PENI - PEOPLE FOR EQUALITY NOT INSTITUTIONALISATION
August 2005 was the twentieth anniversary of the birth
of People for Equality Not Institutionalisation (PENI), a landmark in
the local history of the disability rights movement. PENI put
disability rights on the political agenda by advocating for equal
treatment and de-institutionalisation. Staging public actions and
demonstrations throughout the 80s, PENI gained media attention to
improve a range of living, working and social conditions for people
with disabilities, especially with respect to transport, residential
care facilities and access to public spaces and services.
PENI MULTIMEDIA PROJECT
The PENI Multimedia History Workshop enabled five key
activists in PENI and associated causes to present highlights from
their personal experiences, collective story and achievements, as a
ten-minute digital story, as well as in a version print and audio/radio
formats.
The PENI Multimedia History Workshop was initiated in
mid-2005 by Anitra Nelson, a filmmaker, Steven Hurd, a disability
rights advocate and activist, and Anne Burke, Education Program
Manager, lab.3000 Incubator (RMIT University). Several workshops were
held during August-October 2005. The project received funding from the
Melbourne Community Foundation — The Paterson Family Fund. The
resulting digital story and audio recordings provided material for
transcription into a print version.
Grit Media in conjunction with project initiators hope
to further develop the project this year and are currently seeking
funding form various sources.