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Darebin Community Awards highlighting the contributions of community

Updated: Mar 29, 2021



Every year the Darebin Community Awards highlight the wonderful and impactful contributions our community members make to the City of Darebin. The presentation night, presided over by Darebin Mayor Councillor Lina Messina and MC local comedian Nelly Thomas, is this year nestled within the FUSE Darebin program. FUSE is Darebin’s new biannual arts festival and highlights the many talents and creative endeavours of the Darebin community.


Radio 3KND were there broadcasting LIVE across our ever expanding footprint. Mayor Messina said the achievements of all nominees deserved to be celebrated, and were a testament to the love and care shown throughout the entire community during a difficult year. “It’s a privilege to preside over these awards and acknowledge the many wonderful contributions that individuals and groups make to enrich life in Darebin. Through these awards we celebrate local heroes who have shown great leadership, compassion and kindness,” she said.

The awards were held at Darebin Arts Centre, Cnr Bell and St Georges Road Preston, tonight Thursday 18 March from 6.30pm. Aboriginal & Torres Strait Islander Community Leader of the Year Winner – Ian Hamm.

Ian Hamm is a well-respected Victorian Yorta Yorta Aboriginal man. He is well known across the wider Melbourne community including here in the City of Darebin, the heartland of Aboriginal Community Controlled organisations in Victoria. For the past seven years Ian has attended National Apology events and National Sorry Day events for Darebin City Council and been a keynote speaker at these events.

Ian is a great advocate for reconciliation and has also supported Darebin Council in its Reconciliation Week messages, National Apology to Australia’s Stolen Generations and National Sorry Day events amongst other events by providing his attendance and Leadership in the Community. Although Ian is often selected and invited to be upon many committees and boards across Victoria his work at the community level is predominately done on a voluntary basis in the Aboriginal community space.



CALD Elder Community Leader of the Year Winner (new category) – The Very Reverend Fr George Nasr. The Very Reverend Fr George Nasr has been the Parish Priest at St George’s Cathedral Thornbury for nearly 50 years, and has performed over 30,000 ceremonies for the Antiochian Orthodox community including christenings, weddings and funerals. Fr George Nasr has served and lived in Darebin since migrating to Australia from Lebanon. Some key work was helping migrants settle in Australia, including Lebanese in the early days and more recently, the newly arrived Syrian refugees. Fr George Nasr started the congregation with a small number of families and it has grown to over 1000. Fr George mentored many Priests who have now established new Churches, and recently had his parish elevated to Cathedral status. This is the only Antiochian Orthodox Church in Victoria with this status and only the second in Australia. Fr George Nasr’s contribution in humanitarian work has not been limited to his religious community, and many dominations know the work Fr George Nasr has done. In the next few weeks year Fr George Nasr will be celebrating 50 years as an Antiochian Orthodox priest.



CALD Emerging Young Leader of the Year Winner (new category) – Fardowsa Yussuf

Fardowsa was dedicated to youth engagement and took a strong interest in organising workshops for Young Women to support their mental health. Fardowsa completed a Leadership program at Darebin Youth Hub and volunteers with Girl’s Night, located at the Hub. During the closure of The Hub in 2020, Youth Service programs went digital. Fardowsa hosted many online events via Darebin Youth Services to actively engage young people in the community. Fardowsa played a major role behind the scenes, supporting the online ‘Make Space’ workshops, a program to engage young people online. She also hosted a wellbeing session. Fardowsa also supported the online Youth Activism Panel for Youth Week.

Lifetime Achievement Award Winner – Vona Thompson

A local legend, Vona Thompson has made an impact on Preston for more than 80 years through community volunteering and fundraising. As a child, her first fundraiser was selling toffee at school for the War Relief. Now 90 years young, she works two days' a week in 'Vona's wonderful haberdashery shop' at Northern Care Works. Her 'share all' attitude enables customers from diverse cultural backgrounds to find previously used fabrics buttons and thread for their creative projects.

Life Achievement Award Special Commendation – Christine Hodge

Chris has been an early years educator in the Kingsbury area for 30 years and has established strong links with families and community. A kindergarten is the beating heart of the community and through her welcoming and inclusive nature, she has fostered a life-long love of learning with young children. Chris has taught many children across three generations of families, indicating the trust and respect she has within the local community.



Community Group of the Year Winner – Locked Down Trivia

The Locked Down Trivia team, made up of several Darebin residents, saw a great opportunity to use lockdown productively. The team volunteered to coordinate and host weekly on-line trivia nights open to anyone and everyone. The Locked Down Trivia events were completely free for players, with an optional donation to different a local charity, community-based organisation, school or kindergarten each week. These nights offered much needed source of light-hearted, family-friendly and COVID-safe fun. They included trivia questions, of course, but also some crazy dress up competitions, cake decoration competitions, Lego building contests and even an avenue to showcase musicians and entertainers. This incredible team hosted 25 trivia nights and raised over $170,000 - with 100% of the funds raised going directly to the 70 different beneficiary organizations, including many Darebin based organisations. Sustainability Award – Darebin Hardwaste Heroes

In May 2020 two local residents, Jacqueline Lewis and Jo Press launched a Facebook Group called Darebin Hard Rubbish Heroes. The primary goal of the group was to save usable items and materials from landfill by helping Darebin residents find new homes for things they no longer required. Membership is open to anyone and the group is for the use of individuals not professional companies. Members were walking around streets taking photos of hard rubbish piles and posting them on the page, and others asking if someone can pick up an item seen in a photo. Members can add an ISO (in search of) request and ask others to look out for items, and people are showcasing what they've collected and how they've cleaned or fixed it up and are now using it.


As of February 2021, membership is over 7000 followers and at the time of hard rubbish collection had 100 or more posts a day. This group assists to reduce landfill; expand our circular economy; assist with behavior change on reducing waste and greenhouse emissions by reducing consumption. The DHRH have a big year planned for 2021 to reach even more members in the community and rehome as many pre-loved items as possible.

Sustainability Award Special Commendation – Moon Rabbit

Moon Rabbit is a social-enterprise café situated in Preston and is part of the Bridge Darebin network. Created with zero-waste values at its core and set up as a vocational training facility, the team were ready to build on their award-winning success of 2019 when the COVID crisis hit the hospitality sector hard. Undeterred by having to face an uncertain “pause” in regular trading, Moon Rabbit members rallied together to remain open and created innovative solutions and pivots that not only kept staff employed but upheld the sustainable practices of the business.

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