Part 1: When Aunty Dawn Daylight was a child she was kept as a slave at the All Hallows' convent in Brisbane - which was perfectly normal and legal treatment of an Aboriginal person under the 1939 Aboriginals Preservation and Protection Act.This is her story.
Part 2: When Aunty Dawn Daylight was a child she was kept as a slave at the All Hallows' convent in Brisbane - which was perfectly normal and legal treatment of an Aboriginal person under the 1939 Aboriginals Preservation and Protection Act. This section is about how the act worked and how it was impossible to fully escape.
Part 3: When Aunty Dawn Daylight was a child she was kept as a slave at the All Hallows' convent in Brisbane - which was perfectly normal and legal treatment of an Aboriginal person under the 1939 Aboriginals Preservation and Protection Act. This section looks at the idea that many still hold that members of the Stolen Generation were neglected, and so were better off taken away from their families.
Part 4: When Aunty Dawn Daylight was a child she was kept as a slave at the All Hallows' convent in Brisbane - which was perfectly normal and legal treatment of an Aboriginal person under the 1939 Aboriginals Preservation and Protection Act. These sections concern their physical imprisonment, the work they were forced to do, and the difference in education between Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal children who were wards of the state.
Part 5: When Aunty Dawn Daylight was a child she was kept as a slave at the All Hallows' convent in Brisbane - which was perfectly normal and legal treatment of an Aboriginal person under the 1939 Aboriginals Preservation and Protection Act. In this last section Aunty Dawn and Aunty Margaret reflect on the effects of their time spent at All Hallows' and ask that people acknowledge their experience.