Showing posts with label 2011 trip. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 2011 trip. Show all posts

Lowitja O'Donoghue

Lowitja O'Donoghue

I don't know who this person is, but her name makes me think she's part Irish and part indigenous Australian.

I just saw that she's on the overwhelming biography site. Yikes. I was lazy and hoping for a short research time today. Oh well. I hope she's interesting.

I'll start with Lord Wiki.

I'm right about her being Aboriginal and Irish. I guess I'm proud of myself there.

Baby Lowitja was born on 1 August 1932 in a large cattle station called Granite Downs. It's in northern South Australia. I'm looking at it on Google Maps now. I guess it's also the name of a town, or does Google Maps actually show cattle stations? I'm guessing it was a very big cattle station.

Anyway, Granite Downs is about four hours north of Coober Pedy.

Lowitja was the fifth of sixth children. She was baptized by the United Aborigines Mission. The UAM has a page where they compare Aboriginal social values with Non-Aboriginal social values. It's pretty interesting. I think our world would be a lot better off if we leaned a little more towards the Aboriginal way.

I'm not sure if O'Donoghue was a stolen child or not. I guess I'll find that out when I read her very long interview. Lord Wiki says her parents were concerned for her welfare because Granite Downs was very isolated, and there was no school. From this, it sounds like they were NOT stolen. It seems their parents chose to send them somewhere. O'Donoghue went to a United Aborigines Mission in Oodnadatta.

Google Maps shows Oodnadatta as being about seven hours south-east of Granite Downs. Lord Wiki says it has a desert climate. I guess it would classify as being part of the outback. I'm looking at the average temperatures to see when would be a good month to eventually go to the outback. September would probably be good. The average temperature is 26(80). April and August would work too. I don't think we're going to do this during the next visit, but maybe the visit AFTER that.

I'm not sure how long O'Donoghue stayed in Oodnadatta. Lord Wiki says she was eventually moved to the Colebrook Children's Home in Quorn, South Australia. That's very close to Port Augusta, and about four hours north of Adelaide.

Lord Wiki says O'Donoghue was in the Quorn home by the age of three. Wow. That's young. I pictured her going there when she was much older.

O'Donoghue says she was happy in the home. She liked living there. I'm sure we'll learn more about that in her interview.

The South Australia History website has an entry about Colebrook. I'll read that. It's not all happy. I'm sure some kids like O'Donoghue had a positive experience. But this website does talk about the loss of language and culture. It says, In an effort to isolate the children from their 'perceived harmful surroundings' the Sisters would like to move the home as far away from Oodnadatta as possible. That's just sad. These people wanted these children as far away from their culture and family. Judging from what I saw on the United Aboriginal Mission website, it seems they've made some positive changes. The way they described Aboriginal Culture was very positive.

Okay, but it's not a completely positive change. I was curious just now, and looked at the UAM's website to see what they said about their history. They speak of it in completely positive terms. They put Christians in a good light, and nonreligious folks in a bad one. They say, Many in the secular world at that time embraced a Darwinian world view which categorised the Australian aborigine as a sub human species destined to die out in the process of evolution. Many of the Government policies developed in subsequent years were based on these views. So are they saying Christians had nothing to do with any of the negative stuff?

The South Australia history site says there were stolen children at the school, as well as children who had been sent there by their parent's choice. However, for all children it was very difficult for their parents to take them out once they were sent there. That's very sad. A parent might have put their child in there because they were in a desperate situation. I wonder if they knew it would be hard to get them out again.

When O'Donoghue was about twelve, the Colebrooke home moved to Eden Hills in Adelaide. There, O'Donoghue attended Unley High School. Her first job after finishing school was, as a nanny of six kids, in a place south of Adelaide called Victor Harbor. While doing that work, she attended a Baptist church. There she met someone who worked at a hospital. This person convinced O'Donoghue to be a nurse.

From 1950 until 1953 O'Donoghue worked as a nursing aid in Victor Harbor. The small hospital didn't have a training course so she eventually applied to enter a program in Adelaide.

O'Donoghue had a small problem. She had the qualifications needed for finishing high school. However, she never took the required exam for certification. The hospital she wanted to apply to, The Royal Adelaide Hospital, required student nurses to have their certification.

Fortunately, it wasn't a problem for long though. The hospital soon decided to open their doors to students who weren't officially qualified. O'Donoghue became a nurse and worked there until 1961.

How old would she have been in 1961? Let me do the math.....

She'd be about twenty-nine.

After the hospital stuff, , O'Donoghue worked in India. She did work with a mission.

In 1962 she returned to Australia. She got a job with the South Australian Department of Education as an Aboriginal liaison Officer. I wonder why she took that career path? What happened to nursing? Did she get burned out?

In 1967, O'Donoghue went to work for the newly formed Department of Aboriginal Affairs. I'm guessing this was formed after the Referendum?

She worked there several years. Then if I'm understanding this right, she spent time after that working for private organizations.

In 1990, she became chairperson of the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Commission. She held that position for six years.

In 1992 she became the first Australian Aboriginal to address the United Nations General Assembly. What? Really?! It took that long! I'm surprised it didn't happen much sooner. Although maybe I'm misreading this.

In 1997, she publicly stated that she was part of the stolen generation, but later admitted she wasn't sure about the issues surrounding her separation. She was VERY young when it happened. We couldn't expect her to remember.

I'm done with Lord Wiki. Now I'll go to the overwhelming biography site. The interview was done in 1994. I need to remember that this was over fifteen years ago. Some stuff might be outdated.

I'll start with part 1.

She says O'Donoghue is her father's name. She never met him.

The missionaries called her Lois.

Daddy O'Donoghue was the station manager of Granite Downs. It that the big main boss? Did he have a love affair or relationship with O'Donoghue's mother? Did he rape her? What's the story?

According to O'Donoghue we may never know the story. She wasn't able to finally talk to her mother until she was much older. She says the cultural and language barriers made it too hard to talk about such a difficult subject.

O'Donoghue says she doesn't know the true date of her birth. It MIGHT be 1 August. It might not.

I feel weird referring to her by the last name of this white man who had nothing to do with her life. I think for now on, I'll use Lowitja. Plus, I think it's easier for me to spell.

In this interview, Lowitja says she was removed at the age of two....taken. I wonder who has the evidence that shows this is not the case. Was Lord Wiki lying to me...trying to cover up the crimes of white folks? Or did Lowitja's mom admit to giving up her daughter?

Lowitja says she had older sisters that were taken away as well. One was six. She doesn't remember what happened. Is she blocking painful memories of being stolen, or painful memories of being sent away?

Okay. Maybe there is some clues about the relationship between Lowitja's mother and Mr. O'Donoghue. She says her siblings have the Irish guy as their father too. She says this indicates they probably had some type of long-standing relationship. Yeah. Probably.

He had family in Adelaide. Wow. Did he go back and forth a lot? Did he just visit the station every so often? I had assumed a station manager would live on the station.

Lowitja says when she was a teen, there was a process called becoming exempt. With this, a part Aboriginal person would declare themselves as being white. Once they did this, they could do things like drink in pubs and get married. This was all for the purpose of assimilation...breeding the blackness out of Australia.

Lowitja resisted the whole exemption thing. Good. After reading some of this stuff, I sort of wish I could resist being white as well.

The interviewer brings up the idea of the Aborigines having their own prejudices against the half-caste children. Half-caste....Is that the politically correct term? Tim and I refer to Jack as a half-breed. I know that's not politically correct. We're vulgar people. Maybe we should start saying he's mudblood. That would be cute. Harry Potter references are almost always cute.

Seriously. I don't know what the politically correct term is. Maybe I'll just say not fully Aboriginal and/or not fully white. Lowitja says that although she was warmly welcomed back into the community as an adult, she believes when she was a young child, there might have indeed been prejudices against children who were not fully Aboriginal.

Lowitja says she was told she spoke the Aboriginal language when she arrived at the home. I think she's since forgotten all of it.

Tim was adopted from Korea when he was two or three. He was pretty fluent in Korean. He lost it all. He can do the accent well though. He can make himself SOUND Korean. I wonder if that means a part of him still has that language.

To his parents credit, I think they did try to provide him with Korean lessons. And I did too! Twice I've bought Tim language programs. He gets into them for a day or two, and then loses interest.

Oh, this makes me so mad. It doesn't surprise me though. The children in the home were discouraged from using their Aboriginal language. They were also discouraged from talking about their origins.

I really hate the whole idea of cultural superiority.

Lowitja says as an adult, she relearned the language. She said it came easier to her than it did other students. Ah. It might be like Tim. I bet if he'd put his mind to it, he'd learn it fairly fast. It's not like he doesn't want to learn. He's proud and interested of his Korean heritage. I think he just gets sidetracked.

Oh. Here. The interviewer uses the term half-caste. So, I guess it IS politically correct, or at least it was back in 1994.

No wait. I think the interviewer uses the term because it was the name of the home. Colebrook Home for Half-Caste Children. The interviewer and Lowitja talk about the word. Lowitja says it is NOT used anymore. She says that these days any such terms are offensive. If you're Aboriginal, you're Aboriginal. There doesn't need to be a divisions 0r fractions.

What can I say? I still see my child as a fraction. He's half Caucasian. He's half Korean. It's complicated though because Tim was adopted. The Korean half doesn't play much of a part in stuff. Culturally speaking, Jack is pretty much 100% Caucasian. All his known grandparents are white. It's really weird to know that somewhere out there in the world, my child has grandparents that we don't know. He might have aunts, uncles, and cousins too. They might be in Korea. They might be in America. Some might even be in Australia.

Lowitja is asked if she has much to do with her Irish relatives. She said she keeps very minimal contact with them. However, when asked if she feels any kinship with the Irish, she says she does feel something. She mentions how both cultures have had to fight for justice.

Lowitja says she doesn't remember any affection coming from the people who worked in the missions. Instead, they'd receive affection from the older children. She doesn't much remember the children who took care of her, but she does remember the baby she looked after when she was older. She even remembers the baby's name.

All right. I'm on part 2 now.

Lowitja talks about the women who ran the home. She says Sister Hyde was very strict. Sister Rutter was a little less strict. There didn't seem to be a lot of warmth there, although Lowitja says the sisters did have favorite children. Maybe those kids received warmth. Lowitja wasn't one of the favorites.

Lowitja believes she wasn't naughty. She thinks she was simply outspoken, and that behavior wasn't valued in a strict Christian school.

It's funny. Lowitja talks negatively about the school, yet she sees the discipline as a positive thing.

She remembers getting beaten. She remembers being beaten. And she was okay with that? I've heard pro-spanking parents say stuff like that. I was spanked when I was a child, and I'm thankful for it.
Well, I wasn't spanked as a child, and I'm thankful for THAT. Thank you very much. At least I don't think I was spanked. Maybe I was and I don't remember. I vaguely remember my mom slapping me once. I picture it happening on an escalator. It might have been a dream though. The memory is way too vague for me to verify it as reality or not.

I've heard pro-spanking parents declare that they never spank in anger. That's supposed to be better somehow. I'm much more okay with the idea of my parents getting REALLY pissed off at me, and (VERY occasionally) losing their temper and giving me a little slap. I know what it's like as a parent to be THAT angry. I almost slapped Jack once. He was walking over me and stepped on my stomach....something like that. I reached out to slap him. It was like an automatic response. Fortunately, I missed him.

But planned spanking when not angry is just too premeditated for me.


Lowitja talks about how the beatings would give the kids welts. There were actual physical marks from this punishment. Yet, she STILL sees it as a positive thing.

Yikes. It Jack going to grow up and tell his therapist I was a bad parent for not beating him?

Now that I think of it, I really haven't had much success in life. Perhaps if my dad realized belts weren't just for keeping your pants up, I'd have my novels published. Maybe I'd be rich and famous.

My parents have failed me!

Lowitja had a positive experience at school.

She's asked about her awareness of being Aboriginal. She said it was there because new children would come in, and they would know the language. They'd also know about Lowitja's mother.

In the interview, she disagrees with what I read on the South Australia History site. She says parents WERE encouraged to visit. Although actually, the South Australia site didn't say they were discouraged from visiting. They were just not allowed to take the children back home. Lowitja says however that the distance was far. It was difficult to visit.

Despite the fact that the Aboriginal children were educated at local schools, they were not given a wealth of career choices. For Aboriginal women it was domestic service, domestic service, or domestic service. I believe there's nothing wrong with domestic service. I think it's sad that this type of work has such little respect. But it IS awful that this was the only choice to Aboriginal women.

Lowitja went to be a nanny for the Swincer family in Victor Harbour. When she came, Mrs. Swincer was near giving birth to her sixth child. Lowitja had the job of taking care of the five others.

Lowitja was only sixteen when she went to work there.

She said she got a good report when she left. That's nice.

Lowitja was paid a wage for her nanny job. However, the money was put into a trust, and she couldn't have that until she was twenty-one. If I'm reading this right, she never got the money. She tried to get it earlier to pay for some of the nursing stuff. She couldn't get it. The interviewer asked if she returned when she was finally twenty-one. She said no. She was too angry.

See, this is what people mean when they say our anger hurts ourselves the most. I mean I think it's FINE that she was angry. I'd be angry too. And I'm angry for her. But not getting the money....why? How does that punish them? It only punished her.

Lowitja talks about how she was initially rejected from the Royal Adelaide Hospital. It wasn't just about not having the proper certification. A woman from the hospital told her she should go to Alice Springs and work with her own people.

Now I'm on part 3.

Around this time, Lowitja became involved with the Aboriginal Advancement League. I guess this was when she was still in Victor Harbor. She said she went to Adelaide every week to participate in the Aboriginal Advancement stuff. One of the things they fought for was to get Aboriginal women into the nursing profession.

Eventually, Lowitja left Victor Harbour and moved to Adelaide. There she worked as a private nurse for a family she met through the Aboriginal Advancement League.

The good news is the Aboriginal Advancement League wasn't just made up of Aboriginal Australians. Some white people were involved too. Hearing stuff like that makes me feel better about the world.

Although Lowitja had done her training at the Victor Harbour Hospital, when the Royal Adelaide Hospital FINALLY accepted her, they forced her to start from the beginning. Lowitja believes this was because she's Aboriginal.

The first Matron that Lowitja worked under was very difficult. She did not show Lowitja a lot of love. This made Lowitja more resolved to work harder and be as perfect as possible.

Lowitja feels she was a very good nurse. I bet she was. She says for the most part the patients liked her. She does say however that some patients weren't happy with having a black nurse.

Lowitja says for the most part, she did not experience a lot of racism in her life. To me, it sounds like she encountered a lot. BUT she also encountered a lot of people who did not act racist. So I think maybe that counteracted the bad.

Lowitja eventually became a charge nurse. The interviewer asks her if the nurses working under her were upset to have an Aboriginal person in charge. She says not at all. Her experiences with them were very positive.

She talks about going to India. She went there with a mission as a nurse. She had planned to stay three years, but had to leave because of a nearby war.

Lowitja says India was pretty awful. There were no doctors. The nurses had to take care of everything. She also says there were very few live births in India. On top of all that, she says there were tigers and cobras. Yikes.

Well, Australia has crocodiles. But not in South Australia.

All right. Now I'm on part four.

Lowitja says that going to India gave her a broader cultural perspective. She says, Well it gave me a different perspective that, in fact, the Australian aborigines weren't ... weren't the only people that had been colonised and that they weren't the only people who were dispossessed.

Yeah. Dispossession is quite common on our planet.

When Lowitja returned to Australia, she went back to work at the Royal Adelaide Hospital. But she didn't feel satisfaction there. She felt called to do some thing more. This was when she decided she wanted to work more with her own people.

Around this time, she went to find her mother, Lily. She went to a store in Coober Pedy. Some Aboriginal women were there. They saw Lowitja and knew right away that she was Lily's daughter. That's pretty amazing.

The reunion story is sad. Lowitja said her mother quickly became agitated and acted disinterested. Lowitja found out it was because her mother thought she was coming to live there. Her mother felt she wouldn't be able to provide the life that Lowitja was used to. Once Lowitja assured her mom that they were staying at a hotel, her mom acted happy. Her mom spent time with them, but not at the camp. It was like she was ashamed of it, maybe?

These reunions are really depressing. I guess it's good that they happen, but so sad that they have to happen. I think there's something poignant and highly emotional about children reuniting with their birth parents. But if the adoption was a choice, that's SO different. When a child is taken, and then there's a reunion....

Plus, Lowitja had to deal with seeing her mom living in such awful conditions. I can imagine there are so many mixed feelings there. Lowitja's life was actually GOOD, and that might have been from being raised in the home. I can imagine she had so many mixed feelings. What if she had not been taken away? Would her life had been horrible? Or what if it hadn't been. What if she managed to succeed as a child growing up in the Aboriginal World. What if she had been there to take care of her mother?

I imagine the mother had mixed feelings too. What if someone kidnapped Jack? What if we found him twenty years later, and he ended up having a better life than we ever could have given him? How the hell would we feel? I don't know. I think we'd end up having a nervous breakdown. There'd be too many conflicting feelings.

For the most part though, I'd be so incredibly hurt and angry. I'd be glad that Jack ended up having a good life without us. I'd be relieved. But I would forever resent the years with him that we lost.

Lowitja does talk about her own conflicting feelings. She says she is glad she didn't end up staying with her mother...mainly because she had a promised marriage. Lowitja actually later met the man. She liked him. He was nice, but just too old for her. They met in Adelaide. They'd joke around about the marriage. He'd say he was coming to the camp to get her, and she'd tell him that she was married to a white man. I guess they just played around. That's funny.

I'm on part 5 now. I'm going to read, but slow down on my reporting. I kind of feel what's the point. If anyone is that interested, they can read the interview for themselves. I think I'll only talk about stuff that really stands out to me.

She had a love thing going on with a married man. He loved her. She loved him. But she refused to let anything go on until he was a free man. I guess he wanted Lowitja enough. He made himself a free man. Lowitja married him in 1979.

Lowitja says that his family did not accept her much. It's talked about in terms of racial terms. I'm sure that played a big part. But I think her being the other woman could have been a factor as well. If his family had any love and/or loyalty towards the first wife, Lowitja could have been an unwelcome intrusion.

Lowitja's husband died in 1992. That was two years before the interview. She's asked if she misses him, and she says yes.

All right. I'm on part 6 now. I'm getting tired of reading period, so now I'll probably just read the questions and answers that appeal to me.

The interviewer talks about all the programs that have been developed to helped Indigenous Australians. She says despite this there are still so many problems. Why? Lowitja talks about how the Aborigines themselves haven't had enough part in determining the priorities.

I think it's all about self-determination. The communities need help, and yes sometimes it has to be outside help. But that help has to be directed by those in the community themselves. Otherwise, it's an invasion. At least I think so.

When the Minister of Aboriginal Affairs is a white woman, what does that say to Indigenous Australians? You guys aren't smart enough or capable enough to take care of yourselves.

I'm on part 7 now.

There's talk of welfare.

I know right-winged people are against that. I was looking at a Facebook poll message board the other day. There were the people who talked the usual talk. They said stuff like, Get your ass off the couch. Get a job. Work! Take care of yourself. The idea there is that we all have equal opportunity. All people are capable of working and taking care of themselves. The only reason not to get a job is you're lazy. Yeah. Never mind that unemployment is so high right now.

I do think we're all capable of taking care of ourselves. But sometimes we need HELP taking care of ourselves. I don't think struggling communities should have people come in and save them. They need to be given what they need to help themselves.

Lowitja says, I mean people need all the help that they can get to assist them to find their way in the community and, of course, one of the things that Aboriginal people are talking about, of course, at the moment is the need of course for economic enterprise, so there certainly is a ... a lot of thought being given to the purchasers of properties and also getting involved in ... in joint ventures, into tourism, and into a whole range of things.
Yeah. I think that's what's needed.

I'm on part 8 now.

She's asked about her vision for the future. Lowitja says, Well the vision, of course, that I would have for my people, of course, is that we would be able to get involved in economic development that would put us in a position of being able to manage our own enterprises, so that, in fact, we were not dependent upon government.

I like that vision. But I do think sometimes that independence grows out of dependence. There's two ways of helping people. You can take care of them in a way that creates more dependency. You teach them that they can only exist with your help. And then there's a way of taking care of someone that pushes them towards independence. You give them some of the resources they need, and then stand back and allow them to help themselves.

I'm on the last part now. Good! It's about religion and spirituality. It sounds like she emphasizes Aboriginal Spirituality more than Christian. I'm glad to hear that. I personally prefer the Aboriginal religion.

She doesn't believe in life after death. Why does this interview site always ask people about that?

She's for the Republic. I am too. I'm feeling stronger about that everyday. It's too bad my opinion doesn't matter much.

I'm going to quit soon, but first I want to look at Google news for any recent news.

This article says that in 2008, Lowitja reached out to the churches in Australia and reminded them of their part in the stolen generations. She talked about how hard her separation was on her. The article says, Ms O'Donoghue said she had sometimes been identified as one of the "success stories" of the Stolen Generations. But the reality was that her childhood had been deeply unhappy, depriving her of love and the ability to love in return.

Yeah. It doesn't always matter about success. I think there'd be so much pain--something that no one could fully overcome.

This ABC transcript is fascinating. It's about whether or not Lowitja was stolen or not. I thought it was a matter of her being stolen or given up by her mother to the missionaries. Instead it's the use of stolen vs. removal. What? How is being removed different from being stolen? If someone robs me tonight, would it make a difference if I say they removed our computer rather than they stole our computer?

Would it make white people feel more comfortable if we used the term the-removed-generation rather than the stolen-generation?

People are weird.

I'm going to quit now. I have to pee, and Jack wants to use my computer. He's writing a novel.

Colin Thiele

Colin Thiele wrote Storm Boy. That's about all I know.

Storm Boy was recommended to me by a few people...or maybe one person. I forget.

It didn't really look like my type of thing, but I decided to give it a go. I felt annoyingly obligated to like it.

Guess what.

I liked it.

It's a beautiful book.

It's sad though.

I read it at a time when I was losing a lot of faith in humanity. The book kind of confirmed the feelings I had were valid. But there are also very decent people in the book, so it's hopeful rather than depressing.

I don't remember the exact details, but for at least part of the book, Storm Boy is homeschooled. I think he's pretty much unschooled, actually. Instead of sitting in a classroom and learning that way, he learns by immersing himself in nature and talking to adults.

Anyway, I guess I shall start my research.

Lord Wiki says baby Colin was born on 16 November 1920. He'd be a Scorpio.

The birthday website says he's a 3 in numerology.

3 Scorpio....that's quite a combination. The 3 is social. The Scorpio stings. They're all dark and mysterious.

Baby Colin was born in Eudunda South Australia. The town is about an hour north-east of Adelaide. It seems its claim to fame is Colin Thiele himself. There's a statue of him in some garden place.

Lord Wiki says that the Thiele family was Barossa German. Barossa....isn't that Geoffrey Rush's pirate name?

Nope. But close! The pirate name is Barbossa. You just have to add a B in there.

I need to read about this Barossa thing.

Lord Wiki says it's a dialect of German that's common in South Australia. That's pretty cool. Maybe it's kind of like Yiddish. Yiddish is a Jewish dialect of German.

There were a lot of Germans in South Australia...specifically in the Barossa Valley area. Barossa Valley is known for their wine. It's also a good place to get German food.  Well, obviously.

When Thiele was a child he spoke only German. He didn't learn English until he went to school. Lord Wiki says Thiele went to several schools. One of them was Kapunda High School. It looks like the school was once owned by Sidney Kidman....or at least the building was.

Thiele attended the University of Adelaide.

He fought in World War II.

After all that, he did some teaching.

He has written over a hundred books. Wow.

I'll look at his books in a minute. It seems Lord Wiki has a whole separate entry on them.

Starting from 1955, Thiele had very bad arthritis. He would have been only about thirty-five then. But yeah...I know some people get it when they're young.

In his later years, Thiele moved to Queensland. He lived in Dayboro. I'm going to find it on Google Maps....

It's about an hour north-west of Brisbane.

Thiele died on 4 September 2006. That's a day after my mom's birthday. He had a wife, two children, seven grandchildren, and one great-grandchild. It sounds like he was very blessed--successful career and he lived long enough to see his great-grandchild.

Okay. Now I'm going to look at his books.

Lord Wiki has a huge list. I'm going to look at only a few.

His first children's book was published in 1969. That was called Yellow Jacket Jock. I guess then most of his writing fame occurred in his later years. Yellow Jacket Jock is about a child who lives near a dangerous river. Because of this, he has to wear a life jacket.

Crap. I got it wrong. I thought the books were listed by the year they were published. They're not. It's alphabetical. I have to look closer to see which was published first.

The first book was actually Sun on the Stubble. This was published in 1961. In 1996, it was turned into a miniseries. The plot sounds autobiographical. It's about a German child living in South Australia.

I'm going to see if I can find another website; one that will list the books in chronological order. I prefer that.

Oh, forget it. I can't find any list I like.

I'll go back to Lord Wiki.

It looks like Storm Boy was the next book. It came out in 1963. A movie adaptation came out in 1976.

An actor named Greg Rowe played Storm Boy. From his filmography, it looks like he later starred in other adaptations of Thiele's work.

The movie won the AFI award for best film. That's pretty impressive.

Here's a scene from the movie. I would love that life. I'd love to take our homeschooling lifestyle to the beach. I mean homeschooling in the suburbs is great, but a beach setting would be so much better.

Here's a where are they now video thing about the kid in Storm Boy. Rowe has children of his own now. He lives in Canada. When he went to Australia, he brought DVD's home of his movies. He showed them to his kids. That's cute.

I think I'll ignore the publishing dates now, and instead just look at the titles that spark my interest.

He did an Australian Mother Goose book. It looks beautiful.

There's Blue Fin. That was the other Thiele movie that Greg Rowe starred in. The movie came out two years after Storm Boy. It's about a boy who is not good at sport. It seems his father doesn't much approve of him. Then they all go on a boat together. Disaster strikes!

I've decided to do something else. I'm very unsettled here. Can you tell? It's a pain looking through Lord Wiki because some of the books have become so rare. It's hard to find any information about them.

SO...instead I'm going to look at Gleebooks website. They have a list of his books; ones they have available. I prefer to know more about the books he wrote that are more popular, not-out-of -print, available, etc.

I also want to look at Amazon.com as well...see which of his books are available in America.

Crap again. Gleebooks doesn't really provide much information about the books either.

Why am I having so much trouble?

Forgot looking at a list of books. I give up.

I'm going to look at this Colin Thiele website instead. They're selling Thiele's final picture books on the site. They're about bilbies. Cool. I like bilbies.

This page of the site has photos and information about the garden statue of Thiele. It's really lovely. I'd probably cry if I saw it in person. It would get me all emotional. It has a pelican in it. For those who are Storm Boy virgins, pelicans play a big part in the story.

The University of South Australia has some stuff I can look at.

They provide a biography.

Thiele's paternal grandfather migrated from Germany. I wonder if his maternal grandparents were German as well. I wonder how integrated the family was. Did the grandparents and parents never learn English, or did they just choose to speak German at home with their child?

After he finished with the University of Adelaide, he also did some learning at the Adelaide Teacher's College. Then when he returned from the war, he did some more teacher preparation.

From 1946 until 1955, he taught English at Port Lincoln on the Erye Peninsula.

I'm going to look at Google Maps. Well, I see it, but it's hard to explain. I think South Australia has three peninsula's. Adelaide is on the right one. Port Lincoln is on the left one. Then there's another one in the middle.

Fish is a big industry in Port Lincoln.

The season of Survivor set in Australia were filmed near Port Lincoln. I think I actually watched that season...or some of it. I got really into it, and had a hard time deciding whether to watch that or Charmed. We didn't have a DVR at the time, so I had to make very difficult choices.

Oh, never mind. This Port Lincoln Survivor is way different from the one I saw. I saw the American show filmed in Australia. The Port Lincoln show was an Australian version of the show. The one I watched was in Northern Queensland.

See though...there was a time I liked reality TV.  I also watched some of the Real World. Then I lost my love for all that stuff.

Oh yeah. Back to Thiele....

From 1957 until 1963, he taught English at Wattle Park Teacher's College. Lord Wiki says Wattle Park is a suburb in Adelaide.

In 1964, he became vice-principal. A year later he became principal.

We probably don't need to know the exact details of his whole education career. I'll just say he did teaching until 1980. Then he retired. He would have been about sixty then. I wonder if he stayed that long in the job because he loved it, or was he not making enough from his books? I would imagine he'd make enough money writing. I could be wrong though.

It was in 2000 that he moved to Queensland. He was there for the last six years of his life. I wonder if he liked it. Did he adjust to it well, or did he miss South Australia?

IMDb says there were two other movies made from Thiele's books. The Fire in the Stone is about a boy searching for an opal thief. The movie was directed by Gary Conway who has directed episodes of various popular Australian TV shows...Neighbours, Prisoner, Flying Doctors, Country Practice, etc.

I'm not sure if the other movie (Gotcha) was based on a book, or if Thiele wrote the story for the film. It's a short film; only twenty-four minutes.

This site describes the plot of some of Thiele's books.

February Dragon is about a bushfire in New South Wales. Well, no. This other site says it takes place between Melbourne and Adelaide. I believe that more since Thiele is from South Australia.

February. Do most bushfires happen in February? Tim and I have been talking about NOT going back to Australia during a February. I'm a little nervous about going during a bushfire again...especially if we plan to be in Victoria. I know you can't predict these things, but if it's more common in certain areas at certain times.....I'd rather plan accordingly.

The Hammerhead Light is about a young girl who is friends with a lighthouse keeper. That sounds good. I bet I'd like it.

Seashores and Shadows is about the hunt for a shark. I'm sure I'd love that. I like shark stuff.

This South Australia website has some information on Thiele.

Thiele was the fourth of five children.

Thiele's ancestors were some of the first German migrants to South Australia. It sounds like there might have been three brothers....Samuel, William, and Johann Christian Thiele. I'm guessing they would have come in the mid 1800's. For the goldrush maybe? Was there gold in South Australia?

Here. This website has information about gold in South Australia. Actually, it happens to be the same South Australia site....just a different page. I googled and ended up at the same site.

The site says that gold wasn't as big in South Australia as it was in Victoria. But there WAS some gold there. The main gold years were in the 1890's. This was decades after the goldrush in Victoria. I'm not going to read the whole article. I'm lazy. But from what I see, people did LOOK for gold in earlier decades. I guess they didn't have much luck though. But the Thiele ancestors could have come looking for gold. Maybe? I do wonder why they left Germany. Was something bad going on around then?

The grandfather came in 1855. What was happening in Germany then?

Well, there was a war from 1848 until 1852. I'm not sure if that would have created a wave of German immigrants.

Okay. Cool. This website here has a whole history of Germans in Australia.

Most German emigrants came to America, but some others went to Australia.

In the 183o's and 1840's many Germans left the homeland because of religious persecution. But the site says this didn't happen much after that. It probably didn't apply to Grandpa Thiele then.

Some migrated because of economic situations.

In 1848, there was some kind of revolution. Many Germans left then.

Well, I guess I'll just have to keep guessing.

Wait no. I think I got the answer. The German Australia site says that it was Lutherans who came in droves to South Australia. Thiele was Lutheran and from South Australia. I'm guessing his family was in that group. Plus, I misread the German website. I thought they said religious-type fleeing ended in the 1840's. What they really said is that it stopped being the LEADING cause.

I was just googling some more, and learned Thiele died on the exact same day as Steve Irwin. I'm guessing Irwin's death overshadowed Thiele's death.

Anyway, I think I'm going to end this here.....

Amanda Harrison

I have no idea who Amanda Harrison is.

I'm hoping she's not involved with the whole Federation thing. I'm a bit tired of all that.

You know what's the worst thing about Federation? I don't know if I should capitalize the word or not! I have really been struggling with that the past few days.

I'm wondering if any of you noticed. Maybe you guys are just as confused as I am. Maybe you noticed and were just trying to be polite.

I don't know. Although I'm always okay with people correcting me, so if you see a mistake....tell me.

Amanda Harrison might be an actress. I say that because the upcoming names on the list are actors and actresses. I sometimes add names in spurts. One day I added a bunch of acting people. Another day I added a handful of spiritual-type people. And then there was the day I added corporation folks.

Harrison might have been a lone add-on though.

Well, I should shut up and go see already.

Awesome!

She IS an actress. But she's not a film actress. She's a theater actress.

She plays Elphaba in Wicked.

I'm very excited about this post now.

I LOVE Elphaba.

It's funny because I just wrote about her on Facebook. Someone asked me which fictional character I would be. I wasn't quite sure if she meant which character reminds me most of myself, or which character I'd most WANT to be.

Elphaba is definitely the one that reminds me of me. She's unpopular. That's me. She's idealistic. That's me. She gets herself in trouble by having strong viewpoints. That's me.

Sadly though, I don't have green skin. I don't have magical powers. I can't fly. Actually I can...but only in my dreams. Does that count?

It might be hard for me to love Harrison, just because I'm so attached to Indina Menzel as Elphaba. I get attached to having certain people play certain parts.

But MAYBE my heart will open up to Harrison. You never know......

Let me stop rambling and start reading.

Lord Wiki doesn't give any of her birth information. He says she grew up in Bangor, but there's a Bangor in New South Wales, South Australia, and Tasmania. Isn't there a Bangor in Maine too? Maybe it's Stephen King related?

Yeah. I just googled. That's where he lives.

Lord Wiki says young Amanda went to school in southern Sydney.  Sutherland Shire. So that may be a clue. Is Bangor near there?

I'm looking at Google Maps now.

Yep. Bingo. Sutherland Shire is near Bangor.

The school she went to was called Menai High School.

In the late 1990's, Harrison took some acting classes. Then she was cast in Sunset Boulevard.

I used to have that soundtrack, the one with Glenn Close singing. At least I think Glenn Close was in it.

Lord Wiki says I'm right. Here's a video of her singing.

I guess Harrison took the acting classes after she was already performing. The classes happened in 1997 and her first professional play was Aspects of Love. That was in 1993.

I used to have the Aspects of Love soundtrack too. I love the song Love Changes Everything. I think it's one of the best love songs ever.

Harrison was in Les Miserables. Yeah. I had that soundtrack too. I think I actually had multiple versions of the soundtrack...even the French one. I love a lot of songs from that, but this one is probably my favorite.

Here's a piece of trivia. The woman who does Cosette on the Broadway soundtrack is the one who plays Pocahontas in the Disney film. What's her name again, Lord Wiki?

Judy Kuhn...and it turns out she just did the singing. Someone else did the talking part.

I just realized the Les Miserables clip I linked to features Lea Salonga. She's awesome....one of my favorites. She another who does both Broadway and Disney. She sings for Mulan and Aladdin's Jasmine.

I feel I'm ignoring Harrison a bit. Sorry. I'm just so excited about all this musical stuff!

I'll get back to her though. She was in other plays as well. I won't go off on tangents with all of them.

She did get some awards. Maybe I should mention those. Well, one was a nomination, but she didn't win. That was for Oklahoma. Then she won a Robert Helpmann award for Leader of the Pack. I've never heard of that play. I wonder if it's good.

In 2000, she made her West End debute. She was in Mamma Mia! She played Ali. I'm not even sure who that is. Is it one of Sophie's friends? Yeah, Lord Wiki says it is. I don't think it's that big of a part...at least not in the movie. Maybe in the play it's more substantial.

Harrison was later in another West End musical called We Will Rock You. I've never heard of that one either. I'm feeling out of touch here.

Lord Wiki says it's a musical featuring music from Queen. Well, I guess I should have assumed that from the title.

Harrison did the show in London, and then she came back and did it in Australia. For her performance, she received a Helpmann nomination.

Here's a clip of the Australian version of the musical. I don't think that's a Queen song though. I'm confused.

In 2007 and 2008, Harrison was in Miss Saigon. I love songs from that too. Harrison played Ellen. I'm not sure who that is.

Lord Wiki says she's the American wife. Does she sing at all? Okay. Yeah. Lord Wiki says she does have some songs.

Harrison's role in Melbourne's production of Wicked began in 2008. This is the one that also stars Anthony Callea and the late Rob Guest. Well, of course it no longer stars the late Rob Guest. He's been replaced.

The show is soon going to move from Melbourne to Sydney. Yikes. I was planning to see it when we went to Melbourne. I guess we'll have to change those plans.

For her portrayal of Elphaba, Harrison was nominated for both the Green Room Award and Helpmann award.

Well, I'm done with Lord Wiki.

I shall look elsewhere now. I'm not sure how much will be out there. I might have to spend most of my time playing on Youtube.

Here's an article about Harrison on a We Will Rock You website.

She was born in Sydney.

She had very little formal training. She spent six weeks at the West Australian Academy of Performing Arts, but quit after six weeks.

I personally think formal training is often overrated.

It seems Harrison agrees with me. She left school because she was offered a role in Sunset Boulevard. She says, I figured, why spend three years learning something I had already been offered to do. Nothing is better than on the job training as far as I’m concerned.

Amen to that.

When she auditioned for Mamma Mia, the final auditions had to be done in front of the real ABBA people. Wow. That would make me nervous. No actually...auditioning in front of ANYONE would make me horribly nervous.

Here's a Sydney Morning Herald article about Harrison.

They give me an age. She was 31 in 2006. So now she's about 34.

Harrison is a self-confessed dag. What's a dag? I have to go look that up.

This dictionary says it refers to someone who isn't neat and stylish. Well, that's me most of the time.

She has worked with Hugh Jackman before.

That's about all I'm getting from this article.

Well, I think I'm going to just go and play on YouTube.

Here's Harrison singing "The Wizard and I". I love this song.  And I actually like it with her singing! I'm not sitting here wishing she was Indina Menzel instead. They sound very much alike though.

The lyrics of the song are absolutely brilliant. I especially like the last minute or so...great irony.

Okay. Amanda Harrison is AMAZING....at least with that song.

Beautiful.

Here she sings with Lucy Durack....one of the best songs ever. "For Good".

I am SO impressed.

I never thought I could love anyone in these roles besides Menzel and Chenoweth.

Lucy Durack sounds like she was about to cry at 1.45. I can't tell if she was really crying or faking it. This is the same part in which Chenoweth's started crying at Menzel's last performance. What is it about that line?

Actually, I just watched it again. I kind of think Durack is faking it....well, acting, I should say.

Here's As Long As Your Mine--Another Wicked song. It's the romantic one.

Here's a behind the scenes of Wicked video.

Here's an interview with Harrison and Durack.

They say the rehearsals for Wicked were done in three weeks. Wow. That doesn't seem long at all. I wonder how long most rehearsals last.

Wait. They had two weeks of tech (not sure what that means) so there were five weeks in total.

People from the American production came to Australia to help them.

The interviewer asks if anything has ever gone wrong...set problems or messed up lines. I think that's a great question. I love stories about that. Helen Reddy had a great one in her book. She broke a glass on the set. She had to work it into the scene. She ended up sweeping up the glass, but it messed up with timing and everything. Still....she managed to do okay with it.

Anyway, what does Harrison and Durack say about that?

Well, they have a good one. There's a scene in Wicked where Elphaba and Glinda have a fight. They slap each other. There are sound effects to go with the slaps. Durack messed up the timing. The slap sound came at the wrong time. Then she and Harrison started giggling.

I'm liking Harrison. I like her sense of humor.

Here's Harrison's part in the Rob Guest Memorial. This is a Jewelchic video. Jewelchic reminds me a lot of one of our family friends.

Here's an interview on David and Kim.

They say they perform the play eight times a week. Five nights and three matinées. Wow.

They get Monday and Tuesday off.

Still. It sounds exhausting.

Harrison says she has a toddler. I can't imagine having to balance theater and motherhood.

She talks about how she tries to save her voice and has a no-talking day. The husband takes care of the baby. He's a stay-at-home dad.

Harrison said the green make-up went into her ear. The doctor saw it when she went for an exam.

Here's the cast of Wicked singing a Christmas song.

All right. I think I'm actually tired of watching videos.

So I'm going to say good-bye now.
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