Last of Rabbit-Proof Fence girls, whose trek home was made into famous film, dies
[2024-02-15 22:44:06]
She was the youngest of the three girls from the northwestern part of Western Australia and influenced the award-winning movie "Rabbit Protective Fence", who died at the age of 95.
Warning: Readers of indigenous peoples and Torres Strait Islanders said that the next story contained images and names of the dead
Martu's female Daisy Kadibil is a child taken away from the family as a member of the stolen generation.
She and her sisters, Molly and his cousin, Gracie used a rabbit guard fence to settle down from the Moorish natives, a 1,600 kilometer journey, to the house.
This story brings Australia's stolen generation problems to domestic and international audiences.
After returning home he bore a child in Wilna, but she said that she returned to Jaga Long again.
She spent most of her life at the nearby Parnngurr community where her descendants continue to live.
Mr. Jones said he saw a movie on how these girls decided to return to their hometown.
"Because of the stolen generation, her children are gone, they just fight back, they never stop," he said.
"She (Yuzen Saishi) is the youngest and the oldest is Molly.I think Molly knows that way because Molly is repairing a rabbit-protecting fence.
An incredible walk makes it possible for kids to travel through the stormy inland areas of the province for hundreds of kilometers
More than 200 children died at Moor River camp, Daisy and her sister were brought there, and many died for treatable respiratory and infectious diseases.
At that time Western Australia's policy was to take children of indigenous parents and take care of the people to "integrate" them into Western society.
Until the 1960s thousands of indigenous children were forcibly taken away from their families, but this era was called a stolen generation.
Paddy Gibson, a senior researcher at Jumbunna University of Technology, said in Western Australia that the best guardians of soil welfare secretary gained great power.
"This is an incredibly destructive policy, let people feel the real pain and suffering of the indigenous community, and I can feel it today," he said.
"They do not need any special excuses to take away indigenous children from their families, they can basically shed kids across the state, they did."
"When people really see through the eyes of these women, they can see what kind of cruelty this policy means."
Mr. Cardibil has joined the community and died in Jiggaron last month but was not buried until the end of June.
Su Darwin Porter, the consultative chief of the community organization Kanyirninpa Jukurrpa, said Lady Cardiby is a very strong and decisive woman.
She taught them to teach their children their own understanding of Matu culture, hunt and care for culture, and she respected Martu Jukurrpa (dream), she said.
"She is truly loved, she is loved by her family and community, she is a very impressive woman," Davenport said.
Rabbit-Proof Fence is the Australian TV series (directed by Philippe Neuss) in 2002, featuring "Follow the Rabbit Fence" by Doris Pilkington Garimara. It involved the author 's mother and the other two mixed - girls escaping into the region of the Moorish indigenous northern Perth and returning to their indigenous families after being placed there in 1931. The girls walked along a 9,500 mile (2414 km) Australian anti-rabbit fence, followed by white authorities and black believers and returned to their communities of Gigalong
Anti-rabbit fence tells the true story of three Aboriginal Australian girls - Molly, her sister Daisy and their cousin Gracie. It is based on the book "Follow the Rabbit Fence" by Molly's daughter, Doris Pilkington Garimara. When Molly was 14 years old, Gracie was 10 years old, and Daisy was 8 years old, the Australian government took them from their homes and trained them to become white-settler's servants. The girls ran away and decided to go home following the "protective fence". The movie cont