A Boy's Short Life: The story of Warren Braedon/Louis Johnson
Anna Haebich and Steve Mickler
He never knew his name, he never knew his mother, he never knew his family, he never knew his people, he never knew his country. Born Alice Springs, 4th January, 1973, murdered Perth, 4th January, 1992 ... because he was black.
Louis St John Johnson, born Warren Braedon into a Luritja and Arrernte family, was taken from his mother in Alice Springs at just three months old.
Despite growing up with the love and care of his adoptive family, Louis was increasingly targeted by school bullies and police for his Aboriginality, and his attempts to find his natural family in Alice Springs were thwarted by bureaucracy. Walking home on his nineteenth birthday, Louis was brutally murdered by a group of white youths ‘because he was black’.
This story captures the dark heart of racism in modern Australia, and the history, government policies and community attitudes that marked this boy out for a short life.
Praise for A Boy's Short Life:
Devastating as it is, this book should be mandatory reading in schools. THE WEST AUSTRALIAN
Haebich and Mickler’s work is comprehensive, well researched and highly accessible. The decision of the authors to frame the text in their preface as one suitable to the ‘contemporary young reader’ should not limit its potential scope for readers of all ages. Louis Johnson was just nineteen when he died in tragic circumstances, his death the result of racially motivated violence and prejudicial medical treatment. It is thus, in this reviewer’s opinion, an incredibly valuable case study of the very real effects of institutionalised racial violence in this country, and an important story to be told.LIMINA: A Journal of Historical and Cultural Studies
Book details
PUBLICATION DATE: 2014
FORMAT: Paperback
EXTENT: 130 pages
SIZE: 203 x 133 mm
ISBN: 9781742585079
RIGHTS: World
CATEGORY: Aboriginal, Anna Haebich, Biography and Autobiography, General Non-fiction, Staples Fund, Steve Mickler,