Bringing Them Home Oral History project

Between 1998 and 2002, people from all over Australia told us their stories as part of the Bringing Them Home Oral History project.

Between 1998 and 2002, people from all over Australia told us their stories as part of the Bringing Them Home Oral History project.

Listen as they tell us in their own words about the impacts caused by the removal of Indigenous children from their families.

This collection shares with us 340 intimate stories, in over 600 hours of recordings.

These are people directly affected by the laws and policies which created the Stolen Generations. These are the voices of:

  • Indigenous people taken away from their families
  • Indigenous people whose children were removed
  • administrators, police officers, carers, missionaries and welfare workers.

These stories show us that everybody's experience was unique, which is why these recordings are so valuable as a public record.

Two men hug and another man shakes one of their hands

Juno Gemes, Countrymen, elders from Arakun and Mornington Island greeting each other before a ceremony, Mornington Island, Queensland, 1978, nla.gov.au/nla.obj-147616168

Juno Gemes, Countrymen, elders from Arakun and Mornington Island greeting each other before a ceremony, Mornington Island, Queensland, 1978, nla.gov.au/nla.obj-147616168

Listen to the stories

Where speakers have given permission, recordings and transcripts are available online through Trove and the Library catalogue. Sometimes you will need to get permission to listen, read, or get copies, but this is detailed in the records.

Listen to the recordings through Trove

Listen to the recordings through the catalogue

Other ways to access the stories

In some cases, you can order copies through the Library catalogue.

You can listen to some of the recordings that are not available online in the Library's Special Collections Reading Room.

Published in 2002, Many voices: reflections on experiences of Indigenous child separation, edited by Doreen Mellor and Anna Haebich, is based on these oral histories. Although now out of print, you can still read it in the Library's reading rooms or purchase a digital reproduction through the Library catalogue.

Project background

The Bringing Them Home Oral History project ran from 1998 to 2002. The purpose of the project was to collect and preserve the stories of Indigenous people and others affected by or involved in the removal of Indigenous children from their families.

The project was established in response to the first recommendation of Bringing Them Home: Report of the National Inquiry into the Separation of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Children from Their Families.

A pilot project recorded 31 interviews between July 1998 and June 1999. The full-scale project recorded over 300 more interviews between July 1999 and June 2002.

More information about the project is available in our Australian Web Archive.

Related information

Page published: 16 Feb 2023

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