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Tag Archives: Afghanistan

Love Lost

08 Friday Aug 2014

Posted by Mark in Gerard Oosterman

≈ 6 Comments

Tags

Afghanistan, breavement, deafness, love

By Gerard Oosterman

Lost love

Lost love

“I am so sorry to hear about your loss, Bettina”. “Ah, don’t be.” “Thank God he is gone, the miserable man”. And with that, the Bettina with the massive battle ship chin dismissed the passing of her husband of over forty years. Sometimes, people hide their grief with putting up a brave front. I don’t think she was in that category, having known both of them for over twenty years.

Sometime during the seventies both Bettina and husband Bob in their wild and impetuous youth traveled Europe in a left hand drive large bus converted to a camper wagon. You now see them everywhere, sometimes with bicycles or even a boat strapped at the back or on the roof. I saw a camper wagon recently that even towed a small car to buzz about in. And no doubt used, through the help of a GPS satellite system, to guide the happy travelers to the nearest Aldi or Woolworth emporium, to stock up on the essentials, including butter and lamb chops with continental parsley.

Bettina and husband Bob, (while in their youth) traveled overland back to Australia where they lived in a large house near the water. It must have been quite an adventure when Afghanistan and Burma were hardly on the well trodden traveler’s route. You would often see Bob and wife with their large grey converted left hand drive vehicle driving around the place with Bob never missing a friendly wave.

He used to regale their travel adventures to us but his Bettina would butt in ‘ oh, nonsense Bob, it wasn’t like that’ and than impose her version of it. He just used to smile and let her do the talking. He did love her, or at least allowed her the freedom to dominate him in conversations.

While on their return journey, they had filled their bus up with Afghan tapestries and carpets which they sold to anyone keen on a bargain. It were the days of so many young couples with children setting up camp in the inner city of Sydney. A true beginning of city living instead of the mind boggling boring but well promoted ‘dream’ of living in the suburbs.

As the years went by, as they seem to so relentlessly, Bob became profoundly deaf and conversations became stilted and awry. A great pity. He was always the friendly giving man and his wife the shouting over the top with such a large chin to accept (in a round-a-bout way). In any case, a long standing marriage were both no doubt had found their levels of comfort and acceptance of each other. True love?

I sometimes thought of Bob waking up and turning towards his Bettina and see the familiar large chin jutting above the sheets. He loved her, that’s for sure, and accepted her as lovingly as any caring husband would. Millions of couple all over the world do this. Hundreds of millions more likely.

And then, Bob died suddenly. Towards the last few years he had a long white beard and often stood silently next to his beloved Bettina. He was now as deaf as a bucket of sand and could not converse as before even though he would sometimes still break out and, while still smiling, mention bits about Afghanistan. Bettina now mostly had the full attention of the audience.

“Thank God he is gone” is what she said. (after forty years)

We Will Remember [redacted]

25 Thursday Apr 2013

Posted by Therese Trouserzoff in Emmjay

≈ 5 Comments

Tags

Afghanistan, Anzac, diggers, post traumatic stress, war injuries

pixellated Soldier2

Story by Emmjay

Our traditional view of the valiant digger is certainly that of a noble self-effacing hero.  A ragtag larrikin in a pair of over-sized shorts and massive boots with a slouch hat and a rollie cigarette dangling precariously from his lip.  This improbable warrior has more than likely just put his life on the line for his mates and overcome enormous odds to defeat a far more numerous foe through rat like ingenuity and courage, a single shot .303 rifle, a cup of tea and a yard of number 8 fencing wire.

We will remember him.  He was our Dad or Grandad, uncle or brother.  He has lived through unimaginable horror and he carried his burden silently.  Only his immediate family know the price he paid for his service to God and country.  The same price they continue to pay long after the bullets have stopped flying.

But that was yesterday and the image of our digger today is more like the bloke in the picture above.  He is anonymous in life and almost invisible.  He is a highly-trained and well-equipped (we are told).  He – and of course nowadays also she – is a professional killer.  We see him visited by our Prime Ministers and Ministers of Defence and pixellated out on our flat screen TVs – particularly when he is an elite Special Services assassin.

That is, until he has the misfortune of being killed by a gang of ragtag vagabond insurgents in filthy scraps.  Killed with improvised explosive devices – not ultra high tech clean weapons, but stuff that they cobbled together through rat-like cunning and ingenuity from explosives they stole or bought from our allies.  We don’t call these men our enemies because we cannot discern them from the people we are calling our allies.

We call them insurgents.  And when our diggers kill them, we show them not in flag-draped coffins flown home for honourable burials with pomp and ceremony and eulogies from prominent politicians.  We show them dead in a dusty ditch with blood and flies.  No noble warriors there.  Not family men leaving widows and children to fend for themselves until they grow into the next generation of “allies”.  Insurgents.

But there are two more diggers that we never seem to see these days.  One is new.  The other is as old as time itself.

Recently the Americans created and awarded a new kind of medal to some specialist military personnel – are they really what one might call “soldiers” ?  These good men and women visit death and destruction on our mutual enemies by sitting at computer screens somewhere far removed from the battlefield – and fly drone (unmanned) aircraft allegedly capable of  assassinating only the most important enemy leaders.  We call them precision-strikes because there’s never any unintended damage or death.  We would call that “collateral damage” – in the unlikely event that it was ever to occur.

No smell of high explosives.  No dust and blood for these high tech warriors.  No service in hostile foreign lands far from loved ones deep in harm’s way.  No personal risk beyond a slight case of RSI.  These heroes are putting their carpal tunnels on the line for God and country.  Let’s give them medals.

The timeless image of our forgotten digger is the man who was badly wounded but who lived.  This bloke is an embarrassment.  Well, he must be, because we treat him like he doesn’t exist.  Especially if his wounds are psychological.

He’s one we will do our best to forget.

We know exactly how many diggers have been killed in Afghanistan.  We get updates moments after the event – who, when, where.  But the digger who is wounded is a fast fading statistic at best; more likely a report written in invisible digital ink.

There’s not a lot of military glory in mental health disability, is there.

Our military commanders insist we have no endemic mental health problems with our returned soldiers.  So it’s no surprise that we seem incapable of making sure that there is first rate psychological support for the man or woman who has gone through hell and come back worst for wear.  Because he or she is a phantom.

It’s up to him or her to suppress the anguish and recurrent horror.  And it’s up to their family to shoulder on their own the endless burden of service to country .

The family certainly won’t forget.

But our politicians and bureaucrats will do their darndest to make it as difficult as possible for returned service men and women to receive proper care.  Deny, obfuscate, red tape, red tape, red tape. Disgraceful.

And we as Australians have got to do a lot better than this.

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