CRANBOURNE STAR NEWS
Home » Admired Mama leads by example

Admired Mama leads by example

Once there was a Mama who was grappling through the challenges of life. Now, she has become a beacon of hope for hundreds of others.

Announced as a winner on the 2025 Australia Day Honours List, Selba Gondoza-Luka doesn’t like to call herself the “boss” at her organisation Afri-Aus Care.

She rather prefers to be called a Mama.

“My job is not a job. When you have a job, you hate it (not all the time). When you have it at your core it’s your passion.

“When I’m at Afri-Aus Care I’m not a CEO, I’m a sister and a Mama.

“There’s no hierarchy and it helps the women not to feel inferior. Sometimes people will start introducing me as their boss, but no I’m their sister or Mama.”

She is awarded the honorary Medal of the Order of Australia (OAM) for her intense work in the African community through her organisation founded in 2015, built through her personal experiences after she migrated from Malawi in 2001.

Her family was struggling in every sense since the move but an unsupportive abusive husband, the loss of her baby who was only in this world for a few months after a premature birth, was the last straw. She attempted to take her own life as she slipped into postnatal depression.

“When people have problems or catastrophe in their lives instead of digging in the sand and sitting sad, it’s better to take the problem and find others who have the same problems.

“I know a lot of women are suffering from family violence, kids go off the rails – it all happened to me.

“My baby died but instead I took the experience and looked for people who went through what I went through.”

Later, a daughter Kwacha Luka stayed out of home in her early teens to avoid the problems and fell through the cracks.

Selba and her daughter are the symbol of not everyone is perfect but what you do with your circumstances will make or break you.

Kwacha, who is now a successful fashion designer, has seen the incredible journey of her mother and can’t express just enough of how proud she is.

“I have seen her when she was at her lowest. It’s been an amazing journey.

“From where she came from, she used to be very dependent on my dad. He was the main person that handled a lot of things at home.

“She was more vulnerable than I was, she lost her marriage etcetera – her lived experience is why she is able to do what she does now.”

She changed herself as a person and a mother, formed a healthy and positive relationship with her daughter, took her struggles and experiences to study the very thing that almost broke her – mental illness. And she worked with Monash Health in various settings.

“I worked with Monash community mental health service with South Sudanese children on several projects. This is where my eyes opened, where I saw a big gap between the youth and us the elderly,” Selba says.

“To do the work well, following UBUNTU values, seeing others in my shoes and having my own personal experiences as a family violence survivor, the inter-generational conflict with my daughter, my daughter suffering inter-generational trauma and when I was a psychiatric patient.

“Our young people have got rights without responsibility, which brings consequences.”

UBUNTU is all about connection to the community, to the family and with people because as Selba says, ‘I am because we are.’

She thanks God Jehova and her parents John Ned Gondoza and Ms Maness Gondoza for raising her the way they did.

“I learnt the UBUNTU values from my parents. Our homes have orphans and the less priviliged.”

A decade later, she has saved hundreds of families, as well as young people in and out of the justice system. Her UBUNTU Mama’s learn to regain control of their lives, form better relationships in their family unit and make better life decisions.

“We are still living in Africa in this generation having strict African values. In most cases it doesn’t work here.

“Most of the children come from school and lock themselves in their room, in isolation but in the same house.

“So, our work is trying to stop that isolation, and it works.”

Selba Gondoza Luka is not an unknown name in and outside of Victoria, especially in Greater Dandenong.

She’s renowned for her work with youth from the African communities to avoid anti-social behaviour and promote a sense of community, as well as working with their Mamas.

She also supports Mamas and babies from early pregnancy, providing guidance, support, stability and a sense of community though UBUNTU values.

Selba has worked with various Government departments and universities to further the opportunities available to African youth because “Australia is the land of opportunity and freedom”.

“If you don’t know how to find the opportunities, you will be lost.”

Passionate and driven to better provide for her community, she is unstoppable despite her busy calendar. She still finds time to go out to the Parkville Youth Justice Centre to cook and provide counselling to the young people in prison.

She mixes cuisines across the world to produce “beautiful food” all while teaching them the values of UBUNTU and treating others the way they want to be treated, with respect.

Digital Editions


More News

  • This land is not fragile – but our truth became selective

    This land is not fragile – but our truth became selective

    Australia is not a fragile nation. But our willingness to tell the whole truth has become fragile. We are a young country built on an ancient land, and instead of…

  • Bestselling Author Candice Fox, J P Pomare to visit Connected Libraries

    Bestselling Author Candice Fox, J P Pomare to visit Connected Libraries

    Book lovers will have the chance to meet some of Australia’s most acclaimed writers when two author events come to Bunjil Place Library in the coming weeks. Connected Libraries has…

  • Emergent 2025 celebrates creative talents of Casey secondary students

    Emergent 2025 celebrates creative talents of Casey secondary students

    The ‘Emergent 2025’ showcase has returned to Bunjil Place with the program aiming to celebrate an array of creative accomplishments from past innovations. At last year’s graduate performances, performing arts…

  • What’s on

    What’s on

    Emergent 2025 Short film, doco and animation night that showcases talented young filmmakers in the region. – Thursday 12 March 7.30pm at Bunjil Place outdoor plaza screen; free event. Berwick…

  • Hit to helmet proves costly

    Hit to helmet proves costly

    **Just when you thought the Premier relegation battle between DEVON MEADOWS and UPPER BEACONSFIELD couldn’t get any closer, there was an odd moment towards the end that may have helped…

  • Cannons set to launch into season 2026

    Cannons set to launch into season 2026

    Purchase this photo from Pic Store: 497922 Hockey is nearing its return date and it is all systems go at Casey Cannons with the club set to host its season…

  • Panic-buying despite 24-hour fuel price cap

    Panic-buying despite 24-hour fuel price cap

    As concerns increase regarding fuel prices across the state with warnings against panic buying, one of Casey’s cheapest fuel stations in Cranbourne has run out of U91 fuel and diesel…

  • Community figure Rob Wilson recovering

    Community figure Rob Wilson recovering

    Purchase this photo from Pic Store: 225295 Former City of Casey mayor and long-time community figure Rob Wilson is recovering after suffering a significant stroke just before Christmas, with family…

  • Seth has immediate impact

    Seth has immediate impact

    Seth O’Hehir had quite the impact in his 54 balls of batting and 12.1 overs of bowling for Kooweerup A Grade this season. That’s all it took – in his…

  • Lakers remove Knights’ armour, Bloods too good for Bucks

    Lakers remove Knights’ armour, Bloods too good for Bucks

    Purchase this photo from Pic Store: 535994 It was a disappointing end to the season for Keysborough in the DDCA Turf 3 competition after the Knights were bowled all out…