Survivor of notorious Australian boys’ home wants it rebuilt

admin admin | 10-19 08:20

Uncle James Michael 'Widdy' Welsh was taken from his family in Coonamble, in central NSW, when he was eight years old.

He was taken hundreds of kilometres away to the Kinchela Aboriginal Boys Home, in Kempsey on the state's mid north coast.

"When we went through those gates, that little child didn't exist anymore," Uncle Widdy told AAP.

"We were given numbers, we were put in a way that we were never allowed to do anything, we were never allowed to ask for anything, never allowed to question anything."

Uncle Widdy's number was 36.

ADVERTISEMENT

He is one of hundreds of boys taken from their families and placed at Kinchela between 1924 and 1970.

These boys were part of the Stolen Generations - Indigenous children taken from families and community in an attempt to assimilate them into white society.

There are 49 survivors of Kinchela alive today.

Marking 100 years since Kinchela's establishment on Saturday, the survivors are calling for the site to be converted into a museum and healing centre.

Uncle Widdy, now aged 72, didn't want anything to do with the Kinchela site at first.

"I, like most of the brothers, just wanted to burn it down or blow it up," he said.

"We didn't want to go back to that place because it was an evil place to us.

ADVERTISEMENT

"The truth is that would not serve a purpose because it would just hide the trauma that comes from that place."

He wants the Kinchela site to be a place of truth-telling and healing, where the experiences of the survivors can be honoured.

"They'd flog us, they'd starve us, these are the things that happened there but we didn't have no one to tell," he said.

"That's why I want the structure rebuilt. I want my children to know that place, I want the spiritual world of that place to be settled, to be understood."

Kinchela Boys Home Aboriginal Corporation, which supports the survivors, is planning to raise A$5 million for the rebuild.

The corporation's chief executive Tiffany McComsey said it is a matter of urgency to fulfil the wishes of survivors, who are all aged in their 70s and 80s.

"If there isn't an investment now in supporting survivor-led healing solutions, supporting Stolen Generations survivors and their communities, in having these sites returned to them so they can create healing centres, museums, keeping places, that opportunity is going to be lost," she said.

ADVERTISEMENT

"It's only through their direct experiences of what happened in those places and those sites that this truth can be told."

Disclaimer: The copyright of this article belongs to the original author. Reposting this article is solely for the purpose of information dissemination and does not constitute any investment advice. If there is any infringement, please contact us immediately. We will make corrections or deletions as necessary. Thank you.


ALSO READ

AWS CEO defends return-to-office policy amid staff discontent

Amazon Web Services CEO Matt Garman has recently addressed employee dissatisfaction regarding the co...

PSX: Profit-taking drags KSE-100 Index down for second consecutive session

Profit-taking dominated the Pakistan Stock Exchange (PSX) for the second session in a row, as the be...

Cost of repairing historic Napier fountain revealed

Thousands of people have feasted their eyes on the visual delight of the Tom Parker Fountain in Napi...

Lawson qualifies 15th for US Grand Prix sprint in fulltime debut

Kiwi Liam Lawson will start 15th on the gird for the US Grand Prix sprint race in his first drive as...

Gisborne Yacht Club lease trimmed by 16 years after iwi objects

Gisborne Yacht Club’s lease will be shortened by 16 years after local iwi Ngāti Oneone objected to i...

Survivor of notorious Australian boys’ home wants it rebuilt

Uncle James Michael 'Widdy' Welsh was taken from his family in Coonamble, in central NSW, when he wa...