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Conclusion
Interviewees:
Various
Interviewer: Frank Heimans,
for
Baulkham Hills Shire Council
Transcription: Catherine Sapir, May, 2006 |
We
asked the volunteers in this project how their lives have been transformed
by their volunteer experience?
Jill
Morgan: I’m a totally different person. Having become a volunteer
I’ve learned and I’ve grown so much. I’ve learned a lot about me and I’ve
learned a lot about the Shire I live in. I’ve learned a lot about the
people that make up the Shire. The main thing that I’ve learnt is that
I can do it. Yes, I think that’s got to be it. It’s given me the confidence
to look forward to future challenges, I suppose, and know that I can give
it my best shot. It’s given me confidence that way.
What
do you personally get out of being a volunteer?
Harry
McLean: I guess a lot of satisfaction. You get to meet a lot
of people, particularly around the area when we go around doing property
inspections or burning piles for people, new residents when they move
in, we get to meet them so it’s a good thing to get to meet everybody
around you and talk to them and they know who you are then if they need
to call someone. I guess it’s more not what you can get out of it as what
can you do for the movement because I think most people have something
to offer even if it’s just a young person that knows nothing about it,
they might be fit and strong and you can show them what to do and they
can do that whereas older people can come along with knowledge in communications,
radio equipment. We have so many varied types of people in the Brigade
and you can use all of their skills.
Dawn Matthews: Volunteers are the people who get up there.
They don’t necessarily say "here I am, I am a volunteer, I’m doing
this", they get up there and start being leaders and create the energy
to do a job that wouldn’t get done without them. Somebody stands up there
and says "I can see a need, let’s get it done" and they’re not
standing up and saying "the Government should do this or the Government
should do that", they get up there and they do it. They are the example
of what we are, what we can be and what we need to be to survive in the
future.
When
you look back at some 35 or so years of volunteering, what’s the main
thing you’ve learnt from that experience?
Keith
Vallis: People aren’t always easy to understand. You’ve got to
think very deeply about how people want to be involved in things and at
times seem to be hesitant but you generally find that you can convince
them that this is not a difficult thing that I’m asking you to do, wouldn’t
you be prepared to come along and do it. I’ve found that people in the
main are always there when you want them but at times it takes a bit of
convincing.
Do
you think that volunteers get enough recognition for the work that they
do?
Keith
Vallis: Well I think personally that most volunteers that I know
don’t want recognition for what they do because, like me, the value of
it is in what you achieve and what you get for yourself. Personally I’ve
never thought I’ll do this because if I go there to the Council meeting
someone might give me a pat on the back. That’s not what you do it for.
Rebecca
Heinrich: It’s my chance to make a difference. There’s no more
to it. It’s my chance to give something back and to say thank you for
all the support I get from people. It’s my chance to do the same thing
to other people and it’s just my little gift that I love giving to humanity
and trying to encourage people, both young and old, to follow their dreams
and reach out there and make sure that they reach their potential.
This
Oral History project was produced by Frank Heimans of Cinetel Productions.
The project was co-ordinated by Baulkham Hills Shire Library Service.
The opinions in the Oral History interview tapes and the compilation CD
are those of the individuals concerned and do not necessarily represent
in whole or in part the position of the Baulkham Hills Shire Council.
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