Skip to content
CharitiesAidWelfare, Education Training

Blind chef Craig Shanahan features in new book to inspire and educate

Vision Australia 3 mins read

Media Release

 

July 20, 2023

Cooking up a Storm puts inclusion on the menu!

Second book of Vision Australia’s ground-breaking Big Visions series brings the story of blind professional chef Craig Shanahan to life.

For Craig Shanahan there was only ever one career path in mind – that of a professional chef.

Now 31, Craig has spent the last 15 years working across Sydney’s hospitality scene, from earning his dues in the kitchen of some of the city’s most well-known restaurants and at one stage running his own café in western Sydney.

At age two, cancer caused Craig to lose his left eye. In his early 20s, another tumour damaged the optic nerve in his right eye, leaving Craig with just six percent of his remaining vision.

“Being a chef is what I’ve always been passionate about and it was my dream to become one as soon as I finished school,” Craig said.

“It was hard getting into the industry. People definitely thought I’d be unsafe or a risk in the kitchen. For me, there was a lot of educating and showing to others that I had my ways of doing things and that I was safe and capable of being in the kitchen,” he said.

Craig’s challenges in finding acceptance in his chosen field are the motivation behind lending his story to Cooking up a Storm.

“The book is a real privilege for me and it’s really special that my story might help motivate a young person to go after their dreams,” Craig said.

“Just because you might live with a disability doesn’t mean that you can’t find a way of doing what you want to in life. It’s important young people know that, but also everyone else in their life.”

While Craig has shown that living with blindness or low vision doesn’t have to be a barrier to career or personal success, that message is yet to resonate with wider society.

Vision Australia research shows that just 24% of people who are blind or have low vision are in full-time employment, with the attitudes of others shown to be a key barrier.

Vision Australia hopes Cooking up a Storm, the second of three books in the Big Visions series, can help challenge those perceptions and serve as inspiration for children and young people who are blind or have low vision and their families.

“We know children and young people who are blind or have low vision often find it difficult to envisage themselves in their dream career or how they can fully participate in wider society,” Vildana Praljak, Vision Australia Library manager, said.

“A big part of that is not having people with lived experience of blindness or low vision represented in the books they read or other media they consume. The other major factor is the perceptions wider society holds about the abilities of people who are blind or have low vision,” Vildana said.

“Craig’s story through Cooking up a Storm, and the rest of the Big Visions series, are a new way to tackle these issues. They put the stories of successful Australians who are blind or have low vision in front of the next generation of children and young people, but they’re also an important tool in the hands of parents, educators when it comes to conversations about disability and what people are capable of.”

Cooking up a Storm can be purchased from Vision Australia or found on the shelves at leading bookstores and retailers across Australia.

Ends.

Craig Shanahan and Vision Australia spokespeople are available for interviews. Hi-res images of Craig and Cooking up a Storm are also available.

Further media enquiries: Phil McCarroll, 0416 632 253 or phil.mccarroll@visionaustralia.org.

About Big Visions

Big Visions is published in partnership by Vision Australia and Berbay Books.

Sales from the Big Visions series go back into Vision Australia, so that the initiative can continue share new stories of inspiring low vision or blind Australians, working together to make generational change.

To encourage inclusion and participation, the Big Visions books include braille, so children with blindness or low vision can read along with their friends, teachers, and family.

Cooking Up a Storm follows Surfing in the Dark in the Big Visions series, which shared the story of champion para-surfer Matt Formston. The third book in the series, Dressed for Success, will introduce blind fashion designer Nikki Hind to families across Australia.

About Vision Australia

Vision Australia is a leading provider of blindness related services. We offer a wide range of services, equipment and training so people who are blind or have low vision can live the life they choose.

Whether it’s at home, work, school or in the community, our expert staff provide clients across all age groups with skills and tools to help lead active, safe and independent lives.

Visit our website at www.visionaustralia.org.

Media

More from this category

  • CharitiesAidWelfare, Legal
  • 16/11/2024
  • 09:00
UNSW Law & Justice

The free legal service providing justice in a health crisis

A quiet revolution in Sydney’s eastern suburbs seeks the most vulnerable hospital patients and provides them with access to justice. George (not his real…

  • Contains:
  • CharitiesAidWelfare, Government Federal
  • 15/11/2024
  • 16:30
Partnerships for Local Action and Community Empowerment (PLACE)

IDAC partnerships with 50 communities will change lives for a generation of Australian kids

The newly established national centre, Partnerships for Local Action and Community Empowerment (PLACE), welcomes today’s announcement by the Investment Dialogue for Australia’s Children (IDAC) Roundtable. The ambitious plan will include establishing ‘Innovation Zones’ and place-based partnerships in up to 50 local communities by 2030. These initiatives aim to empower communities with the tools, support, and data access they need to improve outcomes for children and families. PLACE will play a central role alongside other IDAC partners in supporting one of Australia’s largest coordinated investments in place-based change. PLACE will work hand-in-hand with IDAC partners, including governments, philanthropies, and local stakeholders,…

  • Education Training, General News
  • 15/11/2024
  • 13:59
MissingSchool

Solving chronic school absence: MissingSchool’s Megan Gilmour named 2025 Australian of the Year for the ACT

Meet the global education ambassador and technology trailblazer working to ensure all children are seen and heard Announced at a ceremony last night (14 November 2024),MissingSchool co-founder and CEO Megan Gilmouris the 2025 Australian of the Year for the ACT. The awardrecognises her leadership of the first organisation in Australia to address chronic school absence forchildren facing medical-mental challenges serious enough to affect their education and wellbeing. Megan now goes into the running for the national accolade to be revealed on 25 January 2025. In Australia, up to one in three school children (1.2 million students) are at risk of…

  • Contains:

Media Outreach made fast, easy, simple.

Feature your press release on Medianet's News Hub every time you distribute with Medianet. Pay per release or save with a subscription.