2024 in review 12

When you post on social media or a blog like this it often feels as if you are writing on water. Down the memory hole your post goes — if you’re lucky to have an afterlife with new readers arriving via internet searches, but in most cases not. This one I have chosen because it really is needed more than ever now.

Unfortunate looseness with the facts of history

Posted on  by Neil

BBC – History – Historical Accuracy and the Making of ‘Auschwitz’

14 Oct 2005

I saw the third episode of this outstanding series last night. The sheer evil of those times is breathtaking; if ever a series deserves to be compulsory viewing, this is the one. If ever you doubted that Holocaust apologists or deniers and neo-Nazis deserve utter contempt, watch this series.

BBC – History – Genocide Under the Nazis

20 Oct 2005

Tonight on ABC-TV in Sydney this brilliant and thoroughly documented series deals with Dr Josef Mengele. Compulsory viewing in my opinion. Brazil, to its shame, sheltered this monster, as earlier had Argentina and Paraguay. He died, would you believe, in 1979.

Of particular interest to Mengele were twins; beginning in 1943, twins were selected and placed in special barracks. Almost all of Mengele’s experiments were of dubious scientific value, ignoring the lack of ethics involved, including attempts to change eye color by injecting chemicals into children’s eyes, various amputations and other brutal surgeries, and in at least one case attempting to create an artificial conjoined twin by sewing the veins in two twins together; this operation was not successful and only caused the hands of the children to become badly infected. Subjects of Mengele’s experiments were almost always murdered afterward for dissection, if they survived the experiment itself.

I learned today that my colleague Betsy B’s mother-in-law and one sister survived Mengele in Auschwitz. Six degrees of separation… Less in Betsy B’s case.

Alfie van der Poorten (16 May 1942 – 9 October 2010)

Van der Poorten was born into a Jewish family in Amsterdam in 1942, after the German occupation began. His parents, David and Marianne van der Poorten, gave him into foster care with the Teerink family in Amersfoort, under the name “Fritsje”; the senior van der Poortens went into hiding, were caught by the Nazis, survived the concentration camps, and were reunited with van der Poorten and his two sisters after the war. The family moved to Sydney in 1951, travelling there aboard the SS Himalaya.

Van der Poorten studied at Sydney Boys High School from 1955 to 1959, and earned a high score in the Leaving Certificate Examination there. He spent a year in Israel and then studied mathematics at the University of New South Wales, where he earned a bachelor’s degree in 1965, a doctorate in 1968 under the joint supervision of George Szekeres and Kurt Mahler, and a Master of Business Administration. While a student at UNSW, he led the student union council and was president of the University Union, as well as helping to lead several Jewish and Zionist student organisations….

Clive Kessler

I am a child of World War II. I was born in Sydney, Australia, in 1942. My earliest childhood memories are of my mother’s parents, German Jews who had managed to escape from Europe before the war broke out. For my first three years of life, I lived in the midst of the dark cloud of hope, fear and doubt in which they were constantly enveloped: hoping that their many relatives still in Germany would somehow survive the war; fearing (as the war went on and news began to emerge of the dreadful happenings there) that they would not; and doubting whether other people could, in any way, imagine, or even cared about, their anguish.

By war’s end, it became clear that none of their large extended family in Europe had survived. As a child I grew up in the aura of their awful pain and I somehow absorbed into myself their terrible loss – a loss for which there were then no words and no name. Now it is called the Shoah, the holocaust.

But my grandparents had some relatives who, in the mid-1920s, for a mixture of religious and political reasons, had gone to live in Palestine. From time to time, amidst the wartime gloom and in the years immediately after 1945, we would receive letters – I still remember their fascinating postal stamps, picturing a domed building, and bearing Arabic as well as English and Hebrew characters – that also provoked mixed feelings in my grandparents: a mixture of relief and hope, of anxiety and fear, as well as some gratitude that others had somehow survived the slaughter in Europe. After 1945, the tempo of my life, following theirs, began to be set by the daily radio broadcasts detailing the collapse of the British Mandate in Palestine, the declaration of Israel’s statehood, and the subsequent 1948 war. In many ways, I was formed by those experiences….

After later experience, especially a time living in Israel and seeing what the lives of Palestinians were like, Clive by 1989 was expressing this view:

I had wept to read of the destruction of the many Jewish communities, large and small, of Central and Eastern Europe, and was entitled to do so. Now I wept, too, to read of the expulsion, in 1948, of the Palestinians from Lydda and from Ramleh. I was entitled and also obliged to do so. This is not to equate Lydda and Ramleh in 1948 with the Warsaw Ghetto of 1943 – all such events are unique and, in some sense, incomparable – but we can find, and must recognize in them (despite their differences of time and place and circumstance), some common human themes, moral lessons and imperatives.
As new maps were drawn to reflect these newly created “facts on the ground” in Israel/Palestine, legitimization was incrementally given to processes for which the world has since coined the ominous and chillingly appropriate term “ethnic cleansing.” This process – of possession, of new map-creation, and of the framing and legitimization of new triumphalist, national narratives on the basis of those newly drawn maps, with all their renamed towns and villages – happened, not once, but twice (the immediate historical events don’t matter here) in 1948 and again in 1967.

But I beg all of us to examine very carefully all glib and loaded parallels between present events and the events this post has dealt with from the world into which I was born at a safe distance, and others I have known at a rather smaller distance. This applies to parallels drawn by both sides today. Those events deserve special abhorrence, a special place in the sad story of humanity’s worst crimes.

And I commend too this earlier post: Rant warning! Yes, I sounded off on FB again…

The amazing man who was the Prosecutor at Nuremberg, probably the first person ever to use the word “genocide”, and a champion of the International Court of Justice where in his 90s he was given the honour of summing up the very first prosecution case.
A Jew born in Odessa. 1920 – 2023!

2024 in review 8

Most read items in June

The ones with the highlight were posted in June.

Gaza from 3,500 BCE to yesterday

Posted on  by Neil

And I 100% endorse his endorsement of Ground News!

I cannot recommend this Canadian treasure too strongly. There are so many over-simplified, twisted and just plain wrong accounts circulating online on both sides of the argument about Israel/Palestine! This sweeps ALL of them off the table and gives you an idea of what the past of this area really has been. It does not take sides, but certainly laments from the historian’s viewpoint the awful damage the Israeli military has wrought, not forgetting the human cost. In the last minutes the compiler expresses his own opinions as a Jew opposed to the current actions of the Israeli government but through the entire presentation he has to that point been scrupulously dispassionate.

This is a shameful time and much of that shame rests with Israel and their more mindless supporters — but not only with them.

Again I say, watch this and be disabused of some of the awful disinformation that chokes the internet at the moment.

Such GOOD NEWS on Facebook overnight!

And what a back story is there! In my January 2024 post Keeping your balance in this polarising world I said:

I share many of Mosab’s posts because they are so often gems — but also they keep us grounded in the reaity of Gaza/Palestine. I otherwise select carefully what I share in this space, preferring things which seem to me well considered or made by people whose expertise and experience command attention. I make a point of avoiding the purely propagandist on either side, or those who curate otherwise useful material selectively and for propaganda purposes. I admit my choices are fallible, but I hope what I DO share is useful.

10 hours ago: Whenever I post about the killing of our children in Gaza, some inhumane people comment, asking H*a*m*a*s to surrender.

How shameful!

The problem is not only about this logic.

What about us in Palestine? Are the I*srae*lis the only people who have the right to exist and show the brutal power to protect their state?

Even if there was no H*a*m*a*s or Fatah, would Palestinians have a free state?

What parties did we have before 1948?

My choice has been to avoid many of the memes and tropes some use, including even at times Mosab, which provide horrific images and stories of dead or mutilated children and other examples of the crimes that all wars bring. Just as powerful, in my mind, are these two images, the second one provided by Mosab in the past couple of days.

In December 10, 2023 I shared this from Mosab:

Breaking, my heart is broken, my friend and colleague Refaat AlAreer was killed with his family a few minutes ago.

Refaat is a university professor and writer and editor of Gaza Writes Back.

I don’t want to believe this. We both loved to pick strawberries together. I took this photo of him this summer.

This is very brutal….

This year, there are no strawberries, no books (my destroyed library in the second photo), no English literature, no sea, no Refaat.

Please Refaat, come back!

Now we read on Facebook:

I just found this photo of Refaat, where he was carrying some olive oil he could salvaged from his family’s bombed house, days before he got murdered in an air strike.

If you look at the photo I shared of Refaat with the strawberries and then look at this picture, you will realize how much Refaat went through even before his murder.

RIP, loved one!

For Mosab’s story see this from PBS — there is a warning but I urge you to see this. It cannot be seen too often.

2024 in review 6

The month was much given to the 65th Reunion of my High School Class, which I attended via Facebook rather than in person.

As at 29th April

Anzac Day and Sydney Boys High reflections — 2

Posted on  by Neil

I remember the Sydney High Anzac Day assembly in 1957, and I remember too that when I told Mum and Dad about it afterwards their enthusiasm was muted. Gordon Bennett was not entirely uncontroversial, as memories of the surrender of Singapore and what Bennett did were still quite fresh. Fifteen years does not seem long ago to me these days, nor did it to my parents in 1957. My Dad’s RAAF greatcoat was still hanging in our laundry…

For detail see this episode of Four Corners (ABC).

Despite highly decorated achievements during World War I, during which he commanded at both battalion and brigade level and became the youngest general in the Australian Army, Bennett is best remembered for his role during the fall of Singapore in February 1942. As commander of the 8th Australian Division, he escaped while his men became prisoners of the Imperial Japanese Army. After this, Bennett’s military career waned and, although he rose to command a corps, he never again commanded troops in battle. In 1945, his escape caused controversy and resulted in a Royal Commission and military enquiry. Both found that he had been unjustified in relinquishing his command. — Wikipedia

So our Colonel Des Duffy was in the thick of it!

Sydney Boys High — “The Record” 1957

UPDATE: I have found the citation for Des Duffy’s Military Cross. It can be viewed on the 2/30 Battalion Association site. Search for “Duffy”.

This was a truly epic venture, and a Sydney Boys High alumnus was a vital member of it.

WARNING: The following video is a religious telecast, so if you want to avoid the sermon stop it at 20 minutes! Up until then it really is a good account of the Krait.

Bob Page? Now there is a story!



This humble fishing trawler led a double life during World War II as part of Operation Jaywick.

See The Last Post Ceremony commemorating the service of (NX19158) Captain Robert Charles Page, Z Special Unit, Second World War.

Bob Page was born on 21 July 1920 in Sydney, the eldest son of Harold and Anne Page. He attended Sydney Boys’ High School and enrolled to study medicine at the University of Sydney in 1940. He left his studies a little over 12 months later to enlist in the Australian Imperial Force. Joining the 2/4th Pioneer Battalion, he was quickly promoted to the rank of lieutenant.

In 1942 Page’s father, Harold, who had been a senior administrator in New Guinea, was captured by the Japanese at Rabaul. Later that year Harold Page was en route to Japan on board the Montevideo Maru with more than a thousand prisoners of war when it was torpedoed and sunk, killing all the prisoners on board.

In the same year Lieutenant Page transferred to Z Special Unit, a joint Allied unit formed to conduct clandestine operations behind Japanese lines in South East Asia. In September 1943 he took part in Operation Jaywick, devised by British officer Captain Ivan Lyon and using a dilapidated Japanese-built fishing vessel, the Krait, to sneak a crew of 14 into enemy waters. The Krait left Western Australia on the 2nd of September and arrived off Singapore about three weeks later. From there, Page and five other men paddled canoes in to Singapore Harbour and attached limpet mines to Japanese ships under cover of darkness. They destroyed or seriously damaged seven ships, more than 35,000 tonnes of shipping.

On his return, Bob Page married Roma Prowse in Canberra on the 1st of November, 1943. His role in Z Special Unit required him to keep the operation secret from Roma. Page was awarded the DSO for his “courage and devotion under extreme hazardous conditions”, but because of the need for secrecy it was not officially promulgated until 1945 and Bob never knew about it….

To conclude the story, I turn to the Australian Dictionary of Biography.

In September 1944 Page was one of twenty-three men taken by submarine to the South China Sea. There they seized a junk in which they sailed towards Singapore. On 6 October, off Laban Island, they mistakenly fired on a Malay police launch, killing some or all of the crew. With secrecy lost, the mission was abandoned. The commandos scuttled the junk and made their way in rubber dinghies to their base on Merapas Island. For about two months they either evaded or fought off the pursuing Japanese. A British submarine sent to collect them failed to make contact. Page and ten other survivors were eventually captured, taken to Singapore and sentenced to death. With nine comrades, he was beheaded on 7 July 1945 at Ulu Pandan. After the war had ended, his remains were reinterred in Kranji war cemetery. His wife survived him.

There was a made-for-TV movie in 1989, Heroes of the Krait

The road down the Moore Park side of the school is called Cutler Drive. I mentioned it yesterday.

Cutler Drive on the left

[Sir] Roden Cutler was awarded the VC and went on to be Governor of NSW. The driveway from Anzac Parade to Cleveland Street past the school’s front entrance is named after him. And the gates at Anzac Parade, dedicated to him in 2007.

Dr Jaggar, the Principal, said at the Dedication:

As a scholar, sportsman, soldier, leader,diplomat, concerned citizen and statesman,Sir Roden Cutler was an example in action of our SBHS ethos – with truth and courage. At High in 1934, Sir Roden was awarded School Blues for swimming, water polo and target rifle shooting. Sir Roden was described as a trier, a leader and a role model for younger boys. At High, then as now, we idealise the good all-rounder – the person who has the talent, courage, will power, self-discipline, flexibility and communication skills to succeed in a variety of endeavours. Sir Roden was such a man. His integrity in public life was legendary; his gallantry conspicuous, his humility inspirational. He was able to interact easily and warmly with people from all walks of life. He loved his sport. His lifelong dedication to public service and charitable causes marks him out as a very special Australian icon – a man of the people.

Most importantly of all for us here, Sir Roden held his old school in high regard and throughout his life supported its activities. His involvement as patron of our organisations made him special to our community. He was a point of reference for the school in its history and a champion of its causes. He dedicated buildings and made himself available at ceremonial occasions, despite his commitments as Governor. Even as late as 2000, nearly two decades after his retirement, he attended an Anzac Day assembly with a 1934-40 class reunion at High, despite his ill health and the inconvenience of being confined to a wheel chair. He joined in the singing of the school song with his old classmates. He followed closely the fortunes of the cadets and the rifle team and was very pleased with the gift of a picture of the High GPS Championship target rifle shooting team of 2001. It was with a solemn pride that twenty School Prefects formed up behind our school banner and led the procession into St Andrews cathedral at Sir Roden‟s state funeral in 2002.

As a staff member in 2000, I was at that Anzac Day assembly.

In the early hours of 6 July 1941, the Battle of Damour began. This operation, fought 30 km south of Beirut, was the last major operation of the Syria-Lebanon Campaign that Australians were involved in.From the start, Vichy French forces responded with constant shelling and mortar attacks. Australian losses began to mount.

As an artillery observation officer, Cutler was involved in heavy fighting. He captured 8 Vichy French soldiers from 3 separate machine-gun posts.

The enemy in the first nest were persuaded by the sight of this six feet four inches of elongated Aussie jumping right into their midst. Those in the second nest were talked into it by Cutler’s limited French. A grenade dropped into the third plus the assistance of a Bren-gunner from the battalion caused its occupants to make an instant decision on the subject.

[John William O’Brien, Guns and Gunners: the story of the 2/5th Australian Field Regiment in World War II, 1950, p 122]

As fighting continued in the hilly surrounds, communication became difficult. The Australians’ wireless would not work. Cutler offered to attempt to restore communication. He planned to go to a pre-arranged spot and try and lay a telephone line, despite the danger from ongoing heavy machine-gun fire.

Before he could complete the task, Cutler was wounded in the leg. He managed to stem the blood loss with a tourniquet. But he lay in the open, in excruciating pain, for 26 hours. Pinned down by enemy fire, his company was unable to rescue him.

Cutler was eventually rescued by French prisoners, who took him to the road. From there, he was taken for medical care at a dressing station. By this time, his leg had become septic. Amputation was the only option.

Cutler’s ‘conspicuous and sustained gallantry’ bravery was recognised with the awarding of a Victoria Cross (VC). When he was well enough to travel, he was invalided out of the army and returned to Australia.

That is from Anzac Portal — Australian Department of Veteran’s Affairs.

Arthur Roden Cutler (right) pictured at the awarding of his Victoria Cross with his mother, Ruby Cutler (centre) and the Governor-General of Australia, Lord Gowrie (left), at Admiralty House, Kirribilli, on 11 June 1942. AWM 012577