Grannies, aunties, mothers and daughters, all the skeletons are out : a story of truth and healing

This thesis is a bridge to healing Between my grandmothers who have gone on before me And me and my daughter I've been told that I have a keen ability to expose and look at both sides of the story. No matter how ugly the truth may look I am likely to name it, voice it and admit it. This thesis...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Daniels, Leona J.
Other Authors: Brown, Leslie Allison
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2005
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1828/1855
Description
Summary:This thesis is a bridge to healing Between my grandmothers who have gone on before me And me and my daughter I've been told that I have a keen ability to expose and look at both sides of the story. No matter how ugly the truth may look I am likely to name it, voice it and admit it. This thesis looks at both sides of an Aboriginal adoption and reconnecting story. By both sides I do not mean the sides of the government and First Nations people. I will not give the government such pleasure to voice their opinion to my story. I will tell the sides of the stories of women who have been affected by the adoption scoops. The women, connected through genetics and sisterhood, all have similar roots but different stories. Different stories with different truths.