Qantas

Places of the Heart

Where Julia Gillard finds serenity after politics

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2013 | South Australia ADELAIDE

When I was first living in Altona in Melbourne’s west, I used to walk my little Pomeranian dog on the beach; Tim [Mathieson] and I made it a regular feature of our life there. As an MP, there was less and less time to do that.

In 2013, post-politics, I moved back to my home town, Adelaide. That first walk on the beach near our home brought back all my childhood memories. It’s lovely to experience the full cycle of seasons to see how the beach changes – the water, the seaweed, the dunes and the tide – and also how the people change, from dedicated dog walkers rugged up in winter to people in summer gear on a bright, sunny day.

Now, as Tim and I take Reuben, our Cavoodle, for runs on the beach, I know how important physical exercise and a mental break is to your wellbeing. In my new role [at beyondblue], I’ve got science to back that up! It really matters.

2015 | United Kingdom WALES

I emigrated from Wales with my family in 1966, when I was four. Though I’d been back a few times, in 2015 the National Assembly for Wales asked me to give a talk in their series about women and Wales.

After that, I forced Tim to go on the “Julia Gillard, This Is Your Life” tour. We hired a car and drove to Barry, where my mother is from, then stood in front of the house I was born in and got a sneaky photo.

On another day, we went to Cwmgwrach, the coalmining village where my father was born. As I stood outside his old house, ready for Tim to take a shot, the man who lived there came charging out the door, calling out to his wife, “I told you she’d come!” They had seen publicity of me in Wales. The family invited us in for morning tea and we ended up exchanging Christmas cards. It was fantastic.

2017 | East Africa MALAWI

I chair the Global Partnershi­p for Education, a fund that supports developing countries to improve school education. This year, I travelled to Malawi with Rihanna, our ambassador.

We went to schools that had been made by villagers out of mudbricks, with 100 kids to a classroom and almost no textbooks. We went to a girls’ secondary school and I’ll always remember the moment they realised that Rihanna was there. It was like when Justin Bieber’s in town – screaming, squealing teenagers.

You realise how globalised our world is when you’re in a girls’ school in Malawi and they all know who Rihanna is and half of them are breaking into her songs! Because she’s so used to it, she was warm and engaged. She was like the Pied Piper; wherever she moved, there were hundreds and hundreds of girls around her.

You can listen to beyondblue podcasts on demand on selected Qantas flights (see page 204).

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