Achtung:

Dieses Wiki, das alte(!) Projektwiki (projektwiki.zum.de)
wird demnächst gelöscht.

Bitte sichere Deine Inhalte zeitnah,
wenn Du sie weiter verwenden möchtest.


Gerne kannst Du natürlich weiterarbeiten

im neuen Projektwiki (projekte.zum.de).

letters: Unterschied zwischen den Versionen

Aus Projektwiki - ein Wiki mit Schülern für Schüler.
Wechseln zu: Navigation, Suche
(Lina)
Zeile 63: Zeile 63:
  
 
Yours sincerely, Zita Wallace
 
Yours sincerely, Zita Wallace
 +
 +
 +
==Zoé==
 +
 +
Letter to Mr Kevin Rudd, prime minister
 +
 +
 +
Dear Mr Rudd,
 +
 +
 +
I sat in the room you have hold your apology and my heart was touched. I want to write you letter about my feelings.
 +
 +
 +
I had been stolen from the nuns as I was a child. They told me that we would going shopping, and then they took me into a home for orphans. I did not know why they had done this and I was shocked. It was awful, terrible and painful. I felt angry about the case and the thoughts that we were just slaves for the nuns. They destroyed my childhood. So your apology means a lot to me. I have to thank you that you have reconciled aboriginal and white people. I think you are an example for the humanity. Thank you a lot. It´s not too late to say sorry.
 +
 +
 +
Yours sincerely,
 +
 +
 +
Zita Wallace

Version vom 1. Oktober 2019, 16:44 Uhr

Inhaltsverzeichnis

Luca

Page 17 ex.3c)

Dear Mr Rudd,

I write this letter because I was one of the many children who were stolen many years ago. I was many years sad and angry about it, because of my terrible childhood. When I saw the speech I could not stop the tears from rolling down. It was so wonderful to get an apologize of the terrible things that happened to me and many children too. It’s a wonderful feeling to get an apologize and I want to thank you for the wonderful words you said in your speech. It was so heart-touching. I really wish I could forget this terrible time but now it’s a peace of my storry.

Yours sincerely,

Zita Wallace

Faye

Dear Mr. Rudd,

I write you this letter because I heard your speech of 12th February 2008 and it was very nice to hear. I was also a part of that stolen generation and I was very sad all my childhood. I miss mum, dad and my brothers and sisters so much. I am very glad to hear the word “sorry” about what happened. Very much girls are a part of the stolen generation and we are all very sad about our children story. We could not go to school like you. We have to clean rooms, cook dinner and wash clothes. We learned to read and to write but not more. If we spoke our old language, the nuns used to hit us, so we learn to live like white children. The government wanted us to forget our family traditions and it was very hard for me. I wish that the other generations are not a part of these awful stolen generation and I am very happy that there is somebody who apologizes about the happened things.


Yours sincerely,

Zita Wallace


Louisa

Dear Mr. Rudd,

I write this letter to you because I heard your speech from the 12th of February 2008 about the stolen children. I´m one of thousand children who were stolen. And I think it´s good to tell the people about that. It´s good for them to see how somebody feel who hurt and haven´t done anything. I´m very thankful that my wish of the apologize become true. I feel very scared, for my whole live because I was only 6 years old. But I think it´s very difficult to think about what happened to me and the other Kids because nobody wants to be in this situation and it´s very hard for me to understand. I hope after that the people know more about us and they respect us as we are. I think nobody can change this and this is right, but I think it´s good, that the Minister says something about what happened. I hope that the people who hurted us realized after we had gone, what they did and I will never wish somebody what we have to live. After the speech I cried and I had gooseflesh all over my skin I want to say thank you for that. I hope that the rules about that get stronger and that the people who would do this think about it, before they destroyed their and the victims life. In this case thank you.

Your sincerely,

Zita Wallace


Jenna

Dear Mister Rudd,

I write this letter because I heard your speech on 12th February 2008 and I am one of thousend stolen childrens. It was nice to hear your apology. But I miss my mum, dad and my siblings. I do not have a childhood because I grew up in a ophanage. Lots of children were with me in one big room and the most were crying. We all slept on hard mettresses and whenever we spoke our language they beat us. And we must cleaning and cooking the whole day. And the only thing we learned was to read and write. Now so long time after this happened you at least say sorry! I hope that more people now know our history and respect us as we are.


Yours sincerely,

Zita Wallace


Kai

Dear Mr Rudd,

I heard your speech and I was very emotional during it. I wanted to say thanks to all of you. It was a hard time to all of us but now you are saying the things what you did were wrong. You cannot remove the past but you can promise that you are not going to repeat your mistake. The Aborigines are going to be fine with it.

Greetings from Worita

Zita Wallace


Lina

Dear Mr. Rudd,

I write you this letter, because I was one of thousands of children who were stolen and I want to say thank you, for your speech! The apology let me show, that you´re a man with a very big heart. And that you think, that it don´t was okay, what he do with us, this time was the hardest time in my life. Now, no words can describe, what this “sorry” does to me. I think it is time to leave the hard and bad time in the past.

Yours sincerely, Zita Wallace


Zoé

Letter to Mr Kevin Rudd, prime minister


Dear Mr Rudd,


I sat in the room you have hold your apology and my heart was touched. I want to write you letter about my feelings.


I had been stolen from the nuns as I was a child. They told me that we would going shopping, and then they took me into a home for orphans. I did not know why they had done this and I was shocked. It was awful, terrible and painful. I felt angry about the case and the thoughts that we were just slaves for the nuns. They destroyed my childhood. So your apology means a lot to me. I have to thank you that you have reconciled aboriginal and white people. I think you are an example for the humanity. Thank you a lot. It´s not too late to say sorry.


Yours sincerely,


Zita Wallace