The Assyrian activist Mr. Temmuz Temmuz, who is a resident of Sydney, attended our studio during a visit to Sweden where his mother lives. We asked him to tell about the Assyrian movement in Australia, since he was one the pioneers within the West Assyrian community in Sydney to establish cultural associations and church congregations. He begins with his personal background in Turabdin, his emigration to Australia, how it took more than a year and a half to be convinced about his ancient Assyrian identity, how he and his friends established Babylon Cultural Association, how some anti-Assyrians started to create divisions within the community using the church as a tool, how bishop Aphram Aboodi continued his anti-Assyrian activities in Australia after he was expelled from Sweden, how Mr. Temmuz reminded the late Patriarch Zakka I Iwas about the importance of keeping our youth connected to its ethnical identity in the Diaspora, the importance of Assyrian schools in the Diaspora, like the one of the Assyrian Church of the East in Sydney, and finally the need of a national homeland for the Assyrians in order to maintain our ethnic identity, language and culture alive.