21 June 2025

Nearly 1,000,000 humanitarian settlers in Australia, by ChatGPT with Ann Tündern-Smith

An email message from the Refugee Council of Australia brought Ann's attention to the impending arrival of the 1,000,000th humanitarian entrant to Australia.  Ann did some of her own research on the Web, noting that the arrivals so far numbered only 950,000 and that the current intake is capped at 20,000 each year.  Still, several Websites were getting excited about the one million figure, so Ann thought that summarising them would be a good project to set for an Artificial Intelligence or AI program.  Minor errors in ChatGPT's answer have been corrected by Ann.  What do you think of the result below?

Since 1947, Australia has resettled 950,000 refugees and others in humanitarian need through a evolving migration program that reflects both its international obligations and domestic priorities. This achievement is one of the most significant in the history of global refugee resettlement, placing Australia among the world’s top resettlement countries per capita.

Australia’s formal humanitarian resettlement began in the aftermath of World War II. In 1947, it accepted its first group of Displaced Persons (DPs) under an agreement with the International Refugee Organization (IRO). These were the 839 Lithuanian, Latvian and Estonian Heintzelman passengers upon whom this blog focuses. 

This photograph really has become an icon:  it shows men from the First Transport, the Heintzelman ready to travel by train to Bonegilla after disembarking in Port Melbourne
 from the
Kanimbla on 9 December 1947

Many of these early arrivals were from elsewhere in Eastern Europe— Ukrainians, Yugoslavs, Czechs, Slovaks, Rumanians, Hungarians, Belorussians, Bulgarians and Poles—who had been displaced by war and Soviet occupation. Around 180,000 DPs arrived between 1947 and 1952, often transported by ship and housed in temporary migrant hostels around the country. This intake was driven both by humanitarian concern and a government policy of “populate or perish,” reflecting Australia’s desire to boost its population and workforce.

In subsequent decades, the program expanded and diversified. The 1970s saw a large intake of Vietnamese refugees following the Vietnam War and the fall of Saigon in April 1974. The “boat people” crisis starting on 26 April 1976 marked Australia’s first major experience with spontaneous maritime asylum seekers, and the government responded with a structured resettlement and community sponsorship approach. This era also included Cambodian and Laotian refugees, who together made up the Indochinese humanitarian intake.

Vietnamese boats in Darwin Harbour

In the 1980s and 1990s, humanitarian arrivals included people fleeing civil conflict in Lebanon, the Horn of Africa, and the Balkans. The post-Cold War period saw new waves of displacement, and Australia responded by adjusting its program to accommodate refugees from Afghanistan, Iraq, Sudan, and later Syria. Throughout this time, Australia maintained a commitment to formal resettlement through the UNHCR (United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees) as well as a Special Humanitarian Program (SHP) that allowed individual Australians and eligible community organisations to propose people in humanitarian need for resettlement.

Today, the humanitarian program is capped annually, with places allocated between the Refugee and SHP categories. While numbers have fluctuated, the average annual intake has been around 13,750 in recent years, though it has occasionally increased in response to global crises. Notably, in 2015, Australia offered an additional 12,000 places for Syrian and Iraqi refugees.

Across the decades, Australia has also built a strong, community-based settlement support system. Refugees are offered language training, employment services, trauma support, and assistance integrating into Australian society. Many have gone on to make significant contributions to Australian life in areas ranging from business and education to politics and the arts.

Despite ongoing public and political debate—particularly over asylum seekers arriving by boat—the structured humanitarian resettlement program remains widely supported and continues to play a key role in Australia’s identity as a multicultural nation. The milestone of nearly one million people resettled since 1947 is a testament to Australia’s enduring commitment to providing refuge and opportunity to those fleeing persecution and conflict.

FOOTNOTES

  1. As noted in the first entry for this blog, the official figure does not include those who have been able to pay their own way to resettlement in Australia.
  2. The current annual refugee and humanitarian intake is set at 20,000 people, which means that it will be at least two more years before the 1 million mark is reached.
  3. Ann gets a glow of satisfaction every time she sees the Special Humanitarian Program mentioned, as she wrote the initial instructions for this and also was charged with the initial selections, in order to test how the instructions and the ideas behind it were working. That was in 1981.
SOURCES

Ann asked ChatGPT for it sources. This is how ChatGPT replied (although the links have been changed--see below).

"Combining data from the Department of Home Affairs, Parliamentary Library, and RCOA, the cumulative total of refugees and humanitarian entrants to Australia since 1947 is generally cited as being over 950,000 and nearing one million. This figure includes Displaced Persons, UNHCR-referred refugees, and entrants under the Special Humanitarian Program.

"Australian Government, Department of Home Affairs, 'About the Program'

"National Archives of Australia, [Historical immigration records and exhibitions such as A Place to Call Home? Migrant Hostel Memories, currently accessible through https://www.flickr.com/photos/national-archives-of-australia/albums/72157647236319189/] accessed 21 June 2025.  [The National Archives of Australia is at https://naa.gov.au.]

"Parliament of Australia, 'Australia’s Humanitarian Program: a quick guide to the statistics since 1947' https://apo.org.au/node/72483 accessed 21 June 2025.

"Refugee Council of Australia, 'Australia Draws Closer to Milestone of 1 Million Refugee Arrivals Since World War II' https://www.refugeecouncil.org.au/950000-refugee-arrivals/ accessed 21 June 2025.

"United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees, 'Regional Resettlement Data' https://www.unhcr.org/au/regional-resettlement-data accessed 21 June 2025."     

ChatGPT seems to have been able to go where mere humans using Google Search cannot go.  In all cases, it provided the Home Page link only, except for the UNHCR site.  There it seemed to provide an Australia specific link which is not active.  Ann therefore has tried to provide you with more useful links.

18 June 2025

Picking pears for Australia, by Daina Pocius and Ann Tündern-Smith

One quarter of male Baltic refugees from the First Transport were employed as fruit pickers in Victoria’s Goulburn Valley between January and March 1948.  The Commonwealth Employment Service’s District Office had arranged for them to assist in the fruit harvesting subject to certain conditions, including that they be employed in batches of at least five and that satisfactory board and accommodation had to be provided by the growers.  

 

The Goulburn Valley had only a small quantity of available labour which would have been totally inadequate to harvest the crop.  This would lead to the loss of thousands of pounds worth of fruit.  Most of the refugees, whose average age was 24 years, were employed in the Ardmona area for the harvesting of fresh fruit, canning fruit, and dried fruits.

 

Apricot picking had started early in January, before the Baltic refugees were made available.  The pear picking season was expected to start on 20 January.

 

On Wednesday and Thursday, 28-29 January 1948, 193 Baltic migrants arrived in Shepparton by special buses from the Bonegilla Migrant Camp.  The 193 number is that given by the Shepparton Advertiser newspaper on 30 January: it’s more optimistic than the 187 we found by examining all the “Bonegilla cards” for the Heintzelman group. 


The red dot in the west (right) of this Google map marks Ardmona; the Bonegilla Migrant Experience in the east (left) of this map has been developed from the former Bonegilla migrant camp: the modern trip from Bonegilla to Shepparton takes a little more than two hours so the remaining two and a quarter hours is the trip from Shepparton to Ardmona;
Click on the map for a larger version on another page
Source: Map data © Google

 

The Advertiser journalist wrote that the Goulburn Valley fruit growers were almost unanimous in agreeing that the new workers from the Displaced Persons camps were an “excellent type” and they were “well satisfied with the selection”. The refugees were to be distributed among 30 orchards in the Shepparton and Ardmona district.  Maybe plans had changed since destinations for the fruit pickers were recorded at Bonegilla, since they show only 16 employers.

 

The journalist advised that, at the end of the season, the new workers would be free to accept employment as permanent orchard hands if they so desired.  Wishful thinking!

 

The 16 orchards involved were those of :

 

Anton Lenne of Ardmona,  

 

AW & JF Fairley of Shepparton,

 

Bruce Simson of Ardmona,

 

Dundas Simson Pty Ltd, Ardmona,

 

E Fairley of Shepparton,

 

HE Pickworth of Ardmona,

 

H Hick of Grahamvale,

 

I Pyke of Ardmona,

 

J Nethersole & Sons of Ardmona,

 

JT Goe of Orrvale, 

 

RT Clements of Toolamba,

 

SF Cornish of Ardmona, 

 

TE Young of Ardmona,

 

Turnbull Bros of Ardmona,

 

VR McNab of Ardmona, and

 

W Young of Kelvin Orchards, Ardmona.

 

As for the minimum group size, the Advertiser mentions 3 and that was the number that the Bonegilla cards show going to JT Goe.  They were one Latvian and two Lithuanians, who we have to hope were already great friends.  At least they had German as a common language.


Picking pears,  possibly on the Grahamvale property of Mr H Hick
Source: Arvids Lejins collection


It seems that not all orchard owners were fair to the new workers.  According to the Communist Party’s Tribune newspaper, some were kept in isolated groups and were working a 48-hour week for the same pay as Australians receive for a 40-hour week.  Some of the Balts had thrown in their jobs and returned to Bonegilla early.  

 

Povilas Laurinavičius, who we met in the last blog entry, returned to Bonegilla after 2 weeks only with Anton Lenne of Ardmona.  We don’t know why he returned.  It could have been the hours expected to be worked 6 days a week.  Maybe the outdoor conditions in February heat did not suit him, give that he was 40 years old already.  If that was the reason, it wasn’t taken into account when he was sent a few days later to the Iron Knob mine in South Australia.  Antanas Jurevicius returned from Anton Lenne on the same day.  According to Antanas Bonegilla card, he had been married in the camp on 22 December, so he probably was keen to get back to his new bride.


Anton Lenne: photograph provided by Marg Spowart to the
Lost 
Mooroopna Facebook page

Source: Facebook   


Eleven had returned already before these two, the first 6 on 11 February, so after 12 days only at the most working in their new industry.  Five had been working for J Nethersole and Sons, Ardmona, and one for Mrs I Pyke.


Fruit pickers' lunch break, possibly on the Grahamvale property of Mr H Hick
Source: Arvids Lejins collection


A small number of the fruit pickers could not cope with their new-found freedom.  Jonas Razvidauskas appeared before the Shepparton Court on 16 February charged with assault, after he had attacked 3 policemen in the Shepparton Police Station and broken the glasses of one.  He was yet another First Transport man who had had too much to drink, having bought a bottle of wine and consumed it all, after which he could not remember anything.

 

He was said to have torn his own clothes to shreds and to be appearing in clothes borrowed from another prisoner.  He was fined £2 on each of the assault charges and ordered to pay £2 to replace the broken glasses.  This was a total of £8, likely to be more than he was earning each week.  He was one of the employees of Turnbull Brothers of Ardmona, and was one of those sent on to Goliath Portland Cement in Railton, Tasmania afterwards.

 

The Melbourne Sun News-Pictorial newspaper reported an outline only of Razvidauskas’ behaviour in the Police Station but the local newspaper, the Shepparton Advertiser, went into considerable front page detail about the aggression and damage.  

 

It reported also that 2 more of the men appeared before the Court.  Another Lithuanian, Jonas Rauba, was convicted and discharged on a charge of being drunk and disorderly.  An Estonian, Kaljo Murre, faced the same charge and received the same sentence.  Murre claimed that this was the first time he had drunk beer and it would be the last time.  These may well have been “famous last words”.

 

The Bonegilla camp was meant to be dry, although Ann has heard of smuggling and alcohol being allowed for special occasions, like Christmas celebrations and weddings.  If the fruit growers were paying their men a fortnight in arrears, which has been the custom in Australia for a long time, then they would have had their first pay just before the 14-15 February weekend.  It’s now wonder then that 3 were found in public places to have overindulged.  No doubt more drinking went on that weekend in private.

 

Easter 1948 ran from Good Friday on March 26 to Easter Sunday on March 28.  The day before Easter started, the Shepparton paper ran a paragraph headed, Balts on Move (see below).


Source: Shepparton Advertiser, 28 March 1948

 

As for the “itchy feet”, another 23 had returned to Bonegilla before Easter, making 36 in all, but more than 80 per cent were still on the job.  

 

The bulk of the Baltic fruit pickers returned to the Bonegilla camp between 31 March and 7 April, 114 of them.  Another 38 returned on 10 April, leaving one stalwart behind.

 

Borisas Dainutis did not get back to the Bonegilla camp until 5 May, so he seems to have spent nearly another 4 weeks with Messrs Turnbull Brothers of Ardmona.  As he was sent then to the Dookie Agricultural College in Victoria, perhaps he was displaying a great interest in agriculture despite having been selected in Germany has a potential builder’s labourer.  Let’s see what we find when we explore his life story soon.


A Turnbull Brothers fruit box saved by Cartonographer (Sean Rafferty)
Source:  https://ehive.com/collections/5682/objects/939087/turnbull-brothers-orchards

 

On the day that Borisas returned, another rural newspaper, the Riverine Herald, ran an article headed “Balts Appreciated”.  Based on interviews with fruit growers, the Herald estimated that the fruit pickers had saved the Goulburn Valley the loss of thousands of pounds worth of fruit.  “Proof of success of the scheme … (was that) the fruitgrowers (sic) were already voicing their wishes to participate in allocations of migrants next season”.


The fruit growers had not been happy with the front page publicity achieved by Razvidauskas, Kauba and Murre.  The Herald said that, “Expressing disappointment that adverse publicity had been afforded the very small minority of the men who had clashed with the law during their sojourn in Tatura and Ardmona district, … the men were excellent types on the whole and proved themselves highly adaptable to a variety of work.”

There was a sting near the tail of the report:  “It was further claimed that while some instances of difficulties in handling the Balts had been reported, on the average, where reasonable conditions were provided for them, good service had been given.”

What did these fruit growers expect from young men who had just endured 5 or more years of war, sometimes right in the middle of it, digging trenches between the opposing German and Russian sides?  All had been living on restricted rations until they boarded the Heintzelman and therefore were not at their healthiest.  There should be no need to mention also that some of them were more highly educated than most of those making a career of fruit growing and so might have regarded fruit picking as yet another obstacle on the path to a more satisfying future.

SOURCES 

National Archive of Australia: Migrant Reception and Training Centre, Bonegilla [Victoria]; A2571, Name Index Cards, Migrants Registration [Bonegilla] (1947-56); https://recordsearch.naa.gov.au/SearchNRetrieve/Interface/DetailsReports/SeriesDetail.aspx?series_no=A2571 accessed 17 May 2025 ("Bonegilla cards").

 

National Archive of Australia: Migrant Reception and Training Centre, Bonegilla [Victoria]; A2571, Name Index Cards, Migrants Registration [Bonegilla] (1947-56); LAURINAVICIUS POVILAS, LAURINAVICIUS, Povilas : Year of Birth - 1908 : Nationality - LITHUANIAN : Travelled per - GENERAL HEINTZELMAN : Number – 571 (1947-48) https://recordsearch.naa.gov.au/SearchNRetrieve/Interface/ViewImage.aspx?B=203619595 accessed 17 May 2025.

 

Riverine Herald (1948) 'Balts Appreciated', Echuca, Moama, 5 May, p 2 http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article116540389 accessed 13 June 2025.

 

Shepparton Advertiser (1947) 'Baltic Migrants For The Fruit Harvest, Most Will Work at Ardmona', 12 December, p 1 http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article173900200 accessed 13 June 2025.

 

Shepparton Advertiser (1948) 'Labor Problem for Fruit Harvest' 6 January, p 1 http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article169556903 accessed 2 June 2025 accessed 2 June 2025.

 

Shepparton Advertiser (1948) 'Baltic Migrants Arrive' 30 January, p 1 http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article169557378 accessed 2 June 2025.

 

Shepparton Advertiser (1948) ‘Balt Fights Three Police’ 17 February p 1 https://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/169557746 accessed 17 June 2025.

 

Shepparton Advertiser (1948) ‘Balts on Move’ 25 March, p1, https://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/169558516 accessed 17 June 2025.

 

Sun News-Pictorial (1948) 'Wild After Wine, Balt Fined', Melbourne, 17 February, p 10 , http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article279326226 accessed 2 June 2025.

 

Tribune (1948) 'Balts Work 48 Hrs. For 40 Hrs. Pay', Sydney, 14 April, p 3, http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article208109382 accessed 13 June 2025.