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The Origin Of Aboriginal People

Decent Essays

The Oxford dictionary defines the stolen generation as: “The Aboriginal people forcibly removed from their families as children between the 1900s and the 1960s, to be brought up by white foster families or in institutions.” But what the oxford definition cannot tell us is the horrible impacts of the stolen generation on the stolen children, their families, the Aboriginal culture and Australia as a Nation. The stolen generation was caused by European Australians belief that Aboriginal people were inferior to them, a belief stemming from the fact that the Aboriginal people had not industrialised and therefore they appeared primitive to European Australians whom had industrialised in the 1700s. The European Australians also believed that the …show more content…

These children then become known as the stolen generation. The children of the stolen generation were arguably impacted the most by these acts. Children were taken from their families by members of the Aboriginal Protection Board for ‘their own protection’ the board members at first only taking ‘half-cast’ children, children whom were of Aboriginal and European decent. The board members took the children from their families to in theory give the children a better life, as half cast children were often treated differently and did not fit in as they were neither full Aboriginal nor full European, meaning these children were outcasts more often than not. However as time went on the act extended to all Aboriginal children that could be taken at any age, from birth up to fifteen and an amendment to the Aborigines Protection act in 1915 gave members of the Aboriginal protection board the power to remove children from their families without a court order or parental consent. These children were taken away from their families and sent to institutions or fostered out to white families. In these institutions the Aboriginal children more often than not faced horrible conditions, and in many cases were mentally, physically and sexually abused. Children in these institutions were encouraged to forget their heritage, meaning they were forbidden to speak their native tongue, preform their native practises and in many cases were moved hundreds of kilometres from their families, many also

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