PAKENHAM OFFICER STAR NEWS
Home » Painful tale paves pathway to hope

Painful tale paves pathway to hope

Family violence can be dispelled within a generation – but it needs clear leadership, says the inspirational Hana Assafiri.

At the launch of Assafiri’s memoir Hana: The Audacity to be Free, she was part of a panel on family violence hosted by Wellsprings for Women on 3 July.

In her book, Assafiri traverses her life in migrating to Lebanon and back to Australia, as well as being family violence victim-survivor, support worker and the founder of the iconic Moroccan Soup Bar.

Assafiri called for “unequivocal” leadership and the end of “double-speak” about violence against women.

“We say we want to create this great utopian world where women would be safe.

“But we justify, condone and even reward behaviours that bully, coerce and violate women in practice.

“We see this play out in the highest office in the land. In Parliament House, how people abuse one another in Question Time. On the football field. In wars.

“These are all extensions of the same mindset.”

She told the forum that sadly for women the issue was “commonplace”. It was important to talk about the issue in a way that women could “imagine a way out”.

Back in the 1960s, her late Lebanese-born mother’s depression while in Melbourne showed that the services available didn’t “translate” for her.

The family, including a 5-year-old Assafiri, moved to Lebanon in an effort to help her mother.

One of the biggest differences that could be made was to make family violence services more accessible to everyone, she said.

Advertising campaigns on family violence were not as clear and pervasive as ‘Slip, slop, slap’ and 0.05 drink-driving campaigns.

The 1800 RESPECT hotline was little known, and should be replaced with simply calling triple-0.

She added why was it that women and children were taken away into refuges, rather than the perpetrators who could be put through treatment.

Co-panellist Sandra Maudier from Wellsprings told the audience not to be afraid to “ask the question” to suspected victims.

Dr Nimini Fernando backed up the point, advising people not to “give up” on offering support and to “travel with them”.

It took women about two years to act on violence against them at home, she said.

Wellsprings for Women chief executive Dalal Smiley said Assafiri’s story left her “gobsmacked”, despite knowing her in the family-violence sector since the 1980s.

“Sometimes just one of those issues can leave you with trauma for a lifetime. Yet she used her experience to make so much out of it.

“The simplicity of what she did in addressing family violence in women’s lives makes you realise how complicated we make things working in this sector.”

Assafiri left the family violence sector – frustrated by being unable to find safe accommodation for a fleeing woman and two children.

It led her to the Moroccan Soup Bar, a restaurant that she imagined would be a safe space for women.

She wanted to flip the notion of kitchens being a place of female subjugation, but a means to gain financial empowerment.

Common wisdom is that women on average leave an abuser seven times before exiting the last time. In 25 years at Moroccan Soup Bar, not one of the women returned to a violent partner.

“If you provide enduring, better options than the circumstances of violence, then women don’t need to go back.”

Safe and Equal board chair Maria Dimopoulos said the book was “inspiring as much as it is searingly painful” – breaking the silence on child sexual abuse and domestic violence.

She quoted from the prologue: “I wish for readers to recognise it’s in the cracks of vulnerability where we find our strength”.

Assafiri said she wanted to take the “shame and humiliation” away from those who endure abuse.

And to “place it where it belongs – to the perpetrators … and those who maintain the system of secrecy and silence.”

“Equally these events don’t define who you become – and nor should they ever.”

In a passage describing child sexual abuse, she left a page blank – “I tried to find the way to capture the essence … in the end you say nothing, you say everything,” she said.

However, on being told of the abuse, her mother attempted to avoid further humiliation by setting up Assafiri in an arranged marriage.

“I went from the hands of one abuser to another,” Assafiri told the audience. But it gave her the “capacity of lived experience”.

In her imagination and “secret escapes”, she found a “world of possibility”. Leaving the abusive marriage was “harrowing” but then formed the “possibility of being freed”.

She wished she had a book similar to her memoir as a companion during the “aloneness”.

“It’s in the absolute isolation – both culturally and individually – that’s where violence thrives. It takes people away from their social connections and networks.”

She hoped that in the pages, readers could see a “pathway of hope”.

Proceeds for the book Hira: The Audacity to be Free go to the First Nations women’s domestic violence service Djirra.

Digital Editions


More News

  • Yabbies in pursuit of Cobras total to stay in hot finals race

    Yabbies in pursuit of Cobras total to stay in hot finals race

    Purchase this photo from Pic Store: 533222 When the back is against the wall a response is needed. And Pakenham Upper/Toomuc’s back is pressed hard against the wall in a…

  • Yakkerboo excites in 50th year

    Yakkerboo excites in 50th year

    Purchase this photo from Pic Store: 533858 Yakkerboo was welcomed into its 50th year with another successful celebration, bigger than ever. Drawing families and visitors for a weekend of celebration,…

  • Galloping into a New Year with style

    Galloping into a New Year with style

    Purchase this photo from Pic Store: 531866 Under a blazing blue sky, thousands of revellers celebrated the Year of the Horse at the annual Springvale Lunar New Year festival. More…

  • Lions reach the pointy end

    Lions reach the pointy end

    PAKENHAM BOWLS SATURDAY The 14th and final home and away round of the 2025/26 Weekend Pennant season was played last Saturday. Pakenham One (Div 1), seventh on the ladder, had…

  • Bulls dominate Pakenham

    Bulls dominate Pakenham

    Purchase this photo from Pic Store: 533225 Cardinia rebounded in a big way and pushed Pakenham’s season to the brink on day one of round 13 in the Casey Cardinia…

  • O’Sullivan joy at Garfield

    O’Sullivan joy at Garfield

    Purchase this photo from Pic Store: 520670 GARFIELD GOLF There were a few drops of rain prior to Thursday’s par event but that didn’t stop a sizable field of 95…

  • Who wants fourth spot?

    Who wants fourth spot?

    Purchase this photo from Pic Store: 533221 The ladder in the Warragul and District Cricket Association (WDCA) Division 1 competition could not be any closer as the fight for fourth…

  • Masters get on the board

    Masters get on the board

    Purchase this photo from Pic Store: 531164 PREMIER FIRSTS It was a Thursday night thriller that had everything — big hits, momentum swings and a finish that kept supporters on…

  • Clyde up for the challenge

    Clyde up for the challenge

    Purchase this photo from Pic Store: 533226 A red-hot Rutter Park battle saw the two most in-form teams of the competition in Tooradin and Clyde go back-and-forth on day one…

  • The many joys of farming

    The many joys of farming

    Purchase this photo from Pic Store: 526003 Labertouche dairy farmers Mark and Trish Hammond certainly do not make it easy on themselves when it comes to being on the land,…