The Last Post Magazine - Edition 31: 2023 Remembrance Day Edition

Page 14

INSPIRATIONAL AUSTRALIAN WOMEN

Vivian Bullwinkel thought she was going to die. There, 22 Australian nurses and a British civilian woman were forced to wade into the ocean and shot by Japanese soldiers. Bullwinkel was the only survivor. “The Japanese took out tommy-guns, set up a machine-gun, and ordered us into the sea,” Bullwinkel told reporters after the war. “There was no mistaking their vicious intentions ... We all knew we were going to die... “When we were thigh deep in the surf they opened up a murderous fire, mowing us down like a scene I saw in a film as a child. “The women around me shrieked, stiffened, and sank. I was hit here, in the left side, under the ribs, falling unconscious in the water. “I can’t swim a stroke, I can’t even float, but somehow I felt my body being washed about in the waves. “I lay still, partly because something told me I would be killed if I moved, and partly because I did not care anyway.” Wearing the uniform in which she was shot, Bullwinkel told reporters, “I am sorry I am hazy in parts about all this. I have tried so hard all this time to drive these scenes from my mind.” When one correspondent began to apologise for asking her to recall the horrors she had experienced during the Second World War, she replied, “No. This story is one that must be told everywhere.” Bullwinkel spent three and a half years as a prisoner of war in and around Sumatra. She went on to testify at the war crimes tribunal in Tokyo, and dedicated the rest of her life to ensuring the nurses killed at Banka Island were not forgotten. More than 80 years after the Banka Island massacre, Bullwinkel has been immortalised in a bronze sculpture by Brisbane artist Dr Charles Robb at the Australian War Memorial in Canberra. Her nephew, John Bullwinkel, was one of three generations of the Bullwinkel family at the dedication ceremony.

The 26-year-old Australian army nurse had escaped the fall of Singapore in February 1942, and had survived the sinking of the SS Vyner Brooke, clinging to a life raft before making it ashore at Radji Beach on Banka Island.

“It’s a great honour,” he said. “She wasn’t one to hog the limelight ... She was humble. She was compassionate. And she was very self-effacing. She was always trying to help people ... and she was very loyal, and very loyal to her colleagues, in particular.” Bullwinkel’s sculpture now stands in the grounds of the Memorial, opposite a sculpture of her friend, wartime surgeon and fellow prisoner of war, Sir Edward “Weary” Dunlop. On the base are 22 stainless steel discs, representing the victims of the Banka Island massacre. They are arranged on the base of the sculpture as a reflection of the stars that would have been visible in the night sky on 16 February 1942. For her nephew John, it’s particularly poignant. “We’re very proud that she’s being remembered, together with the other girls who died on the beach,” he said. “I think she would have appreciated that. For her, it was always to do with her comradeship, loyalty, and compassion, and not wanting them to be forgotten.”

12 THE LAST POST – 2023 REMEMBRANCE DAY EDITION


Articles inside

Me and My Pet Aged Care

2min
page 85

The Unspoken Duty of Aftercare

3min
pages 104-107

Social Connection and Resilience

4min
pages 103-104

Don’t leave me behind?

2min
pages 84-86

The Royal Commission into Defence and Veteran Suicide

4min
page 82

Open Door Adventures on another journey with Australian Veterans

4min
pages 80-81

Resolute Ready International GLOBAL RECOGNITION AWARD

3min
pages 78-79

Inspirational Australian Women: Associate Professor Cleola Anderiesz Chief Executive Officer National Breast Cancer Foundation

3min
page 77

VAD is a gift

4min
page 76

Eureka win for researchers behind new anti-cancer strategy

3min
page 74

Age Discrimination Commissioner leaves valuable legacy

3min
pages 72-73

The truth about inflammation: All you need to know about 2023’s hottest health topic, from causes to cures

10min
pages 70-71

STATE OF THE ART WELLNESS CENTRE opens at St John of God Richmond Hospital

1min
pages 64-66

foreword

3min
page 63

The Bigger Picture of Music

4min
pages 55-58

Jelena Dokic

21min
pages 44-54

Duty Nobly Done Battlefield Tours “Walk in their footsteps...”

3min
pages 42-43

Port Stephens Koala Sanctuary wins at NSW Tourism Awards

2min
page 41

The Crucial Role of Zoological Koalas in Preserving Genetic Diversity and Protecting the Species

3min
page 40

The koala, despite being a national and international icon, is in crisis

1min
page 39

Welcome to Gunnedah Shire

2min
pages 36-38

Remembering the ‘Quarantine Heroine’

2min
page 35

The City of Rockingham is a Navy town

2min
page 30

This Story Australia Western Australia 2023

2min
pages 28-29

Golden Quest Discovery Trail

5min
pages 26-27

Kalgoorlie RSL

4min
pages 24-25

Discovering a Subaquatic Wonderland: Unveiling the Busselton Artificial Reef Trail

4min
pages 22-23

WA as a tourism destination for veterans

2min
pages 20-21

Bullwinkel thought she was going to die.

3min
pages 14-17

POW’s daughter shares her journey of reconciliation

8min
pages 8-9

RSL AUSTRALIA UPDATE National President Greg Melick

4min
page 6

foreword

2min
pages 4-5

GREG T ROSS Diary of an independent publisher

3min
page 3
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