Warning: This post features explicit details of child sexual abuse, that could be triggering for some readers.
They were anally raped, beaten with canes and whips, and made to eat their own vomit.
They were humiliated when they wet their beds, forced to parade around the home in soiled sheets.
Some children as young as five were made to perform oral sex.
The victims were around 200 children – mostly orphans – all of whom were too young and too innocent to know how to stop to the heinous behaviour they were forced to endure.
The perpetrators were employees of the home, other residents at the home and members of the clergy. People in positions of trust. People who were charged with the protection of the young lives they so abused.
It happened at the North Coast Children’s Home in Lismore, New South Wales, over a period of 40 years from 1944 and 1985.
These horrifying details have come to light recently as part of the Royal Commission Into Institutional Responses to Sexual Abuse, which is currently taking place around Australia. The Commission was announced last year by former Prime Minister Julia Gillard in response to what she described as a historically systemic failure to respond to allegations of child sex abuse in Australia and to protect children from it.