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The Inquiry with its limited budget relied on voluntary witnesses to come forward and tell their stories and took evidence in public and private sittings from many different people including:
Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people Government and church representatives Former mission staff Foster and adoptive parents Doctors and health professionals Academics Police
There were 777 submissions received which included:
535 Indigenous individual and group submissions 49 church submissions 7 government submissions, and 500 confidential submissions.
The report was submitted to the Parliament in April 1997.
One of the most important aspects of the Bringing Them Home was to place on record the grief, the guilt and the suffering that many Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander mothers and their families experienced, and are still experiencing today. More information on “Bringing Them Home” can be found here.
"Indigenous children have been forcibly removed from their families and communities since the very first days of European occupation in Australia. In that time, not one Aboriginal and Torres Strait family has escaped the effects. Many families have been affected in one or more generations by the removal of one or more children. Nationally, the Inquiry concludes that between 1 in 3 and 1 in 10 Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander children were forcibly removed from ther families and communities between 1910 and 1970.
Effects relating to the Stolen Generation include:
Insecurity and lack of self-esteem, feelings of worthlessness Depression and suicide Delinquency and violence sometimes leading to imprisonment Alcohol and drug abuse and/or Lack of trust and intimacy
For the majority of witnesses to the Inquiry, the effects have seen multiple, continuing and profoundly disabling. The trauma of separation and attempts at 'assimilation' have damaged their self esteem and well-being, and impaired their parenting and relationships. In turn their children suffer. There is a cycle of damage people find difficult to escape unaided". Quoted from 'Bringing Home' Report.
The Goondir Health Service's Stolen Generation Worker ensures professional counselling is made available to Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people who are part of the Stolen Generation. The Stolen Generation Worker will provide:
* Confidental referral to a Counselling Service near you * Confidental referral to "Link-UP" (Qld) Aboriginal Corporation * This is before, during and after the process of finding your natural family * Confidental history taking * Telephone or one to one support * Stolen Generation information, services and inquiries
The role of the Stolen Generation Worker is to give people an understanding of the social and emotional effects due to the systematic removal of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people from their family and land, which dispossessed them of their culture.
Workshops are provided on:
* Stolen Generation * Effects arising from Stolen Generation * Identity and culture * Mental health awareness * Suicide awareness * Drug and alcohol abuse awareness * Grief and loss * Social and emotional well-being
Contact Goondir Health Service Stolen Generation Counsellor
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