Australia Apologizes to Child Migrants
Gov't Recognizes Suffering of Generations of Impoverished U.K. Children Shipped Down Under, Often to Abuse, Neglect
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In this Oct. 6 1950 photo, 10-year-old twins Brian Thomas Sullivan (left) and Kevin James Sullivan from Islington carry their luggage to the boat train "Rangitoto" as they leave Liverpool Street station in London bound for Auckland, New Zealand. Britain and Australia are saying sorry to thousands of British children who were promised a better life overseas, only to suffer abuse and neglect thousands of miles from home. (AP Photo/PA, file)
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Australian Prime Minister Kevin Rudd, left, comforts a man attending a ceremony in the Australian capital of Canberra, Monday, Nov. 16, 2009, where Rudd issued an apology to thousands of impoverished British children shipped to Australia with the promise of a better life, only to suffer abuse and neglect thousands of miles from home. (AP Photo/Mark Graham)
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Two women comfort each other at the ceremony today Canberra. (AP Photo/Mark Graham)
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The British government has estimated 150,000 British children may have been shipped abroad between 1618 and 1967, most from the late 19th century onward. After 1920, most of the children went to Australia through programs run by the government, religious groups and children's charities.
The programs, which ended 40 years ago, were intended to provide the children with a new start - and the Empire with a supply of sturdy white workers. But many children ended up in institutions where they were physically and sexually abused, or were sent to work as farm laborers.
At a ceremony in the Australian capital of Canberra attended by tearful former child migrants, Rudd apologized for his country's role in the migration and extended condolences to the 7,000 survivors of the program who still live in Australia.
"We are sorry," Rudd said. "Sorry that as children you were taken from your families and placed in institutions where so often you were abused. Sorry for the physical suffering, the emotional starvation and the cold absence of love, of tenderness, of care. Sorry for the tragedy - the absolute tragedy - of childhoods lost."
The apology comes one day after the British government said Prime Minister Gordon Brown would apologize for child migrant programs that sent children as young as 3 to Australia, Canada and other former colonies over three and a half centuries. The first group was sent to the Virginia Colony in 1618.
Rudd also apologized to the "forgotten Australians" - children who suffered in state care during the last century. According to a 2004 Australian Senate report, more than 500,000 children were placed in foster homes, orphanages and other institutions during the 20th century. Many were emotionally, physically and sexually abused in state care.
The Australian government has ruled out compensation, saying liability lay with state governments and churches that ran the institutions.
British High Commissioner Valerie Amos said her government had not yet addressed the compensation question.
Ian Thwaites, service manager of the Child Migrants Trust, which has advocated for child migrants in Australia for 22 years, said both the British and Australian governments were liable.
"It takes two governments working closely together to be able to make this mess and break the hearts of thousands of children and families," said Thwaites.
Andrew Murray, a former Australian senator who was a child migrant from Britain to an orphanage in Rhodesia (now Zimbabwe), called on Australia to pay reparations.
John Hennessey, 72, who was born in Bristol, England, and sent to Australia, said he was beaten and sexually abused at a Christian boys home in Western Australia state. He wants compensation from Britain, which he said had deported children to the other side of the world and then abandoned them.
"The apology should have started from England. They were embarrassed and Australia shamed them into it," he added.
The Forgotten Australians also welcomed the apology. Rod Braydon, 65, said he was raped at the age of 6 by a Salvation Army officer on his first night in a boys home in the city of Melbourne.
"When we reported this as kids, we were flogged to within an inch of our lives, locked up in dungeons and isolation cells," said Braydon, who received a cash settlement from the Salvation Army for the abuse and is suing the Victoria state government for neglect.
A 2001 Australian report said between 6,000 and 30,000 children from Britain and Malta, often taken from unmarried mothers or impoverished families, were sent alone to Australia as migrants during the 20th century. Many of the children were told they were orphans, though most had either been abandoned or taken from their families by the state. Siblings were commonly split up once they arrived in Australia.
Authorities believed they were acting in the children's best interests, but the migration also was intended to stop them from being a burden on the British state while supplying the receiving countries with potential workers.
A 1998 British parliamentary inquiry noted "a further motive was racist: the importation of 'good white stock' was seen as a desirable policy objective in the developing British Colonies."
Australia had an immigration policy that favored British and white immigrants until the 1970s.
"We were used as white fodder," Hennessey said. "The Archbishop met us at Fremantle (in Western Australia) and I can still remember his words. He said, 'Welcome to Australia. We want white stock because we're terrified of the yellow peril.'"
British Children's Secretary Ed Balls said the child migrant policy was "a stain on our society."
"The apology is symbolically very important," he told Sky News television.
"I think it is important that we say to the children who are now adults and older people and to their offspring that this is something that we look back on in shame," he said.
Britain has been trying to make amends since the late 1990s by funding trips to reunite migrants with their families in Britain.
Brown's office said officials would consult with representatives of the surviving children before making a formal apology next year.
For more info:
Alliance for Forgotten Australians
U.K. Department for Children, Schools and Families
By Associated Press Writers Rod McGuirk and Jill Lawless
© MMIX The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
- They won't get compensation. if most Australians take a page from the present position of most Americans, they will say that it happened too long ago and the people in Australia now, should not have to pay to the families of people long gone. They will point out that they personally never sent kids to live in Australia, America or New Zealand and that they personally did not abuse these people--they will then point out that given the time frame, descendants cannot ask for a thing because the people who are alive now, did not do what their ancestors did, though what happened for years may have determined the status and welfare of the victims families for generations. It does not count--a sorry will have to do. We would not want all the people that have been systematically been mistreated, discriminated against, raped, murdered, enslaved or orphanages to expect compensation--the world cannot afford to pay for all the evil and abuse it keeps fostering...
Funny how "the world" never seems to think about the potential cost before they start programs that harm other people.....right? - Reply to this comment
- Abuse at the hands of church workers and priests. It's astonishing what has been done by people who put on a show of decency and righteousness. The Bible says that pedophiles will get the very worst of punishments but I'm sure that is small comfort for those who endured it. I'm very sorry for what happened to these children. I don't understand it. I don't understand how Britain could be so cold as to send them off, thousands of miles from their families. This whole thing makes me feel sick. The British have not made Families a priority for way too long. Did they invent the hideous idea of "Boarding Schools" ? I don't understand a culture that has no respect for Family.
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- I really don't understand what an apology like this supposed to do. Yes, I'll agree it wasn't a nice thing to do to kids, pretty appalling actually, but giving an apology 400 or even 40 years removed from whomever did the bad deed? Isn't that absurd? I see no reason to apology for something my great-great-great-grandad did. It's like Norway apologizing to England for the Viking raids.
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- In this Oct. 6 1950 photo, 10-year-old twins Brian Thomas Sullivan (left) and Kevin James Sullivan. I'm curious what happen to these twin-boys?
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