Stolen Generations remembered



Stolen Generations remembered

Tuesday May 27 2014, 11:53am

By Boyd Robertson


The trauma of the Stolen Generations still affects the Mossman community. 

At the National Sorry Day ceremony at Douglas Shire Council's Mossman office on Monday, Indigenous residents shared their stories of how the loss of their relatives through forcible removal impacted their lives and culture.

Douglas Shire Mayor Julia Leu added council's apology to the national expression of remorse before raising the Australian flag alongside the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Leu said. 

"Social historian Robert Mann estimated that about 25,000 indigenous children were removed between 1910 and 1970 - a staggering amount of people," Cr Leu said. 

"On behalf of the Douglas Shire Council, I want to offer my sincere apology for the pain, suffering and hurt to you and your families.

"We know that there is community goodwill but we need to know that this is turned into action that makes a difference - we need to have cultural respect, understanding and we need to work together."

 

Mossman resident Daphne Naden experienced the impacts of forced removals first-hand when several of her siblings were taken to the Daintree Mission in the 1960s on the basis of their lighter-coloured skin. 

Her two older sisters and younger brother's only chance to see their parents or the rest of the family were on Sundays at church, and that opportunity disappeared entirely after they were taken to Townsville when the mission closed in 1963.

She said when they returned as teenagers they were 'strangers' to their family and had lost much of their traditional skills, culture and knowledge.

"When they came back they really were strangers - even though Mum and Dad were the best parents you get," she said. 

"My younger brother used to call the mission mistress 'Mum' - I think that really impacted on him when we lost our mum."

Ms Naden said the impacts of forced removal reached across generations and had long-lasting effects on Indigenous mental health. 

"Think about a kidnapping - someone is forcibly removed from their parents as kids, you can imagine the trauma," she said. 

"How do they ever get over it if they are away from their parents for so long?

"There's not too much attention to the actual mental health and trauma at the time - that would impact the physical health and mental wellbeing."

Nevertheless Ms Naden said gestures like National Sorry Day and then-Prime Minister Kevin Rudd's apology for the Stolen Generations were important steps in healing the rift between Indigenous and European Australia.

"In a little town like this, we live separate lives, we don't interact much," she said. 

"But we're going to have changes where we're all going to become friends and be able to walk into each other's houses - that's where you're going to get true Australianship.

"To address some of these things you've got to talk about it, you can't just try to forget about it and move on."