Ruth Balint Ruth Balint i(A120008 works by)
Gender: Female
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Works By

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1 Margaret Taft Delves into the Lives of Two Remarkable Australian Jews Ruth Balint , 2023 single work review
— Appears in: History Australia , vol. 20 no. 1 2023; (p. 182-183)

— Review of Leo and Mina Fink : For the Greater Good Margaret Taft , 2022 single work biography

'My grandparents and their baby, my uncle, arrived in Melbourne aboard the RMS Mooltan on 16 February 1939. They were met by the Australian Jewish Welfare Society, formed only two years before to assist Jewish refugees upon their arrival. It is possible that either Leo or Mina Fink, or both, were among those who greeted them off the boat. It stuck in my grandparents’ minds for the rest of their lives, the kindness shown by these Jewish strangers, and their gratitude. Leo and Mina Fink had been in Australia less than 10 years before my grandparents arrived, yet in this short time were already spearheading the relief and reception of Jewish refugees from Europe. After the war, Leo Fink also gained the ear of Australia’s first immigration minister Arthur Calwell, travelling regularly to Canberra determined to plead the case for the acceptance of Jewish survivors in Australia’s first mass immigration intake. For decades, the Finks were synonymous with Jewish life in Melbourne. Even today, as Margaret Taft notes in her history of this remarkable couple, it is impossible to venture far in the Jewish community of Melbourne without stumbling across their names engraved on plaques or enshrined in education and philanthropic endowments.' (Introduction)

1 Young Women’s Memoirs of Migration, Dispossession and Australian ‘unbelonging’ Demand to Be Heard Ruth Balint , 2022 single work review
— Appears in: The Conversation , 23 June 2022;

— Review of Unknown : A Refugee’s Story Akuch Kuol Anyieth , 2022 single work autobiography

'Akuch Kuol Anyieth was born into a world of violence. Her memoir begins at the age of five, when she fled with her mother and her three siblings from civil war in South Sudan to a refugee camp in north-west Kenya.'  (Introduction)

1 Lena Hattom : Coming to Australia on the Siev-IV. One Family's Journey Lena Hattom , Ruth Balint , 2021 single work essay
— Appears in: Smuggled 2021;
1 Munjed Al Muderis : A Journey of Many Legs Munjed Al Muderis , Ruth Balint , 2021 single work essay
— Appears in: Smuggled 2021;
1 Carina Hoang : My People Smuggler Was My Savior Carina Hoang , Ruth Balint , 2021 single work essay
— Appears in: Smuggled 2021;
1 A Jewish Refugee Racket Ruth Balint , 2021 single work essay
— Appears in: Smuggled 2021;
1 Introduction : People Smuggling and Australian Migration History Ruth Balint , Julie Kalman , 2021 single work essay
— Appears in: Smuggled 2021;
1 3 y separately published work icon Smuggled Smuggled : A History of Illegal Journeys to Australia Ruth Balint (editor), Julie Kalman (editor), Sydney : NewSouth Publishing , 2021 22015777 2021 anthology essay biography

'The sea was rough, waves a few metres, falling on top of us. We were just waiting and hoping and praying that we were going to make it.'— Taozen, proud Australian, proud Hazara

'Smuggled offers a previously unseen glimpse into the dangerous and shadowy world of people smuggling. It shares harrowing true stories of those fleeing persecution to seek asylum and reshapes our idea of those —sometimes family, sometimes mafia — who help them find it.

'People smugglers have such currency in Australian politics yet they remain unknowable figures in our migration history. But beyond the rhetoric lies a rich past that reaches far from the maritime borders of our island continent — to Jews escaping the Holocaust, Eastern Europeans slipping through the Iron Curtain, ‘boat people’ fleeing the Vietnam War, and refugees escaping unthinkable violence in the Middle East and Africa.

'Based on revealing personal interviews, Smuggled provides a compelling insight into a defining yet unexplored part of Australian history.'

Source : publisher's blurb

1 Home Truths Ruth Balint , 2018 single work review
— Appears in: Inside Story , June 2018;

— Review of Miss Ex-Yugoslavia Sofija Stefanovic , 2018 single work autobiography
'Sofija Stefanovic’s laugh-out-loud memoir explores life between homelands'
1 The Greatest Crime Ruth Balint , 2017 single work essay
— Appears in: Sydney Review of Books , July 2017;

'In a recent chapter in a book about empathy, the South African-born historian Stephen Aschheim, who now lives in Israel, remarked that ‘atrocities, perhaps especially our own, are more acceptable when performed in distant places and acted upon ‘uncivilised’ populations… The closer to home that they are perpetrated, the more problematic they become.’ For decades now, Australia’s detention regime has effectively moved the government’s handling of asylum seekers out of sight – beyond the gaze of journalists, activists, lawyers and the public. This has enabled the government to lie about the people detained, using variations of the ‘uncivilised’ trope, without much fear of censure by the people themselves. And in an even more cynical twist, it has allowed successive governments to represent themselves as both muscular and fair, in standing firm with a policy that ‘stopped the boats’. But they haven’t stopped the boats and they haven’t stopped the deaths, they have just moved them out of our watch.' (Introduction)

1 Untitled Ruth Balint , 2012 single work review
— Appears in: Journal of Australian Studies , September vol. 36 no. 3 2012; (p. 395-397)

— Review of Not Dark Yet : A Personal History David Robert Walker , 2011 single work autobiography
1 Where Are the Historians? Ruth Balint , 2009 single work essay
— Appears in: Inside Story , July 2009;

'History on Australian television doesn’t reflect what historians really know about the past, and the fault is on both sides, writes Ruth Balint' 

1 Untitled Ruth Balint , 2008 single work review
— Appears in: Journal of Australian Studies , March vol. 32 no. 1 2008; (p. 147-148)

— Review of Being Australian : Narratives of National Identity Catriona Elder , 2007 single work criticism
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