From JOHN FOWKE
Forget about them helping to save
It is salutary that
But it is sad that PNG itself has nothing to say or to give in honour of these old men.
For they and the forces they served with saved PNG for its ultimate emergence as an independent democracy.
If
Nor would Papua New Guineans be free citizens in our own free, democratic nation.
The invasion by the Japanese in what is now PNG was one prong of the overall policy of subjugation to the will of the Japanese under the Emperor and his proposed Greater Asia Co-Prosperity Sphere.
We know just how prosperous and well-treated the other invaded countries -
PNG was in effect, even if not widely aware of it, defending itself as much as Australia from a fate very different from that which awaited it under the League of Nations Mandate- ( later United nations)- administered by Australia.
The labour force we call the Angels - courtesy of a famous poem in The Australian Women’s Weekly at the time - were conscripts taken from villages all over coastal and inland Papua; not simply from the villages along the famed Kokoda Track and surrounding district.
Men aged between 18 and 40 were taken from their villages and placed with the Army in areas of need from the Gulf through Central, on the Track itself, later at Kokoda, and in Milne Bay.
One old Fuzzy conscript, who lives near Malalaua in
Every now and again, whenever yet another story about medals and rewards for Fuzzies was featured in the news of the day the old man would collect enough for the return bus-fare to Moresby and go to the big city.
All his trips, needless to say, were fruitless.
Until last week, when with five others, the last of the last, he finally received recognition from
In 1942, the Australian Army Command in
These recruits were medically checked and all those who passed were then signed for service and sent to
Men from west of Daru right around through Goaribari and Purari, Orokolo, Kerema, Moresby, Abau, on through Mailu, Milne Bay, East Cape, Gosiago,the islands and Northern District were conscripted at the will of the Army.
These men were conscripts, like the young Australian militiamen they initially carried for and supported. And, unknowingly, and importantly for today’s generation of Papua New Guineans, they were serving the interest of their own land and people in this arduous and dangerous work.
Now that Australia has recognised and honoured the contribution of all the Fuzzy-Wuzzies by making a presentation to the last, frail representatives of a generation who knew the reality of warfare between modern, industrialized nations, is it not time that the people of PNG also paid honour to the contribution of these men?
The truth of the emergence into independent statehood by PNG is that the founders and pioneers of this nation are not the politicians who in the mid-sixties obtained independence from a willing colonial government; not the men who founded the two original political parties.
No. The true pioneers of modern PNG are the Fuzzies together with the hard-fighting soldiers of the Pacific Islands Battalion, and equally-brave and willing men of the Royal Papua Constabulary and the New Guinea Police, all of whom served, shoulder to shoulder with the Allied forces, in opposition to the aggressive Japanese invasion of this land.
The Nation owes it to itself- to the younger generation particularly- to recognise these facts by bestowing a suitable honour upon these few old survivors before it is too late.
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