The West Australian
Jan 26, 2002

Proud look back at long walk
  to freedom

  By Yonnene Pearce


  MOLLY KELLY describes
  her remarkable survival in
  simple terms.

  "Oh my," says the
  84-year-old, when asked
  about the 2000km trek she
  took seven decades ago - from the Moore River native
  settlement back to her family in the Pilbara. "Gee, it
  was a long way."

  The journey, chronicled by her daughter, Doris
  Pilkington, in her book Follow the Rabbit Proof
  Fence, is about to hit the big screen.

  A film to be released nationally next month tells the
  true story of how three young Aboriginal girls made
  their way back to the Pilbara.

  They had been taken in the 1930s from the Jigalong
  community, east of Newman, to the Moore River
  settlement under the government policy of the day.

  Mrs Kelly, then 14, escaped with her sister, Daisy
  Craig, 8, and her cousin, Gracie Fields, 10, after just
  one night at the settlement.

  The other girls followed Molly's lead. 

  "When they asked how they were going to get home,
  she said, "We are going to have to find the
  rabbit-proof fence'," Mrs Pilkington said. "To me that
  was a very powerful statement because it showed
  strength and certainty."

  The No. 1 rabbit-proof fence ran 1833km from west
  of Esperance to north of Port Hedland. It was
  believed to be the longest fence in the world when
  completed in 1907. 

  Molly knew of the landmark because her grandfather
  was a fence inspector.

  "At night, they slept in bushes and made camp fires
  because it was freezing cold," Mrs Pilkington said.
  "They would bury the ashes in the morning and
  because it was raining the tracker couldn't pick their
  tracks, which gave them a jump start.

  "In front, they had the love of a mother and behind
  them was the fear of being caught by a tracker on
  horseback who would whip them and take them back
  to the settlement to be punished and locked up in a
  boob (a solitary cell)."

  The author and her family will leave Perth today to
  travel to Jigalong for the Australian premiere of the
  film on Monday. Her granddaughter and
  great-grandson have travelled from Alaska for the
  event.

  Molly Kelly, 84, and Daisy Kadibil, 78, still live at
  Jigalong.

  While Karratha station appears in the film, most of
  the Phillip Noyce-directed movie was shot in South
  Australia's Flinders Ranges. Laura Monaghan, 10, of
  South Hedland, and Everlyn Sampi, 13, of Broome,
  star with Kenneth Branagh.

© 2001 West Australian Newspapers Limited

http://www.thewest.com.au/20020126/news/state/tw-news-state-home-sto41830.html
-- 
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"A terrorist is somebody who is prepared to kill innocent 
people to further a particular political objective." 
-Senator Robert Hill
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