How did you get here?

Are you an Aussie Mongrel too?   😄

 

see video at top of story

 

http://www.smh.com.au/comment/this-day-marks-great-loss-and-great-gift-20140125-31fc1.html

 

Belinda Lopez

 

My grandparents were boat people. Not asylum seekers, specifically, but they did arrive by boat, and they'd left a dictatorship in Spain that prevented the expression of culture and political beliefs. They were lucky in that they wanted to be in Australia at the same time that Australia wanted them.

This was the 1960s, and the Australian government's thirst for migrants was insatiable.

When I read the headlines today about asylum seekers/illegal arrivals/insert label here, I'm struck by the sheer luck of my family having made it to Australia at the right time, and from the right country.

 

There's a lack of self-reflection among Australians when we focus on the ''mode of arrival'' of those trying to come to this country, as a means of determining whether they are people who legitimately deserve be here. It's as if we've forgotten something pretty crucial: We all got here somehow.

The thought struck me on the train. Our rail network is a rich ecosystem of ethnicities and languages. Cultures morph and intermingle across stations. Everyone in my carriage had a story of arriving here somehow. And so, inspired by the Coalition government's focus on ''mode of arrival'', I started approaching strangers on trains, with a microphone.

Certain rules of non-interaction on public transport are maintained, silently. People jump when you approach them. They eye you suspiciously over their smartphones. But I persevered. I walked up to people, and I asked them: How did you get here?

 

Of course, I was looking for an answer to a deeper question: How had they arrived in Australia?

The initial reactions fell into three clear categories.

Many of the passengers of Anglo-Saxon heritage answered casually, telling me what station they'd hopped on at.

Foreigners living here told me how they'd arrived in Australia - through love and heartbreak, poverty, secrecy, forced opportunity and unexpected chance.

 

And people like me - the first-generation and second-generation Australians whose parents and grandparents had arrived here by boat or plane - sometimes answered guardedly and a little defensively. "I was born here. I consider myself Australian. I am Australian," they'd say. I got the feeling they'd been asked that question more than once.

 

In one memorable train ride, there were stories of dictatorial governments, of dreams about Australia drawn from soap operas, of civil war, orphans - and of course convicts. And always - mostly always - a smile when they reflected on their luck of having ended up here, whether it was two months or 200 years ago.

 

The people of indigenous heritage I spoke to gave the same answer in one form or another: "Well, 65,000 years ago my ancestors arrived here, and we've been here ever since."

I left the train exhausted with the weight of the stories I was carrying with me. It was strange to think I would never have known them if I hadn't asked.

 

There's a lot more to think about on Australia Day than the shopping list for booze and which songs might make Triple J's Hottest 100. For indigenous Australians, it's the story of survival. The public holiday marks the beginning of great loss: of separation from land, from culture, from children. For families whose ancestors were migrants, my family - and most likely yours included - the day marks the gifting of a second chance, and a second home.

What I'll also be thinking about this Australia Day is the endless potential for a great conversation with someone in this country. So go on. Try it. Ask the person next to you. And remember to ask yourself: "How did you get here?"

 

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Re: How did you get here?

1960 here as well !

 

 

.Ex Ipswich Suffolk England   April 1960..   by boat   "Fairsky "

 

No passports or papers for us kids ..

 

my sister and I had to pay for searches to get paper work to become citizens 10 years ago.

 

brother got his citizenship as soon as he left uni 1970 ..needed it to practise law ..

 

We know all have dual citizenship.

 

My grandies still tell friends that I came out on a convict ship . lol

Message 41 of 59
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Re: How did you get here?

Not many Scots were brought in leg irons, mostly Irish or petty thieves from London.

Message 42 of 59
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Re: How did you get here?

It was a joke, Jenny.

Message 43 of 59
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Re: How did you get here?

I wake up some days and wonder how I got here, but other days I just wonder how to get the hell out.

Message 44 of 59
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Re: How did you get here?


@xxlejacsxx wrote:

1960 here as well !

 

 

.Ex Ipswich Suffolk England   April 1960..   by boat   "Fairsky "

 

No passports or papers for us kids ..

 

my sister and I had to pay for searches to get paper work to become citizens 10 years ago.

 

brother got his citizenship as soon as he left uni 1970 ..needed it to practise law ..

 

We know all have dual citizenship.

 

My grandies still tell friends that I came out on a convict ship . lol


 

We arrived here in February 1960 on the Fairsky.Yours would have been the next trip over.😊
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Re: How did you get here?


@the_great_she_elephant wrote:

I don't believe, at my time of life, that standing up in front of an official and reciting an oath of allegience would make me feel any more Australian than I do already.


I felt very much the same way.  I had been here, contributing to Australia, for a number of years.  I had an Australian husband and three Australian children.  I felt like I had already shown my commitment to the counrty.

The only reason I did the citizenship thing is because, living in Canberra at the time, I wanted to get work in the APS and those were the rules.

I actually felt that what I had already contributed was somehow devalued.

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Creator of the Most Awesome Thread Topic EVER
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Re: How did you get here?


@spotweldersfriend wrote:

@xxlejacsxx wrote:

1960 here as well !

 

 

.Ex Ipswich Suffolk England   April 1960..   by boat   "Fairsky "

 

No passports or papers for us kids ..

 

my sister and I had to pay for searches to get paper work to become citizens 10 years ago.

 

brother got his citizenship as soon as he left uni 1970 ..needed it to practise law ..

 

We know all have dual citizenship.

 

My grandies still tell friends that I came out on a convict ship . lol


 

We arrived here in February 1960 on the Fairsky.Yours would have been the next trip over.😊

Smiley Surprised Luxury!!

We came on her "sister" ship, the much older Castel Felice, in 67

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Yes, I have an opinion. No you don't have to agree with it. Yes I do have a right to it.
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Re: How did you get here?


@carls*world wrote:

@spotweldersfriend wrote:

@xxlejacsxx wrote:

1960 here as well !

 

 

.Ex Ipswich Suffolk England   April 1960..   by boat   "Fairsky "

 

No passports or papers for us kids ..

 

my sister and I had to pay for searches to get paper work to become citizens 10 years ago.

 

brother got his citizenship as soon as he left uni 1970 ..needed it to practise law ..

 

We know all have dual citizenship.

 

My grandies still tell friends that I came out on a convict ship . lol


 

We arrived here in February 1960 on the Fairsky.Yours would have been the next trip over.😊

Smiley Surprised Luxury!!

We came on her "sister" ship, the much older Castel Felice, in 67


 

There were 3 ships in that class,carl-The Fairsky,the Fairstar and the Fairdinkum😃
Message 48 of 59
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Re: How did you get here?

My parents both came over as refugees from Europe after WW 11 - seperately, and married here a few years later.

 

My mother worked as a translater for the Red Cross both in Germany (not her country of birth) and  then Sydney for some time - she spoke & wrote 5 languages fluently, and could understand 4 or 5 more...

 

Dad ended up at Bonegilla migrant camp  - as s skilled worker he had no problems getting employment, unlike others.

 

First generation Aussie!

Message 49 of 59
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Re: How did you get here?

My family migrated here in the early fities, I was a baby, they left Holland to look for a better life, it was hard going after the war, never looked back, paid their own way, no migrant camps, no assistance at all. Got citizenship asap. 

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