Everyone is well aware that Human Rights give us and allow us the rights to live, but what if there was no such thing as human right, would everyone’s lives be affected by harsh cruelty? Well there are many examples of Human Rights being broken, the Stolen Generation is just one of them, and the song `Took the Children Away’ by ARCHIE ROACH, reflects on what happened to the stolen generation. The Stolen Generation was where Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islanders were removed from their families and ‘Snatched from their mother's breast’ by the Australian Federal and State government and church missions, so that the black race would be breed out. the reason these terrible acts happened is because during 1910-1970 in Australia, the government …show more content…
The author of this story is Bill Simons, his intentions with this story of his childhood, is to show what these horrible people did to him and his family. The audience is everybody, but mainly the people that took and look down upon these Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people. This source was written in 2009, but date is relevant as Bill Simons has said “I’m still getting healed now and I'm 62, but thinking about it still makes me angry and I'll never forget the pain and suffering “. The purpose of this source is to inform and is try to show us Simons story on what the Australian government did to his family and also hundreds of other families. The perspective Simons has written his story at is neutral, it seems like he’s telling the story how it happened he doesn’t sound like he’s full of anger, he seems like he is begging to accept what happened and how it is in the past but wounds never fully heal. I believe this source is fact as he is not trying to persuade and force people to feel guilt for what these people did to him and his people, but he is informing the audience. The language being used in the source is formative language he is informing us exactly what happened. The examples and proof to support these claims are in Bill Simons autobiography, and the events that happened in this book are most certainly