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Suicide prevention amongst refugees

Suicide prevention amongst refugees

SBS Australia3 days ago

SBS Indonesian
18/06/2025 08:44 Mental health challenges are often further exacerbated by a lack of access to culturally appropriate care and information. Wesley LifeForce is one organisation working to fill this gap, by offering suicide prevention training for refugees in six languages. Listen to SBS Indonesian every Monday, Wednesday, Friday, and Sunday at 3 pm. Follow us on Facebook and Instagram, and listen to our podcasts .

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Suicide prevention workshops in language try to help refugees, asylum seekers find mental wellness
Suicide prevention workshops in language try to help refugees, asylum seekers find mental wellness

SBS Australia

time12 hours ago

  • SBS Australia

Suicide prevention workshops in language try to help refugees, asylum seekers find mental wellness

Listen to Australian and world news, and follow trending topics with SBS News Podcasts. Nuha Abdul Razaq arrived in Australia from Iraq as a refugee in 2005. She says the topic of suicide is something many from the Arabic-speaking community find especially difficult to talk about. "It's a topic which they never talk about it in our country. When I was in Iraq or many people, I have clients from Syria, from different countries, from Lebanon or from Jordan, maybe we didn't talk it, we didn't talk about suicide in our countries. It's like, some people they feel it's shameful." She now delivers suicide prevention workshops in Arabic for refugees and asylum seekers. The workshops are part of a program launched by Wesley LifeForce which provides training in suicide prevention in six languages: Arabic, Dari, Farsi, Karen, Khmer and Tamil. It's co-designed with survivors of torture, trauma and forced displacement, paired up with the program by an organisation called Service for the Treatment and Rehabilitation of Torture and Trauma Survivors - STARTTS. Ms Abdul Razaq says the success of the training is in large part because it's delivered by people like herself who understand the challenges and stresses of displacement and resettlement. "To move to another country, it's not easy. Some people, they stay in camps for 10 years, 12 years, moving to other country, which is different languages, financial, most of them, they don't have any money to spend, even if they move to other country, if they want to find a job, it's struggling to get a job. And when you get settlement to Australia, another one, you have all (the) stress comes with you." Recent research shows refugees and asylum seekers in Australia experience disproportionately high rates of suicide. Data from the Australian Institute of Health and Welfare shows between 2007–2020, humanitarian entrants to Australia were 1.7 times more likely to die by suicide compared to other permanent migrants. Bethany Farley, the National Training Manager at Wesley Lifeforce, says the broader figures around mental wellbeing for refugees and asylum seekers are also deeply concerning. "There's reports that show that over 50% do actually report that they have poor mental health with more than 25% experiencing PTSD. There are some other reports around thoughts of suicide, which for men can be as high as 10% and for women can be as high as 17%." Deputy CEO of STARTTS Lachlan Murdoch says the trauma of war and displacement presents complex psychological challenges for refugees and asylum seekers. "So being pushed out of your country in traumatic circumstances, exposure to conflict and war, being subjected to things like shelling and bombardment, in some cases being imprisoned and being held in circumstances of great deprivation. Experiences of torture. So all those things impact people in ways that affect their psyche. So refugees experience much higher levels of anxiety and depression and post-traumatic stress disorder and suicidal ideation." He says for asylums seekers, these experiences of trauma can be further complicated by fear of being returned to the country they have fled. "Asylum seekers are in a situation where they're living in protracted uncertainty. And so there's not clarity for them about whether the person will remain in a situation of relative safety or could be returned to circumstances of danger. So that experience of uncertainty also compounds the traumatic effects of exposure to violence and to conflict." Ms Farley says these challenges are exacerbated by a lack of access to culturally appropriate care for refugees and asylum seekers arriving in Australia. "Then you add the other challenges of a language barrier, not understanding how the processes work. And finding services that have translators or people that can actually understand the nuances of how their community and culture responds to different situations, to different processes. The mental health models themselves can be alienating in that they do not meet the needs of a multicultural community." The suicide prevention training delivered by community members like Ms Abdul Razaq aims to address some of these issues by facilitating workshops where participants can share experiences in their own language and learn from each other about the supports available. Ms Abdul Razaq says the stigma attached to speaking about suicide was initially a barrier for her. "And at the beginning I was stressed when I was trained for the first time and I hearing something, some information, but later I accepted that if that's happening in the community, we need all the community to know about it." After delivering the first training session, she says she was inspired by the openness of the participants, and their ability to move past any shame they might associate with talking about suicide. "Nine women attended and it was very good and I liked the way they talk about it. They open their mouth and talk about their stories as well. And it's to build comfortable space between us and to build the trust between us. When they want to talk, they will talk in a normal way." If you or someone you know needs crisis support, contact Lifeline on 13 11 14, the Suicide Call Back Service on 1300 659 467 and Kids Helpline on 1800 55 1800. More information and support with mental health is available at and on 1300 22 4636. Embrace Multicultural Mental Health supports people from culturally and linguistically diverse backgrounds.

Brisbane refugee healthcare service World Wellness Group is at risk of losing its home base again
Brisbane refugee healthcare service World Wellness Group is at risk of losing its home base again

ABC News

time15 hours ago

  • ABC News

Brisbane refugee healthcare service World Wellness Group is at risk of losing its home base again

Like so many refugees, the story of how Elham Zaki came to live in Australia is punctuated by dark chapters. WARNING: This story contains distressing content. She's been subject to horrors that are difficult to put into words: organ harvesting, attempted murder, rape, abuse and half a lifetime of fear. In 2013, when she was working at a refugee camp on the Libya-Egypt border, a brush with death led the United Nations to rule it was no longer safe for her to stay, and she had to seek asylum. "Some people poisoned me and tried to kill me and [that's when I was taken in] an ambulance to Cairo [and then sent to Australia]," she said. The suffering Ms Zaki endured, both before and after she arrived in Australia, took its toll. She experienced debilitating physical and mental health issues which were so severe she could barely move or talk. She refused to venture outside for years, fearing the world and people around her. "I feared that people were going to beat me, do something bad. I was scared of any man," she said. She was referred to a clinic in Brisbane's south — the World Wellness Group. The not-for-profit, social enterprise healthcare service is a one-stop-shop for both medical and holistic support services. There, Ms Zaki was able to get treatment from physiotherapists, general practitioners, support groups and mental health specialists. The clinic also became her safe space. She remembered an occasion when she said she hadn't eaten a proper meal in two days and her GP gave her some food from the community pantry. "Before, [I was] very sad all the time, crying and I think [I don't know how I can get better]," she said. "But after I came here for the first time, I thought [I can]." World Wellness Group co-founder and director Rita Prasad-Ildes said she saw clients like Ms Zaki several times a day. "It's really proven to us that this is the way we can work with population groups that are constantly falling through the gaps and have a lot of access barriers," she said. But the clinic is facing an uncertain road ahead as the building it's been operating out of for less than a year is up for sale. Ms Prasad-Idles said if they were forced to relocate again — in what would be the fifth time in 10 years — they'd struggle to find another base. "We have really been priced out of commercial rentals," she said. She said the organisation would only be able to afford a clinical building in the outer suburbs, potentially forcing their booming clientele base — which, on average, currently travels more than 20km to see them — to travel further for the care they so desperately need. The organisation has been rallying to raise funds to buy the space themselves, but they're currently $600,000 short of the $4 million needed. The group had quietly raised more than $3.4 million over the past year, all while dealing with ever-growing demand for its services. Now, the July 31 deadline they've been given before the building hits the market is looming. Ms Prasad-Idles said the crowdfunding operation was about the survival and sustainability of the clinic, and their ability to continue helping more than 3,400 patients. "It isn't really about a building; it's about having a space — an anchor," she said. "Our whole work team here — we're all migrants. I think the migration journey is always about finding a home, and this is our home." Ms Zaki said she owed her life to the organisation. After years of living in fear and solitude, and months of mental health treatment, Ms Zaki said she had finally been able to go outside — a small victory in the wake of devastating trauma. But more than going outside, she's now started a Master of Public Health at University and is an avid volunteer in her community.

Suicide prevention amongst refugees
Suicide prevention amongst refugees

SBS Australia

time3 days ago

  • SBS Australia

Suicide prevention amongst refugees

SBS Indonesian 18/06/2025 08:44 Mental health challenges are often further exacerbated by a lack of access to culturally appropriate care and information. Wesley LifeForce is one organisation working to fill this gap, by offering suicide prevention training for refugees in six languages. Listen to SBS Indonesian every Monday, Wednesday, Friday, and Sunday at 3 pm. Follow us on Facebook and Instagram, and listen to our podcasts .

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