Stolen Generation Essay

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    A shared sense of history is about acknowledging that Australia already had a history long before European settlement, or ‘colonisation’, in 1788. It is about acknowledging that the Australian continent was not ‘terra nullius’, an empty, uninhabited land. It is about recognition and taking ownership of the history of Indigenous Australians, and also about looking at the chain of events, since colonisation, from their perspective. Up until the late 1960’s it was celebrated that Australia’s history

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    This essay will argue and reflect on the issues and perceptions of the Stolen Generation as well as justifying why this part of Australian history had occurred during 1905 – 1969. It will also argue the issue of whether the government should have taken the Indigenous children away from their families better known now as the “Stolen Generation”. Unfortunately, past actions caused by the government are now seen as wrong and today still remain to have profound repercussions for all Aboriginal people

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    The plight of the stolen generation affected the whole indigenous culture. Based on evidence, the Stolen Generation was traumatising for the children, due to them being taken from family and forced to live a completely different way. Also, due to the government forcing them to live differently, their old tradition ways would be forgotten. A policy called assimilation was introduced by the government, which resulted in children being traumatized from being separated from family. From 1910 to 1970

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    Have you ever wondered what the Stolen Generations are and why they were taken from their families? Between 1910-1970, many Indigenous children were forcibly removed from their families because of many government policies. The generations of children removed under these policies became known as the Stolen Generations. These policies left a heritage of trauma and loss that continues to affect Indigenous communities, families, and individuals to this current day. The violent removal of Indigenous

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    and unscrupulous. The riveting Rabbit Proof Fence film released in 2002, directed by Philip Noyce eschews bigotry by illuminating a dense history of racist and distorted Aboriginal representations. Furthermore, it chronicles the ordeal of the Stolen Generations which included the abduction of “half-cast” Aboriginal children; Molly, Gracie, and Daisy from their families which was blinded by assertions of white supremacy to prevent the “creation of a third unwanted race” through the continued infiltration

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    An example of anguish and suffering due to ‘white’ policy laws, was the attempted genocide era also known as ‘the stolen generation’ which lasted for decades (Krieken 2009).The stolen generation era was a “systematic annihilation for Aboriginal cultural identity” (Krieken 2009, p. 297) because children were forcibly taken from their families to institutional facilities that were either run by charitable or religious organizations with the intention of ‘civilizing’ them so they can integrate into

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    Stolen Generation Essay

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    The stolen generation has impacted the lives of countless Indigenous Australians. The common perceptions of the Aboriginal people are negative. We think they should get jobs and work as hard as most white Australians do today. We don’t consider the emotions and effects the stolen generation has had on our indigenous Australian’s. We understand the past events were bad but we can’t fathom why they don’t just move on, forget it and leave the past behind? By looking through sources, recounts and information

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    response of the wider community. A powerful illustration that embodies a similar attitude, value and belief is Kerry Fletcher’s, Sorry Song. Written during the early years of indigenous rights, comes arguably one of the most iconic messages, of the Stolen Generation. Through purposefully using repetition and personification in each verse, Fletcher is without doubt singing in determination to expose the ugly history; federal governments effortlessly try to keep buried. Moreover, these techniques become equally

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    Scrutiny over skin colour seems ever so prevalent, the idea of diverse culture is ignored unless it is the white way; otherwise, it is too primitive. In a foreign land, guns and white skin give the right to rip children away from their families and culture. Yet it is for their own good, is it not? The children are like little birds trapped in a fallen nest and about to become prey to something new. A new predator that they haven’t seen, but with its appearance it forces its new ways onto those around

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    non-Indigenous people in Australia under the issue of the Stolen Generation over the last decade. The Stolen Generation of the early 20th century was the result of extreme mistrust and cultural disputes between Indigenous and non-Indigenous Australians. While some historians claim that the Stolen Generation was attempted genocide and others contradict it by arguing that it was about protectionism, one cannot refute that the Stolen Generation has ultimately hindered reconciliation and will continue

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