Cummings was born at the Bagot Aboriginal Reserve in Darwin, which had previously been the site of the Kahlin Compound.[3] Her mother, Nellie, had been taken from her family in the Daly River and placed there some years before.[6] In 1948 Cummings also was taken from her mother and placed at the Retta Dixon Home, alongside her two brothers.[5]
In 1990 Cummings published her autobiography Take This Child (1990)[7] which was an account at her time at the Retta Dixon home and the harsh treatment, which included abuse and emotional deprivation, that the children received there.[2] She recalled been beaten regularly during her tie there and said of some of these beatings:[8]
I was a child of 10 or 11 and you don't beat a child with a cane that severe, or humiliate the child, to the severity where he or she crumbles
— Barbara Cummings, Institutional sexual, physical abuse compensation case to enter Commonwealth mediation, ABC News, 22 November 2016
This book told not only her story but the stories of the people around her and included numerous interviews with others in which she sought their account of what had happened and see if she had missed anything.[5] This book was used to inform the 1997 Bringing The Home Report which was published by the Australian Human Rights Commission.[9]
There are those who still dismiss the Stolen Generation. I do not think there are many in this Chamber who do, and especially not in the gallery, yet it remains incumbent upon us to challenge that view whenever we hear it. Barb did that with her dignity and with her voice. We all know those times when you meet a special person and you are left with a feeling you have just spent time with someone who is very genuine, who sometimes leaves you a little floored. As soon as you sat down with Barb, time kind of stood still. All her words had weight. She had a way of putting you in the moment
— Michael Gunner, Condolence Motion: Dr Barbara Cummings, NT Legislative Assembly, 26 November 2019
In the same motion the then Minister for Aboriginal Affairs, Selena Uibo, called her 'a trailblazer for Aboriginal affairs in Australia and a powerful voice for our Stolen Generations'.[5]
Cummings, Barbara (1990). Take this child - : from Kahlin Compound to the Retta Dixon Children's Home. Aboriginal Studies Press, Canberra.[7]
The title of this book is taken from a quote by Retta Dixon, for whom the Retta Dixon Home was named, in which she said that God had told her to "[t]ake these children, and train them for Me". Cummings also said that this quote reflected the attitudes of successive governments and policy-makers.[7]
^ abcCummings, Barbara (1990), Take this child - : from Kahlin Compound to the Retta Dixon Children's Home, Aboriginal Studies Press, ISBN978-0-85575-208-8
^Batchelor Institute of Indigenous Tertiary Education (2019). "Annual report"(PDF). Batchelor Institute of Indigenous Tertiary Education. Retrieved 21 April 2024.