In early 2013, my editor sent me to Penrith to write a colour story about the marginal Western Sydney seat of Lindsay. On a sunny weekday afternoon I wandered in and out of shops on the main strip, talking to business owners and customers about politics.
Inevitably the subject of asylum seekers would come up, and as I trudged in and out of local businesses I was told over and over again that they were stealing jobs and taking handouts from the government.
About half way down the strip I stepped into a delicatessen that was basically two shops in one space. Half the shelves were stacked with eastern European canned goods, jars of pickles and an array of crackers I’d not seen before. Behind one counter a middle-aged Polish woman was making sandwiches heavy on deli meats and gherkins.
Across the floor, behind another counter groaning with freshly julienned carrots, fluffy rolls and cold pork cuts, was a Vietnamese woman around the same age as her shopmate.
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