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

spot_img
- Advertisment -spot_img
- Advertisment -spot_img

Native Foodways – ‘Baking is one part of what we do’

Native Foodways is a First Nations owned and led social enterprise partnering with people from communities across Australia.

Can the Waterloo South People and Place Plan deliver?

Homes NSW Portfolio (formerly LAHC) has placed its Draft People and Place Plan on its Waterloo South site for comment until the end of May.

Why we love our pets

We all know that pets play an important role in our lives and we love them for many reasons. They are companions, supporters, don’t judge us and are loyal.

Living with dementia – a carer’s journey: 4. Progression

A year after the dementia diagnosis, Stuart was reasonably stable, but his cognition and memory started to deteriorate. He wasn’t able to put the rubbish in the colour coded bins, flooded the bathroom by leaving the tap on, misplaced house keys.

Run with Team UNHCR

Registration is now open for major running events in Sydney and Melbourne. Join Team UNHCR ...

Connected people are healthy people

Our hearts are heavy as we continue to mourn the tragic events that unfolded last month at Westfield, Bondi Junction, and across our city. The senseless loss of lives in such a familiar setting strikes deep at our sense of security.