The influence of one racial group could wipe out an entire community. In “We Are Going” by Oodgeroo Noonuccal, the poet describes how the native people, or the Aborigines, were forced out of their native lands by white settlers. In the poem, the Aborigines feel that they have become the strangers in their old homeland, whereas the actual strangers are the white settlers, as can be indicated in the line “We are as strangers now, but the white tribe are the strangers.” (11,12). Throughout the poem, the word “old” occurs many times, symbolizing how the Aborigines’ native traditions were now considered from the past, and didn’t really exist anymore. Another line reads, “Notice of the estate agent reads:
The influence of one racial group could wipe out an entire community. In “We Are Going” by Oodgeroo Noonuccal, the poet describes how the native people, or the Aborigines, were forced out of their native lands by white settlers. In the poem, the Aborigines feel that they have become the strangers in their old homeland, whereas the actual strangers are the white settlers, as can be indicated in the line “We are as strangers now, but the white tribe are the strangers.” (11,12). Throughout the poem, the word “old” occurs many times, symbolizing how the Aborigines’ native traditions were now considered from the past, and didn’t really exist anymore. Another line reads, “Notice of the estate agent reads: