Whare Timatatanga Hou Ora Kaitāia Women's Refuge chief executive Waimaria Veza says it has been preparing since October for a busy holiday season. Photo / Brodie Stone
Whare Timatatanga Hou Ora Kaitāia Women's Refuge chief executive Waimaria Veza says it has been preparing since October for a busy holiday season. Photo / Brodie Stone
For many, the summer holidays are a time to connect as family, but for the country’s northernmost Women’s Refuge, it is the busiest time of the year.
Whare Timatatanga Hou Ora Kaitāia Women’s Refuge chief executive Waimaria Veza said staff had been preparing for a surge in demand sinceOctober.
She expects the refuge’s two safe houses to be at capacity until the end of January.
“It is a busy time for us,” Veza said, adding that other northern region refuges were also expecting demand to increase over the festive season.
The seven Kaitāia refuge staff cover an area from Kāeo to the east, Mitimiti in the west, past the Mangamukas and all the way to Cape Rēinga.
Kaitāia Women's Refuge chief executive Waimaria Veza says vulnerable people will be arriving on their doorstep thick and fast during the summer holiday period. Photo / Brodie Stone
“We might get a report and it will say a family harm incident happened because they’ve run out of food.
“There’s a lot of expectation on families, parents or caregivers to provide what is required at Christmastime.”
Any woman who walks through the door of the refuge is provided with a risk assessment and a safety plan with the tools to make a safe escape.
“We never encourage them to leave a relationship; that’s a decision they make on their own,” Veza said.
For women in remote areas, safety plans could include encouraging them to get to know their neighbours, having a second phone, or cutting spare keys.
“It might even go as far as having a bag packed.
“It’s just letting them know, ‘We’re here, you have somewhere to go,’ because a lot of them won’t leave because they don’t know where to go.
“We have to ensure we have things like petrol vouchers because some of the need is like ‘I’ve gotta get out of here, I need to leave tomorrow.’”
Partnerships with other organisations ensured women had what they needed to either escape or help to prevent abuse in the home.
Organisations such as the Bald Angels supplied food parcels, while others as far away as Auckland donated presents for women with children.
“We’ve delivered food, and families have cried. They’re like, ‘You just don’t know how much of a difference you have made in our lives today.’”
Making a difference in someone’s life was a privilege, Veza said.
Shehad noticed during her 21 years with Women’s Refuge how the organisation had switched from being the ambulance at the bottom of the cliff to the “fence at the top”.
She believed more people were reporting family harm, and there was less stigma.
“I think it was always like this, but I think there’s more awareness around it, and so they’re more likely to ring up for help and more likely to report it.”
During winter, the refuge might only have one woman turn up in a day.
“I just say, ‘Hey, if we’ve made the difference in one family’s life, then we’ve done well today.’”
Brodie Stone covers crime and emergency for the Northern Advocate. She has spent most of her life in Whangārei and is passionate about delving into issues that matter to Northlanders and beyond.