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Making the Invisible Visible

Making the Invisible Visible

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I can't secure funding to pay them any<br />

more than they are paid – yet they<br />

pesevere because it’s what gets them<br />

out of bed in the morning.<br />

My staff and volunteers literally save<br />

lives – they help people rebuild their<br />

lives and then they help people to grow<br />

into who they always wanted to be –<br />

yet they would earn more money<br />

stacking shelves in a supermarket.<br />

I work 50-60 hours a week, a lot of the<br />

time is spent writing funding bids – to<br />

get the funding to provide these<br />

services – it’s highly competitive.<br />

What do you consider to be the<br />

most important qualities in<br />

someone working with victims?<br />

Grit and resilience – empathy and<br />

patience – and to be as non-judgemental<br />

as is possible for a human being.<br />

How would you respond to<br />

someone who feels that getting<br />

funding for support services is<br />

easy?<br />

I once had someone tell me that people<br />

who work for charities shouldn’t be paid,<br />

it should all be voluntary – that just about<br />

sums up what the public know about<br />

charitable funding….<br />

What I would like to impress on anyone<br />

who thinks that support services are<br />

easily funded is that I have the most<br />

amazing people working for me, people<br />

who set the world alight with their<br />

passion and dedication to the injustice of<br />

domestic abuse, half of them are<br />

volunteers – the half who are paid could<br />

be paid more working in a fast food<br />

restaurant .<br />

There are more charities, trying to help<br />

the ever-increasing number of people<br />

who are being missed due to the<br />

impact of austerity, all fighting for less<br />

money. And there are still a lot of<br />

people out there who don’t believe that<br />

victim/survivors of domestic abuse<br />

should be given support – we stood in<br />

a shopping centre for five hours with<br />

our campaign material asking people<br />

to pledge that they stand against<br />

domestic abuse, and aside from the<br />

odd negative remark and even a couple<br />

of veiled threats, we had no-one sign.<br />

We asked “do you care about domestic<br />

abuse” and the overall response was<br />

“no” – that is how hard it is to secure<br />

funding and support for our support<br />

services. Yet everyone can tell you a<br />

story of someone they know who has<br />

been in an abusive relationship.<br />

Liza Thompson SATEDA

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