Bringing the Light

Bringing the Light

Life as a woman in Nepal isn’t easy. Girls aren’t guaranteed the same educational opportunities as their brothers and women have fewer employment options than men. For disabled women, life is harder still, as deep cultural prejudices fuel discrimination, making it difficult for them to integrate fully into society and lowering their employment prospects. So it’s no wonder that when such women are offered education, a means to support themselves and even the chance to become leaders in their community, they compare it to being given light – and it’s this metaphor that has given a new documentary its title.

Bringing the Light tells the inspiring story of an social enterprise that is celebrating its 10th anniversary this year. In November 2006, Melbourne resident Stephanie Woollard was travelling through Nepal and met a group of seven disabled women who were struggling to survive by making and selling handicrafts from a tin shed in Kathmandu. Stephanie decided to stay in Kathmandu for three extra weeks and out of her own pocket, funded training for these women in skills to grow their chances to create an income for themselves. The women started to earn money as Steph worked on creating demand in sales of their products. Since then, the group has blossomed and through fundraising and the sale of the women’s handicrafts has been able to establish two centres in Kathmandu (in buildings, not tin sheds!) and four branches based in villages in remote areas. To date, Seven Women has trained 5000 women, teaching literacy and numeracy and given them new skills to create income streams, enabling the most socially isolated and outcast women to shine.

Bringing the Light is screening across Australia, starting in Melbourne on May 26. To attend a session or inquire about hosting a screening, contact Steph @ [email protected] or book online.

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Pull up a chair… there’s room at this table!⁠
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For the first time, Feast for Freedom is bringing people together for a spectacular long-table dinner as part of the Melbourne Food & Wine Festival.⁠
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A Longer Table is exactly what it sounds like: one beautiful shared table inside the Asylum Seeker Resource Centre (@Asrc1), piled with generous dishes inspired by this year’s hero cooks, Noha and Nige.⁠
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From 6 to 9pm on Wednesday, 25 March, this is what you can expect:⁠
🍽 A three-course shared feast⁠
🍷 Matched drinks⁠
🎶 Live entertainment⁠
✨ A room full of good humans⁠
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Your ticket doesn’t just buy you a delicious dinner. It supports the ASRC’s vital work and helps create a fairer future for people seeking asylum.⁠
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Seats are limited, and long tables have a way of filling up quickly – head to @MelbFoodAndWine’s website to book now: feastforfreedom.org.au/mfwf⁠
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#FeastForFreedom #MelbourneFoodAndWineFestival #LongTableDinner #FoodForChange ⁠
Sew versatile! 🪡

Another great make from Lisa from @SunnySewsEveryday:

My #PeppermintWaratahWrapDress is finished and I’m so proud of it. It has been designed not to flap open and flash your pants in the wind, so I feel confident it will be a great wheelchair or standing dress in English weather.

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✨ INSTANT CLASSIC ✨

The Peppermint Myrtle Shift Dress is a beginner-friendly make with a few special details based on the ever-stylish shift shape – the perfect dress you need in your wardrobe right now! 

Myrtle cuts above the knee with options to customise the length. Don’t think she’s reserved for hot weather either: try a heavier-weight fabric to turn your Myrtle into a pinafore-style garment for layering.

For our fabrics we chose two from our lovely sewing partner @Karmme_Apparel – the bold Rottnest Stripes in a lightweight, soft-drape cotton, and the quality linen in the handpainted Mexico Collection. 

Get making the Myrtle – the only question is, can you stop at just one?

Link in bio 🪡

Fabric: @Karmme_Apparel
Sewist: @Laura_The_Maker
Photos: @KelleySheenan
Models: @SerahSews and @Pins_And_Tonic
Location: @ShareTheDignityAustralia

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