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Dreaming Inside poetry provides window on the thoughts of Indigenous men in jail

Aunty Barbara Nicholson has spent the past decade working with Aboriginal inmates at Junee. (ABC Illawarra: Sarah Moss)

Over the past decade, Aunty Barbara Nicholson has made the journey to Junee Correctional Centre more than 300 times.

The Wadi Wadi elder works closely with the prison's Indigenous inmates as they learn how to connect their thoughts and feelings to words. 

The men write poetry mostly, and free-flowing, train-of-thought poetry written from the perspective of an angry, incarcerated Indigenous man makes for tough reading. 

"We think about change a lot, but what is change?" Aunty Barbara asks.  

"You don't really get significant change from one momentous event, but I think you can change from an accumulation of a lot of events.

"And I've got an accumulation here, it's 10 years, so let's hope that can change things."

Aunty Barbara has worked with hundreds of men, and says she remembers each one of them.

A decade after Aunty Barbara first started working with the inmates, the 10th edition of their journal of poetry, Dreaming Inside, has been published.

Launched by acclaimed author Melissa Lucashenko in Wollongong, the stories touch on love, life and loss as disenfranchised men express themselves through poetry, highlighting their own pain and misdemeanours.

At the launch, both Aunty Barbara and Lucashenko reflected on the importance of working with people inside jail.

Dinnewan Connection dancers opened the journal launch with an Acknowledgement to Country. (Supplied: Elizabeth Tadic)

'Forbidding' but safe

The cover of Dreaming Inside: Voices from Junee Correctional Centre, Volume 10. (ABC Illawarra: Sarah Moss)

A lot of people ask Aunty Barbara if she is frightened going into jail. She's not.

She says while there's a forbidding atmosphere, she feels safe. 

So, what is it like working in a jail?

Aunty Barbara describes it as, "Daunting, somewhat fearful at times, absolutely exhilarating and soul feeding".

"I get more out of those trips than those boys get from me, I can tell you," she says.

As an Indigenous woman who is concerned about the inmates' access to culture, Aunty Barbara thinks culture is strong in Junee Correctional Centre. 

Dreaming Inside tutors actor Billy McPherson, author Simon Luckhurst and David Kennedy. (Supplied: Elizabeth Tadic)

"It's what sustains them in there.

"And the ones who are culturally strong encourage the ones who are not so culturally strong because they were brought up out of country."

Dinnewan Connection dancers at the launch of Dreaming Inside Volume 10. (Supplied: Elizabeth Tadic)

Language holds culture 

Lucashenko, who hails from the unceded land of the Bundjalung nation, and has been couch surfing since the recent floods in her hometown Mullumbimby, was glad of the opportunity to launch Inside Dreaming Volume 10. 

Lucashenko launched Volume 10 of Dreaming Inside.  (Supplied: Elizabeth Tadic)

In preparation for the event, the award-winning wordsmith, author, poet and academic checked the definition of prison, and discovered its Latin word means to apprehendere.

"It literally means to take or to take hold of, and I thought, 'That'd be right'," Lucashenko says. 

Sisters Inside is also celebrating 20 years of work. (Supplied: Sisters Inside)

Lucashenko is a founding member and active participant of Brisbane-based grassroots organisation Sisters Inside.

Established in 1992, Sisters Inside — much like Dreaming Inside — is celebrating 20 years of assisting criminalised women, girls, children and families.

"It's very rare for a grassroots organisation to work in this space, especially prisons," Lucashenko says.

"We all know that there is trauma, poverty, racism, white supremacy that leads to people to have outbursts and become violent.

"It's not that the violence isn't real, it's that there is a better way.

"If we are going to apprehend the brothers in Junee, and the other people behind bars, the refugees included, homeless people who are using prison as somewhere to get a feed and a bed, mentally ill people who end up in jail because we don't have a decent system of caring for each other, if we are going to apprehend those people, then let's do it in the true meaning of the word, let’s take them all in and look after each other."

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