Australian Baha'i Sites

How one neighbourhood in Hobart is working to transform itself 

For the past two years, a children’s class in South Hobart, Tasmania, has been contributing towards a more sustainable community while strengthening the Baha’i moral education process.  

The initiative began in 2022 when children’s class teacher Angela Bryan recognised the desire within locals to work towards a more environmentally conscious neighbourhood.

The Together We Grow gardening group and children’s class.

“This is a distinctive characteristic of the area,” Angela says.  

“Several years prior, the children’s class had been held in a nearby hall, but attendance had dropped to just a few families.”  

An important step in the formation of this grassroots initiative involved a proper reading and response to the needs of the reality of the locality.

Angela Bryan

Having spent years making connections with local community garden groups, Angela says it was on a bush track near her home that she had a conversation with Janet Stone a grandmother passionate about environmental concerns with a drive to transform the local neighbourhood at the grassroots.  

“Janet suggested the children’s class may like to participate in the upcoming bushcare activity which she was leading to create a safe space for endangered bandicoots,” she says. “This lead to the eventual relocation of the class to the adjoining South Hobart Community Garden, which Janet helped to establish some years ago.  

“This chance encounter not only connected like-minded people in the locality but formed some lasting bonds of friendship as well.”

The children’s class has since moved to the community garden and is assisted by Angela’s daughter, Rebecca. As well as including gardening efforts that address the environmental concerns within the local area, the classes, titled Together We Grow, feature singing, prayers, blessings for the Earth and its peoples, stories and activities. One favourite activity has been a treasure hunt where children search for sections of quotes in the garden and put them together.

A favourite activity of the Together We Grow participants is a treasure hunt through the garden, finding parts from a quote and putting them back together.

“An important step in the formation of this grassroots initiative involved a proper reading and response to the needs of the reality of the locality,” Angela says.  

“The group now has two plots which are used to teach the children about tending a garden and a Baha’i from another locality has also become very involved in teaching and providing some financial and material support.”  

The endeavour is currently supported by up to four families, with other friends attending intermittently, and also provides an outlet for junior youth to provide service to their neighbourhood. “One very committed mother, who has a young child and attends regularly, has agreed to participate more in running the session,” Angela says. “This young mum has lead groups of youths on wilderness adventures so has a wealth of experience and capacity in a range of outdoor activities.”

The Together We Grow gardening group working on the plot at the South Hobart Community Garden.

Publicised in the South Hobart Sustainable Community (SHSC) newsletter and with Angela participating in general community working bees and gatherings organised by the SHSC, she says it is hoped the broader community-building vision of the children’s classes and the institute as a whole might be shared with more “like-minded friends who may be inspired to join in this community initiative”.  

“I think everyone feels they are contributing to create a vibrant, outward-focused community.” 

Thanks for reading.

Subscribe

Hobart

The Baha’i community of Hobart is made up of a number of Local Spiritual Assemblies, or local governing councils, and has a thriving community-building process that addresses the moral educational needs of children, young people and adults. The community is also devoted to participating in social transformation projects, and is home to its very own […]

More

Published in September, 2024, in Community Stories > Community Building

Available online at: horizons.bahai.org.au/community-stories/how-one-neighbourhood-in-hobart-is-working-to-transform-itself/

Related Stories

Lane Cove

A mystical experience: Lane Cove temple tour connects hearts to Baha’u’llah 

More than 65 people from Lane Cove have visited the Baha’i House of Worship in an excursion that provided the chance to engage in meaningful conversations while connecting hearts to the temple ...

Ballarat

The unfoldment of a moral education process in Delacombe 

It’s taken eight years for the Baha’i education process to take root in Delacombe, a neighbourhood situated in the west of Ballarat, in regional Victoria.  The process began when the Baha’i ...

Video
Bunbury

Using camps to build capacity 

Institute camps in Western Australia’s south-west are helping individuals to build capacity and spurring them into the field of action.  Launched in 2021, the first camps were held at a ...

Mosman Park

Social action initiatives thrive in Mosman Park

Community members in Mosman Park are working hard to tackle issues of isolation and loneliness, supporting one another through initiatives that aim to connect neighbours, the elderly, young and ...

Video
Tarneit

Tarneit’s young people soar towards building of vibrant communities 

Prisha Nayak believes it is by nurturing and guiding young people that she can contribute to the betterment of the world.  “My goal is to instill in them the virtues that will inspire others ...

Lane Cove

Children’s festivals part of pattern of community life in Lane Cove 

Children’s festivals in Lane Cove, Sydney are providing the opportunity to build vibrant communities focused on the moral education of young people.  Held during the school holiday periods, ...

Video
  • Featured in
    Find more stories about

    Children’s Education