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It seems that Australia’s new Prime Minister
Kevin Rudd wants to correct the historical acts of his country.
For decades aborigines were treated with disgrace; from 1910
until the 1970s aboriginal children were taken away from their parents and they
were placed in white homes and orphanages.
According to some Australian publications, the destroying of
these families was due to the theories of the English intellectuals who
believed that aborigines were a degenerate nation and that they should be
exiled.
An estimated number of 100,000 mostly mixed-blood aboriginal
children were separated from their families under state and federal laws.
Mr. Rudd, in the first act of his government, yesterday made
a public apology to aborigines for the bad treatment that they faced for so
many years. In his statement, the Prime Minister characterized the policies the
aborigines were confronted with as an attempt by white Australia to remove
them from the population.
“The pain is searing, it screams from the pages, the hurt,
the humiliation, the degradation and the sheer brutality of the act of
physically separating a mother from her children is a deep assault on our
senses." These were the words that Mr. Rudd used to express the fact that
he is against the acts of his descendants.
He called this gesture towards the aborigines a “first
step.” Moreover the state government of Tasmania
donated $4.5 million to Stolen Children while last year, a man in South Australia won a
$525,000 settlement because he was taken away from his mother when he was a
baby.
Just like Australia,
the Canadian government apologized to its native people and Bill Clinton also
apologized to America’s
former slaves. Kevin Rudd’s act comes after 11 years of refusal from John
Howard’s government to apologize to the aborigines.
Australia’s
Prime Minister said Wednesday that he wants “a future where all Australians,
whatever their origins, are truly equal partners, with equal opportunities and
with an equal stakes in shaping the next chapter in the history of this great
country,” as quoted by Australian media.
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