Lola Edwards grew up in Tingha, NSW. Her mother was a Ngarabal and father was a Kamilaroi. Her father was what Aboriginal people would call an 'old bush lawyer' and would regularly be an advocate for Aboriginal people in court. Lola and her family always believed this was the reason they were taken. When Lola Edwards was four years old, in 1951 she was taken away with her older and younger sisters and her brother Gordon from her family by the Aboriginal Welfare board. They were picked up and taken to the train at Inverell to Sydney, her brother Gordon was separated at Central Railway Station, then Lola and her sisters were put on the train to Cootamundra. Lola didn't see her mother until many years after and never met her father as he died before she was released.
Cootamundra Girls Home
Lola Edward spent 11 years at the Cootamundra Girls Training Home in NSW where she was taken after being removed from her family. Cootamundra Aboriginal Girls Training Home opened from 1912 and closed in 1969. Girls there were trained to be domestic servants like Lola and others were trained to be telephonists and then worked at the home and others did typist courses. Lola did not go back to visit the home until 1980, 31 years after she was placed there. In an interview in 2008, Lola recalled that another girl at the home used to talk to herself at night in bed and told Lola she was trying to remember her language under the blankets. Lola also said that she believed she and the other girls at the home where being raised "to think white and act white and keep herself clean, scrub her skin, take the black off her skin."
Work
When Lola was 16 she was placed out to work in the township of Junee, where looked after a baby and a little boy. The couple she worked for owned a local taxi service and Lola would clean the house, do the washing, do the cooking and man the taxi base. Years later she married and moved to San Francisco, United States. While she was living in San Francisco she got a phone call from her sister asking if she wanted to come down and meet her mother. The reunification with her mother made Lola decide to move back to Australia and find out more about her family and lost culture. Lola's sister then started Link-Up with Dr Peter Read and Lola became very passionate about the organisation. When Lola started her work with Link-Up, she was required to go down and do the searches for people who asked them to, for their files at the state records. Lola was then asked to be a member of the Indigenous Advisory Council for the National Inquiry into the Separation of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Children from Their Families' led by former Human Rights Commissioner and Commission President, the late Sir Ronald Wilson, and former Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Social Justice Commissioner, Mick Dodson. Lola also played a critical role in ensuring the stories of the Stolen Generations were heard. The Commission's 1997 report 'Bringing Them Home' was the result of this Inquiry. Her contribution to this Inquiry, along with her lifetime of advocacy, has contributed to ensuring that this part of Australia's history is acknowledged and known by all Australians.
Achievements
Lola Edwards has won the Tony Fitzgerald Memorial Award at the annual Australian Human Rights Commission's Human Rights Awards in Sydney on 9 December 2011. The award recognises individuals with a proven track record in promoting and advancing human rights in the Australian community on a not-for-profit basis. Bill Edwards, her husband who accepted the award, said: “This is a true acknowledgement of Lola’s lifetime passion of seeking social justice for Aboriginal people and especially for those members of the Stolen Generations who continue to be disadvantaged.” In 1995–96, together with the late Carol Kendall, Lola was appointed to the specialist team for Link-up which travelled extensively throughout NSW conducting 30 preparatory forums to assist Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people, including members of the Stolen Generations, to give evidence to the Australian Human Rights Commission's Inquiry into the Separation of Aboriginal People from Their Families. Lola was also the inaugural chairperson of the National Sorry Day Committee.