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Rebecca Heinrich
Interviewee:
Rebecca Heinrich, born 1982
Interviewer: Frank Heimans,
for Baulkham Hills Shire Council
Date of Interview: 28 Aug 2001
Transcription: Catherine Sapir, May, 2006 |
The
Princess Quest gave way to the Excellence in Youth Awards and the Shire’s
Youth Ambassador for 2000 was Rebecca Heinrich.
I am almost
19 years of age, in two weeks’ time I will be. In Year 7 I was elected
to the Carlingford High School’s Student Representative Council. I was
lucky enough to work myself up through the ranks and I went through the
District SRC and then the State SRC and then in 1999 was fortunate enough
to be elected the President of the Australian Student Representative Council.
Got to go to America on a leadership tour so soon after getting back to
Carlingford High School I was elected School Captain there, so within
my school as President of the SRC, myself and the other School Captain,
a very good friend of my called Tim Smith, started up a campaign to raise
$10,000 for Canteen which is an organisation looking after kids with cancer.
We basically got up at assembly one day and said “alright guys if you
can raise $10,000 we’ll shave our heads.” And they did, I had long blond
hair halfway down my back and now I don’t have a lot of hair at all but
that was one of the first initiatives I did as School Captain but I guess
the real turning point from coming back from America was actually starting
my own business called Banana Power with my best friend from the trip
whose name was Lisa Bollard and the two of us started up this business
in 1999. It’s now 2 ½ years old and we’ve been to over 500 schools
in the country and every day, in fact I’ve only just got home from a school
presentation, we’re getting out there and meeting young people and telling
them our story and training their student leaders and trying to get the
young people to solve the problems in their school and get out and be
inspired and make sure they reach their own potential.
Banana Power – there’s not a real definition to it. It’s
bright, it’s catchy, it’s energetic and it’s youthful.
Who
funds Banana Power. Is it all voluntary?
We have about 40 young people who are volunteers but all
the money we make from Banana Power we put back into running camps and
conferences in school holidays and we sponsor rural kids and disadvantaged
kids to come along to these events.
What
sort of things does Banana Power do to motivate people into action?
A key example would be simply doing a key note address
to a school assembly so that would just be speaking to them. This morning
we went to a school that were holding their anti discrimination week so
we went in and talked to them about sort of perceptions and stereotypes
and how we shouldn’t judge each other and mutual respect and school spirit
and getting students involved in school life and supporting each other.
But we also spend a lot of time with SRCs like Prefects and other student
leadership bodies in schools and we do leadership training covering topics
like goal setting and communication skills, team work, public speaking
and also looking at youth issues like youth suicide and drugs and alcohol
abuse, eating disorders, the lack of youth space and things to do. You
name it, we’ve probably covered it. It’s a good time.
Is
Banana Power for year 7 upwards?
It originally started for year 7 and upwards, however
we’ve recently worked with primary schools as well from about 8 years
to old to 18 years old now. We sponsored some Aboriginal kids from rural
Australia to come to one of our camps last January. We have a lot of different
workshops run on youth issues and one of the issues which keeps coming
up time and time again is the need for reconciliation and we have a lot
of young, like Aboriginal young people, come in and present workshops,
that sort of thing so we’ve had a lot to do with that. We also ran an
anti-discrimination pledge. It was put into action in all schools in NSW
and young people were encouraged to sign an anti- discrimination pledge
and that covered the issue of discrimination based on race as well, so
that was another angle we’ve worked with Aboriginal people.
Every school holidays, whatever season it is, we run camps
where kids from all over the country come together. We’ve held camps in
the Hills Shire at Vision Valley Conference Centre and also at other places
in the State and usually there’s about 120 kids that come per camp. They
come from Tasmania and Western Australia and the far corners of the country
and it’s four days of personal development where we teach them a lot of
new skills. They make some great friends and the feed back we keep getting
is just hold more and more so that’s what we’re trying to do.
What’s
your present commitment to Banana Power. How many days a week would you
spend say on Banana Power at work?
I’d say minimum
a week we’d do at least three schools. Last week we did about fourteen
so it varies a lot. You can have big weeks and not so big weeks. The really
great thing is about it, it is so flexible and when I have a lot of other
commitments like trying to study at University it’s good but when exams
come around and that sort of thing I can calm down Banana Power and concentrate
on those things.
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Excellence in Youth Awards 2000
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What
about the Hills Young Leaders Breakfast. What’s your involvement with
that?
Twelve months ago now I was selected as the Baulkham Hills
Shire Council Youth Ambassador, which means I was the winner of the Excellence
in Youth Awards which is one of the events of the Orange Blossom Festival
and when I became Youth Ambassador I was expected to represented the Shire
at absolutely everything you could imagine. I was basically expected to
be on a lot of different committees at the Council and be a spokesperson
for youth and be their voice but what I also tried to do within the position
was sort of try and get in there and get my hands dirty and one of the
ways I did that was through the Hills Young Leaders Breakfast which I
started almost a year ago now. We have run three successful breakfasts
now. It’s basically young people who are out there achieving in various
fields from sport to music to environment, business, etc. and they come
together once every couple of months for these breakfasts that we have
and we have a speaker along and it’s just a real great chance to not only
recognise the great things that they’re doing but give them a chance to
meet new people, make support networks and just have a lot of fun.
You
also have a connection with Westmead Hospital. What do you do for them?
They have an in house radio station at the hospital for
all the kids in the wards. They’re all connected up to this radio station
and they can ring in and request songs. I host a show every Monday night
for a couple of hours – that’s a blast. We have kids ringing up requesting
songs and we walk around to all the wards and have competitions and it’s
great. Like it’s something that just to see them smile and laugh and have
fun is great.
How
do you find time for all this?
It’s difficult, it’s challenging and to be honest I’m
still waiting for an eighth day of the week to be invented, but my outlook
is you only get out of life what you put into it so I’m just go, go, go
and I collapse every once in a while and try and sleep for a few days
but I have a passion for it and I love getting out there and being with
young people and representing young people.
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