Sorry Day Prayer for Sunday 26 May

With Sorry Day being on a Sunday this year the Bringing Them Home WA Committee Bringing Them Home (white background)have produced a prayer and reflection resource which can be used in churches and faith communities on 26 May.  This will give an opportunity for faith communities to raise awareness about Sorry Day and continue the journey of reconciliation.

You can download the prayer here:  Sorry Day Prayer 2013

2011 BTHC Annual Report

The 2011 annual report prepared by the Bringing Them Home Committee co-convenors, Jim Morrison and Ian Robinson is now available to view and download online. Click the link below to read what the (entirely voluntary) committee worked towards and achieved in 20111!

Bringing Them Home Committee 2011 – Annual Report

In summary:

  • In 2011, we have achieved a lot in advocacy with both specialist and mainstream service providers, getting the stories heard and respected. Our education materials are still not ‘ready to serve’.
  • Sorry Day has been a spectacular success, but all of our mob are still hurting deeply. In 2012 we are concentrating on the support groups, Yarning Circles and further roll out of appropriate healing programs.
  • We also need to strategise about taking the big step into service provision and staffing. We need your help.
  • Join with us in the journey that heals everyone in our nation.

Have you heard the ‘Sorry Song’?

The forced removal of so many Aboriginal children from their mothers, families and communities inflicted profound grief, suffering and loss that continues to affect them, their communities and descendants.

In 1998, Kerry Fletcher wrote the Sorry Song , on behalf of all of us whose hearts ache when we think of the pain those children and communities suffered and the pain which they still endure today.

The Sorry Song is regularly performed at the annual WA Sorry Day event, as well as having been performed at events marking the National Apology to the Stolen Generations in 2008.

Listen to (a short version of) the Sorry Song below ::

Visit www.sorrysong.com.au to view the lyrics, download the sheet music or watch/listen to other performances of this moving song.

Home is a long journey

The following reflection was written by Rev Dr Ian Robinson, the non-Indigenous co-chair of the Bringing Them Home Committee (WA) Inc.

‘Rabbit Proof Fence’ is one of my favourite stories. It stands tall, for sheer courage, among all the histories and braveries that are told and re-told by all Australians. Three stolen Aboriginal kids ‘follow the rabbit proof fence’ from the compound at Moore River to their home at Jigalong.

Wouldn’t it be good if there was a long fence that led us all home? Then we would know what to do. We would apply ourselves with courage and cunning to make the long journey to where the land sings our name. Many have made that journey and it is a wonderful thing to honour and celebrate. There is more to this, however.

For many others the fence that leads home is just not there. Removed as children, records distorted or inaccurate, alone in the world, who knows where they come from, who knows where their land? Where are the link-up services that can do the detective work and bring them home?

And if they do find their people, when they arrive, it isn’t always a big welcome. Someone they have never known. A new voice to be included. A fractured soul to be nurtured. At home too, they have had the hurts of the past twenty thirty fifty years.

For many others the fence runs all around and goes in entirely the wrong direction. The trans-generational effects of Stolen Generations trauma now places many angry souls into prison, there to be fenced in from the long journey, institutionalized some more, de-humanised, punished and punishing, hurt and hurting. Vicious circles like tractor wheels have run many people down, the wheels of rejection, illiteracy, rejection, addictions, violence, rejection, crime, imprisonment and so on. And they don’t know why it turns out like this. If only there was a balcony from which to get a perspective?

Just as immigrant peoples make secrets out of the history and say – they are better off in institutions – so too do the Indigenous peoples who have never known their history say – we are better off going away from here. ‘Away’ can mean an illusion of remote outstations where everything is all right, ‘away’ can mean succumbing to the prison system, ‘away’ can mean suicide. What we need is a home, an imperfect welcome home.

For many others the fence is actually a revolving door. Their own removal to an institution means a lack of family nurture, and then in turn a lack of parenting skill, and removal of their children…. Reliable relatives are found but routinely burn out on the workload of looking after too many grandies. With all their brilliant degrees, endless research, and piles of dust-gathering reports, the family welfare departments simply oil the door instead of working out how to keep support systems in place to make families strong. Bottle shops pick up the profits. Police are called to pick up the pieces. Revolving door and vicious circles turning, turning.

Home is a long journey and hard work. The journey Home is the gathering of as much identity as can be found, as much connection with community as we can muster, and setting out to care for the next generation. It takes a love of neighbour and love of one another as much as we love ourselves. That’s a love that needs ongoing renewal. That’s the love that will heal, as nothing much else does. Like water holes, we can find it along the way.

Who has the courage to make that journey? Who will stop being a victim and take their first steps? The time to decide is now. The risks of the journey are much less than the risks of staying where we are. Things must change. We must change what we have been doing.

Can we make it? Together, yes. We DO have enough love to hold each other long enough to make the journey far enough. Aboriginal people have been through huge trials and changes before. Who will decide not to pull out their white privilege whenever the going gets rough? Who will stop shaming and think twice and stand up in support of a generation or three?

Home is where a magnificent culture is recognized and restored. Australia is where all these cultures, ancient and modern, speak to each other and call out from each other both old and new things. Haven’t you heard – we are welcome to country!

Who will listen to a vibrant creative people, who know from of old how to care for the arid lands, who move to the rhythm of a zero footprint? Who belongs in the oldest living culture on the planet, and will allow this Spirit to resonate through them to others? Let all those who say ‘yes’ now mark this day as Home-coming day, and begin the long journey Home.

What’s with all the flags?

Have you wondered why there are a large number of Aboriginal and Sorry Day Flags around the Perth CBD? The Bringing Them Home Committee (WA), in partnership with the Department of Indigenous Affairs, Reconciliation Australia and the City of Perth have arranged for the flags and banners to be put up to alert the community to the fact that 26th May is Sorry Day and this leads into Reconciliation Week from 27th May to 3rd June.

The Bringing Them Home Committee will commemorate the fourteenth anniversary of the release of the Bringing them Home Report with a major event at Wellington Square in East Perth. The event has been planned in collaboration with a number of community and business groups and with the support of a large number of schools. In excess of 1,000 schoolchildren from around Perth will be attending.

School events and activities commence at 10.30am, but the formal proceedings begin at 12 noon to allow as many people as possible to come along during their lunchtime. Following the traditional Welcome to Country by a Noongar Elder, the Guest Speaker, David Wirrpanda will provide a personal reflection on what Sorry Day means for him. There will also be a smoking ceremony as Aboriginal people invite Non-Aboriginal Australians to join them in a walk of reconciliation to the Sorry Pole at the conclusion of the proceedings.

Details:

WHERE: Wellington Square in East Perth
WHEN:  Thursday 26th May

10.30am for school activities
12 noon Formal Ceremony and Welcome to Country
12.20pm Speech by David Wirrpanda
12.45pm Smoking Ceremony
1.00pm  Performances by Bryte MC, Ulla Shay & Damien Thornber and the Orphans

See you there!

Sorry Day 2011 – Volunteers Needed!

The Bringing Them Home Committee (WA) was established over ten years ago following the release of a report in 1997 into the National Inquiry into the Separation of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Children from Their Families. This was known as the Bringing Them Home Report. One of the recommendations in that report was the establishment of a national `Sorry Day’ to be celebrated each year to commemorate the history of forcible removals and its effects. This is now commemorated each year on 26th May, the anniversary of the day in 1997 when the report was tabled in the Federal Parliament.

In Perth, the major event for Sorry Day is organised by the Bringing Them Home Committee and takes place at Wellington Square in East Perth on the 26th May each year.

The day commences at 10am with a range of activities for approximately one thousand schoolchildren. The formal proceedings commence at 12 noon and run through until 2pm. This includes a Welcome to Country by Noongar Elders, singing and dancing by Aboriginal performers, a Smoking Ceremony and a Guest Speaker who brings a personal perspective to the meanng of Sorry Day. We also provide a sausage sizzle for attendees at the event.

Not surprisingly, the logistics of organising this event are substantial and rely on the voluntary efforts of our Committee and supporters. We would be delighted if you could join us on this important day of reconciliation and ease the workload for the Committee. We need people to help with everything from setting up chairs and marquees; setting up the barbecues and cooking the sausages; helping with school activities; coordinating the carparking on the reserve and then the inevitable clean up. You will be pleased to know that we will be holding a modest after party at a venue near to Wellington Square later in the afternoon on 26th May, as a small thank you to our volunteers and helpers!

If you have some spare time on Thursday, 26th May please email our Event Coordinator, Yvonne Sargeant: bthcwa@gmail.com or ring her on 0424 193 465.

Sorry Day 2010

Come along and join in this important event which commemorates the history of forcible removal of Aboriginal children and its effects on Aboriginal families and communities.  It is also a time to commit to working together to ensure proper reconciliation in this country. The Bringing Them Home Committee (WA) are keen to hear from anyone prepared to volunteer some of their time to help out with the managing of the event on the day.

If interested, please email sarah.mumme@wa.uca.org.au.

WHEN:    Wednesday, 26 May
TIME:      12 – 2.00PM
WHERE:  Wellington Square, East Perth

Come along for great music, interesting speakers and a free sausage sizzle!


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