From June to September 2019, I am fortunate
to be completing my international field placement with the Lifewise Trust in
Tamaki, Aotearoa. The Lifewise Trust (LIFEWISE),
Airedale Property Trust (APT), and Methodist Mission Northern (MMN) operate
interpedently in order to work towards the vision of connected, just, and
inclusive communities. Each Trust is dedicated to family and community
resilience, from working with people and families directly, to providing
financing and infrastructure which makes this work possible.
In choosing my international placement, I
wanted to continue to learn and grow in the fields of housing and homelessness,
community and land development, and infrastructure. Based out of the University
of Otago building, Airedale Property Trust, Methodist Mission Trust (Splice),
and Lifewise share one main office. This office is a busy, but united hub of
activity, from property management, community building, youth homelessness initiatives,
fundraising, research, development and practice and much more. I am working
among many individuals who are committed to making homelessness rare, brief,
and non-reoccurring and are keen on sharing their work and experience with me.
I have been welcomed into the Lifewise
Practice & Development Team and have focused on Housing First (HF)
projects. I have analyzed and interpreted documents to create briefing
documents for government officials, I am currently working on collecting,
analyzing, and interpreting data gathered by the HF program in Auckland, with
the goal of reporting how the program might be improved or developed, informing
community service providers on the wants and needs of whānau, and reporting on
the realities of the health and wellness of whānau to external stakeholders, I
have completed research on IPS Supported Employment (Individual Placement
Support), and documenting the Kaupapa Māori / iwi-led model that is being used
for the delivery of HF in Rotorua. While simultaneously working on these
projects, I’ve been a part of the Tamaki community, going on home visits with
the HF Team, attending community events such as the Piki Toi Artist Exhibition, standing in
solidarity with whānau to protect Ihumatao ,
celebrating the opening of the Pitt Street residence (a HF home, but also an
artists’ collective), attending symposiums related to Marae housing and HF, and
participating in The Big Sleep Out in Rotorua, for one night, coming together with
community and business leaders and to experience what it’s like sleeping rough,
getting a taste of life on the streets, and raising critical funds to prevent
homelessness.
I would like to say a BIG Tēnā Koutou to
all my whānau Aotearoa. Learning about Maori culture, sharing stories, and
experiencing the beauty of the people, language, and land has been a
life-changing journey that I’m grateful to have shared with all of you.
Ka kite anō au i a koutou.
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