DANDENONG STAR JOURNAL
Home » Mum means business

Mum means business

By CASEY NEILL

Dee Insaro is a mum who means business.
She’s the co-ordinator for the Keysborough-based Thai Language School of Melbourne and Sivalai Thai Dance.
“I can’t read and write Thai. I wanted my kids to be able to speak and read and write and just know about their cultural background,” she said.
“My intention was to study with them.”
But she’s now too busy managing teachers, volunteers and 80-plus students to go to classes.
“My kids know more about the language than I do!”
Ms Insaro was part of the Mothers Mean Business Expo at Dandenong Market on Sunday 15 May.
The event showcased migrant women and their businesses, many started at kitchen tables.
Victorian Immigrant and Refugee Women’s Coalition (VIRWC) organised the event with help from the Multicultural Women’s Friendship Network, City of Greater Dandenong, Dandenong Market and ERMHA.
Many exhibitors were administrators, nurses and academics in their homeland and found themselves in a new country, still driven to succeed but unable to continue their original career.
The event was designed to offer inspiration and advice to other migrant women about how to succeed.
“I met a lot of new people. I made some friends,” Ms Insaro said.
Thai Language School of Melbourne started at a Forest Hill temple in 2001 and has since grown enormously.
Its Sunday classes relocated to Keysborough College this year.
Ms Insaro moved to Australia from Thailand when she was four years old.
“Every day after school we had to write the alphabet.
“I was never allowed to speak English at home to my mum and dad, I had to speak Thai.
“It’s very tonal. That’s where I find it hard. There’s about 44 letters in the alphabet and you’ve got another 20 or so accents.”
She said it wasn’t just people with Thai backgrounds who attended classes.
“Some of our adult students, they’ve just been to Thailand and they enjoy it there so much they want to learn the language so they can communicate in Thai,” she said.
“We have a few people, their businesses send them. They want their staff to learn Thai because they have business relations with Thailand.”
Sivalai Thai Dance is part of the language school.
“We dance for events, weddings … ” Ms Insaro said.
“It’s very elegant, classical.
“It’s theatrical. Certain songs you’re actually portraying a story from the song.
“I’m quite shy so it makes me open up and I just feel very graceful, very elegant.
“It just takes me out of my comfort zone, I think.”
For more information, visit thaimelbourne.com.au.

Digital Editions


More News

  • Critical nursery in need of a home

    Critical nursery in need of a home

    Purchase this photo from Pic Store: 532813 A volunteer nursery helping to propagate the South East’s disappearing flora is now itself under threat. Greenlink Sandbelt Nursery has been supplying the…

  • Three arrested following alleged stabbing in Narre Warren

    Three arrested following alleged stabbing in Narre Warren

    Three teenage boys were arrested last week following an alleged stabbing in Narre Warren. Police believe the altercation took place between a group of boys at a shopping centre on…

  • Galloping into a New Year with style

    Galloping into a New Year with style

    Purchase this photo from Pic Store: 531866 Under a blazing blue sky, thousands of revellers celebrated the Year of the Horse at the annual Springvale Lunar New Year festival. More…

  • Sign of the times: Record crowd expected at Bring Your Bills

    Sign of the times: Record crowd expected at Bring Your Bills

    Purchase this photo from Pic Store: 403433 February is piling up with credit card debt, back-to-school bills and higher interest rates – so the time is more than ripe for…

  • Funding call to further combat racism

    Funding call to further combat racism

    An anti-racism support network has provided its first insights after a year of documenting racism across the state, the first of its kind in Australia. The network, established in 2025…