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Little Exiles

von Robert Dinsdale

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403626,400 (4.06)16
A stunning novel set in the wake of the Second World War, Little Exiles tells the extraordinary story of the forced child migration between Britain and Australia that took place after World War II and how this flight from home shaped the identity of a generation of children. Jon Heather, proud to be nearly nine, knows that Christmas is a time for family. But one evening in December 1948, no longer able to cope, his mother leaves him by a door, above which the legend reads Chapeltown Boys' Home of the Children's Crusade. Several weeks later, still certain his mother will come back, Jon finds himself on a boat set for Australia. Promised paradise, Jon soon realizes the reality of the vast Australian outback is very different; its burnished desert becoming the backdrop for a strict regime of hard work and discipline. So begins an odyssey that will last a lifetime, as Jon Heather and his group of unlikely friends battle to make their way back home.… (mehr)
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I normally read writers in chronological order, but with Robert i started on his fifth book, 'The Toy Makers', then his fourth book, 'Gingerbread', and now i've just finished this, 'Little Exiles', his third book.

A chronologically back to front experience, but one that i'm very happy to have taken.

To say that Robert's writing is heavy going emotionally would be a little understated.   Each of the three books above deals with trauma and the after effects of it upon one of the main characters and how that also affects those close to them.   In 'The Toy Makers' the trauma is introduced half way through the book, in 'Gingerbread' it's slowly revealed incrementally as we go through the story, but in 'Little Exiles' it begins with the trauma.   And each traumatic experience is very different.

Now some might shy away from these kinds of tales, just wanting to spend their time on pleasant reading experiences.   Which is fine, if that's your thing.   But you would be missing out greatly in not only some incredibly well written and constructed story telling, but also missing out on understanding how trauma really affects people and brings chaos to their lives and those around them.   Is it not incumbent upon all of us to attempt to understand what people who are suffering from PTSD are going through and through that beginning of understanding gleaned from the pages of a fictional story begin to find some compassion towards people who may need a little extra from us?

Someone once said to me that they never read fiction because it's just make believe nonsense.   I disagree.   In good works of fiction, like Robert's books, we can see into lives that aren't constrained by shame, guilt and privacy, but are simply laid bare upon the pages for all to see.   And in fiction we are given a look inside places that non-fiction dares not tread.

And sadly, this is not all fiction.   The underlying story of this book is true.   Children were taken from the UK and shipped off around the Empire to populate those places we invaded to make them more English -- because if there's more of us there then we obviously have more claim upon it.   No thought as to the rights of those children were given and no one really cared what ultimately happened to them.   They were just shipped off to places like Australia as though they were convicts and used however the colonial authorities saw fit to use them.

And we harp on about having an inquiry into child sex abuse in the UK, but at no point is anyone talking of having an inquiry into the overall abuse of children that has occurred here historically.   Children who were physically and psychologically abused, or simply stolen from their families to populate the Empire, just don't seem to matter.   It's very clear that the government is sending out a message that as long as no one touched your genitals then the abuse doesn't count -- the government simply isn't interested in what a great many children suffered because the government is fully aware that it was complicit in it.

Luckily we've come a long way since the Victorian times and their attitudes to children that permeated our society well into the 1900's.   But i do feel we still have a long way to go.   No child should ever have to suffer abuse of any kind, and that needs to be fully recognised.

Anyway, if you still haven't got around to reading any of Robert's books, then do please give them a go.   I would definitely recommend starting with 'The Toy Makers' and working back from there. ( )
  5t4n5 | Aug 9, 2023 |
Although convict transportation to Australia had ceased by the 1860’s, Britain sanctioned the exportation of another kind of human cargo, that of unwanted or disadvantaged children. The reasoning behind this was ostensibly to give these children an opportunity to create a better life for themselves, but in reality, these children were little better than slave labour. In Little Exiles, author Robert Dinsdale tells the story of a few of these children.

Jon’s father didn’t return from World War II and his mother had three children and financial difficulties as well as health concerns, eventually she left her son in the care of the Children’s Crusade Society. Peter and George had similar stories and also ended up being taken into care. Within months they found themselves being shipped to Australia and while the older boys, Peter among them, were parcelled out to farms as labourers, Jon and George were sent to a remote desert mission in Western Australia. Here a life of hard labour and abuse of all kinds awaited them.

Little Exiles is a heartbreaking story, particularly as one knows that it is based on actual events. These children lost all control over their lives and many were told the lie that their parents had died so they also suffered loss of identity and sense of belonging as well. The story is harrowing but telling the story through Jon’s young eyes made the story lack clarity for me. He did not always have the words to describe what was happening and this in turn pulled me from the story as I puzzled out what Jon was trying to say but overall this fictionalized account of the forced migration of thousands of British children made for a very poignant read. ( )
  DeltaQueen50 | Nov 28, 2019 |
From the Afterword:
"It is proposed that the Commonwealth {of Australia} seek out in Britain by whatever means necessary, at least 17,000 children a year suitable and available for immediate migration to Australia." Arthur Calwell, Australia's Minister for Immigration 1944

This novel is a fictionalized account of the policy of "Child Migration". During the years following WW II the government looked the other way as charitable organizations schemed to send children abroad--"often by systematically telling them that their parents were dead and that better lives awaited." Instead, many of the children suffered criminal lack of care, hardship, psychological and physical abuse, as well as sexual.

I was previously aware of the "Lost Generation" of aboriginal children forcibly removed from their parents, but wasn't aware of this policy which resulted in children from the British Isles being "exiled" to Australia for a supposed better life. In this fictionalized account, Jon is 8 years old in 1948, and his father has not yet returned from the war. His mother, desperately impoverished, brings him to a Boy's Home. He thinks it is to be just a temporary stay, but in fact his mother has signed him over for transport to Australia. He, and other boys and girls in similar circumstances, are placed on private or "charitable" farms to learn how to be farmers. (In truth, they provide the slave labor that keeps the places running and profitable.)

This is a well-researched and eye-opening book. ( )
  arubabookwoman | Nov 19, 2015 |
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A stunning novel set in the wake of the Second World War, Little Exiles tells the extraordinary story of the forced child migration between Britain and Australia that took place after World War II and how this flight from home shaped the identity of a generation of children. Jon Heather, proud to be nearly nine, knows that Christmas is a time for family. But one evening in December 1948, no longer able to cope, his mother leaves him by a door, above which the legend reads Chapeltown Boys' Home of the Children's Crusade. Several weeks later, still certain his mother will come back, Jon finds himself on a boat set for Australia. Promised paradise, Jon soon realizes the reality of the vast Australian outback is very different; its burnished desert becoming the backdrop for a strict regime of hard work and discipline. So begins an odyssey that will last a lifetime, as Jon Heather and his group of unlikely friends battle to make their way back home.

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