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Human Rights and Equal Opportunity Commission
Bringing them Home - The Report
Chapter 2 National Overview
Every morning our people would crush charcoal and mix that
with animal fat and smother that all over us, so that when the police came they
could only see black children in the distance. We were told always to be on the
alert and, if white people came, to run into the bush or run and stand behind
the trees as stiff as a poker, or else hide behind logs or run into culverts
and hide. Often the white people - we didn't know who they were - would come
into our camps. And if the Aboriginal group was taken unawares, they would
stuff us into flour bags and pretend we weren't there. We were told not to
sneeze. We knew if we sneezed and they knew that we were in there bundled up,
we'd be taken off and away from the area.
There was a disruption of our cycle of life because we were continually
scared to be ourselves. During the raids on the camps it was not unusual for
people to be shot - shot in the arm or the leg. You can understand the terror
that we lived in, the fright - not knowing when someone will come unawares and
do whatever they were doing - either disrupting our family life, camp life, or
shooting at us.
Confidential evidence
681, Western Australia: woman ultimately surrendered at 5 years to Mt Margaret
Mission for schooling in the 1930s.
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