Working Together: Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Mental Health and Wellbeing Principles and Practice: Editors Pat Dudgeon, Helen Milroy and Roz Walker.
‘The book is intended for staff and students and all health practitioners working in areas that support Indigenous mental health and wellbeing. Working Together offers a high quality, comprehensive examination of issues and strategies influencing Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander mental health and social and emotional wellbeing.’
Over time I will highlight various parts of the book, but for now I would like to draw your attention to the chapter Community Life and Development Programs - Pathways to Healing by Helen Milroy, Pat Dudgeon and Roz Walker
One thing that has really struck since working in this field is the Indigenous aspiration of healing the community, rather than just ‘fixing’ the individual as is the case with much of western culture’s mental health system. The former approach is far superior.
So what might healing Indigenous communities involve? Here is a summary of what this chapter is about, as described at its beginning:
‘This chapter provides an overarching framework for understanding the components of healthy communities through a healing and community life development approach.
The chapter explores three major themes covering the nature of the trauma that has occurred over many generations and continues to be experienced in the present. These are:
- the extreme sense of powerlessness and loss of control;
- the profound sense of loss, grief and disconnection; and
- the overwhelming sense of trauma and helplessness.
In turn, there are three pathways to recovery to address each of these areas of trauma that have occurred as a consequence of the history of colonisation and its impacts:
- self-determination and community governance;
- reconnection and community life; and
- restoration and community resilience.
Most significantly we argue that Aboriginal worldviews, developing a comprehensive, holistic approach that focuses on individual, family and community strengths whilst at the same time addressing the needs of the community, is both a more culturally acceptable and effective approach to address these issues.’
Here is what the authors have to say about the first steps to re-establishing healthy communities, which is of clear relevance to what we are trying to do with Sharing Culture.
‘The first step in re-establishing healthy communities is to acknowledge and understand the impact of the colonial legacy on the lives of Aboriginal people today and the various pathways necessary for healing from historical trauma, using both cultural and contemporary understandings and processes.
Although the full history of Australia in regard to the treatment of Aboriginal peoples remains in dispute, there is enough evidence to support the experience of sustained, profound trauma for the entire Aboriginal community over generations, suggestive of genocide. See Chapters 1, 6 and 17 for further discussion.
It is partly the ongoing effects of this process that continue to impact negatively at the individual and community level that require healing before the contemporary issues can be successfully dealt with.
Following this, establishing appropriate cultural, community, family and individual support systems and programs to address current needs and developments can occur systematically.
The themes that emerge in the pathways to recovery are:
- self-determination and community governance;
- reconnection and community life; and
- restoration and community resilience.’
I show these bullets again because they are key to healing. Their importance to community healing is powerfully illustrated by Annalise Jennings’ work in Cape York Indigenous communities with her Whole of Community Change Model.