The award-winning Australian film Rabbit-Proof Fence, released in 2002, deals with a controversial issue of the “Stolen Generations” from late in the nineteenth century to the late 1960s. The film depicts a true story of three mixed descent girls, Molly, Gracie and Daisy, from an aboriginal settlement at Jigalong, in the far north of Western Australia. In 1931, they _____41_____ from their mothers’ arms and transported 2,400 kilometers to the Moore River Native Settlement—an official government camp which was established to train the aborigines to _____42_____ the white society. _____43_____ the assimilation policy, many aboriginal girls were forever separated from their own flesh and blood. _____44_____ bravery and determination Molly led her younger sister and cousin to escape from the camp and went in search of the rabbit-proof fence _____45_____ guided them home. It was a perilous journey over 1,500 miles. Rabbit-Proof Fence portrays the grief and anxiety the assimilation policy imposed on many aboriginal families. 【題組】42 (A) conflict with
(B) oppose against
(C) integrate into
(D) menace to