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HISTORY This Week

Freedom Rides Down Under

HISTORY This Week

The HISTORY® Channel | Back Pocket Studios

Society & Culture, History

4.54.2K Ratings

🗓️ 15 February 2021

⏱️ 27 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

February 15, 1965. Walgett, Australia. A group of about 30 Sydney students has traveled here on a fact-finding mission – a mission they’ll call a Freedom Ride, inspired by the efforts of Civil Rights activists in America. They’re here to document the unequal treatment of Aboriginal members in Walgett. But after being kicked out of town, their bus is run off the road, and the students brace themselves to face their attackers waiting in the night. How did the U.S. Civil Rights movement spark a wave of student activism on the other side of the world? And how did this dramatic confrontation help catapult this student protest to national importance, changing Australian society forever?


Thank you to our guests: Ann Curthoys, student Freedom Rider and Professor Emeritus at ANU; and ANU School of History Professor, Peter Read, author of “Charles Perkins: A Biography."


Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Transcript

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0:00.0

The History Channel, original podcast.

0:03.2

Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander listeners

0:05.4

are advised that the following program

0:07.2

may contain voices of people who have died.

0:11.8

History this week, February 15, 1965.

0:18.5

I'm Sally Helm.

0:23.5

The students decide to post centuries around the hall

0:27.1

to guard the entrances while they sleep.

0:30.1

They're staying tonight at a church

0:31.7

in the small town of Walgit, Australia.

0:35.2

Three days ago, they left the University of Sydney

0:38.2

to travel to more rural places,

0:40.2

trying to understand the state of Aboriginal rights

0:42.7

in their country and to stand up for equality.

0:45.9

They're calling it the Freedom Ride.

0:49.4

Today, they spent the day in Walgit protesting segregation.

0:53.2

Some important spaces in town are for whites only.

0:56.8

They don't allow indigenous Australians to enter.

0:59.6

The students pick it up, holding signs

1:01.6

that said things like,

1:02.8

Walgit, Australia's disgrace.

1:06.4

It didn't make them a lot of friends,

...

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