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The Stolen Children: a personal account

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  29 February 2016

Extract

Teresa Donaczy’s calm presence and quiet sense of humour cannot mask her pain. The memory of removal from her family at the age of five still haunts her. A re-union thirty-four years later, a happy marriage, nine children and thirteen grandchildren cannot erase the hurt.

Born Teresa Kirby on an Aboriginal reserve in the New South Wales town of Balranald in 1936, Teresa recalls how the Aboriginal people hid their children in the bushes to avoid them being taken by New South Wales Government authorities.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1991

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References

Hankins, Carla C. (1982) The Missing Links: Cultural Genocide through the Abduction of Female Aboriginal Children from their Families and their Training for Domestic Service 1883–1969, B.A. (Hons) Dissertation, University of New South Wales.Google Scholar
Parbury, Nigel (1986) Survival. A History of Aboriginal Life in New South Wales, Ministry of Aboriginal Affairs, New South Wales.Google Scholar
Read, Peter. (undated) The Stolen Generations. The Removal of Aboriginal children in N.S.W. 1883 to 1969, New South Wales Ministry of Aboriginal Affairs.Google Scholar
Secretariat of National Aboriginal and Island Child Care. (1986) Child Abuse and Neglect from an Aboriginal Perspective, paper presented to the Sixth International Congress on Child Abuse and Neglect, Sydney.Google Scholar
Summers, J. (1975) “Aboriginal Policy” in Gibb, D. and Hannan, A. (eds.) Debate and Decision, Heineman Educational.Google Scholar