Margin moira kelly biography

Our People

As someone who identifies as part of the BAME and international student community in the UK, I have lived experience struggling to secure a job myself, and understands the tremendous amount of stress and anxiety that comes alongside this process. Thus, just as many young ambassadors from FVG in the past, I am motivated to be part of the solution, and advocate for better, efficient, and meaningful solutions that tackles youth unemployment issues once and for all.

As a fresh graduate, I am going to start my first job working for SEO London as its Corporate Law Programme Coordinator, supporting outstanding candidates from BAME or social mobility qualifying backgrounds to secure a career in law. In the meantime, I am also actively volunteering for CIVICUS as its Youth Action Team Member, supporting and amplifying the voices of young people/youth-led organisations worldwide.

To me, being able to serve my community, alleviate the suffering of others; and at the same time to live a balanced and happy life would be some of my key priorities at the moment. I always believe th

Snapshot

Naturally Twenty-five of the Best! isn’t making a judgment about who the 25 best Australian Catholics really are – how could anyone know? It is simply an attempt to identify some people in Australia’s history and in the present time for whom faith is, or has been, significant. We have left the twenty-fifth box without an image so that you can nominate someone you know, or know of, to fill this spot.

Khoa Do. Boat person, film maker and humanitarian

When Khoa Do (pronounced Kwa Doh) was two-years-old, he left Vietnam on a fishing boat with his parents, who risked their lives to find a future for their children in another country. Khoa and his family arrived in Sydney and settled in the city’s west. They moved from suburb to suburb wherever the rents were cheapest and finally settled in Yagoona. After primary school Khoa received a scholarship to St Aloysius College, a life-changing experience.

‘What the school taught me was that it doesn’t matter what your background is, what you look like, whether your name is sold on mugs in stationery stores

About the 16 Days of Activism campaign

Each year, the 16 Days of Activism campaign runs from 25 November to 10 December, raising awareness and calling for action toward preventing and ending all forms of gender-based violence. 

We’re committed to preventing all forms of gender-based violence within our community, and support Respect Victoria’s local campaign, Respect Women: ‘Call it out’. 

This campaign raises awareness about what respect means, what it looks like, and how to put it into practice in your everyday life. It encourages us to call out sexism, sexual harassment and disrespect towards women. Go to Respect Victoria for more information about their campaign. 

 

How we're working with local organisations to take action

Having so many touchpoints with our community, local businesses can be leaders in preventing all gender-based violence in Manningham. Recently, we supported our local real estate businesses to do just that. 

Ten real estate agents from five of our local agencies, pro-actively joined our Manningham Safe, Respectful and Inclusiv

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