In "Following the Rabbit Fence", Doris Pilkington looked at the boundary between altruism and atrocity. This line sometimes blurs as she copies the letters sent among the members of the Australian government and they imagine the interaction between responsible government officials and half caste children. The Australian government forcibly assimilates and even eradicates the cruelty of Aboriginal culture, but under the altruism covering to hide their behavior,
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 continues to a girl walking 1,500 miles home to avoid being arrested and surviving in the wild. It is also the story of "Stortor generation" in Australia. Thousands of indigenous children were taken away from their homes by the government. Many of these children never met parents again.
Doris Pilkington Garimara's book "Follow the Rabbit Fence" (1996) describes three Australian indigenous girls who use guard rails in the 1930's to guide the Jaga Long. The girls were stolen from their parents in Western Australia and escaped from the Aboriginal district of the Moor as a member of the stolen generation where they were detained and walked to the family of Jighara and the fence of the rabbit I traced. Dramatic movie Rabbit - Proof Fence (2002) is based on this book. In 2016, British female Lindsey Cole walked from Moore River Settlement 1600 km away to Jigalong. In September 2016, Doris' daughter met her at the end of the walk.
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