In all social indicators, Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people rate as among the most disadvantaged peoples in Australia. Rates far worse than non-Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples in education, employment, health, standard of living and incidence of family violence. They are also grossly over-represented in the child protection and criminal justice systems. “The disparity is so great that the life expectancy of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples is 12 years less for males and 10 years less for females than the corresponding rates for their non-Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander counterparts.” The Australian’s governmental constitution, responds to the disadvantage faced by the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islanders people as the ‘Close The Gap’ strategy. The Government feels the need to equalize the levels between Indigenous and non-indigenous Australians; the history of the Aboriginals and Torres Strait Islanders has never been a pleasant story. The ‘Stolen generation’ describes many Aboriginals and Torres Strait Islanders’ lives, as to children were forcefully removed from their homes by past Australians federal, State and territory governmental agencies, and church missions from the late 1800’s to the 1970’s. These acts were allowed under permission of their parliament, and the children removed were either sent to institutions or adopted by non-indigenous families. Not allowed visits from their own parents, also forcing a new community and culture upon them. These children were removed because of their low economical communities, making the public believe that the children would get a better life, better education, a more loving family, and a more comfortable and civilized upbringing by white families or governmental institutions. When the reality was the children were being removed to be servants, in order to expose ‘Anglo values’ and ‘work habits and to stop the Aborigi