ABSTRACT

In the ten years immediately following the Second World War, some 170 000 immigrants from Europe and Britain arrived in Australia. First published in 1988, this unique book recreates the experiences of those who fled a ravaged Europe to seek a new life in far-distant Australia. Their stories are told in the words of the people themselves, supplemented with photographs, documents, press reports and memorabilia.

These stories of over 100 Australians, New and Old, stories sometimes humorous and often very moving, provide a fascinating insight into a significant moment in Australian history. As the first definitive examination of life in the migrant camps, it documents a part of Australian history in danger of vanishing without trace.

Never before has there been such a collection of intensely personal accounts of what it was like to pass through the immigration centres and workers’ hostels on the way to building new lives – and to shaping present-day Australia.

part |44 pages

In transit

chapter |9 pages

Displaced persons

chapter |10 pages

Australia?

chapter |11 pages

Southward bound

chapter |12 pages

First impressions

part |67 pages

Just an ordinary town

chapter |13 pages

A very basic army hut

chapter |10 pages

Community on the fringe

chapter |11 pages

Child's play

chapter |13 pages

Food and friction

chapter |9 pages

The status quo

chapter |9 pages

A unique experience

part |79 pages

New Australians

chapter |16 pages

A mobile workforce

chapter |13 pages

The last convicts?

chapter |14 pages

The language prison

chapter |13 pages

Australia is different

chapter |11 pages

The migrant experience

chapter |10 pages

Here to stay