高清福利片

Murray Kamara portraits.
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The Man Who Escaped Sierra Leone

10 September 2018
Graduate and Outside the Square speaker, Murray Kamara
"There are times when you walk into the train station or shops and people will look at you differently. I recently had dreadlocks and you could see people making judgements like, 鈥楾here goes a shabby African boy."

Murray Kamara was born in Freetown, Sierra Leone鈥檚 capital, in 1989, two years before the coup which would overthrow the Joseph Momoh government and plunge the country into one of Africa鈥檚 bloodiest civil wars. The 11-year conflict would leave over 50,000 dead and displace approximately one million people.

One of the most terrifying practices during this time was the drafting of child soldiers. Thousands were abducted, threatened and sometimes forced to kill their own families as part of the recruitment process.

We had one of the most traumatic civil wars in African history and there was no way we could stay in Sierra Leone. From 1999-2006, I was in a camp.
Murray Kamara, Community Advocate (BSW 2015)

By 2000, Murray鈥檚 family, along with almost half a million Sierra Leoneans had sought refuge in Guinea and Libera. But under the weight of such intense migration, these countries struggled to respond. The situation worsened in 2001, when Guinea鈥檚 President, Lansana Conte, publicly attacked refugees and incited violence against the Sierra Leoneans and Liberians. For weeks, refugees lived in fear as police, soldiers, and civilian militia broke into their homes, looted their belongings, raped, beat and arrested them.

Through this all, Murray survived.

In 2008, the U.N. High Commission for Refugees informed Sierra Leonean refugees that their refugee status was being withdrawn. Murray was 18 years old and had lived his entire life during war. After a gruelling application process, he was granted an Offshore Humanitarian Visa to Australia, where he arrived in Lismore, a city of strangers.

鈥淒uring the war, my family separated. I was with my aunt and uncle, so not a lot of my family members are here. I was lucky enough to get in touch with some family members but I鈥檓 not in contact with most of them.鈥

Murray began to attend the local TAFE and work at a Macadamia farm to earn money. There, he soon encountered a new set of challenges.

This guy employed us in his Macadamia farm, paying us $10 an hour. It was below minimum wage, but his friend told me, 鈥榊ou guys are lucky, you鈥檙e the first black people he鈥檚 ever paid鈥.
Murray Kamara

鈥淢y cousin and I were the only non-English-speaking people in my TAFE class. This woman introduced us to a lot of other people, all of whom were Australian, and she asked us, 鈥楢re you guys from detention?鈥 Everyone in the class laughed.

"People in that part of the country, they鈥檙e not exposed to other cultures. They鈥檙e not exposed to other races.鈥

Murray ended up leaving Lismore and moving to Sydney鈥檚 Bankstown, home to a large Sierra Leonean community, and studied a Bachelor of聽 Social Work at the University of Sydney.

鈥淒uring my social work degree, we had a lot of debates about people coming to Australia by boat. Being a person that arrived here on-shore as a refugee, I could tell that most people didn鈥檛 have that understanding of refugees and asylum seekers.

"One of the first issues we discussed was the Tampa crisis and how people were kept in detention, and I remembered the TAFE woman who asked me if I was from detention. So I tried to imagine why young people would be laughing when asked about detention.

"For the past five years, I鈥檝e worked with people from detention on a daily basis. I know how horrible their lives are. It鈥檚 not a laughing matter, it鈥檚 very, very serious.鈥

Today, Murray is studying a Juris Doctor at the University of Sydney, and continues to work as a Community Advocate after a placement at the Asylum Seekers Centre proved eye-opening.聽

I interviewed a politician from Georgia. Most of the time, people think about asylum seekers, they think of queue jumpers. Seeing a member of parliament escaping persecution was a turning point for me. I thought, 鈥業 was a refugee, now I鈥檓 interviewing a person who is affluent and seeking refuge in another country.鈥 There鈥檚 more to the dynamic and politics of asylum seekers. The stories are not always told and it鈥檚 not as simple as we think it is.
Murray Kamara

鈥淚t gives me a lot of hope to listen to other people鈥檚 stories and their resilience. It鈥檚 very hard to come to this country and their journeys are quite different from mine. My story is shocking but when I listen to people from Afghanistan and other countries, it gives me hope that people have the courage to flee persecution one way or the other.鈥

Although Murray speaks with optimism when discussing his experiences, he admits to struggling with the ongoing vilification of African communities that has continued to emerge in Australian media and politics over the last 18 months.

鈥淎 few years ago, with the rise of Barack Obama, we thought things were changing. Things are not changing, they鈥檙e getting worse. It鈥檚 about race, it鈥檚 about religion. It鈥檚 worrying."

If you are a young, black person, there are places you don鈥檛 have the freedom to visit because you鈥檙e scared of what others will say. You don鈥檛 have the freedom you should in a country that鈥檚 meant to uphold freedom and human rights and justice.
Murray Kamara

For Murray, it鈥檚 important we take the time to talk to each other and form our own opinions, rather than accepting the ones proffered by the media and politicians.

鈥淚 think we listen to our politicians too much. Refugees are humans. They can contribute to society. Get to know them and understand their culture, understand their way of life. We are all human so let鈥檚 forget about race or colour or religion.

"What鈥檚 the Australian value? I think the Australian value is to help each other out. Sometimes we forget that.鈥

Murray Kamara will share his insights and experiences during the Outside the Square discussion, Stories and Racism in Australia: What if you're not white? on 22 November 2017 at the Old Rum Store, Chippendale. Book tickets here.

Article by Theodora Chan (BA, MECO 2010; BA, HONS 2012), Co-Founder and Content Director at .