Stigma and Discrimination NUAA Admin Stigma and Discrimination NUAA Admin

Hate this

“Can’t get angry though, because one angry blackfella means we’re all angry blackfellas. Yet a handful of incompetent whitefellas means what? The system. I want you to care. I want you to be angry, too. I want you to hate this.”
Hate This, is a powerful piece written by Carissa Lee, a Noongar actor and writer whose work has featured in The Guardian, Junkee, Witness Performance, IndigenousX and The Conversation. We are happy to be able share the piece both as written text and spoken word performed by First Nations actor Angeline Penrith.

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Stigma and Discrimination NUAA Admin Stigma and Discrimination NUAA Admin

Shining a Light on the Hope-Filled, Stressful Journeys of People Leaving Jail

Exhaustion is a one-women radio play about life after jail. Jarrah, a woman in her 40s, gives the audience a massive dose of ‘real talk’, offering her vulnerability and her struggles to overcome the challenges of life after release from jail. She inspires empathy and concern as she shares the things that are important to her and how she feels.

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More than just users NUAA Admin More than just users NUAA Admin

Kira’s Story: Young, Black & Deadly

Kira is, in her own words, “a young woman who has been through a lot” but, writing from jail, she tells how she’s re-taking control of her life and shares what she has learned. “For me, the secret to change is to focus all your energy not on looking back fighting the old, but on building the new you,” she says. “Sometimes the smallest step in the right direction ends up being the biggest step of your life. Tiptoe if you like but take the step! It takes courage and resilience to be who you really are in a society that mostly denies your existence.”

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Hep C & HIV NUAA Admin Hep C & HIV NUAA Admin

I said, “I'll use more drugs and deal with my hep C tomorrow.” But tomorrow turned into 10 years. | Kate’s story 

Kate is a proud Aboriginal woman who has a history of injecting heroin. She wants to share her unique experience of clearing hep C twice, nearly 2 decades apart. Her first treatment was in prison in the early 2000s, with Interferon. Soon after she got out of prison, she got hep C again and didn’t get treated until 2019. Getting treated a second time has been life changing for her and she now supports peers with hep C and drug use.

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More than just users NUAA Admin More than just users NUAA Admin

Letters from Inside

These are 2 of the letters to Users News has received from incarcerated peers. Miranda writes to us about getting cured of hep-C and overcoming past trauma. Bill says “Thank God for Buvidal!” because using in jail can be really stressful.

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Advocacy NUAA Admin Advocacy NUAA Admin

This Is What’s Possible

Keenan Mundine, an Aboriginal man in his thirties, is a co-founder of Deadly Connections, a service supporting Aboriginal people. Keenan was 14 when he first went into juvenile detention and did many years of jail after that. Keenan believed that this life was just normal. But then he began to question the information that was passed onto him. Today, he is a family man who uses his experiences to walk with people from his community towards the lives they want.

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Treatment NUAA Admin Treatment NUAA Admin

Miranda Project: Working with women after jail

Gail Gray is a proud First Nation Wiradjuri Woman who grew up on Gadigal land in Sydney. Gail spent over 15 years in and out of NSW jails. She has now spent 15 years using her lived experience to help women in the justice system. Gail talked to NUAA about how her choices led her to the Community Restorative Centre (CRC) as a caseworker with the Miranda Project.

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