Community brought together by A Festival of Lights

Traditional dancing at A Festival of Lights. Picture: Carmel Zaccone

Sunraysia’s inaugural A Festival of Lights brought together the Sunraysia community for a night of food, entertainment and breaking down cultural barriers. Melanie Whiting explores how the celebration came to be and its significance to the Sunraysia Indian Association and broader community.

Moving to a new town can be tough, especially when it’s more than four hours away from the closest capital city, and in a country you’ve only lived in for five years.

But that’s exactly the challenge Venu Annam, originally from India, faced when he arrived in Sunraysia two years ago.

In October, as president of the incorporated Sunraysia Indian Association, Venu helped put his culture on centre stage for “A Festival of Lights”, a celebration known in India as “Diwali”.

In October 2016, Venu was new to town and celebrating Diwali with friends and family when they came up with the idea of the festival.

A few months later, the Sunraysia Indian Association was incorporated, with the group to host two public events each year – Diwali in October and the Indian New Year in April.

“The first purpose of the association is to bring all the Indians living in Sunraysia together, and we also have a second purpose, to integrate us into the Australian way of living and integrate Australians into our culture,” Venu says.

Through the association, he hopes to help other people who, like him, moved the area not knowing a single person.

“I spent five years in Sydney and then some circumstances of life changed and I was looking for a regional town to live in,” Venu explains.

“Until then, I only saw Mildura on an orange juice bottle – I didn’t know where Mildura was.” Venu applied for a job with Lower Murray Water and stayed a week in the region, but not before checking Google Maps to find out where he was going in the first place.

During his stay, he was impressed with all the region had to offer, the slower pace and country charm was a welcome relief from the hustle and bustle of Sydney “I had almost had enough of the big cities,” Venu admits.

“But if I’m going to move my family over a 1000km distance, I need to make sure that town has all the basic facilities.

“I wanted to speak to somebody, so I actually stood outside the Indian shop and kept smiling at everybody.” It was there he met a stranger-turnedfriend who he credits with his decision to move to Mildura and the early concept of the Sunraysia Indian Association.

“I was thinking, if somebody else comes here, that person may not know anybody else so we need some sort of organisation to help people who come here,” Venu says.

After months of planning, the association pulled off an event unlike any the Sunraysia community had seen before.

The night kicked off with the traditional ritual of “Lighting Diyas”, followed by cultural performances, traditional Indian food and a fireworks show to close the event.

“There are some families who planned to go out of this region that are now staying here because they can enjoy all the cultural events,” Venu says.

READ THIS WEEK’S FULL ISSUE OF SUNRAYSIA LIFE

Digital Editions


More News

  • Young peoples’ housing matters to MASP

    Young peoples’ housing matters to MASP

    YOUTH Homelessness Matters Day was on Wednesday 15 April, and is held each year to highlight that nearly half of all those experiencing homelessness are under the age of 25.…

  • Gallery display for former mayor

    Gallery display for former mayor

    A FORMER Mildura Mayor’s artwork is now on display in a Great Ocean Road Gallery, spotlighting the Mallee landscape along coastal artworks. Former Mildura Rural City Council Mayor Eddie Warhurst’s…

  • Wenty want to go back-to-back

    Wenty want to go back-to-back

    THE Wentworth A Grade premiership-winning coach and SFNL sharp shooter, Amanda Edwards, said despite the losses of Courtney Wakefield to Robinvale and Christie Becker to the Imps, her team can…

  • Four proposals for Gol Gol recognition

    Four proposals for Gol Gol recognition

    WENTWORTH Shire Council will this week consider a motion to recognise prominent figures in the Gol Gol area with new signs and displays. The motion contains four proposed changes submitted…

  • Progress on Wenty jobs

    Progress on Wenty jobs

    WENTWORTH Shire Council has noted several completed and ongoing projects for the past month, including repair assessments to roads damaged from the recent heavy rainfall event. The Council is scheduled…

  • Focus group open for members

    Focus group open for members

    RED Cliffs Focus group is welcoming anyone from the community to join its monthly meetings to help improve the local area’s facilities. The monthly meetings provide locals the chance to…

  • More birdies than bogeys for junior golfers

    More birdies than bogeys for junior golfers

    YOUNG golfers from near and far reaped the benefits of four full days of golf last week, gaining plenty of experience competing in the Sunraysia Junior Golf Week tournament at…

  • Low-sensory centres for accessible voting

    Low-sensory centres for accessible voting

    VOTING at the next Victorian State Election could be more accessible for people who face barriers at traditional polling places with the rollout of low-sensory mobile voting centres. Low‑sensory voting…

  • Doctor starts a new chapter

    Doctor starts a new chapter

    SUNRAYSIA Medical Centre in Red Cliffs has a new general practitioner. Dr Muhammad Ayubi, who studied and worked in Glasgow, Scotland, arrived here with his wife in January, and said…

  • Communities encouraged to speak up

    Communities encouraged to speak up

    VICTORIAN Farmers Federation is calling on regional community members to make submissions to the Murray Darling Basin Plan Review. Consultation for the 2026 review opened on 5 February, inviting stakeholders…