This resulted in children experiencing a disconnection from culture, and an inability to pass culture on to their own children.
Warrior soundtrack lost generation skin#
Children of First Nations and white parentage were particularly vulnerable to removal because authorities thought these children could be assimilated more easily into the white community due to their lighter skin colour. Policies focused on assimilating children as they were considered more adaptable to white society than adults. It proposed that First Nations people should be allowed to ‘die out’ through a process of natural elimination, or, where possible, assimilated into the white community. The forcible removal of First Nations children from their families was part of the policy of Assimilation, which was based on the misguided assumption that the lives of First Nations people would be improved if they became part of white society. The policies of child removal left a legacy of trauma and loss that continues to affect First Nations communities, families and individuals today. The generations of children removed under these policies became known as the Stolen Generations. Between 1910 and the 1970s*, many First Nations children were forcibly removed from their families as a result of various government policies.