Bringing them Home - Lance story
Lance
Dad died when I was
        about two. My parents were married, but they often lived apart. When I
        was a little kid, they gave me to an Uncle and Auntie and the police took
        me away from them and put me in a Home. I have never been with my brothers
        and sisters at all. They were also put into the same Home. My brothers
        and sisters did not know that I existed until a nun said, 'Come and meet
        your little brother'. I have some contact with them now. I see them once
        every six months. To me they are like acquaintances.
If I was in a stable
        Aboriginal family, I wouldn't have the problems I have now - identifying
        myself as Koori. For ages I despised my parents; how could they just dump
        me in this Home? I hated them for what they were - Koories. I therefore
        hated Koories. I hated myself because I was Koori.
St Joseph's Home
        - Sebastopol - is where I grew up. It was run by nuns wearing black habits.
        The only Aboriginal kids there were just me and another bloke. There were
        girls there too. I stayed there for seven or eight years. I bloody hated
        it. I remember going to bed crying every night and wetting the bed every
        night and every day moping around unhappy. I hated authorities. The nuns
        were really strict on you. We had a big dormitory where the boys slept.
        I used to go to bed crying. I remember a nun with a torch saying, 'Stop
        crying'. I hid my head. She came back and hit me on the head with the
        torch. I still have the scar today.
I did not know
        I had brothers and sisters ...
I did not know I
        had brothers and sisters until I was aged twelve. I thought, 'How come
        I did not know about it? Where were they? How come they did not come and
        play with me?'. You did not really want to know them and find out Mum
        and Dad kept them and threw you away. You'd realise your fears were true.
Lake Condah Mission
        is where my parents came from. I suspect they grew up with their parents.
        My parents moved around heaps, although my mother doesn't now. We have
        a love/hate relationship. She loves me, but I hate her. I have never had
        a Birthday Card or Christmas Card. She is just a Mum in that she gave
        birth to me.
At age eight I was
        adopted out to these white people. They had three children who were a
        lot older - in their thirties and forties. I get on with them well. They
        send me Christmas Cards and Birthday Cards. It is good having people like
        that, but sometimes you know you are not really part of the family. You
        feel you should not really be there, eg, 'Come along Lance we're having
        a family photo taken'. I have not told them how I feel. They have tried
        real hard to make me feel part of the family, but it just won't work.
I got up to Year
        11 at School. I got a lot of flak, 'How come your parents are white?'.
        On Father and Son Day, 'Is he the Postman or what?'. It was pretty awkward.
        It was always awkward. I was always a shy kid, especially among my Father's
        friends. 'Here is my son'. They would look at you. That look. 'You're
        still together?'. I remember waiting for my Mother at her work, which
        was a bakery. A bloke asked me, 'Where is your Mum'? He searched for an
        Aboriginal lady. I wished God would make me white and these people's son
        instead of an adopted son.
I still call them
        Mum and Dad. But when I go to my real Mum, I find it real hard to call
        her my 'Mum' because she has just been another lady - OK a special lady.
        Mum's Mum [ie adoptive mother] because she was there when I took my first
        push bike ride and went on my first date.
After Year 11, I
        got a couple of jobs. I got into heaps of trouble with the Police - drugs
        and alcohol. I could get my hands on it and escape and release my frustration.
        I saw Police ... their fault as well as with me being taken away from
        my family. Slowly that decreased because a couple of cops came to my place,
        just to see how I was doing and just to talk to me. You can see the effects
        of stuff, such as alcohol, so I don't drink anyway. Alcohol took me away
        from my parents, who are chronic alcoholics. Mum is and Dad was. It took
        my brother [car accident at 18 years, high blood alcohol reading].
Three years ago I
        started taking interest in Koori stuff. I decided at least to learn the
        culture. I did not find the stereotype. I found that we understood what
        we were and that we were on a wave-length. I made a lot of friends and
        I am yet to make more. It becomes very frustrating. I am asked about a
        Koori word and I don't know. You feel you should know and are ashamed
        for yourself. I feel Koori, but not a real Koori in the ways of my people.
It is hard to say
        whether I was better off being taken away because the alternative never
        happened. I think the people I went with were better off economically
        and my education was probably better than what it would have been otherwise.
        I might have ended up in jail. I may not have had two meals or none and
        fewer nice clothes and been less well behaved.
If someone tried
        to remove my kids - over my dead body. I'd pack them up and move them
        away. Not the shit I've been through - no.
Confidential submission
        154, Victoria: removed 1974. Lance's story appears on page 461 of
        Bringing them home.
Last updated 2 December 2001.