logo
From angklung workshop to identity discussion, 'Nusantara in Melbourne' works to preserve Indonesian culture

From angklung workshop to identity discussion, 'Nusantara in Melbourne' works to preserve Indonesian culture

SBS Australia2 days ago

SBS Indonesian
28/05/2025 09:54 On Saturday, 24 May 2025, Australia Indonesia Youth Association (AIYA) Victoria and Asian Hustle Network organised "Nusantara in Melbourne" at the Indonesian Consulate General. The event, which ran from noon to 4.15 PM, featured various cultural activities. Attendees could join angklung workshops, try batik-making, play traditional games, participate in panel discussions about Australian-Indonesian cross-cultural identity, and contribute to a collaborative zine featuring diaspora stories.
Ian Darmawan, acting president of AIYA Victoria, said the event aimed to give Indonesian diaspora opportunities to collaborate and build networks.
Nusantara in Melbourne, 2025. Credit: Supplied/Diana Pertiwi Billy Addison Adityanto from The Perantau Podcast, one of the speakers, said, "Sometimes we question our nationalism when we're overseas. But actually, it's precisely because we're abroad that we can make Indonesia proud and represent our country well." Two Indonesian students, Widya Diantari from Bali and Widya Rama Sujiwati from Jakarta, both pursuing Master of Public Health degrees at the University of Melbourne, enthusiastically welcomed the event. "For those who've been here long, it helps ease their homesickness for Indonesia. For newcomers, it's a chance to network with those who've been here longer," Widya Rama said.
Listen to the full podcast.
Listen to SBS Indonesian on Mondays, Wednesdays, Fridays and Sundays at 3pm. Follow us on Facebook and Instagram , and don't miss our podcasts.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Bulldogs star Rory Lobb opens up on overcoming bullying
Bulldogs star Rory Lobb opens up on overcoming bullying

News.com.au

time27 minutes ago

  • News.com.au

Bulldogs star Rory Lobb opens up on overcoming bullying

As a boy, Rory Lobb would often pretend to be sick so he could stay home from school and avoid the bullies that tormented him. 'I had a lot of anxiety to go to school,' the AFL star recalls. 'Mum was always wondering what was wrong with me, but it was actually nothing. 'I'd literally sit at home all day and eat.' The Western Bulldogs swingman, who grew up in Perth, left school at 14 after verbal and physical harassment left him feeling'very depressed'. 'It was just really hard on me,' he said. Australia is in the grips of a mental health crisis, and people are struggling to know who to turn to, especially our younger generations. Can We Talk? is a News Corp awareness campaign, in partnership with Medibank, equipping Aussies with the skills needs to have the most important conversation of their life. Lobb worked as a painter, builder and machine operator, and was picked up by Greater Western Sydney in the 2013 draft. Later, he joined Fremantle before signing on with the Dogs ahead of the 2023 season. Now, he is encouraging people to speak up as part of News Corp's Can We Talk? campaign, in partnership with Medibank. Lobb urged others facing challenging times to share with loved ones, or a mental health professional. 'The more that you speak out about it and don't internalise … the better you'll be,' he said. 'In a way I'm subject to bullying these days on social media. 'Throughout my career I've found ways to combat that and speaking to people, having a really good relationship at home with my partner Lexi, and also having really good people around, I feel like has really helped me. 'Now, I don't really suffer from anxiety anymore.' He said his struggles as a youngster helped him build the resilience he carries now. The 32-year-old, who stands at more than 2m tall and has reinvented himself as a key defender in recent years,said he focused on being in the moment. 'I really enjoy going into work and hanging out with my teammates,' he said. 'The 'Doggies' (club) is just amazing for me … they're very supportive with everything I do.' Lobb has opened up to club psychologists and also has 'really good relationships' with his coaches. Known for his wild and ever-changing hairstyles, the cult figure said he brushed off negative comments on social media and focused on his inner circle. 'In the media I might be perceived as a little bit loud and out there, but I like my own time,' he said. 'I like to spend time with my family and friends.' Lobb is due to marry influencer fiancee Lexi Mary, who he said had been 'so amazing' for him, in October. Mary, who has more than 44,000 TikTok followers,also blocks out the noise from trolls online. 'I used to get a lot of negative comments, particularly when Rory was going through his trade saying that I was forcing him to move to a different club,' she said. 'That was a lot for me to take on. 'I feel like people just automatically think they know you and think they can comment on you and how you speak and your appearance. 'I just really try and focus on the people in my inner circle who do know me, and know within myself that I'm a kind person. 'I wouldn't let someone get to me who can hide behind a fake burner account.'

House of the week: Modern rural living
House of the week: Modern rural living

News.com.au

time27 minutes ago

  • News.com.au

House of the week: Modern rural living

Stacey and Thomas Woolf have put their 'perfect family home' on the market and will sadly say goodbye to hectares of space, modern living and a barely used man cave shed. The couple have called the property at 75 Varro Rd, Lloyd Creek, home for the past four years, welcoming two kids along the way. 'It's been magnificent,' Mrs Woolf said. 'It's the perfect family home and we wouldn't be selling if we didn't have to move interstate.' Set on 2ha, the property backs onto bushland, yet is only five minutes from the Humpty Doo shops. The property includes a four-bedroom family house, a new shed, a pool and plenty of lawn space. 'I love the beautiful, modern home,' Mrs Woolf said. 'The cinema room is awesome for movie nights with the kids. 'The dining and living spaces open to the patio, so it's great for entertaining and watching the kids play. 'We've had a third birthday party and Christmas here, and we often have friends over for barbecues.' The house has a double garage, covered entryway and a separate media room. The open plan living, dining and kitchen area has sliding doors opening to the covered outdoor entertaining area, while the kitchen has an island bench and top of the line appliances. The main bedroom has a walk-in robe and ensuite, and the remaining three bedrooms have built-in robes. The property also includes a family bathroom, internal laundry and a second living space. The floorplan of the home would allow for the media room and second living area to be converted into bedrooms as well. Outside, the in-ground pool is fenced and sits just off the patio, and there is plenty of established lawn space and gardens around the home. 'We've also cleared the back of the land and built a fully-irrigated veggie garden,' Mrs Woolf said. The huge insulated shed is less than six months old and has a separate brew room plus a veranda off the front. Mrs Woolf said the property allowed her family to make the most of the Top End lifestyle. 'We live outside most of the time and enjoy the lawns, the pool and playing on the patio,' she said. 'We've only got one neighbour and the other side backs onto bush. 'We're keen runners, so we take the kids running though the bush a fair bit.' The property is close to shops and schools, and is an easy commute to Coolalinga and Palmerston. PROPERTY DETAILS Bedrooms: 5 Bathrooms: 2 Carparks: 4 Price guide: $1.2m

After 45 years watching politics, here's my last wish for this government and its big mandate
After 45 years watching politics, here's my last wish for this government and its big mandate

ABC News

time36 minutes ago

  • ABC News

After 45 years watching politics, here's my last wish for this government and its big mandate

"Dear government, don't be terrible." There was no greater sin in journalism, back in the day, than using the personal pronoun in your copy. It has proved a good rule to follow over the past 45 years. Not just in a style sense but in terms of the state of mind in which you write: it's not about you, it's about your readers, or viewers even. When this column resumes in July, it will be contemplating more global matters, instead of Australian politics. But the transition, the fact that this is the last column on Australian politics, suggests a small amount of indulgence or reflection may be allowed. Political reporting can often have a Postcards from the Edge feeling about it: a report from a very different jungle to the one most normal people inhabit, with hopefully a bit of translation and explanation thrown in for good measure about how and why politicians act as they do. But this particular column aims to turn things around a bit: a postcard sent back to our pollies, with a few reflections drawn from four decades of having to watch them in action, close up. First, as an indulgence taken purely on behalf of readers, let us agree that the federal Coalition can be put aside. That seems only fair, given that the Coalition seems so determined to be irrelevant. Please come back, opposition MPs, when you've remembered what you are there for, or possibly when you have something more intelligent to say. In the meantime, try not to embarrass us all with your apparent complete lack of reflection on why you may have not only been rejected by the electorate, but now represent less than a third of the House of Representatives. You have stumbled around, splitting and reunifying, slagging each other off, on matters of "high principle" which seem to be completely malleable to the number of positions various parties get on the frontbench. Instead, let's focus on the new government: the one that has won an exceptionally large number of seats in the House of Representatives and which is probably already doing stuff that's affecting us voters. All governments are new after an election, whether they realise it or not, whether they have been in power for years or not. There are inevitably some different bums on seats. But more importantly, the context in which the government of the day is thinking about issues will have totally changed: both the economic and global circumstances, and the political circumstances. What new governments can do with their numbers in the House and in the Senate is regularly discussed. But what they are able to do (important distinction) or should do is discussed less. Having watched many federal elections (14) and therefore many transitions of government, it is never clear that new governments quite understand how their mandates, or more importantly, their scope for action may have changed. It's not just about the number of seats they hold in the House of Representatives and the Senate. It's about the relative power of the other parties and the messages that the electorate seems to have sent. And it's particularly about understanding what constraints that might have been shaping judgements for the past few years — constraints that have become so entrenched you don't even realised they are there — may have shifted or been removed entirely. The 2025 election has been generally seen as a message of a rejection of the fringes — at both ends — and a move to the centre. The prime minister has spoken about the idea of "progressive patriotism" as being central to his campaign "We spoke about doing things the Australian way, not looking towards any other method or ideology from overseas," he said. "At a time where there's conflict in the world, where people are often divided on the basis of race or religion, here in Australia, we can be a microcosm for the world." So there's a nice thought. But whether you want to prosecute a case for a nice thought, or a really complex policy agenda, you need to be both able and willing to sell it. The political landscape for the past 15 years has been treacherous, starting with the hyper-aggressive politics of Tony Abbott's leadership of an opposition which sought to bring down the Gillard government on the floor of the parliament. The biggest thing that the Albanese government has to get its head around is that the ultra-toxic nature of conservative attack politics has fundamentally shifted. Sure, News Corp and its Sky After Dark franchise continues to prosecute a particular message. But there is no clear and effective attack dog politician in the mould of Tony Abbott or Peter Dutton now obvious in the Coalition ranks. And the ideological policy underpinnings which drove them — particularly Abbott — are also in splinters. Think how that political agenda and it associated tactics have affected politics, and the caution of the Labor Party. Labor embraced AUKUS, for example, without any apparent thought or contemplation, because it did not wish to be in a different position on foreign policy, defence and the US alliance to the Coalition. This is not to suggest Labor should immediately abandon AUKUS. It's just that, with the Coalition in disarray, the prospect of Labor being in power for two terms, and US President Donald Trump apparently determined to make the US look like the world's most unreliable ally, Australia now has the space to consider what is actually in our best individual strategic interests. That's a space we have effectively never been in before, given our obsession with Great and Powerful Friends. There are so many other underlying presumptions about political norms generated by the Coalition: the ones on debt and deficits; on personal wealth; on migration and dog whistling on race. Once again, it is not a question of overturning policy, just of having the clear eyes to rewire politics without the fear of these political attacks necessarily cutting through. There's a couple of other ideas that are reinforced by watching a lifetime of political theatre. The first is about only half remembered memories. People speak ad nauseum of golden days when governments, and/or the parliament got things done. From someone who lived and worked through those times: don't get sucked into all the stuff about how social media makes it harder. Believe that none of the tax reforms, the social welfare reforms, the energy reforms, or whatever, were actually easy. Everything was fought, as it is now, tooth and nail, whether that be by the Hawke/Keating governments or the Howard government. The arguments only started to fail when politicians got too tired to keep prosecuting them. When the exasperation with "dumb" journalists or voters got too much. In a famous bit of correspondence originally reported in 2008, the former Hawke and Keating government minister, Gordon Bilney, wrote a letter to a local government bureaucrat once he was on his way out the door. "One of the great pleasures of private life is that I need no longer be polite to nincompoops, bigots, curmudgeons and twerps who infest local government bodies and committees such as yours," it said. "In the particular case of your committee, that pleasure is acute." To those who knew him, it was very Gordon Bilney. But it reflects the exhaustion people in the political process inevitably feel, and which can be the most debilitating limitation on getting things through. One of the smartest people to occupy a senior ministerial advisory post once said that he knew it was time to go when he found himself thinking, when confronted by someone lobbying on a policy: "don't you think we haven't already thought of that?" There's a bit of that air around this government already. And if they are going to be successful in using this term to produce change, that has to change. Another truism that has snuck into politics, particularly Labor politics, is that you can't have conflict in your ranks. Well the finance minister, Peter Walsh, publicly advocated for a completely different set of tax reforms to those of the Treasurer during the Hawke years and the government did not fall. A range of opinions is a good and healthy thing, and keeps a government (particularly one with a big majority) vibrant and credible. So just accept — even welcome — some friction, particularly the sort of high class friction provided by figures like Ed Husic, who has demonstrated more decency, bravery and class on the vexed issue of Gaza than anyone else in the Parliament. You are not all managing factions now, or a Labor Party conference. You are speaking for all of us in a world where opinions are rapidly changing. Not being a terrible government means considering just what opportunities you have to change the conversation now that you are not wedged so savagely from the left and right. A despairing Abraham Lincoln, desperate to get a general who would aggressively prosecute the war on the Union's behalf wrote to General "Fighting Joe" Hooker in 1863 in words which Australian voters might borrow in a letter to a government which has a once in a generation capacity to produce change: "Beware of rashness, but with energy, and sleepless vigilance, go forward, and give us victories." And that is all that I can wish for Australian governments to deliver to its people, as I end four decades of keeping watch on what our governments do in our name. Laura Tingle finishes this week as 7.30's political editor. She starts as the ABC's global affairs editor in coming weeks.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store