Bio
The Forgotten Australians (White Australian Children & Child Migrants)
Leanne's mother Betty was often telling her children of her experiences of severe physical and mental abuse when she was placed in a church orphanage in Bathurst from aged 3 to 8 years along with her two older sisters. Her stories of scrubbing floors on her knees, being put into solitary confinement and servere punishments with leather belts and cat n 9 tails if she did anything wrong. Her mother spirit angered the nun's, so from the first day it seemed was Betty was punished more than her sisters. One of her sister's remembers the days when Betty had to carry her sheets on a freezing winters mornings with no shoes across the yard into laundry. Betty would wash them in freezing water as punishment for wetting the bed and then she was flogged as an example to the other children. The black & white photo taken on the day she was removed from the orphanage by her father on 21st June 1947(dates taken from orphanage records). At 14 years she had jumped through a glass window (it was alleged in a court case so she could get away from her father). Accused of lying, was then placed in another institution from aged 14 until nearly 18. Leanne's mother suffered all her life from severe depression and other mental illnesses. Very few people ever believed Betty with many calling her a lier. For many years was prescribed Sarapax and Valium by her doctor and was alcohol dependent. Leanne's mother died aged 48.
Leanne Hawkins (nee Pannowitz also known as Lane) is second generation children's church home survivor along with her older brother and younger sister after being placed in a children's home aged 5, when her mother could no longer cope (Department Community Services Records). Leanne and her little sister suffered severe abuse and humiliation at the church home. Memories of being dragged down the hall by her hair while kicking and screaming, then stripped naked in front of the other girls, stood under freezing cold showers on winter mornings if you wet the bed. Being held down forcibly while someone would cut off your hair. Constantly flogged and given the cane for the smallest wrong doing & left standing in a corner for many hours at a time (the actual corner she was often left standing in at St Michaels is on the video Momma). Feed very small amounts and was always staving. Leanne remembers not being able to do anything right and often told she would burn in hell. It was documented by the Department of Community Services that Leanne had behavioral and learning difficulties by the time she was 11 years. Leanne and her siblings where also fostered out in later years.
When returning home to live with her mother, Leanne remembers it was a very violent time and had been taken (documented DOC's) by police to local hospital with severe welts across her back and down her legs. Leanne went to 9 schools (10 if you count same school twice), finishing school in 2nd form (year 8) with her school report showing moderated marks, (meaning she was well below average). Leanne's remembers constantly crying and not being tolerated at the schools. Often given the cane "the sixes" and the "cuts" with a ruler. Most impacting memories at school where : Leanne loved to sing but told to be quiet and mime songs in the school choirs. One teacher said in an angry voice, "it because she sang out of tune and was tone deaf"! Being awarded a half dead cactus plant for being the worst tempered child in 5th class (The class burst out laughing, Leanne cried all the way home).
Often in moral danger Leanne remembers being sexually abuse several times and sometimes with her sister being abused in the same room. Also remembers being given to a male relative aged 14. Because of the all the abuse Leanne tried to commit suicide 3 times, first time at 13 years to be told by a nurse when she woke up in hospital that she deserved an Academy Award for her acting. Then she tried again at aged 18 and then again at 27 after the death of her mother. Many people accused Leanne when she was a child/teenager for having a vivid imagination also often called her lier. As an adult Leanne has been told many times that she needed to build a bridge and get over it! Or that her memories had been exggerated because "you know how those people make up stuff to make it sound worst than it was just to get attention".
Neural Pathway Damage occurs when children are treated appallingly, constantly placed under physical, mental, and sexual abuse. Very little positive outcome is possible and sometimes the damage is irreversible. With little or no education, family life or skills to build on, these 500,000 children are now adults. Many have had families who now also bare the scars of the damage. Too many of us still fight everyday with mental illnesses, depression, alcoholism and drug abuse. Around 60% people in our prison system had been placed in orphanges and children's government or church homes. There was a show on ABC's 7.30 Report Decemeber 2011 on the worst criminals in Australia have been children from orhanages, children's homes & reform schools. In many of these "reform places", it's fight/kill or be killed. Statisics FA's have a much higher death rate (similar to Stolen Generation) it is also believd that many FA's have committed suicide.
Please read and the apology from our Prime Minister, Mr. Kevin Rudd on November 16th 2009. Go to www.clan.org.au
To our baby sister Annissa born with fluid on the brain, who died at 3 years of age. Little angel you deserved so much more but received so little. In those days babies and children with special needs where automatically institutionalized. The Senate inquiry into the Forgotten Australians 2004 tells accounts of these babies and children strapped to potties all day or babies like Annissa where just left lying in cot's. Annissa died after she had several experimental operations to relieve the fluid from her brain.
Taken from the Australian Senate Inquiry into Forgotten Australians 2004:
At the age of 12, I was taken to the Lachlan Park Asylum...
I used to look after the little kids in this place. I’ll never forget the ones with encephalitis - there were about 6 or 7 of them - with their swollen heads just lying in their cots waiting to die. There were also 5 girls in there who were just vegetables, 3 were sisters...Once I remember the nurses putting hot water bottles on them without covers on them and they got bad burns. There were also 25 little Downs Syndrome children who would be taken out of their beds each morning and strapped onto potty chairs where they stayed all day until they were bathed in the afternoon and put back to bed. They weren’t allowed to walk or run around...
Songs are listed
1. Momma
2. Born with a Label
3. The Woman I am
Also taken from Senate Inquiry:
4.78 The results of a number of experimental trials were reported in the Medical Journal of Australia and the Australian Journal of Experimental Biology and Medical Science:
- Two experiments to attempt to vaccinate against herpes simplex were conducted at St Joseph's Broadmeadows between March 1946 and April 1948. The first group used 51 babies and the second two groups totalling 32 babies between 7 and 10 months old. In both experiments children contracted the disease, leading to the conclusion that 'the vaccination was of no benefit in preventing primary herpetic infection under the conditions of the study'.[230]
- A 1953 paper refers to influenza outbreaks in Victoria in 1946 then epidemics in 1950 and 1951, and studies undertaken at St Joseph's Broadmeadows (during this period about 250 children under three years were housed at Broadmeadows).[231]
4.79 In June 1997, The Age printed a series of articles on children in orphanages and babies' homes in Victoria being used for medical experiments and research until the 1970s that included trials of new vaccines that did not work or failed to pass safety tests in animals. The articles referred to studies additional to those described above, including trials of an experimental whooping cough vaccine using children from a number of institutions including St Gabriel's and Berry Street. Reported results from these trials indicated the vaccinations caused fevers and vomiting in some of the babies.[232]
4.80 It is unclear who was legally responsible for giving permission for children and babies to be used in these medical experiments. The Journal reports acknowledge that the studies were carried out with the cooperation of the sisters in charge of the orphanage. However, even if superiors at institutions or departmental authorities who had legal guardianship that covered care and protection, did this extend to agreement for the child to be used for experimentation? Not all the children were orphans, yet there appears to be no record of a parent's permission ever having been obtained.
4.81 In addition to the issue of consent, a number of other issues arise including what other research may have occurred and was it fully recorded, was there follow-up research and were children put at risk of these experiments (in some herpes research it is reported that a number of the subjects had left the Home during the course of the experiment), do any of the children know they were used as experimental subjects and did they suffer any long term adverse health effects?
4.82 The Age articles created considerable debate. Richard Larkins, Chairman of the National Health and Medical Research Council (that had provided grants for some of the earlier studies), editorialised in the Medical Journal of Australia that the community needs to be assured that current clinical research is of the highest ethical standard. He wrote:
The apparent outrage to these media reports by many different sectors of the community indicates the need for all those involved in clinical research, and indeed in clinical care, to examine the events of the past, and learn from the reactions of the present...We must all note the community concerns, heed the lessons of the past and work to repair the damage.[233]
4.83 Shortkids Downunder also referred to the 1997 Age articles claiming that experimental drugs were administered to children in orphanages by medical practitioners during the period of the Australian Human Pituitary Hormone Program that treated infertility and short stature, especially the use of human growth hormone and human pituitary gonadotrophin.[234] A tragic consequence for recipients of pituitary hormone treatment from this program was being put at risk of contracting Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease. The Committee' 1997 Report on the CJD Settlement Offer noted that there were large numbers of unapproved recipients that had received hormones from a variety of sources that had not been approved as part of the official Program.[235]
4.84 The Wilson Youth Hospital in Queensland was for a period during the 1960s to early 1980s a unique institution doubling as a corrective institution and mental health facility run jointly by the Children's Services and Health Departments. It became notorious for the use of medication on children. The use of sedatives and other 'experimental' drugs have also been linked with Karrala House.
There were 6 medication queues a day, where medications like Melleril, Largactil and Tryptonal were handed out. There were psychiatrists on staff and it was mandatory to go through their mental health assessment. This included EEG’s and various intelligence tests etc. Included in the assessment process was an enforced gynaecological examination, including an internal involving a speculum...
Few of my peers, who were incarcerated in the late seventies, remain. Some did not make it out of their teens. Many died in their twenties, some before my eyes. Some decided it was all too hard and took their own lives. Many more however fell into the addiction trap, self-medicating so to speak. I strongly believe there is a direct correlation between the relentless medicating of inmates at Wilson Youth Hospital and the self-medicating that people mimicked that would eventually end their lives. (Sub 58)
At Wilson I went through a series of medical tests, not told anything and talked to no one. I was heavily medicated and I remember some boys who would get a virtual cocktail of pills three times a day. (Sub105)
We have since found out that drugs were put in our food to keep us quiet, and even though we cannot yet prove it we have also found out that some new drugs were tested on us. (Karrala - Conf Sub 3)
4.85 The Forde inquiry considered the use of 'medication' at both Wilson and Karrala House. During the 1960s and 70s both apparently
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operated as a psychiatric facility where 'treatment' was inspired by a 'medical model'. This conceptualised the child's 'anti-social' behaviour solely in medical (psychiatric) terms with little or no regard to social or other factors. What was deemed to be required was medical intervention in the form of psychotherapy and 'chemotherapy', generally involving the use of anti-convulsants, sedatives and tranquillisers. Forde notes that the DCS at the time asserted that inmates of Karrala were 'treated along modern psychiatric lines with up to date tranquilliser drugs'.[236] With orderlies having no medical training and with modern treatment using up to date drugs in the 1960s and 70s it is highly likely that there were elements of experimentation in their usage. 4.86 Largactil was widely reported as a drug commonly used to pacify 'out-of-control' children. Doses of Lithium and Melleril were also referred to as being regularly used to sedate young children.[237] Children placed in mental homes and other inappropriate accommodation
4.87 A number of submissions from Queensland referred to being placed in mental hospitals for reasons such as running away from other homes. As discussed above the Wilson Youth Hospital served a variety of purposes. In the late 1970s children were still being placed in adult mental health institutions, including Lowson House and Wolston Park:
4.88 One lady reported being placed in Marillac House (a home for people with intellectual disability or social and emotional problems) at the age of 9 even though file records show that only 3 years earlier a psychologist had assessed her as 'clearly of normal intelligence'.
4.89 A number of submissions reported people being placed in mental homes for what was apparently a form of punishment for misbehaviour such as running away, refusing to work or perform chores or arguing with Sisters or staff. The use of drugs to pacify children for what may now be considered high spirited or adolescent behaviour was also common and is referred to in the previous section. The use of such institutions for adolescent children is unjustifiable and the impact that it had upon them incalculable.
4.90 A number of the harshest institutions that had reputations well known among the children included reformatories (indeed to be sent to such a place was widely used as a threat to control children) and remand or detention centres. However, many children were sent to these places even though they did not have 'a record'.
4.91 The NSW Commissioner for Children and Young People has submitted:
4.92 State wards could find themselves in places with a diverse mix of residents.
Fostering arrangements, including holiday placements4.93 Institutions would place children in foster homes for short periods, weekends or during holiday periods ('Holiday Hosts' as the nuns would call them). This was often undertaken in an uncoordinated manner with expediency rather than child welfare being a primary consideration. No attempt was made to match couples with children nor understand the needs of either party. Many reported being placed with much older couples or people with limited child rearing skills and questioned the motivation of some people who accepted children - 'I am sure they only took us to get the money'. Stories were told of being used as a form of cheap 'slave labour' while others were sexually abused by the foster parents, their children or relatives.
4.94 Issues relating to foster care generally and contemporary problems, remedies and future directions for foster care will be considered in the Committee's second report. Deaths in institutions
4.95 As was the case with the Child Migrants inquiry, the Committee heard stories of children who died while in care, in mysterious circumstances or 'disappeared', especially if they had been sick or injured. Some of these stories were accompanied by comments of possible foul play or cover up. Children were usually never given information in Homes, and it is possible that in many cases of allegedly missing children the child could have been transferred to hospital or another home and no one would be told. 4.96 The Forde Commission in its Closed Report on Neerkol endeavoured to establish if there was any basis in fact for the stories of a number of former residents over suspicious deaths and burials in unmarked graves. Not all were satisfactorily resolved with a couple of accounts unable to be confirmed either through first-hand evidence or contemporary documents.[240] 4.97 The Committee noted in Lost Innocents that the records relating to the deaths of some child migrants had been destroyed and that coronial inquests had not appeared to be conducted on some violent deaths. The Committee considered that the lack of coronial inquests and the history of cover-ups of other assaults lead to the conclusion that there should as a minimum be some suspicion concerning the events surrounding some deaths. Unfortunately the passage of years meant that pursuit of cases would now produce inconclusive results.[241] 4.98 With the level of physical assault that has been reported in evidence, it is highly probable that within a group of 500 000 over many years some deaths would occur as either a direct or indirect result of these assaults. While the Committee only received minimal anecdotal and circumstantial evidence, there remains a suspicion of a pattern of limited investigation by police or authorities, no inquests, and police or authorities accepting unquestioningly the word of the carers in relation to deaths occurring at their institution.
4.99 The Committee is also aware that on 28 June 2004 the South Australian Police Commissioner initiated a review following the raising in the South Australian Parliament of allegations by a former State ward that a child had been killed while he was an inmate at an orphanage in Adelaide in the 1960s.[243] 4.100 In earlier years of the century children died from disease which could sweep through an institution. Through lack of hygiene and nutrition children in these times were more susceptible to contract disease, which could in their weakened condition prove fatal. Transition from in care to independence4.101 If life in the institution was not traumatic enough, leaving it was equally so. With little or no aftercare services many care leavers reported that their departure from care consisted of a letter from the department wishing them well and being given a suitcase with what meagre possessions and clothing they may have acquired, some money if they were lucky and being shown the door. They were left to fend for themselves.
4.102 There was no gradual introduction to the outside world, and no preparation to cope with it, so that children had no preparation for adulthood and little idea how to live a 'normal' life. The 'outside world' often proved overwhelming as they had not been trained in any of the most basic life skills.
4.103 This was yet another form of abandonment. Often the only home they knew was the institution. Having had any sense of self worth crushed during childhood, they were now thrown out alone into the outside world and expected to function as an individual.
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