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Sadako Morris and daugter June leaving Kobe on SS CHANGTE
Sadako Morris and daugter June leaving Kobe on SS CHANGTE

Sadako Morris and daugter June leaving Kobe on SS CHANGTE

Date1953
Object number00054436
NamePhotograph
MediumPhotographic print
DimensionsOverall: 80 × 110 mm
ClassificationsPhotographs
Credit LineANMM Collection Gift from June Hammond
DescriptionThis photograph shows Japanese war bride Sadako Morris and her daughter June leaving the port of Kobe, Japan, on CHANGTE in December 1953. Sadako defied her family to marry Australian soldier John Morris and migrate to Australia after World War II. Japanese war bride Sadako Morris remembers, 'waving to my family from the deck rail, I was flooded with all sorts of different emotions. It seemed to take forever to pull away from the wharf and while we could see our families slowly disappear, it was like a kind of torture'.HistoryMore than 600 Japanese women migrated to Australia as war brides after World War II. Their husbands had served with the British Commonwealth Occupation Force (BCOF) after the surrender of Japan in 1945. At first marriage between Australian soldiers and Japanese women was prohibited. But many men fell in love and lobbied the Australian Government for change. When Sadako Kikuchi’s family discovered that she was secretly seeing Australian Army officer John Morris, they threatened to disown her. Strong-willed, Sadako chose to leave, moving into an apartment with John. Sadako met John when she was a seamstress in a Kure department store. There was still much bitterness between ex-enemies. ‘Morrisan’ and Sadako had to keep their meetings secret, using Sadako’s brother Yasuo as a go-between. In 1952, after intense lobbying, the Australian Government eventually gave permission for soldiers to marry Japanese nationals. Sadako and John had a church wedding in 1952. Most of Sadako’s family attended, despite their earlier opposition. Finally, in December 1953, Sadako and her two baby daughters boarded Changte bound for Adelaide. They were among the first group of non-Europeans officially permitted under the White Australia policy. While many immigrants experienced displacement, culture shock and homesickness, Japanese brides also had to endure bigotry in both Japan and Australia.SignificanceThis photograph relates to a highly significant period in Australia’s immigration history, when Immigration Minister Harold Holt overturned the ban on entry for wives of Australian servicemen in 1952, thereby permitting the first group of non-European immigrants under the White Australia policy.