Part 3 Consequences of Removal Chapter 10 Children’s Experiences



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[It] has beenoperatingfor approximately six years and has, until recently, worked with few Aboriginalfamilies. Currently, outof a caseload of 32 families there are fiveAboriginal families working with theFamily Connections Programme and one Aboriginal family on the waiting list. All referrals come from Familyand Community Services. For a programme with only non-Aboriginalworkers thiswork presents a number of dilemmas and a great challenge and we questionwhether it is helpful to these families having non-Aboriginal workers working with them for reunification.It is anintensive programme and workers from the programmemay spend up to10hours a week in a families home (Anglican Dioceseof Adelaide evidence259).

Relationships Australia, formerly the Marriage Guidance Council, identified ‘obvious problems of accessibility and cultural appropriateness’ and a lack of resources (submission 685 page 4).

A furtherproblem is that we alreadyhave waiting lists of6-8weeks in all areas. If we were to advertise specifically to provide a new counselling service forAboriginal and TorresStrait Islander people we couldnotguarantee how soon there is a riskofviolence or severe conflict in thefamily or relationship.

Thereforewhile there is a needfor access issues tobe addressed theresource problem is the major hurdle and we believe that to address this,fundingwouldneed tobe provided.

Non-government agencies with responsibility for counselling and support services for survivors of forcible removal must ensure the cultural suitability of their services, including through strategies to employ Indigenous staff, so that effective services are provided. Relationships Australia submitted that Indigenous organisations may be best placed to provide the services needed.

There is also the important consideration ofownershipof servicesforAboriginalpeople.We donot believe that funding organisations suchas ourselves is necessarily the way to go … funding to Aboriginalorganisations to manage suchprograms in which expertise couldbe purchased from Relationships Australia and others, or joint projects may be a better solution (RelationshipsAustralia submission685 page 4).

The Inquiry endorses the view that services are best provided by Indigenous agencies. The existence of specialist agencies, however, does not relieve agencies funded and intended for all Australians from their obligation to ensure their services are accessible and appropriate for all, including Indigenous clients. This obligation is even more binding when there are no Indigenous agencies or when those which exist are poorly resourced and unable to deal with every need in the Indigenous community.

Counselling services Recommendation 40a: That churches and other non-government welfare agencies that provide counselling and support services to those affected by forcible removal reviewthoseservices, in consultationwithIndigenouscommunitiesand organisations, to ensure they are culturally appropriate. Recommendation 40b: That churches and other non-government agencies which played a role in the placement and care of Indigenous children forcibly removed from their families provide all possible support to Indigenous organisations delivering counselling and support services to those affected by forcible removal.

Restitution of land

… it is a sad but truthfulfactthat the church and Christianpeople in the history of this Sate have contributed to the trauma, thedecimation of the language and theculture among the Aboriginal community (Rev. Finlay submission 327page90).

Church responsibility The loss of connection with and entitlements to land through forcible removal are discussed in Part 3. Some churches appear to understand that forcible removal has

caused these losses and the further losses that flow inevitably from dispossession.

It must be acknowledged that,no matter howwell intentioned the motives of the churchwere in its involvement in separating childrenfromtheir families, it’s complicity has contributed to thedislocation of thepeople concerned and therefore to their lossof land, language and identity (Anglican Church of Australia, Diocese of Perth submission 410 page2).

The staff members who served at Marribank [WA], the scatter homes and thehostels, with few exceptions, were not trained for cross-cultural work. Many acknowledge that theyknew little of the cultures of theAboriginal tribalgroups. Thishad the inevitable effect of further isolating the children from their Aboriginal heritage. One of thesocial workers comments: Aboriginalvalues, traditions,and cultural moreswere ignored in the care arrangements that were made forthe children(Baptist Churches ofWA and the Aboriginal and Islander Baptist Committeeof WA submission 674 Page 15).

Church efforts Some churches have expressed an intention or a willingness to return land acquired for the purpose of housing forcibly removed children or other land acquired for purposes relating to their missions to Aborigines.

Recently, during research through ourrecords inpreparing this submission, Baptist Churches ofWestern Australia discovered Crown Lease of 8094 square metres still inadvertently held by us, at Kojonup Location 4086, Reserve No.16908, in Trust for the purposeof a Cemetery ‘Aboriginals’.

We are willing to hand this land over to theAboriginalpeople, as appropriate. (Baptist Churches of Western Australiasubmission674page 24).

The National Standing Committee of the Uniting Church in Australia has recently apologised,

… to thepeople of Minjilang, traditional owners of CrokerIsland, that the church tookover a largepartof their ancestral lands without their permission, andused it for forty years to provide carefor children separatedfrom theirparents (submission 457page2).

The process of returning mission land has not been straightforward. The Inquiry was told in Broome that the Catholic Church was willing to hand back land used for mission purposes and that negotiations were under way. The Catholic Church proposes to hand back most of the land, retaining some portions as freehold. It is negotiating for an ex gratia payment in the order of $500,000 from the WA Government in return for relinquishing the land it holds on trust. It is proposed to invest that amount for the benefit of the residents of the missions (Bishop Chris Saunders evidence 519).

Proposals The Kimberley Land Council called on churches to ‘resolve any outstanding land

issues with relevant communities’ (submission 345 page 72). The KLC noted that Indigenous people lost land entitlements by being removed from their traditional country to missions. The practice of gathering children together in missions on country belonging to others created problems communities must grapple with today.

Today around the Kimberley there are several large communities of people who have elsewhere been referred to as ‘the historical people’. These are people who live in ex-mission communities on land which is not their traditional country, but is only their home place. They are the people who were taken away, or the children and grandchildren of people who were taken away.

The mention of native title on the country they call home has often caused them great concern. They are afraid that they will have to leave once the land is handed back to the Traditional Owners. They are afraid the Traditional Owners will use their new control over land to kick them off, or that it will no longer be appropriate for them to continue to live there.

So far there have been two claims in the Kimberley where this has been a factor. The Traditional Owners and the KLC have developed an approach where community areas are not claimed, although the surrounding country is. This is to ensure that members of the community who are not Traditional Owners do not feel threatened or obliged to leave. Traditional Owners will seek to control their country, but will have to be able to accommodate the needs of the communities that live there and have lived there for a long time. Traditional Owners recognise that it is not the fault of those ‘newcomers’ that they are there, and that for many it is their only home.

Where the KLC does lodge a claim on behalf of Traditional Owners over an area where other groups have a strong historical connection, we are committed to helping to negotiate a solution over their respective land needs. People hold very strong historical connections to former mission or institution land and these connections must be acknowledged (submission 345 pages 21-22).

Recommendation The return of land used by the churches would express their recognition that the policies and practices of forcible removal were wrong. It would indicate their refusal to profit from a practice most have publicly acknowledged was wrong.

Land holdings Recommendation 41: That churches and other non-government agencies review their land holdings to identify land acquired or granted for the purpose of accommodating Indigenous children forcibly removed from their families and, in consultation with Indigenous people and their land councils, return that land.

Our home was out in the bush, many miles from Kempsey. It was an old wooden shack consisting of only two rooms. It may not sound like much but it was the only home I ever knew. We children were little free spirits, exploring the bush surrounding our home, building cubbie houses, and just being allowed to enjoy our childhood. Our big brothers were always our protectors, we could rely on them to look after us and not let us come to any harm.

Confidential submission 332, Queensland.

Part 6 Contemporary Separations

There were a lot of familiesontheoutside who were saying mydaughter hasn’t come home, my son hasn’t come home.You had a lotof families still fighting and thenyouhadthe bloody welfare saying to these families, ‘We’renot doing what was done in the sixties’. Bomaderry Home was left openasa big secretby the government and the welfare. And it must have beenone of the bestkept secrets that the Government kept. It was hard for the peopleon the outside to prove we was there when thegovernment said we weren’t.

My grandparents waited forme to comehome and I never camehome. My grandfather died in 1978and my grandmother died in 1979. I came home in 1980.

This wasthe last generation that wentthroughthesystem and it really hurt. I thought our people forgot us. IfBomaderry Children’s Home was closeddown at the same time those other two homes, mygeneration would not have gone through that.We could have avoided that.

A lot of the churches and government wantedtosaythat it’s allover. It happened in1930, 1920 was when children was going through the homes. This is what they were saying in the 70s to mypeople that it was all over. Yetme anda lotofother Koorikids was in the bloody Home screaming, pulling our hair out, ‘Somebodycomeand get us’. But nobody could hear us and that was reallyfrustrating.

Confidential submission 522,New South Wales: woman removedat3 years in1969andplaced inBomaderry Children’s Home.

20Introduction

Thefact remains that Aboriginal children are still being removed from their families at an unacceptable rate, whetherby the childwelfareor thejuvenile justice systems, or both (Aboriginal Legal ServiceofWA(ALSWA) submission 127 page viii).

This Part of the report analyses contemporary separations of Indigenous children and young people from their families and communities by State and Territory mechanisms pursuant to the Inquiry’s fourth term of reference. The focus is on the processes of juvenile justice particularly detention, child welfare particularly fostering and institutionalisation, family law and adoption.

Indigenous children and young people continue to be removed from their families through laws, policies and practices of the State or Territory.

[W]hether we talk about the 1910sor1940sor 1970s or even the 1980s, the tragic scenario is that Aboriginal childrenhave, in large numbers,beenseparated from their families. In thepast the dominatingforce was the assimilationpolicy. Now, it is contact with the child welfare and juvenile justice systems which leads to many Aboriginal childrenbeingremovedfrom their families(ALSWAsubmission 127 page 343).

A high proportion of people affected by the past laws, practices and policies of forcible removal have had their own children taken from them in turn. The ALSWA survey of 483 clients who were removed in childhood revealed that more than one-third (35.2%) had had their children removed (submission 127 page 44). A process of second (or subsequent) generation removal occurred in more than one in three cases.

The following chapters detail the extentand nature of contemporary separations through a consideration of the legislation, policy and practices of juvenile justice, child welfare, adoption and family law. They analyse the reasons for continuing separations and, in particular, for the fact that Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander children and young people are at much greater risk of removal by these processes than non-Indigenous children. The facts of contemporary separation establish a need for fundamental change in Australian law and practice.

Tony


When I was three months old [in 1965] the welfare department sent the police to my grandparents’ house. They came armed with a warrant to have me removed. Despite any opposition my fate had been decided. I was taken away. My family were left with the guilt of being accused of child neglect.

In 1967 I was adopted into a white family. They had two sons of their own. It is documented that, from an early age, my adoption mother had feelings of rejection towards me. She wanted a white son. She was taking offence to me as I grew up and my skin got darker. I can remember her always making fun of me. She had a favourite song that she always sung to me. It was that old country song called, ‘the biggest

disappointment in the family is you’. They adopted another son and my new brother was very fair, with blue eyes and blonde hair.

As I grew up, more problems arose. I began to notice that I was getting darker. My adoption father was often sticking up for me when my adoption brothers would come home and tease me about my colour. They were learning words like, boong, coon, abo …

I’d ask her why I was dark.

I’d ask her why I was dark. She would tell me it was because I kept playing with aboriginalkids at school. My adoption mother would make me feel guilty when I got into trouble for something. She would confirm her statement by saying things like, ‘… if you keep playing with aborigines, you’ll end up turning into one’. I was beginning to believe that was why I was getting darker. I started to hate what I was turning into. I started to hate my own people.

In 1978 I went to high school. I was to be separated again. This time it was from my adoption brothers. They were sent to one high school and I was sent to another. When I wanted to know why, my adoption mother told me that she didn’t want me to embarrass her sons.

Towards the end of 1978, I was running away from home and truanting from school. I was sick of my adoption family. I hated my adoption mother. I wanted them to send me back to the orphanage. I wanted my real mother. I didn’t belong where I was. I just wanted to go back to where I believed my mother would come and get me one day. I committed my first offence at 11. I was trying to make my adoption family hate me so they’d send me back. I ended up back at the orphanage. When the welfare officer questionedme about my behaviour, I told him that I wanted to have my real family. He kept telling me that it was impossible. I didn’t believe him and persisted in asking for manyyears to follow.

After a few months at the orphanage I was getting blamed for things that I wasn’t doing. On one occasion I was blamed for starting a fire in the building. I never did it. They wanted to foster me with white families. I ran away. I was sick of getting into trouble and I was scared about being fostered. I just wanted my real family. I couldn’t understand why they wouldn’t take me home.

[After some months on the streets in Brisbane, at the age of 13 Tony was taken into care as uncontrollable.]

While at Wilson [youth centre] I felt like I was in a prison. In my mind, I hadn’t done anything wrong to be sent there. I spent months asking what I’d done wrong. They told me that I was uncontrollable. I used to cry a lot. I kept asking the social workers to find my real mother. It was the same old story.

I ran away a few times. When I escaped I used to go to a family I’d met. They had aboriginal foster kids. I used to like going there. I felt that I had something in common with these kids. Everyone there liked me. The parents there treated me as if I was one of

their own kids. I ended up getting caught and sent back to Wilson. I was depressed again. The family who I’d stayed with made several attempts at fostering me. The welfare department blocked all attempts. I didn’t know how to feel. All this time, the welfare couldn’t wait to put me into a home. Then when I found a family that I wanted to stay with on my own, they wouldn’t allowit. It was like nobody cared what I wanted. It was as if I had no say in anything. It was being arranged for me to be adopted again by another family. When I became aware of this, I did what I was beginning to do best, run away. This made matters worse. People were beginningto give up on me. I was finally sent to Boys Town [aged nearly 14].

I ran away from Boys Town several times. On one occasion that I ran away, I caught a train back up to Townsville. One of the passengers – a woman travelling with her boyfriend – took care of me. We got on real good. She had brown skin just like me. This woman kept asking me questionsabout who I was and where I came from. I was a runaway, so I was restricted to how much I could say, in fear of being caught. I was in love with this woman. I remember falling asleep with my head on her lap. We talked each other to sleep.

We talked each other to sleep.

The following day we arrived at Townsville station. She asked me if I had anywhere to stay. I told her no. Her and her boyfriend invited me to stay with them. I stayed only two days with them. She washed my clothes and made sure that I had a good feed. On the second day she went out with her boyfriend. I got jealous of her boyfriend and ran away when they left.

Until the age of 28 I wasn’t aware just how close I was to finding my mother.

Later the next day I was arrested by the Townsville police. [Tony was returned to Boys Town where he stayed until he turned 15. He then found employment.]

It was a difficult time in my life. It was then that I was mature enough to realise the full ramifications of what everything was building up to. I started to convince myself that I was destined to spend the rest of my life alone. I often saw old people in the street, who were obviously homeless, and knew that that was how I was going to end up. I used to get really depressed about that. Those thoughts and feelings stayed with me for a very long time.

I was never sent back to my family. [When Tony was aged 17 his welfare officer recommended reintroduction to his birth family. The recommendation was ignored.] Nobody cared about the pain that I was feeling. So I tried my best to hide from it. Antisocial behaviour seemed the only way that I could deal with my problems for years to follow. I’ve been a loner since then.

[At 16 Tony stole a car from the family with whom he was staying and left the State. At 18 he committed a burglary and spent 10 months in prison.]

When I got out I started making contact with my adoption family by phone. It was becoming positive. My adoption mother refused me permission to go home to them

when I got my holidays from work. She claimed that, ‘… dad doesn’t think it’s a good idea’. That hurt me a lot. A year later I tried to contact them again. This time my adoption father answered the phone. I rang up to wish my adoption mother a happy birthday. When I asked, ‘…is mum there?’, I was told that she had died two months earlier. It devastatedme. While I was on the phone, I made it clearto my adoption father that I loved him. I felt terrible because I never got to say it to my adoption mother. I’d spent the previous two years trying to make amends.

My life fell apart once again. I became a drug addict and started to abuse alcohol and everyone around me.

[Tony was soon convicted of robbery with wounding in company. He is serving a 14 year sentence.Link-Up (Qld) located his family in 1993. His mother had died9 years earlier. She had been the woman on the train.]

Confidential submission 82, Queensland.

21 Child Welfare – Care and Protection

Thewaypresent legislation responds … is merely allowingAboriginal community organisations to become part of the process … There is nosupportfor thedevelopment ofgenuine Indigenous child care or childwelfare as, for instance, there has been in the United States under the jurisdiction of the Indian Child Welfare Act (Nigel D’Souza,SNAICC, evidence 309).

Overview Indigenous children throughout Australia remain very significantly over-represented ‘in care’ and in contact with welfare authorities. Their over-representation increases as the intervention becomes more coercive, with the greatest over-representation being in out-of-home care.Indigenous children appear to be particularly over-represented in long-term foster care arrangements. A high percentage of Indigenous children in long-term foster care live with non-Indigenous carers.

Over-representation of Indigenous children in care

The following table provides an overview of the over-representation of Indigenous children in substitute care in 1993. The highest rate of placement for Indigenous children was in Victoria and the lowest was in the NT. On average Indigenous children were seven times more likely to be in substitute care than their population share would indicate. Indigenous children comprise only 2.7% of Australian children but they were 20% of children in care in 1993.

Indigenous children in care in 1993

ACT NSW NTQldSATasVicWATotal

Total children in care 1354,6941232,112 1,195 4982,5041,10212,363

Indigenous childrenin care 12b 8295261529355300c 353 2,419

%Indigenous children in care 8.917.742.3 29.1 17.0 11.012.034.919.6

% child population who areIndigenous a 1.02.133.7 2.0 2.0 3.50.74.32.7

Indigenous childrenin care per 1,000 aged0-17years 15263192813401820

Non-Indigenous childrenin care per 1,000 aged10-17 years 1.63.02.3 2.6 3.3 3.92.22.22.7

aFiguresfor theIndigenous child population in each State are taken from the Australian Bureauof Statistics (1993b 1991 Census of Population and Housing,Aboriginal Community Profile ABS Cat. No. 2722.0). TheAboriginal out-of-home care and censusfigures could well be underestimates becauseof

missing information in bothof these counts.For example, no informationwas availableon Aboriginal/non-Aboriginalstatusfor 19.5% ofthe NSW population ofchildren undercareorders. bEstimated from the percentageof childrenreferred to careby the statutory agency. cTheVictorianDepartment estimates that there are approximately 300Aboriginal children in specialised, Aboriginal managedout-of-home care programs, with thepossibility of ‘some others’ with other agencies.

Indigenous children are much more likely than others to be ‘notified’ to a welfare department on the ground of abuse or neglect as the following table shows.

Abuse and neglect notifications, investigation, substantiation and orders, 1995-96

(number per1,000 children)

NSWVicQldWASATasACTa NT

5590422862 27 104 10 16 22 1471819 15 9

Finalised investigations Indigenouschildren All children Substantiations Indigenous children All children Care and protection orders, 30/6/96 Indigenous children All children


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