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Greeks Filled Aussie Migrant Detention

Bonegila-200x200About 35,000 Greeks lived agonizing moments in the Bonegilla Migrant Reception and Training Centre, during the 50’s and the 60’s.

Bonegilla, about 300 kilometers from Melbourne in north-eastern Victoria, and other similar facilities were named by the federal government of Australia immigrant reception centers. Most of those who lived there, saw Bonegilla either as a detention center, or as a concentration camp.

The Bonegilla Migrant Reception and Training Centre was a camp set up for receiving and training migrants to Australia during the post World War II immigration boom. The camp was set on 130 hectares near the small town of Bonegilla between the Hume Dam and the city of Wodonga. The site was a former World War II Australian Army base, and is adjacent to the current Latchford Barracks. The camp opened in 1947 and operated until 1971, over which period it received more than 300,000 migrants. It is estimated that over 1.5 million Australians have descended from migrants who spent time at Bonegilla.

The camp was broken up into 24 blocks each with a kitchen, a mess hut and bath and toilet blocks. The accommodation itself was in ex-Army unlined timber-framed buildings with corrugated iron walls. The rooms were designed to accommodate 20 people and contained no internal partitions. From 1951 onwards the internal walls were slowly lined and painted and cubicles installed, allowing some privacy.

The center was remote from the larger cities and generally attracted little attention from the Australian press. An exception to this general rule was in 1949 when 13 newly arrived children died from malnutrition. An official inquiry was critical of the inadequately staffed and equipped hospital. There were protests about food and conditions in 1952 and Italian and German migrants staged a riot in 1961, smashing the employment office and clashing with police. The protesters posted signs reading “We want work or back to Europe” and “Bonegilla camp without hope”. These two events embarrassed Australian authorities and saw a review of settlement policies.

Former residents include Franca Arena and Sir Arvi Parbo. The only section of the camp remaining is Block 19 which is now a museum and interpretive center. In 2007, Block 19 was included on the Australian National Heritage List.

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