Just cut and paste the edited draft in your answer
Rabbit Proof Fence
1.The policy in Australia used government force to try and assimilate the indigenous people into white society. They considered the aboriginese inferior and must be brought into white society. While doing so, they believed they were doing the aboriginese people a favor. This is similar to the policies the whites had for the Native Americans. In the reservation policy, they believed they were doing the Native Americans a favor by trying to turn the Native Americans industrious and frugal through a couse of industrial instruction.
2.The Australian government assimilated the Aboriginese children in the government camps in numerous ways. One such way was eliminating their language. At the government camps, they were only allowed to speak English. Also they converted them into Christians. Another method of assimilation in the camps was to train the children as workers. The girls were to be trained as cooks and domestic servants. This was very similar to the way whites attempted to assimilate American Indians. They were trained to become industrial workers.
3. Moodoo is an aboriginese tracker and himself is an aboriginy. His job to capture the girls in the camps who try to escape. It is hard to tell from the movie "Rabbit Proof Fence" how Moodoo feels about the girls' escape. But I believe he might feel some sympathy for the girl since he is also an aboriginy and his daughter is in the circumstance . I don't think Moodoo cared whether or not the girl escaped. From the movie, it looked like he was really trying to catch the girls.
4.I don't think the camps were in the best interest of the aboriginy people. There were little to no freedom in the camps. Instead the camps were a deliberate systematic genocide. In the movie, a man stated that by successively breeding aboriginal people with whites, aboriginese characteristics will die out. He even presented a chart of this happening.
2006-12-07
14:19:56
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8 answers
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asked by
Peter Griffin
1
in
Society & Culture
➔ Cultures & Groups
➔ Other - Cultures & Groups
Rabbit Proof Fence
1.The policy in Australia used government force to try and assimilate the indigenous people into white society. They considered the aborigines inferior and must be brought into white society. While doing so, they believed they were doing the aborigines people a favor. This is similar to the policies the whites had for the Native Americans. In the reservation policy, they believed they were doing the Native Americans a favor by trying to turn the Native Americans industrious and frugal through a cause of industrial instruction.
2.The Australian government assimilated the Aborigines children in the government camps in numerous ways. One such way was eliminating their language. At the government camps, they were only allowed to speak English. Also they converted them into Christians. Another method of assimilation in the camps was to train the children as workers. The girls were to be trained as cooks and domestic servants. This was very similar to the way whites attempted to assimilate American Indians. They were trained to become industrial workers.
3. Moodoo is an aborigines tracker and himself is an aborigine. His job to capture the girls in the camps who try to escape. It is hard to tell from the movie "Rabbit Proof Fence" how Moodoo feels about the girls' escape. But I believe he might feel some sympathy for the girl since he is also an aborigine and his daughter is in the circumstance . I don't think Moodoo cared whether or not the girl escaped. From the movie, it looked like he was really trying to catch the girls.
4.I don't think the camps were in the best interest of the aborigine people. There were little to no freedom in the camps. Instead the camps were a deliberate systematic genocide. In the movie, a man stated that by successively breeding aboriginal people with whites, aborigines characteristics will die out. He even presented a chart of this happening.
2006-12-07 14:23:04
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answer #1
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answered by jane 3
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Rabbit Proof Fence
1.The policy in Australia used government force to try and assimilate the indigenous people into white society. They considered the aboriginese inferior and must be brought into white society. While doing so, they believed they were doing the aboriginese people a favor. This is similar to the policies the whites had for the Native Americans. In the reservation policy, they believed they were doing the Native Americans a favor by trying to turn the Native Americans industrious and frugal through a couse of industrial instruction.
2.The Australian government assimilated the Aboriginese children in the government camps in numerous ways. One such way was eliminating their language. At the government camps, they were only allowed to speak English. Also they converted them into Christians. Another method of assimilation in the camps was to train the children as workers. The girls were to be trained as cooks and domestic servants. This was very similar to the way whites attempted to assimilate American Indians. They were trained to become industrial workers.
3. Moodoo is an aboriginese tracker and himself is an aboriginy. His job to capture the girls in the camps who try to escape. It is hard to tell from the movie "Rabbit Proof Fence" how Moodoo feels about the girls' escape. But I believe he might feel some sympathy for the girl since he is also an aboriginy and his daughter is in the circumstance . I don't think Moodoo cared whether or not the girl escaped. From the movie, it looked like he was really trying to catch the girls.
4.I don't think the camps were in the best interest of the aboriginy people. There were little to no freedom in the camps. Instead the camps were a deliberate systematic genocide. In the movie, a man stated that by successively breeding aboriginal people with whites, aboriginese characteristics will die out. He even presented a chart of this happening.
2006-12-07 14:36:08
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answer #2
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answered by Janet Y 3
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Rabbit Proof Fence
1.The policy in Australia used government force to try and assimilate the indigenous people into white society. They considered the aborigines inferior and must be brought into white society. While doing so, they believed they were doing the aborigines people a favor. This is similar to the policies the whites had for the Native Americans. In the reservation policy, they believed they were doing the Native Americans a favor by trying to turn the Native Americans industrious and frugal through a course of industrial instruction.
2.The Australian government assimilated the Aborigines children in the government camps in numerous ways. One such way was eliminating their language. At the government camps, they were only allowed to speak English. Also they converted them into Christians. Another method of assimilation in the camps was to train the children as workers. The girls were to be trained as cooks and domestic servants. This was very similar to the way whites attempted to assimilate American Indians. They were trained to become industrial workers.
3. Moodoo is an aborigine tracker and himself is an aborigine. His job is to capture the girls in the camps who try to escape. It is hard to tell from the movie "Rabbit Proof Fence" how Moodoo feels about the girls' escape. But I believe he might feel some sympathy for the girl since he is also an aborigine and his daughter is in the circumstance. I don't think Moodoo cared whether or not the girl escaped. From the movie, it looked like he was really trying to catch the girls.
4.I don't think the camps were in the best interest of the aboriginy people. There were little to no freedom in the camps. Instead the camps were a deliberate systematic genocide. In the movie, a man stated that by successively breeding aboriginal people with whites, aborigine characteristics would die out. He even presented a chart of this happening.
2006-12-07 14:25:21
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answer #3
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answered by Anonymous
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"Daddy, hurry up! I'm really late!!!" Ok. Here comes another day... Hi, I'm Eric Lee. I live with my three children and my beautiful wife. I work as a car designer for the BMW corporation, and I love to play with my kids. I am 41 years old and yes, that makes me old.That's about it for myself. My oldest son, Matt, is a high school student and doing a fine job. He's a wrestler, and I think likes to show off a little too much front of his girlfriend. But out of everyone in my family, he's the one I trust the most. He also plays flyball. When I was his age, there wasn't a sport like flyball. Well, it's 2041, so everything is different. Flyball is very similar to football, but you wear a mini-jet on your back and you play in the sky. *Edited a bit for spelling and grammar--which wasn't terrible to begin with--but also for "flow." It's a very good start though--keep going! I definitely want to know more about flyball!* By the way, what grade are you in? Just curious.
2016-03-28 22:45:24
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answer #4
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answered by Anonymous
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Just copy/paste it into MS Word or some other similar program, then click on spelling/grammar check and the computer will do it for you.
2006-12-07 14:22:21
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answer #5
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answered by rivkadacat 3
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Peter Griffin It's your news?
http://www.osoq.com/funstuff/extra/extra04.asp?strName=Peter_Griffin
2006-12-07 14:34:46
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answer #6
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answered by emf g 1
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It needs WAY WAY more than grammar and spelling.
Were you supposed to read the book before writing?
2006-12-07 14:25:42
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answer #7
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answered by ? 6
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I will say to ask yahoo mail team sabot that
2006-12-07 14:28:18
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answer #8
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answered by Anonymous
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