Angela Barker OAM is an Australian advocate for victims of domestic violence.

Assault and recovery  

On 7 March 2002, at 16 years old, Barker was assaulted by her 20-year-old boyfriend.[1][2][3] They had been dating since Angela was 14, and he had previously assaulted her multiple times. His attacks culminated that day in 2002, after Barker refused to date him after they had previously broken up. He beat her, and Barker was found by a passerby. After the assault, Angela's family was told that she would remain in a vegetative state forever.[2] After the attack, she spent 8 weeks in the hospital, five months in rehabilitative therapy, and three years in a rehabilitation hospital. She now uses a wheelchair, and was left with severe brain injury and without the ability to talk.[2][4] After five years, she regained the ability to talk.[5] Barker does not recall the 12 months before the attack, and her memory has only recovered to somewhere within thirteen and fifteen.[3] Her former boyfriend later turned himself in, and was sentenced to serve a minimum of seven and a half years in prison.[1]

Activism

As of 2011, Angela has shared her story with over 10,000 teens across Australia and internationally.[1] In 2007, Angela told the story of her assault in a special session of the United Nations General Assembly devoted to children. She was chosen as one of 15 women to meet at the UN for a four-day conference on activism and policy.[2][6] She has worked with the Young People in Nursing Homes Alliance, and represented young people at multiple Australian Labor Party conferences.[4] In 2015, she was the special guest at a White Ribbon Day march in Lakemba.[7] In 2004, Angela's story was made into a film entitled Loves Me, Loves Me Not: Angela Barker's Story by the Australian government for their Violence Against Women Australia Says No campaign.[8][9] In 2011, Barker was voted Victoria's Young Australian of the Year.[1]

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 Anand, Ash. "The butterfly effect: Nine years after a vicious beating left her in a coma, Anj Barker is inspiring others to end domestic violence". The Age. The Age.
  2. 1 2 3 4 Munro, Ian. "Angela tells her brutal story at UN to give women hope". The Sydney Morning Herald. The Sydney Morning Herald.
  3. 1 2 Munro Law, Ian. "Jail term for bashing increased". The Age. The Age.
  4. 1 2 Thomsen, Joseph. "Benalla's Angela Barker nominated for a Victorian Young Australian of the Year Award". ABC. ABC.
  5. Booker, Chloe. "Anj Barker finds love after tragedy". The Border Mail. The Border Mail.
  6. Gorrey, Megan. "Woman crippled from savage bashing by ex-boyfriend raises awareness of teen domestic violence". The Canberra Times. The Canberra Times.
  7. Ngo, Cindy. "White Ribbon Day march: Domestic violence survivor Angela Barker special guest at Lakemba event". Daily Telegraph. Daily Telegraph.
  8. "Loves me, loves me not : Angela Barker's story". WorldCat. WorldCat.
  9. Farmer, Kevin. "Angela tells her story". The Chronicle. The Chronicle.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.