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The Stolen Generation

Decent Essays

The Stolen Generation occurred when the government of Australia decided that the Aboriginal community and culture was not worth coexisting with the European descended members of society. In the Bringing them Home Report, Wilkes (1997) describes the policy as a way to maintain control over the reproduction of Indigenous groups; with the main aim being to ‘merge’ or ‘absorb’ them into the non-Indigenous population. This was achieved by the forced removal of Aboriginal children, mainly of mixed descent, from their homes without any formal requests or legal processes behind the damaging action. From 1985, the simple existence of an Aboriginal mother was proof for the authorities that the children were being either neglected or abused in some way and were removed from their mostly safe families (Douglas & Walsh, 2013). The impacts of the removal were obvious in the individuals directly involved, but the damage has entered into subsequent generations, where the emotional and developmental setbacks have continued (Wilke, 1997). Identity, family values, culture and community are all aspects that these generations lack as a direct result of the separation of the Stolen Generation from their homes and cultural practices. In a recent study by Douglas and Walsh (2013), the historical processes of colonisation, namely the removal policies and practices affecting the Indigenous members of Australian society, have the most to answer for when it comes to the loss of identity and poverty

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