这些家庭……穷得连包裹都送不了”:第二次世界大战中为AIF的土著士兵提供的舒适用品

IF 0.4 Q1 HISTORY
K. Harman
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引用次数: 2

摘要

1941年年中,新南威尔士州的列兵克拉利·康博从他驻扎的叙利亚给南澳大利亚州洛克斯顿的布朗夫人写了一封信。Combo是一名在海外服役的澳大利亚第二帝国部队(AIF)的土著士兵,他写道:“你给不认识的人写信真是太好了。谢谢你主动提出要给我织一双袜子。我穿7码的靴子在第二次世界大战期间,在一个专门为满足在国外服役的澳大利亚土著男子的需要而设计的计划的主持下,这些不太可能的通信形成了一种情感关系。战争爆发后,1940年8月,总部设在维多利亚州的土著振奋协会(aboriginal Uplift Society)成立了全国慰安协会。这是澳大利亚第一个明确意图为土著士兵提供舒适的基金,它的成立、运作方式和结果是本文的主题。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The families were ... too poor to send them parcels': The provision of comforts to Aboriginal soldiers in the AIF in the Second World War
In mid-1941, Private Clarrie Combo from New South Wales sent a letter from Syria, where he was stationed, to Mrs Brown of Loxton in South Australia. Combo, an Aboriginal soldier serving abroad with the Second Australian Imperial Force (AIF), wrote 'it is very nice of you to write to someone you do not know. Thank you for offering to knit a pair of socks for me. I wear size seven in boots'.1 These unlikely correspondents formed an affective relationship during the Second World War under the auspices of a scheme designed specifically to cater for the needs of Australian Aboriginal men serving abroad. Following the outbreak of the war, in August 1940 the Victorian-based Aborigines Uplift Society launched a national comfort auxiliary. This was Australia's first fund with the express intent of providing comforts for Aboriginal soldiers, and its founding, modus operandi and outcomes are the subject of this article.
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CiteScore
0.30
自引率
0.00%
发文量
8
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