How Australian communities can help solve the global refugee crisis

In 2017 we saw hundreds of thousands of Rohingya refugees flee ethnic cleansing in Myanmar and the formal closure of the Manus Island detention centre. We were all left with the question: where to from here?

Amnesty Australia’s new Refugee Campaign Coordinator, Shankar Kasynathan, explains how Australians can do their bit to solve the world’s refugee crisis.

A life of fear

Amnesty Australia's Refugee Campaign Coordinator Shankar Kasynathan with his father
Shankar with his father © Shankar Kasynathan

My father used to be a teacher. He taught philosophy at a university in the hill country of Sri Lanka. It was his dream job. He made friends easily with activists and students and loved being able to share his knowledge with them. After a long day at work, he would call his mother and sisters – who lived in a fishing village several hours away – from a payphone to check they were okay.

Although he didn’t know it at the time, my father was being closely watched as he did these things. The Vice Chancellor of his university compiled a list of Tamil academics he felt were behaving suspiciously and gave it to the authorities. My father’s everyday activities were observed and reported to the police.

Ultimately, his associations with Tamil students and activists made him a terror suspect. He was questioned on the notorious Fourth Floor of Sri Lanka’s Criminal Investigation Department – reputedly a torture facility, with rumours of people falling from windows. Thankfully my father survived.

Kindness of strangers

That was 30 years ago.

Amnesty Australia's Refugee Campaign Coordinator Shankar Kasynathan with his mother and sisters
Shankar with his sisters © Shankar Kasynathan

In 1987, my family and I fled Sri Lanka, leaving behind the arbitrary police searches and our sense of fear. We came to Australia in search of refuge.

We weren’t forced to come by boat. Others have been.

We weren’t re-routed to the hell that is Manus Island or Nauru. Others have been.

We were sponsored. Others must be.

Community-led, neighbourhood-driven solutions are how my family and I escaped a life of persecution, cruel racism, and life-threatening situations.

As a four-year-old, I remember the gifts we received from church groups at our home in Mount Waverley. Beds. A TV. The food we ate. The dining table we gathered around as a family. I remember my sisters and I laughing over the Melway (Melbourne’s road map) which – back in 1987 – showed a cross at the location of our home. The house we were renting was a social housing property managed by the council and a church. We later bought it, and it’s still home today.

The generosity we received is not unfamiliar to other families who have come to this country seeking protection. Communities around Australia look to our government to deliver a fair, safe and orderly system for refugees but successive governments have failed. We are witness to the cruelty and abuse resulting from their failure and we have raised our voices loudly in response.

“All cities are mine, and everyone is my kinsman.”
Kaniyan, Tamil philosopher circa 1st Century BC

Building power in communities

Over 1.19 million women, men and children need to be resettled in a safe country, yet only 30 countries offer just over 100,000 annual resettlement places. This is a global issue and all governments, including Australia, need to do their bit.

It’s time to start focusing on the solutions.

It’s time to start building power in our communities and wielding it.

It’s time to get to work. We can build safe and inclusive communities and welcome those who need our help.

Community sponsorship – where everyday people in the community contribute towards the cost of resettling a refugee – has worked in Canada for over 40 years. Together, Canadians have helped more than 280,000 refugees find safety. It can work here in Australia as well.

Australia’s current proposed community sponsorship model is limited and expensive for people to take part in. The Australian Government needs to expand and improve the program so more families can start to rebuild their lives in safety, just like mine did 30 years ago.

We must harness the strength and compassion in the nearly 150 self-declared refugee welcome zones around the country. These Local Government Areas provide homes to refugees with incredible stories of sacrifice, courage and contributions to the communities they live in.

There is a goodness that lives in our families, communities and neighbourhoods – to reach it we just need to walk beyond our fears. If we can go and build our homes there, raise our children there, look out for each other there, we will all live fortunate lives.

You and I, and our new neighbours.

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Amnesty Australia's Refugee Campaign Coordinator Shankar Kasynathan as a child with his mother and sisters and the family who sponsored them to stay in Australia
Shankar as a child (bottom right) with his family and sponsors © Shankar Kasynathan

What supporters are saying

  1. Stuart Read
    4 April 2018 | 8:15 pm

    Sounds a good idea worth pursuing with some vigour. We can match Canada’s clear humanity with a bit of our own, yes?

  2. Stuart Read
    4 April 2018 | 8:16 pm

    Let’s aim to match Canada’s impressive effort – community-sponsored refugees shouldn’t ‘replace’ Government-led/accepted ones – but complement them. Come on, Australia.

  3. Martha W D Bushnell
    7 April 2018 | 7:03 am

    Time to locate all refugees in permanent homes around the world. Can Australia help more refugees?

  4. Karen Young
    17 April 2018 | 5:24 pm

    Our government needs to be compassionate reguarding all people who need support and refuge

  5. Karen Young
    17 April 2018 | 5:28 pm

    Out government needs to be much more compassionate reguarding people who need support from any country especially the people who have been displaced through no fault of there own.

  6. Judy Schneider
    11 May 2018 | 12:22 pm

    It could be a win win situation. E.g. A country property needs labour for harvesting. A refugee family could come out, be housed and fed in return for the first year’ labour. Then, hopefully, they have learnt enough English to continue education/training/employment and with a helping hand re securing new accommodation/education, continue to contribute and thrive in their new homeland.

  7. Peter Conlon
    11 May 2018 | 1:19 pm

    Australians are generous and open-hearted and Community sponsorship is a viable and compassionate alternative to the cruel punitive approach of our Government.

  8. Michael
    11 May 2018 | 2:38 pm

    local churches could help by the old-fashioned use of a graphic of a thermometer outside the building, to say “We need X to get this family to Australia. Will you help?”
    I’d be in that.

  9. Sucy Varughese
    11 May 2018 | 3:08 pm

    As a migrant myself, my eternal gratitude to and recognition of the First Nations of Australia for their generosity of spirit in suffering the consequences of ongoing settlement of their historic homeland.

    Surely they have to be adequately compensated by our Governments for the injustices done to them. However, with their approval and consent, I all for the collective Community Sponsorship of refugees to Australia.

  10. Lois Morgan
    11 May 2018 | 3:58 pm

    I totally agree that we need to be bigger hearted and end the suffering of refugees who await a place to be welcomed and a new start. Community sponsorship will certainly make the world a better place both for the refugees and those who partake in helping htem.

  11. Beatrice Head
    11 May 2018 | 4:33 pm

    If community sponsorship has been working well in Canada, why can’t it be implemented here?

  12. Belinda Maniscalco
    11 May 2018 | 6:26 pm

    I would like to sign a petition.

  13. Belinda Maniscalco
    11 May 2018 | 6:28 pm

    I would also like to help.

  14. Andrew Mouat
    12 May 2018 | 8:57 pm

    How do I find more information on both the Australian and Canadian sponsorship models?

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