
1997
In 1947, the Assisted Passage Scheme began, devised by the Australian government to bring in white British settlers. For just 10 pounds, they could start a new life in a sun-drenched land of opportunity, and over the next 25 years, more than a million people took up the offer. The scheme's pioneers tell their story.

Veronika Hyks
Self - Narrator (voice)

A Home On the Clouds

The Writer Who Hated the Swedish Language

Portrait of a Wind-up Maker

De Charles de Gaulle à Emmanuel Macron, les gardiens de l'empire

On the Road with Mary

Separated

Gary's Story - No Second Best

Hard Work and "Whatever"

Through Immigrants' Eyes

Remember When We Immigrated Here?

I Know a Place

Brazillians Like Me

The Fall of the I-Hotel

Irpinia

An American in Tangier

Der grosse Kanton

Okinawa/Santos

Sunflower Seeds

Gdud A'liyah

A Thousand Pines