Friday, September 29, 2006
PNG - what other images

are possible? I think that the more heavily clothed, the more likely it is the costumes are highlands. It gets cold enough for blankets up there where the mountains are higher than Mt Kosiusko (2600m or thereabouts. Mt Wilhelm is 4500m, Mt Hagen the biggest city of the highlands is at 3500 m. So imagine a city of say 80000 people on top of Mt Kosiusko?
I am not only fascinated by the
fascinating. The pictures from PNG are not meant as voyeurism but as a tribute to a remarkable people which survives despite the best efforts of greed and corruption to keep them subjected to impoverished circumstances.
I was embarrassed to have to decline an offer of an acquaintance to come and live with me yesterday. It would not be right to create a precedent for the next AVI who comes and as well, I am only renting the University property. I don't know what his normal circumstances of living are but that he sees a wait man as approachable seems interesting in a culture which lives by the rule of wontoks. I wonder who are his wontoks and whose were Simon's wontoks?
I might be a coward and selfish for not being willing to share my accommodation but I can live with that.
I've been feeling really weird
for about a week now. I don't know whether to put it down to the malaria, or the malaria treatment, or to my being concerned about Matthew, or to the irregular weekends that John and I have been working, or to the unsettling circumstances of this week. The funeral of Robin Kiliti, a student from Baiyer who was murdered last Friday was held yesterday and this morning the students will meet to decide whether they return next week.
I wasn't sure what our situation as lecturers was - I turned up in my department on two days and then I thought well if I'm wanted, someone will tell me. I certainly hope the students return next week. It's not as though people are in a daze but we are bewildered. We are not on holidays, we are not on strike, but we are confused. There seems to be very few staff on campus. So much so that yesterday afternoon I myself went into town to get my water bill sorted out.
the only female speaker
to speak was probably the one whom I empathised with the most. She spoke of PNG as a democratic society where there was a silent minority which was not being heard. The silent minority of students was not being heard on campus. Women students needed to be listened to as well she said.
I empathised with her but I was equally impressed with all the student speakers. Tok Pisin seems to have a particular way of expressing emotion whether the emotion is calming or strident and urging. "Yu mas toktok na yu mas harim" can be intoned as a strident urging rallying cry but equally it can be intonated as a soft call to reason.
This 3rd world country with such impressive new generation leaders. PNG and other Non-aligned countries who have just met in Cuba. Your turn will come as the 1st World becomes the Old World - tired, worn out and lazy - still trying to use yesterday's weapons of force on post-modern man's weapon of reason. Congratulations for the excitement your young students encourage me with.
the students met the Univ Council
in open forum in the quadrangle outside the Admin this morning. I observed the proceedings from downstairs for a while and then I crept upstairs to the Architecture faculty where I could better hear the proceedings. The Pro Chancellor used the thoughts of Mr Kiliti, father of the late Robin to encourage the students to concentrate on the job at hand - to get through their year. He recounted how Mr Kiliti at the funeral yesterday had spoken of his dream three years ago which was to be standing proudly in one year's time beside his son who would be wearing a University hat and gown and silk hood and who would be holding in his hand his passport to security. Such heartache as this dream is not to be. Such anguish and agony at having come so close. How does the human spirit recover from that.
when they saved Private Ryan
I wonder why they didn't save L/Cpl Ted Farrell as well? Great Uncle Ted whom I knew when I was growing up in Bourke and who later went over to Gilgandra to be close to his sister, my grandmother, Victoria Kate Anderson, in his old age, returned to Australia after the armistice and arrived in Australia 19th August, 1919 - about ten months after the end of the war. Great Uncle Ted had lost his two brothers over there - George (my middle name) was killed in action in March 1917, and Tim (my Father's middle name) died of wounds in May 1918.
The three brothers had service numbers 1919 (Ted); 1920 (Tim); and 1921 (George). I'm sure they must have seen it as some sort of adventure. They were shearers and labourers out around Bourke and Brewarrina in the days of dirt roads and just after the end of the paddle boats.
Blasphemy
At the orientation week at Univ of Sydney several years ago, the compere was using the name of Jesus Christ in the context of "for Chrissake", and F%$#&N Christ" and simply "Jesus Christ!"which apparently was meant to be funny. I went up to him and told him to blaspheme Allah or the Rainbow Serpent and he said something to the effect "%$^& off you f&%$#'n wanker. What are you on about".
And we are meant to have to put up with this? This is what my country has become? Christianity has become the butt of blasphemy while we condemn Moslems? Are we perverted or what?
Thursday, September 28, 2006
District Governor Of Rotary
Michael Gregory was guest of honour at the combined Rotary Clubs of Huon Gulf, Lae and Bulolo last night, Wednesday 27th September. The clubs met at the Melanesian and heard Michael on a range of issues facing Rotary. "Membership world-wide is stuck at 1.2 million despite moving into Kosova, Eastern Europe, China and soon Cuba. Four clubs closed in Queensland". One club proudly showed Michael a picture on the front of the local paper of Rotarians cooking a sausage sizzle for a school fete. "But what else do you do?" he asked. "Rotarians have to have fun and enjoy service with hands on service. Cheque book Rotary is killing the fun of being a Rotarian. The fun comes in projects where you see smiling faces as books are delivered, people get wheel chairs and clinics get supplies. Rotary has to act with heart and head. We think we know what people need - but we need to ask. When we put a water pump into a village we need to ensure we build a programme in pump maintenance into the project. The big campaigns need to continue. Polio is now endemic in only 4 countries. But it still needs focus. Nigeria stopped immunising and now it has recurred. The malaria campaign with corporate sponsorship is continuing. But you need to have fun. When you are not having fun the motivation ceases and members stop coming. Pretty soon there is no point in inviting a guest speaker because it is embarrassing for the speaker to speak to an audience of 6 members. And the club folds. And the community suffers. Therefore the message is - enjoy yourselves while you are being Rotarians."
As well as that we are aussies
Everybody loves us. That gives us the right to dis-own anyone who does not measure up to what us aussies consider to be aussie behaviour. Losers, sadoes, whingers, weirdos, frieks, loners, and anyone who doesn't drink beer is not an aussie and they don't belong in our country. That's why everybody loves us - we don't take no %$#@ from no-one.
But then of course we're Christians
Yes, I'd forgotten about that. We forgive others, we turn the other cheek, we preach love, we do not judge lest we ourselves be judged, we worship God, we dutifully attend Church with our brother and sister Christians every Sunday, we do not cheat the tax-man, we love honour and respect our parents so much that when they get elderly we put them into the professional care of underpaid nurses in a nursing home, we do not lie and say there will never ever be a GST and that children were thrown overboard, we do not kill civilians and call it collateral damage, we treat refugees and the less fortunate as we would like to be treated ourselves. After all, we are Christians. We love everybody.
"Realist" crossed the boundary
between fair comment and bullying and that is not the purpose of allowing comment on my blog. I can take criticism but I am not going to be bullied with stuff like "sad, bitter, twisted, loser, fool." I can take legitimate argument but why someone has to go one step further and put in hateful put-down garbage leaves me perplexed. Hopes for world peace don't seem real high with bigoted clowns not knowing when to keep quiet.
What started it was a continuing statement by me that Mr David Hicks, Citizen of Australia has been accorded none of the respect which democracy preaches and yet we are fighting a war to promote democracy. All along I have said Mr David Hicks, Citizen of Australia might be a little bit different but that puts him in need of support rather than for us to turn our backs on him. Once upon a time we called people witches or we locked them away in asylums or we threw stones at them and taunted them and made them chase us. David Bryant of Port Arthur infamy was probably similar.
That is where we have community breakdown. I don't know, but it strikes me that Mr David Hicks Citizen of Australia was a loner in need of community. It says more about our own lack of humanity that we could allow someone to fall through the safety net of community support.
There are some who would like to return to the days of burning witches - as long as they are not the accused witch.
Wednesday, September 27, 2006
right on - from http://schilt.info/
"Sydney looks great - in fact, Sydney is a beautiful city... to look at. Go deeper down and this beauty all but disappears. Between the violence, mental health issues, the senseless running around in a hurry, the stress and the isolation of human beings - I think I'm over it. I was over it a long time ago - it just took me a little longer than expected to cut my losses so to speak. Life in the so called west leaves much to be desired. The sad thing is that we are lead to believe that life in the west is normal - we grow up thinking that this is how it is meant to be. Our leaders - yes our leaders - guide nations and mankind towards what? Towards fuckin what? Yet we elect these so called servants to implement our mandate - we get what we deserve by the way. If there is something that typifies the western thought it has to be apathy and ignorance. Our leaders are happy for us to remain in this state - as long as we continue to ignore and not give a rats arse about what's "really" going on - mankind will continue to spiral towards a big pile of shit."
Thanks Robert. I don't feel as though I am the only one.
I was starting to doubt myself
That is what bullies are good at. They have no self esteem of their own so they try to knock others down to their level. A bully the other day did not like what I had written about Australian Citizen Mr David Hicks. "You sad bitter twisted loser fool" he ranted on two comments I allowed through. Just like the bullies at school and elsewhere in Australia, the ones who call others "Fatso, Ugly, Dago, Lebo, Refo, Abo," in fact anything to build themselves up relatively by putting the other person down.
I thought that maybe I might have gone too far myself in knocking aussies and the lack of community in Australia and in what I had said about Australian Citizen Mr David Hicks, prisoner of the Americans in Guantanamo Gaol.
Then I looked at my ancestry. 3 great uncles in WW1, 2 of whom did not return; Father in WW2; Brother in Vietnam.
There is no way you bully that you are going to shut me up. You gutless coward. You hide behind my blog to publish yourself. You gutless fraud. My ancestry %6&8s all over you. You contemptible bully. You and your aussie "mates" are not worth the sacrifices that were made for you so that you can live to bully Australians out of their right to an opinion. You vile piece of muck.
Edward (Edwin) Albert Farrell
Rank on discharge L Cpl
Number 1919
Date of Enlistment 4/Feb 1916.
Returned from Action 19 Aug 1919
Unit 55th Battalion
Embarkation HMAT Barambah, Ship no A37 23 June 1916
Unit at Embarkation 54 Infantry Battalion 2 to 5 Reinforcements April- September 1916.
ANDERSON, WALTER TIMOTHY
Service Australian Army
Service Number NX58048
Date of Birth 8 Jun 1909
Place of Birth BOURKE, NSW
Date of Enlistment 18 Jul 1940
Locality on Enlistment BALLADORAN, NSW
Place of Enlistment PADDINGTON, NSW
Next of Kin ANDERSON, WALTER
Date of Discharge 4 Aug 1947
Rank Sergeant
Posting at Discharge 1 AUST AMPH ARMD SQDN
Prisoner of War No
George Charles Farrell
Rank Private [Pte]
Service Number 1921
Unit 55th Bn Australian Inf
Service Army
Conflict 1914-1918
Date of Death 9 March 1917
Cause of Death Killed in action
Cemetery or Memorial Details
FRANCE 374 Guards' Cemetery Lesboeufs
Place Of Enlistment
Bourke, NSW
War Grave Register Notes
FARRELL, Pte. George Charles, 1921. 55th Bn. Australian Inf. Killed in action 9th March, 1917. Age 21. Son of Timothy and Mary Ann Farrell, of Tudor St., Bourke, New South Wales. VII. L. 10.
Source
AWM145 Roll of Honour cards, 1914-1918 War, Army
Location on the Roll of Honour
George Charles Farrell's name is located at panel 160 in the Commemorative Area at the Australian War Memorial (as indicated by the poppy on the plan).Print out this certificate and bring it to the Memorial & we will give you a free poppy to place next to George Charles Farrell's name.-->
Paul Timothy Anderson
Service: Army
Conflict: Vietnam
Summary of Unit Name(s)
A Squadron, 3rd Cavalry Regiment
Timothy Oxley Farrell
Rank Private [Pte]
Service Number 1920
Unit 55th Bn Australian Inf
Service Army
Conflict 1914-1918
Date of Death 22 May 1918
Cause of Death Died of wounds
Cemetery or Memorial Details FRANCE 29 Crouy British Cemetery Croy-Sur-Somme
Place Of Enlistment Bourke, NSW
War Grave Register Notes
FARRELL, Pte. Timothy Oxley, 1920. 55th Bn. Australian Inf. Died of wounds 22nd May, 1918. Son of Timothy and Mary Ann Farrell, of Tudor St., Bourke, New South Wales. II. C. 16.
Source
AWM145 Roll of Honour cards, 1914-1918 War, Army
Tuesday, September 26, 2006
I went around to Robert and Tony
last night. The murder of a student is so unsettling - that's not the word I want because a murder is wrong and a tragedy and what I probably mean is that the response to the murder is unsettling. Tony told me how he went to the haus krai and spoke words which encouraged the grieving father - "Your son was only doing on Friday night what 50 million students world wide were doing. He was out with his friends." You shouldn't get murdered for that. You shouldn't get murdered full stop. The grieving father had been told that his son brought it on himself and so he was relieved that Tony said what he said.
Post Courier day 2 report
Students urged to return to classes
ACTING Vice Chancellor of the University of Technology Wilson Tovirika has appealed to students to return to classes. The students yesterday started an indefinite boycott of classes to push for a number of demands, among them for the University council and administration to consider the re-introduction of sale and consumption of alcohol on campus. This, the students said, would stop students going outside campus to look for beer and ending up getting killed. Other security issues have also been raised by the students to be addressed.
The boycott of classes is in response to the killing of a third-year Computer Science student early on Saturday morning near a pub at Tent Siti by armed thugs. Six suspects have been arrested by police over the killing. Mr Tovirika said yesterday the boycott of classes was untimely because the students' exams were only four weeks away. He said student activities including the recent cultural show had already disrupted studies and the boycott would only add to the disruptions. Mr Tovirika also called on the students not to disrupt normal operations of the university and to allow public access in and out of the campus. He assured that the administration would endeavour to address the concerns that relate to the running of the university and pass on to the council issues relating to policy.
He said a special university council meeting could be convened to address the issues. The students also held meetings yesterday and requested Vice Chancellor Misty Baloiloi and members of the council to meet with them today to receive their petition. Mr Baloiloi, who is on leave, has indicated to attend the meeting. SRC president Nathan Dingu said the students would stay away from classes until their concerns have been addressed.
Acting Vice Chancellor Mr Tovirika and Registrar Allan Sako as well as other university staff attended the meeting with the students yesterday. Mr Sako assured that the university would provide support to repatriate the body of the murdered student and assist in funeral expenses. A ‘haus-krai’ has been erected on campus and students have been visiting in provincial groups.
Dear Realist - Get with the Strength!
"Dear friends, It's up to us to act, so we're going global and taking our David Hicks' campaign straight to the top. This coming week, the US President wants to pass new legislation for trying detainees that's actually far worse than the unfair system the US Supreme Court threw out - and ignoring the facts, our Government barracks from the sidelines. But his new plan is so outrageous that now support from Congress could collapse. America sees Australia as the closest of allies. At this crucial moment, tell the President of the United States and Congress that another sham system of Guantanamo justice is unacceptable. The President wants to use the anniversary of September 11 to pass devastating new legislation for trying detainees. It prevents defendants and their lawyers from even seeing evidence against them or confronting witnesses, while allowing prosecutors to use hearsay and evidence obtained through coercion. If the President is successful, detainees such as David Hicks will never again have access to appeals, or be able to make allegations of torture or mistreatment in the courts. The American Government has not, and would not ever, allow their citizens to be tried in Guantanamo Bay. Tell them not to create a system of justice for our citizen they wouldn't accept for theirs. Last month Australian Attorney-General Philip Ruddock promised David Hicks would be brought home by November if not properly charged. And Australians will hold him to that promise. But first we need to make certain the US doesn't let the Australian Government off the hook with a system so rigged, even leading Republicans and career military lawyers are protesting.Send your message right now. Let Washington know the eyes of the world are on them - and we expect the real deal, not another kangaroo court. www.getup.org.au/campaign/AustraliaCallingWashingtonThank you for taking urgent action,The GetUp team. PS: If you thought you were alone in supporting the right to a fair trial, GetUp's new Newspoll survey finds that more than 9 out of ten (91%) Australians believe David Hicks deserves a fair trial without delay, while less than 1 in 4 (24%) believe he will receive a fair trial in Guantanamo Bay."
the equatorial equinox
has just passed and Lae's equinox is in about a month. It is starting to get more humid now and soon I will be back to four or so showers a day. Two showers a day is sort of normal but sometimes if I am lazy I might skip the night one. I need the morning one to wake me up and the evening one to clean me up from the perspiration.
eleven months has gone by
since I arrived to start a two year contract with PNG Univ of Technology. I got the job through Australian volunteers International. A volunteer is actually paid but not at international contract rates. We get a subsistence allowance that enables us to live modestly but comfortably. We can't afford to buy a car so we travel by Public Motor Vehicle (about a 22 seater bus size). This is the way to meet people anyway.
I started to wilt at about the 6 month mark and I didn't think I would get through to this far. I have been supported by my fellow AVIs, ex-AVIs and their families, my work colleagues and my Chuirch and Rotary colleagues, and particular friends through circumstances which brought us together.
My nephew Byron had a Ben Franklin motivational statement to keep him going, something to the effect that so many brilliant inventions were on the point of discovery when the inventor gave up. Winston Churchill's best speech was his shortest to a School Speech Day. "Boys and Girls, never give up. Never, ever, ever give up. Thank you."
I am glad I persisted. I didn't know this was me until I came here.
Monday, September 25, 2006
the case of the murdered student
The tragic death of a student by murder last Friday night is being felt around the campus this morning. Yesterday the road up to Bumayong and Tent City was blocked. Today the main gates are blockaded. Students met outside the Admin block this morning and there are no classes today. I went over to the cake and pie shop for lunch and brought back a packet of scones - the last packet - for the people at the gate. I asked if it was alright to pass through firstly though. How this tense situation will resolve itself over the next few days?
breakfast at tiffany's

Us Unitechers hosted the townies on the night of the cultural festival. We partied at Roger's at night and then went to Robert's and Tony's for breakfast. Between us we managed to billet everybody which is quite good fun.
Here is maitre de cuisine Robert taking orders. It was the best bacon and egg roll - better than at the Nadzab airport lounge.
It had to happen sooner or later
I watch Fox news at 4.30. It might be a conservative channel but I am open minded. They use vocabulary like top of the hour and bottom of the hour to mean the o'clock and the half past. Like all good aussies, it had to creep into our vocabulary. I heard a bloke on the breakfast programme today before the eight o'clock news tell me that the top of the hour news would be on after the break. Fair dinkum. Why have we always got to copy other people. As if anytime soon, gimme a break, get a life, loser, wuss, were not enough. What is wrong with our Australian language? These are the very same people who tell you how proud they are to be aussies and then in the next breath they go using the language and idioms of another culture. How unAustralian is that.
Post Courier on murdered student
UNIVERSITY of Technology students are boycotting classes, starting today. They are protesting over the shooting dead of a fellow student during the early hours of Saturday near a bottle shop at Tent Siti. Student leaders said the boycott of classes would be indefinite. The students are demanding that the University allow the sale and consumption of liquor from the Unitech club. At a forum yesterday, the students said this was the second time that a student had suffered at the hands of criminals while looking for alcohol outside of the campus. In 2003 a student from Enga province was shot dead at the University bus-stop while on his way back to the campus after a night out. The student killed at the weekend was doing his third year in Computer Science and was from Baiyer in Western Highlands province. He had gone with two other colleagues to a beer outlet at Tent Siti and were walking back towards the campus when a group of men stopped them and asked for their beer. When the students refused a gang member shot the student at close range. He died instantly. His colleagues went back to the campus after taking his body to the Angau Hospital and recruited more boys and returned to the site of the shooting to hunt for the attackers. The students burnt down a house at the back of the beer outlet which they suspected was the hiding place of the attackers. On Saturday morning large groups of students marched to the Taraka Police station, where they presented a petition to police demanding for police and the community to ‘care and respect students’. They also petitioned the police to act quickly on finding the killers. The students also placed road-blocks outside the university gate and searched some vehicles going to and coming from Tent Siti and Bumayong. Police later ordered the students to remove the road-blocks. Police sources said yesterday a man, believed to be the one who shot dead the student, surrendered and is in police custody. Four other suspects were also rounded up, while two others are at large.
Communities have to show that
they care enough about their members and that they are resourceful and responsible enough to do without government intervention. They have to leave government with nothing to do. Of course this works against the interests of politicians who look for a career in being important and against the interests of political parties which have built a political ideology around their corporate identity and who desire to convert others and to impose their ideology on others.
Noblesse oblige works well in the USA where there are so many institutes for the betterment of the community. Australia has some community spirited noblesse oblige but we are a new money country and new money is less generous than old money.
the apparatus of the State
versus the apparatus of the community. In the days of pre-democracy, "noblesse oblige" was the instrument the ruling classes used to keep a community together. In return for peace, order and goodwill, the better off looked after the less well off - that was their contribution to community and their insurance for their privileged position. The irony of post-Nazism, post-Fascism and post-Communism ideologies is that the democratic regimes have become more bureaucratic and the central governments more signitficant in the lives of people now than when these democratic regimes were competing against the now-discredited State-elitism-in-practice regimes.
Anonymity, individualism and resignation from community responsibility on the one hand and on the other, the social conscience demand that someone else other than me look after the social welfare sector required that central government become even more centrist. User pays and privatisation were attempts by government to get out of the lives of people but personal greed in the private sector has required that government continue its role in regulation and therefore it is still in our lives only much more so than ever.
So how can communities reclaim their heritage and sense of worth?
from the LCC
"If we thought life was difficult with power interruptions, no mobile service, spare a thought for residents in downtown Beirut, Lebanon, or Baghdad Iraq, where that type of chaos we could not possibly fathom in PNG.
Safe weekend
to All!"
you haven't tried if you haven't failed
was a saying told me by a good farmer mate once. Thanks Don. When the going gets tough as it does if one lives life to the full, I pray this prayer.
"I need your help.
Lord, I lost sight of me and of my way,
I am blind and don't know where to turn,
Nor do I see my sister and her plight.
Please give me light that I can see again
A goal, a purpose and a meaning in my life,
And in my daily work and world.
My friends have tried, have tried in vain to help me,
See and find that light.
Yet they themselves were partly blind.
I need your help. You have the only light
That's strong enough to penetrate the darkness of my life.
Please give me sight. Touch my eyes."
shock jocks aussie values quiz
1. aussies drink more beer than (a) the world can produce; (b) New Zealand (c) Arabia.
2. When you go into a Chinese Restaurant an aussie should say (a) Oi Chink, aint yez got no steak n' chips n' eggs (b) May I have the noodles and chow mien please?
3. In a Lebo kebab shop an aussie should say (a) Oi Dago, why don't yez bake the lamb like we do. (b) This is a really interesting multicultural way way of appreciating lamb cuisine.
4. Complete this line of poetry: "aussie, aussie, aussie, oi, oi, ----." Note: This is a trick question - Only aussies are dumb enough to get it wrong.
5. Anyone who isn't an aussie is (a) a loser; (b) a wanker; (c) unAustralian; (d) all of these.
6. When an aussie sings Advance Australia Fair, which hand to you put on your heart? (a) left; (b) right; (c) either.
7. When should an aussie wear the Australian Flag lapel badge? (a) all the time; (b) when likely to be caught on TV; (c) only in Parliament; (d) on public occasions.
8. Complete this joke. "How can you tell a planeload of Pommies has arrived?" ....
9. aussies are the best at (a) two-up; (b) cricket; (c) horse racing; (d) everything.
10. When an aussie sees a down and outer, what should he do? (a) dunno; (b) don't care; (c) tell everyone we look after our mates; (d) walk past.
11. Bonus question. Who was the worst ever Australian Prime Minister? (a) Keating; (b) Hawkey; (c) Whitlam; (d) Chifley; (e) all of them equally bad as they were all Labor.
Sunday, September 24, 2006
one of the other groups

I think Western Highlands for the cultural festival about three weeks ago now.
Such a joyous occasion was that weekend but tragedy struck on Friday night when one of the students was shot at club140 on the boundary of the Unitech and Tent City.
Students will be having their haus krai at the admin building so teaching for this week looks uncertain.
more of the mud-men

from Goroka. What fascinating culture and how rich is this whole world that such traditions are alive. They have the same needs and wants as most other people but they are not overly worried generally if they cannot satisfy everything.
Peter came back this morning from Goroka after seeing his 14 yr old nephew buried. He knocked on my door with 6 yr old daughter Betty about 8.30 with a pile of vegetables for me. How lucky am I. And some clown has the ignorance to bully me as a "sad bitter loser" for writing some quasi-political story that offended their delicate sensitivity. They would do well to experience the vibrancy of PNG or the earthiness of Brewarrina - to realise what is important in life. Get a life - don't be so precious.
Clancy of the Overflow
How many of our Values experts know where The Overflow is? "And he sees the vision splendid of the sunlit plains extended and at night the wondrous glory of the everlasting stars."
You need to get out between Nyngan and Condobolin to find it. That's an Australian Value - to know where these places are that were written about by our heritage poets. Australia is more than Sydney and Melbourne and Parliament House Canberra.
Matthew and Hannah

Matt when he was in y10 at Oxley High School Tamworth, aged about 15 and little baby Hannah at four months or so I think it was at Wilcannia. No wonder they gave Christine and I such happiness.
As I wrote last Tuesday, it is 22 years without her as she died as an eight month old baby from a viral encephalitis. We miss you darling daughter.
I remember working on my first
polling booth out at Brewarrina. I was too young to be a poll clerk so I helped one of the political parties give out how to vote cards. They were times when each of the parties gave out each other's votes if we went for a drinks break or anything. It was a more generous social and political climate then.
Leadership has a lot to do with building a more good natured community. Democracy functions with the consent of the majority and the good will of the minority. The beauty of the Americans is that there seems to be much more goodwill to rival political opinions. They argue their cases strongly, but their comraderie is more good natured. Conservatives joke that they'd much rather party with liberals because they are more fun to be with.
I'm sure our leaders take themselves too seriously here to the detriment of community. Why do they not stop to ask whether what they are doing is good for the cementing of the community? We are a much more divisive society because of personal ambition and power. And for what? We are a minnow on the world stage.
Saturday, September 23, 2006
there's a problem with getting my photos
to get through the system. The problem with the lines seems to be worse than usual and has been this way since I returned to Lae and it was particularly bad in the week I was back in Australia. I particulaly wanted to put my view from the Crowne Plaza Hotel up - as proof that I was there. On AVI wages, we don't get to stay at something like this and even on Uni business we stay in more modest accommodation.
Malaria treatment seems to be working, at least the cough has gone. I was relieved to be able to talk to Matthew tonight - I couldn't get him on his mobile all day but his battery had gone flat and was out fishing with a mate anyway. I got him a Dave Hughes comedy DVD and a Billy Connolly one and Christine said he brought it out to Ballina where they watched Hughesy last week after I had come back up here.
Talking about the malaria, I was doing a lesson and I interrupted to tell the students about it. It's Vivax Malaria I told them - little grubs hide in the liver. I think there's one coming out now. Got him. And I put the imaginary grub on the table and hit it with my sandle which I had kicked off. They seem to relate to a quirky sense of humour which is why probably the student felt confident in coming to me yesterday. I enjoy teaching them. I've got to do a lecture to 700 on Monday. They sit in two amphitheatres and the lecture is videod across.
there are no easy solutions
to some of life's problems. Yesterday afternoon a student came to me with his essay and he needed to talk. He is far from home and I felt honoured that he chose me, an ex-pat wait man to help him, a Melanesian, talk through the problem he had. I could only listen and encourage him and I gave him my phone number in case he needed to talk ove r the weekend.
Life in the dorms can be lonely, particularly if one is feeling down and everyone else is enjoying sport so I wanted to make sure someone was there for him. As I said, I was happy he chose to come to me. After a while I got one of the national to help me and hopefully between us we were able to help the situation.
It is fascinating that in "Mateship Australia"
that one can't have an opinion outside the the 52% mainstream majority without being derided by someone as a "sad bitter loser". The Australia of the Australian Values I grew up with was an egalitarian, democratic and respectful people. The shock jocks are responsible for some of the put downs and discourtesy on mates in Mateship Australia but a decline in the spirit of tolerance and a more individual and anonymous culture are changing our values consciousness to one which my grandparents would not recognise. My Mother and Uncle and Aunty can't understand why I have the views I do but they don't resort to to deriding me with the "twisted bitter loser" line. It's a form of bullying which once upon a time was not part of our culture.
Fortunately there is help for people prone to bullying behaviour but often they do not realise their insults are a form of bullying. It's not necessary to bully other people but bullies need to assert themselves by putting other people down and thus to make themselves feel better.
Friday, September 22, 2006
where heroes abound
As a young teacher in western NSW I never heard any heroic stories of ex-pupils. But as I moved further east, I would get swamped on my first night in town when standing at the bar and it would be discovered I was a new school teacher. Well did the heroes come running to tell of their and their old mans' exploits with the last headmaster but one. "Mate, he called me into his office and he hit me with the cane and I grabbed it and wrapped it around his neck." "Mate, he called me into his office and as he was going to hit me with the cane, I ran out the room. I came back with my old man and he grabbed the cane and shoved it up his @#%^." I'm so glad I wasn't a headmaster in those wild and violent eastern towns. It's a wonder Byron Bay* could attract any headmasters at all.
* Byron Bay. Most easterly point on mainland Australia.
I am always intrigued and bemused
when I hear and see the line "poor/sad/misguided/pathetic/ignorant/bitter/and warped soul" or some variation on it. Intrigued because I wonder why one would have those sentiments about a mate in "Mateship Australia" and not do anything about it to alleviate the perceived misery of the addressee? Bemused because I wonder if like the bully, the addressER is actually feeling that way about themself?
I myself am reluctant to say "I am sorry you have those sentiments" lest it be taken as patronising. I have read and heard the line in letters to the ED, at public rallies, the back of toilet doors, movies and I received one myself the other day in a comment. I am perplexed. I don't want to sound patronising but I would hate to think if there is someone out there in need crying out for help through the transferrence of of their pathos vicariously.
I mean if I felt that a person
was a poor/sad/misguided/pathetic/ignorant/bitter/and warped soul, I think think it to be a moral duty to help the person. It doesn't take much to listen to someone and to buy them a cup of coffee and sit with them a while. My parish priest in Australia wrote the other day for example: "2 days later I found an old man sitting on my doorstep. He too was tired and hungry. He was also ill and could only talk in a whisper. I offered to take him around to the shop to buy some food. He walked very slowly and half way there he had to sit down and rest. He was very thin with a long tangled beard and he carried a crust of bread in his pocket and a ragged bundle on his back. I asked him to collect what he needed and I paid the bill."
Whom is to be pitied - the author of the "poor/sad/misguided/pathetic/ignorant/bitter/and warped soul"? Or the addressee? One really should not belittle the sentiments expressed in the line by attempting some sort of sarcasm with them because there are people whose reality is those tragic circumstances. Spare a though for them if one is not in need oneself.
On the other hand, and I mean this seriously and not as a cheap put down, one should call Lifeline or some other such agency if one needs help. Bullying, intimidating in words or deeds and being anonymous are problems of the modern age which need to be treated. One maybe needs to talk about it. The first act of a brave person is to acknowledge one needs help.
Jesus spent his whole life
with "poor/sad/misguided/blind/crippled/leprous/sinful" Jews and Samaritans and the occasional Roman soldier. His message was that whatever I do to one of them, I do to him. When Lord did I see you poor/sad/misguided/blind/crippled/leprous/starving, alone/ignored and in gaol? And when did I help you?
"Truly I tell you, just as you did it to one of these, you did it to me" said Jesus. Matt, 25:40
wanker - I'm not sure what
this term means but I can probably guess. I think I've heard it used in a rude sense but my understanding is that it is a foreignism and being a hot-blooded-true-blue Australian who is proud of my Australian heritage mostly in the outback, born in Bourke western NSW, Father born in Bourke western NSW, grandparents from around Byrock, Brewarrina, Gongolgon, then I prefer to use Australianisms rather than foreignisms.
So while talking about values, I wonder if the values experts can tell the difference between a billabong and an anabranch; or a coolabah tree from a liquidamber? or a wallaby from a kangaroo; or a sheep from an emu?
Thursday, September 21, 2006
dealing with outrage: a victim at Unitech
"Dear all, We strive in life in whatever beneficial occupation not only for our personal and family comfort and convenience, but also that our neighbours, our beloved nation, our people, or at least those who cross our paths might enjoy a speck from our achievements. And we always desire that the benefits others receive from us is through goodwill and via generous consent and not through forceful acquisition and mischievous demeanour of sort. Unfortunately, as many of you may have already heard, and in my absence on study leave, my family was a victim on Friday (1/9/06) to some of our own citizens, whom regrettably our society has come to accept as "criminals". The modern armour they used was not against an international enemy in some warfare or against a traditional rival in some tribal conflict, but against a harmless family, whose members toil daily to contribute to the nation's coffers so that these "criminals" might receive sufficient medication, travel on better roads, and generally receive other government services. As a family, like any hard-working citizens and non-citizens, we annually contribute significant sums in income taxes, let alone goods & services taxes, to indirectly assist our brother and sister citizens. Nevertheless, some of our own people thought these was not enough! They came and took that which pleased their eyes, fruits of our sweat, from our home that day. I can spare some peace that my wife, my daugters, my sisters, and my nieces were untouched.Now, I am wounded in the mind. My family's traumatic ordeal has occurred only a few days from my beloved nation's 31st anniversary, where we are expected to sing, "...we are independent and we are free..."; and at the anthem's end, "...shout again for the whole world to hear..." Through our national anthem, which is our pride, we are assured of our freedom and safety. We are urged to shout again that this is the nation of our dreams, and a place we desire our children journey through joyful time and space. Unfortunately, our selfless service to our people has been rewarded with the traumatic experience. Our pride to sing for freedom and safety has been paid with a psychological wound. Should we serve? Should we sing? We are indeed mystified! In revenge, I could opt for assistance from my "bubu's black bilum" (a RIGO measure!) and invisibly track my assailants until all drew their last breath. But, to kill a citizen is to kill myself! Or I could accend a mountain and pray for divine lightning bolts to strike my enemies. But, I do not consider myself holy enough to draw that response; even if I were, the Maker would likely forbid the scheme. BUT, I HAVE VOWED TO FIGHT! AND IT WILL BE A DIFFERENT BATTLE...
To those Christian brothers and sisters, colleagues, friends, and relatives, who comforted my family after the ordeal, and assisted in any way, I owe you my deep gratitude."





