Stolen Generation Essay

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    who now live and existing in Australia, a mistrust of the systems in place. After European colonisation and the impact of the Stolen Generations, asking the original land owners of Australia to trust the policies and procedures in place in today’s society is a big ask, considering it was the policies and procedures of our government that resulted in the Stolen Generation in the first place. It is also difficult for many Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people to prosper in mainstream culture

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    without the Aboriginal community’s agreement. As a result, many Indigenous Australians were separated from their families, their communities, and their land. Aboriginal children forcefully removed from their families, known as “The Stolen Generation”. The Stolen Generation as

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    since European settlement, and the colonisation that occurred, Indigenous Australians have suffered significantly, with ongoing problems of poverty, adversity and difficulties such as issues with legislation and overcoming the impact of The Stolen Generations. Prior to colonisation and before sovereignty was imposed, the indigenous population saw themselves as part of the land and the land owning them with a profound spiritual connection, argued to have been self-sufficient and operating their own

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    1. The Stolen Generation explores the removal of Indigenous children from their families’ due to the ‘White Australian’ assimilation policies that were passed in motion by the federal government from 1909-1969 (Young, 2009). A psychological trauma that I could not imagine going through by having a higher authority to remove me or any of my siblings away from my parents at such an early stage in life would leave not only myself but my whole family in distraught and feelings of emptiness due to the

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    impacted have heightened levels of anxiety, depression, post traumatic stress disorder, and other mental health issues, with suicide rates in the Indigenous communities exceeding the other communities of Australia. Although being history now, the Stolen Generation and its policies will forever remain one of Australia’s biggest period of

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    “The Sapphires” is a film that highlights and portrays a celebration of the Aboriginal culture in Australia. The film is set in Cummeragunja Australia in 1968, when racism was paramount. However, Wayne Blair the director of the film entertains the audience by the amusement in the film, whilst also connecting with the audience through emotion. “The Sapphires” positions the viewer to see Aboriginals point of view, of how they are perceived by others whilst celebrating the Aboriginal culture. The narrative

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    The 60s Scoop

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    The 60s Scoop refers to the systematic removal of indigenous children from their homes to be put into foster homes or for adoption by child welfare authorities. This matter caused great emotional traumas, such as being the inability to express one’s feelings and the stress of being taken away from one’s family, for those who were taken as well as their families. Drew Hayden Taylor’s play, Only Drunks And Children Tell The Truth, depicts these traumas on Janice, an indigenous woman who was taken from

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    The Stolen Children had a major impact on Indigenous Australians because thousands of children were taken from their families, abused and the impacts have stayed with them for their whole life. Stolen generation is a period of Australia’s history that ruined the lives of so many Indigenous Australians and created a gap in Aboriginal Culture, where the traditions and knowledge of their heritage is endangered of being forgotten. The Stolen Generation is the generation of children that were taken

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    Australian Aboriginal people were affected during the Stolen Generations and how these effects still resonate today. Australia’s short colonist history has shed light onto how the lives of Indigenous individuals and groups have been greatly impacted as the invasion of White Settlers in 1788 set up centuries of inequity and unfair treatment of Aboriginal peoples. This paper will be outlining a sample of how significant the acts of the Stolen Generations impacted the country and in particular Aboriginal

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    Essential Question:How has life changed over time for First Peoples? Spin-off Question: What is the stolen generation? What effect did this have on the indigenous people? Between 1910-1970, many Indigenous children were forcibly removed from their families as a result of various government policies. The generations removed under these policies became known as the Stolen Generations. The policies of child removal left a legacy of trauma and loss which continue to affect Indigenous communities, families

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