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Ach Exchange member: Akhter Jahan Rahman

Akhter Jahan Rahman

An Indian vocal music teacher, psychologist and musician, Akhter moved to Adelaide with her late husband and five-year-old son as refugees four decades ago.

Akhter is a member of Sing Australia, has her own musical band (Jazz Massala), teaches Indian music and organises musical soirees for Bangladeshis.

She is a keen member of Zonta, the Australian Labor Party, National Seniors Association and the South Australian Bangladeshi Community Organisation. She volunteers with Meals on Wheels and enjoys cooking, socialising, walking and pilates.

Akhter was one of the film-makers involved in the inaugural Good Lives on Film Project in 2014.

“Being a member of The Exchange has opened up a different world for me to the one I was used to when I was working full time,” she says. “It’s given me an avenue for meeting people who want to remain independent and who have positive lifestyles. I enjoy receiving information about different events and projects and getting involved.”

Anne Biggins

Anne was involved in the second Good Lives on Film Project in 2015 and has been a member of The Exchange since its inception.

Anne was left unable to work after surgery on a brain tumour, but says The Exchange has provided an avenue to helping her meet new people with similar interests and to try something new.

“I’ve always enjoyed art and I go regularly to the Art Gallery, but I had never imagined myself as somebody who could make a film,” she says. “Making the films was wonderful – I couldn’t wait for the days to come when we would meet. Everybody clicked and we had an absolute ball.”

Anne and four friends have formed an ongoing film-making group and meet once a month to watch a screening at The Mercury in Adelaide.

Ach Group exchange member: Ted Setnikar

Ted Setnikar

Ted Setnikar says there is ‘no such thing’ as retirement. For him, the move away from full-time work is merely a transition from regimental hours and commitments to flexible hours and commitments.

Today Ted juggles voluntary work as a bus driver for the Hut Community Centre in Aldgate and as a cook in the kitchen at the Hutt Street Centre for homeless in Adelaide.

In 2014 he published a book about his harrowing childhood in Slovenia, The Lacemaker’s Son, and donates all proceeds of its sale to the Hutt Street Centre.

He is an active member of The Exchange and was guest speaker on a panel brought together by ACH Group at the Adelaide Festival of Ideas in 2016.

Ted was heavily involved in shaping ACH Group’s award-winning Free to Be Project, a commitment to delivering inclusive services for older Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender and Intersex (LGBTI) individuals, and was one of the first filmmakers in the inaugural Good Lives on Film project in 2015.

Ted lives in the Adelaide Hills with his partner and practices Soka Gakkai, a Japanese form of Buddhism which promotes peace and happiness.

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13 hours ago

What is the best experience you've ever had on your birthday?

Dianne and Brian had an encounter like no other when they were invited on stage with Dame Edna back in 1999, on what happened to be Dianne’s birthday.

Brian shared this story as part of an intergenerational project between Tatachilla Lutheran College students and Perry Park Residential Care Home residents. In this project, students get to know the residents by creating videos about what they learned about them.

Here's what Brian recalls:

“The kids bought us the tickets, and we loved it. What we didn’t know was that they had bought tickets for the front row. So we made it through the first half, and then the second half began. They announced they wanted a couple to come on stage.

And they picked the two of us, for whatever reason, I do not know. It was Dianne’s birthday, so we got up on stage, with twelve hundred people looking at us. I was thinking, 'I hope there’s no one in this crowd that knows me.' We were served a meal; Dame Edna ordered spaghetti Bolognese. Whatever you do, do not eat spaghetti Bolognese in front of twelve hundred people!

We stayed on stage for the second half of the show. It was fun because Dianne ended up with a kiss on her cheek from Barry Humphries, everyone wished her a happy birthday. After the show, we went for a coffee, and everyone kept recognising us, asking if we had been on stage. Needless to say, it was a night to remember, and we got home quite late, at 1am.”

What a story! Thanks, Brian and Dianne, for sharing. We’re sending our Happy Birthday wishes to Dianne at Perry Park today. 🎂🥳 🥂
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What is the best experience youve ever had on your birthday? 

Dianne and Brian had an encounter like no other when they were invited on stage with Dame Edna back in 1999, on what happened to be Dianne’s birthday.

Brian shared this story as part of an intergenerational project between Tatachilla Lutheran College students and Perry Park Residential Care Home residents. In this project, students get to know the residents by creating videos about what they learned about them.

Heres what Brian recalls:

“The kids bought us the tickets, and we loved it. What we didn’t know was that they had bought tickets for the front row. So we made it through the first half, and then the second half began. They announced they wanted a couple to come on stage.

And they picked the two of us, for whatever reason, I do not know. It was Dianne’s birthday, so we got up on stage, with twelve hundred people looking at us. I was thinking, I hope there’s no one in this crowd that knows me. We were served a meal; Dame Edna ordered spaghetti Bolognese. Whatever you do, do not eat spaghetti Bolognese in front of twelve hundred people!

We stayed on stage for the second half of the show. It was fun because Dianne ended up with a kiss on her cheek from Barry Humphries, everyone wished her a happy birthday. After the show, we went for a coffee, and everyone kept recognising us, asking if we had been on stage. Needless to say, it was a night to remember, and we got home quite late, at 1am.”

What a story! Thanks, Brian and Dianne, for sharing. We’re sending our Happy Birthday wishes to Dianne at Perry Park today. 🎂🥳 🥂