Our diversity makes Australia a great place to live. May Harmony Day lives on ...
"I don't know why I survived. You can't say it was just because I wanted to live. Everybody who died on that plane had their own reasons for wanting to live."
A Certain Light by Cynthia Banham (Allen & Unwin, $33) will be published on March 21.
Cynthia Banham survived the 2007 Yogyakarta plane crash that killed 21 others, but lost her marathon-running legs in the process – along with life as she knew it. Her gritty determination to achieve since has impressed her family, friends and doctors.
For a long time, Cynthia Banham could not speak about the plane crash. Even now, after 11 years, her voice catches. "I somehow fell out of that burning aircraft," she says. "If I hadn't, I would have died. I was nearly dead anyway."
Banham and I are drinking coffee on a warm Sydney morning. On the table between us lies A Certain Light, the book publishers started urging her to write almost as soon as she emerged from the wreckage. She says she abandoned tentative earlier attempts to tell her story because she found the process too painful. It wasn't easy this time, either. At her desk, she listened to music in an attempt to lessen her anxiety. "My heart was going crazy in my chest as I sat there at night," she says. But once the words started to flow, she knew writing the book was the right thing to do. It felt like "a kind of liberation".
Unflinching reporting of the facts is familiar territory for Banham. At the time of the accident, she was a respected journalist: the foreign affairs and defence correspondent for The Sydney Morning Herald. As she puts it in the book, she "got paid to fly around the world and ask people questions about things that mattered and then write about them". The pressure of deadlines didn't bother her, she tells me: "I thrived on it. Five stories a day I'd be filing sometimes."
Pushing herself hard is in Banham's nature. At university, she was a serious rower. Later she took up running marathons. Since she awoke from an induced coma a week after the crash, she has channelled her energy into overcoming her catastrophic injuries and rebuilding her life. This is the first time we have met, and from the moment she walks into the room I am struck by her grit. Straight-backed, slender, quietly spoken, she is at once a fragile and formidable figure. Those are prosthetic legs under her elegant black pants. Her left arm, extending from a lacy black short-sleeved top, is severely scarred, and the ends of the fingers on her left hand are missing.
“The World Happiness Report is a landmark survey of the state of global happiness. The World Happiness Report 2018, ranks 156 countries by their happiness levels, and 117 countries by the happiness of their immigrants. The main focus of this year’s report, in addition to its usual ranking of the levels and changes in happiness around the world, is on migration within and between countries. The overall rankings of country happiness are based on the pooled results from Gallup World Poll surveys from 2015-2017, and show both change and stability. There is a new top ranking country, Finland, but the top ten positions are held by the same countries as in the last two years, although with some swapping of places. Four different countries have held top spot in the four most recent reports- Denmark, Switzerland, Norway and now Finland. All the top countries tend to have high values for all six of the key variables that have been found to support well-being: income, healthy life expectancy, social support, freedom, trust and generosity. Among the top countries, differences are small enough that that year-to-year changes in the rankings are to be expected. The analysis of happiness changes from 2008-2010 to 2015-2015 shows Togo as the biggest gainer, moving up 17 places in the overall rankings from the last place position it held as recently as in the 2015 rankings. The biggest loser is Venezuela, down 2.2 points on the 0 to 10 scale. Five of the report’s seven chapters deal primarily with migration, as summarized in Chapter 1. For both domestic and international migrants, the report studies not just the happiness of the migrants and their host communities, but also of those left behind, whether in the countryside or in the source country. The results are generally positive. Perhaps the most striking finding of the whole report is that a ranking of countries according to the happiness of their immigrant populations is almost exactly the same as for the rest of the population. The immigrant happiness rankings are based on the full span of Gallup data from 2005 to 2017, sufficient to have 117 countries with more than 100 immigrant respondents.
The ten happiest countries in the overall rankings also ll ten of the top eleven spots in the ranking of immigrant happiness. Finland is at the top of both rankings in this report, with the happiest immigrants, and the happiest population in general. The closeness of the two rankings shows that the happiness of immigrants depends predominantly on the quality of life where they now live, illustrating a general pattern of convergence. Happiness can change, and does change, according to the quality of the society in which people live. Immigrant happiness, like that of the locally born, depends on a range of features of the social fabric, extending far beyond the higher incomes traditionally thought to inspire and reward migration. The countries with the happiest immigrants are not the richest countries, but instead the countries with a more balanced set of social and institutional supports for better lives. While convergence to local happiness levels is quite rapid, it is not complete, as there is a ‘footprint’ effect based on the happiness in each source country. This effect ranges from 10% to 25%. This footprint effect, explains why immigrant happiness is less than that of the locals in the happiest countries, while being greater in the least happy countries.
A very high proportion of the international differences in immigrant happiness (as shown in Chapter 2), and of the happiness gains for individual migrants (as studied in Chapters 3 and 5) are thus explained by local happiness and source country happiness. The explanation becomes even more complete when account is taken of international differences in a new Gallup index of migrant acceptance, based on local attitudes towards immigrants, as detailed in an Annex to the Report. A higher value for migrant acceptance is linked to greater happiness for both immigrants and the native-born, by almost equal amounts…”