The 1960 s meant change for a lot of oppressed people, including the Australian aboriginals. A strong influence for this change came from the USA, but the change was only seen on the surface, as the USA wanted the rest of the world to believe The Ku Klux Klan still continued to direct violence against black Americans, particularly in the southern states. But in 1954 the US Supreme court ruled public schools must be integrated, that is, all races attend the same school. But segregation of the whites and blacks remained in places such as cafes, public toilets and living areas Demonstrations began. Black students held ‘sit ins’ in restaurants and shops that refused to serve them. Freedom rides, where black people and their supporters made a trek through the south hoping to stop the segregation and racism.
The freedom rides reached Australia in the 1960’s and was used by aboriginal people to inform Australians how they were being treated. And in the 1960′ and 1970’s it seemed that the plight of the aboriginals was gaining more support. August 1966 saw a walkout at Wave Hill cattle station by aboriginals. The protest was about equality in wages and conditions.
The Essay on How Being In Love Can Change People
"How Being in Love can Change People" In the three marvelous works, Matchstick Men, Punch-Drunk Love, and "Mama Day", people are all changed greatly, and for the better by romantic or father / child love. How everyone knows that there is no one on Earth who is perfect, yet when there is love, we come so close to it. Within these three works of art, one can analyze how there is actual change ...
The demonstration became a starting point for the campaign for Aboriginal Land Rights. The Aboriginal land right commission came about in 1963. When a group of aboriginals sent a partition, written on bark, to protest about an aluminum site being opened on sacred land. Sacred land are places that bear the marks of the creative ancestral spirits which continue to have a presence in the landscape. The struggle for equality and land rights continued and a tent city sprung up outside parliament house in 1972 this became a symbol for the aboriginal people. They were now fighting back against all the wrong doings that they felt have been done to them, as a race..