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What happens after you say sorry? John Bond describes progress towards healing a deep hurt in the soul of Australia.


Two years ago, a national enquiry presented its report to the Australian Government. It had looked into the effects of removing Aboriginal children from their families, a practice which went on for 150 years into the 1970s and aimed to assimilate Aborigines aborigines: see Australian aborigines.  into Western culture. The report, Bringing them home Bringing Them Home is the title of the Australian "Report of the National Inquiry into the Separation of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Children from Their Families". , exposed the immense harm this policy had caused.

The Government received the report with little enthusiasm. But the reaction in the Australian community was very different. According to according to
prep.
1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians.

2. In keeping with: according to instructions.

3.
 the Associated Press Associated Press: see news agency.
Associated Press (AP)

Cooperative news agency, the oldest and largest in the U.S. and long the largest in the world.
 correspondent in Canberra, it was the biggest news story of the year. Soul-searching discussion went on for months, culminating in a national Sorry Day when hundreds of thousands apologized to the `stolen generations'--as those who were removed are now known (see FAC FAC - Functional Array Calculator. An APL-like language, but purely functional and lazy. It allows infinite arrays.

["FAC: A Functional APL Language", H.-C. Tu and A.J. Perlis, IEEE Trans Soft Eng 3(1):36-45 (Jan 1986)].
 Vol 11 No 1).

This massive expression of community empathy touched the hearts of many who have suffered as a result of the removal policies. As one woman--who had been removed from her family, and whose children had been removed from her--said on ABC TV
For , see .
ABC TV, colloquially Channel 2 and often known in the media as Aunty, is a national public television channel in Australia. It is the primary television service of the Australian Broadcasting Corporation.
, `At last we are coming back into the family.'

This year the stolen generations responded by launching a Journey of Healing `for all who want to help the healing process among Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal peoples, and in the relationship between us'.

As with Sorry Day, events took place all over Australia, developed by small groups, Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal, who enlisted others, raised the money and organized publicity.

Most cities chose a procession to symbolize the launch. In Adelaide, a thousand people walked to forgotten places such as the site of Piltawodli, an Aboriginal school opened by German missionaries in 1839. School children sang there in the local Aboriginal language, perhaps for the first time since 1845, when troops demolished de·mol·ish  
tr.v. de·mol·ished, de·mol·ish·ing, de·mol·ish·es
1. To tear down completely; raze.

2. To do away with completely; put an end to.

3.
 the buildings and the children were moved to an English school English school

Dominant school in painting in England from the 18th century to c. 1850. From 1730 to 1750 two distinctive British forms of painting were perfected by William Hogarth: genre scenes depicting the “modern moral subject,” and the small-scale
 which banned their language.

In other city centres, hundreds took part in colourful colourful or US colorful
Adjective

1. with bright or richly varied colours

2. vivid or distinctive in character

Adj. 1.
 processions, beginning and ending with commemorations. Many suburbs, country towns and rural centres organized their own events, as did hundreds of schools, churches and community organizations. There was plenty of music, with two new CDs launched. And two national TV stations screened programmes about the Journey.

On Sorry Day the focus was on the removal policies. This year the media also carried stories of the foster parents to whom the children went, and of the pain and joy of separated families linking up. Medical journals got involved too, with articles aimed at helping doctors better understand the continuing effects of the removals.

There is a long way still to be travelled. Health and social statistics show that many Aboriginal people are still alienated al·ien·ate  
tr.v. al·ien·at·ed, al·ien·at·ing, al·ien·ates
1. To cause to become unfriendly or hostile; estrange: alienate a friend; alienate potential supporters by taking extreme positions.
 and in despair. Many of the recommendations of Bringing them home have yet to be implemented. But Aboriginal leaders say that since Sorry Day they have noticed an increased respect for Aboriginal people among the general community.

Perhaps this is particularly due to the stolen generations, who have continually kept the focus on healing rather than blame. At the Journey's launch in the Great Hall of Parliament in Canberra, a thousand voices joined in the theme song, written by two Aboriginal people who have suffered from the removal policies:

Come join the journey, Journey of Healing

Let the spirit guide us, hand in hand

Let's walk together into the future

The time has come to make a stand

Let's heal our hearts, let's heal our pain,

And bring the stolen children home again

For our native children to trust again

We must take this journey together as

friends.
COPYRIGHT 1999 For A Change
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 1999, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Author:Bond, John
Publication:For A Change
Date:Aug 1, 1999
Words:582
Previous Article:1989: year of the people.
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