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Sarah Ferguson’s domestic violence series hits home

Journalist Sarah Ferguson will examine domestic violence in a two-part documentary series – Hitting Home – to air on ABC on November 24-25.

The In Films production will see Ferguson move into a women's refuge in search of answers.

Ferguson has also gained access to courts and safe rooms, domestic abuse programs in prison, forensic doctors and specialised police units for the series, which took six months to make.

Ferguson said she wanted to find out how domestic violence worked.

"Why men – and it is largely men – do it, and why their partners find it so hard to leave," she said. 

"These are gripping, sometimes heartbreaking, stories of women and children caught up in extraordinary situations. 

"Their courage in speaking out took my breath away.”

“All year we have been hearing stories of violent attacks on women, alone at home, in front of their children, in cars, in remote locations or in full view in public, but I didn’t have a good understanding of what domestic violence actually is."

Hitting Home is written and presented Ferguson and directed by Ivan O’Mahoney. 

The executive producers are Ivan O’Mahoney and Nial Fulton.

ABC director of television, Richard Finlayson, said Hitting Home was a program for everyone – men and women, young and old.

“The Prime Minister rightly labels this crisis a national disgrace," he said. 

"I hope Sarah’s unprecedented access to victims and their stories will not only enlighten viewers but reveal areas of hope for the future.”

The second episode will screen on the UN International Day for the Elimination of Violence Against Women on November 25.

It will be followed by a special edition of Q&A hosted by Virginia Trioli.

  1. I still feel disheartened.you say the pm… I presume M Turnball. I had left a DV situation in Victoria and had St George bounce back my casual pays from the first jobs I got when I moved to Sydney. I had the most difficult time interacting with services, government departments etc… The flow on effect has been more traumatizing then the punch in the nose.

    M Turnbulls staff (electoral) made my life more difficult when I went to seek support when communicating with Centrelink and so called Job Networks. Police tell you to walk away, leave it alone, …. Etc…. It’s not what a journalist sees, real life includes more put downs from every direction, then you meet the people who have been through much more complex things than you….

  2. It’s a thoughtless and pathetic male who thinks hitting a woman is a sign of masculinity. The real strong man is one who knows he is and knows how to control it. That’s emotional and physical strength. The women hitter is exactly the opposite emotionally weak and has never learnt the strong man’s success of control.

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