Palm Island Community Company

Theme

Healing And Trauma

How Palm Island Community Company storytellers name healing and trauma in their own words. Every storyteller below carries the theme; every quote is verbatim and only surfaces from analyses that passed an anti-fabrication grader.

7 storytellers carrying87 mentions across the corpus

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Voices carrying this theme

In their own words

  • We help First Nations women involved, no, at risk or involved in the criminal justice system

    Describing the primary target population for the Women's Healing Service

    PICC Women's Healing Service Team

  • We basically tailor, we sit with the woman, we find out about their journey and we tailor our delivery of service to whatever that is and wherever they are on their journey. So every individual one is different.

    Explaining the personalized methodology of service delivery

    PICC Women's Healing Service Team

  • What we really need now is to know what the other PICC services provide so that when she knows the other families and young ones she knows where to refer what services to refer.

    Emphasizing the need for a service directory and referral process within PICC services

    Tammy

  • Mum's never known her history

    Describing how her mother, a member of the Stolen Generation, never knew her roots and passed away at 52

    Cyndel Louise Pryor

  • She didn't want us to be lonely like she did

    Explaining her mother's motivation for having ten children

    Cyndel Louise Pryor

  • That's the resilience and the strength and the importance of what we are doing today

    Acknowledging families who traveled from Townsville and distant places to attend the Early Childhood Center opening

    Rachel Atkinson

  • Our children are our future. They are our ancestors of tomorrow

    Central statement at the opening celebration expressing core cultural belief

    Rachel Atkinson

  • They didn't ask for that. You know, the white man took advantage of our, our parents, you know, like use them. Then they don't claim the child, and I still feel that pain that I have. It'll never go away till the day I die.

    Speaking about her mother's experience with a man who fathered children but didn't claim them

    Aunty Ethel Taylor Robertson

  • We born and bred and we stay and we could die. We die here. You know what I mean?

    Explaining why elders must be consulted over outside workers

    Aunty Ethel Taylor Robertson

  • They fell in that trap.

    Referring to the opening of the canteen and how it negatively changed their lifestyle

    Iris

  • There's no place like home.

    Expressing her deep connection to Palm Island despite everything

    Iris

  • Our mother was one of the stolen generation

    Ethel introduces her family history and her mother's experience of forced removal

    Aunty Iris May Whitey

  • You can just imagine the hardship that we had to go through

    Ethel reflects on their upbringing as one of 17 siblings with significant household responsibilities

    Aunty Iris May Whitey

Quote selection: every quote shown above is from an analysis that passed an anti-fabrication grader. Analyses with critical issues are not surfaced here.