This rocket was used to launch satellites into orbit |
A large police van rolls up
in front of your door. Several uniformed men jump out of the vehicle and hang
around the front yard. One of the men opens
the gate and knocks on your front door. Apprehensive
and a little nervy you open the door and stare at the man in your porch and say
“how can I help you, officer?”
“You have to come with me” the man said urgently in an imperial British
accent. “It will be no longer safe to live in this area” he continues. "Please,
gather your family and all your possessions and come with me now. Do not worry
sir! You will be allowed to return home after a period of 54 years”.
This scenario seems unlikely to have ever occurred anywhere in a civilized world, but it happened in South Australia. It took 54 years for the Indigenous Arangu people to be returned to their land after many of them were forcibly removed.
A rest spot up the Sturt highway |
Jules and I travelled up the Sturt highway to find out more about
Woomera. The town has that typical outback style with broad access roads and
red dust everywhere. In the centre we found a collection of rockets in front of a church. After entering the old church, now serving as a museum, it
felt like stepping back in to the 50's. We strolled through the exhibition
looking at all the old artifacts. There are dusty radios, school photos of proper
looking children, local cricket paraphernalia and many uniforms of a bygone
era.
A couple of questions were bugging me whilst meandering over those creaky floorboards. Wasn’t Woomera where the nuclear tests were held? Yes it was! Did I miss the info? Yes I did! Surely they would have that displayed here at the edge of ground zero? Around I went again, paying close attention to the items on show. Finally, I found 'one' manila folder, laying between a pile of other files, with articles about our sinister past and started taking photographs of each page.
One of the newspaper clippings of the manila folder |
Maralinga means ‘land of thunder’ in the local dialect and ‘boy’
did the Brits create some thunder. Between 1955 and 1963 the British, with
assistance of the Australian government, ran seven series of nuclear tests at Maralinga, just down the road
of Woomera - the village that housed all the living staff and families involved.Many soldiers and their families were exposed to radio active material |
An
effort was made to remove the Indigenous population from their 3000 square km homeland.
A total of 100kg of toxic and radioactive substances were exploded in this area. 1200 Indigenous people were exposed. It's only more recent decades that stories
have emerged about what happened to the people living near the site. One of
those stories is Yami Lester's, a Yankunytjatjara man, who was only
10 years old when the testing began.
"I was a kid.
"I
got up early in the morning, about 7 o'clock, playing with a homemade toy.
"We
heard the big bomb went off that morning, a loud noise and the ground shook.
"I
don't know how long after we seen this quiet black smoke - oily and shiny -
coming across from the south.
Cloud formations over the field of thunder |
"Next
time we had sore eyes, skin rash, diarrhea and vomiting everybody, old people
too.
"Some
of the old people, I don't know how many died."
Mr.
Lester was unable to open his eyes for several weeks, and when he did, he
couldn't see.
By
1957 he was completely blind.
"When
I was in Alice Springs in 1984 I heard Sir Ernest Titterton, who was saying blackfellas
were all looked after.
"That
it was all clear where [the] Maralinga testing occurred.
"I
thought to myself 'he talking the wrong way.'
"He
doesn't know what happened on our end.
"So
I picked up the telephone and that's where it all started."
Mr Lester began telling his story, and his actions eventually
led to the
McClelland Royal Commission in 1985.
Mr Yami Lester |
Alan Parkinson became the key person on the Maralinga clean-up
project, representing the then federal government. By 1997, however,
there was much cost-cutting involved in the project, and differences of opinion
about how the project should proceed, which led to the sacking of Parkinson by
the Government of that time. Parkinson states that:
"What was done at
Maralinga was a cheap and nasty solution that wouldn't be adopted on
white-fellas land”
Source: Wikipedia
The Totem 1 used at Maralinga to carry nuclear warheads |
Let’s make that leap to 2009 where the Australian government gives the land back to their rightful
owners..
Would ‘you’ go back there? To live?
The insides of a Rolls Roys engine used to launch rockets |
Grey Bits
September 27, 2016 marks the 60 year anniversary of the start of nuclear testing at Woomera. Information of an art exhibition to commemorate this occasion can be found on the following link
http://www.abc.net.au/news/2016-09-21/exhibition-to-mark-60th-anniversary-of-nuclear-testing/7865192
Photo courtesy of Google |
In this blog I have focussed on the Indigenous population of the Maralinga area. Many of the soldiers and their families suffered terrible consequences of their exposure to toxic material at Maralinga. Read more at
http://www.news.com.au/lifestyle/health/health-problems/new-generations-of-australian-families-suffering-deformities-and-early-deaths-because-of-genetic-transfer/news-story/5a74b7eab2f433402aa00bc2fcbcbea4
This is where I read Yami Lester's speech.
http://www.abc.net.au/site-archive/rural/content/2011/s3326601.htm
Looking across Lake Hart to the Land of Thunder |
Here is a link if you would like to read more about Maralinga and Woomera
https://www.creativespirits.info/aboriginalculture/history/maralinga-how-british-nuclear-tests-changed-history-forever#toc0
3 comments:
A shame on Australia's history, I do remember this even though I was a kid at the time, Mr Menzies PM at the time would never have said no to the British.
Very interesting Mars, great read, love to the lovely Jules.
Love to you as well Mars.
Thanks Sandra. Love your comments as always.
Love. Mars
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