Vietnam Swans

Australian Rules Football In Vietnam!

What’s it mean to be Australian? A tribute to Ernie

Posted by Vietnam Swans on May 1, 2009

The Thailand Tigers and Vietnam Swans hand out Club shirts to ex POWs Bill, Neil and Snow. And an extra one for their mate, Ernie

The Thailand Tigers and Vietnam Swans hand out Club shirts to ex POWs Bill, Snow and Neil. And a 4th shirt for their mate, Ernie

After the ANZAC  match last Saturday, a man named Grant Harris approached Phil Johns from the Swans. He handed Phil a one pager that his friend Christopher Greenwood had written about Ernie. Ernie was an ex POW who was due to make his 9th consecutive trip to the 2009 ANZAC Day Dawn Service with students from the local Esperance High School in Western Australia.

However, two days before he was due to leave for Thailand, Ernie suffered a heart attack. Last Wednesday, Ernie Redman OAM died. With kind permission from Christopher Green, “This (ex POW’s) Life” is reproduced below:

Someone asked me the other day what I thought it meant to be an Australian. At last, me thinks, an easy puzzler to answer. And no, I’m not visualizing a speeding car with two flags protruding from the rear passenger windows. For me it is the pride I get out of being asked to assist a bloke by the name of Ernie Redman. In the town I live in, Ernie is a living legend. Every year at about this time Ernie comes to my shop and asks me to check over his video camcorder. He needs to know that the battery is charged and the camera is in good working order. It’s not as though Ernie knows how to use it. He doesn’t even know how to turn it on. The point is he knows someone who does.

Some of Ernie's high school students from last year's Quiet Lion Tour

Some of Ernie's high school students from last year's Quiet Lion Tour

A local high school student will take on the role of camera person for Ernie when they accompany him with other students on his annual vigil. Ernie is a veteran P.O.W. Every year for the last eight, Ernie visits The Burma – Thai Railway which he helped to build during World War II. The tour is named The Quiet Lion Tour, after Sir Edward “Weary” Dunlop as a tribute to his brave, compassionate work alongside the likes of Ernie during those torturous years.

The camera will capture Ernie walking the line with his new batch of students, talking about the hardships his mates battled. He rarely talks about how much he suffered. He and his mates weren’t much older than the high school students who accompany him, when they were thrust into this “hell hole”. He talks about how torturous some Japanese soldiers were on their fragile spirit. He never blames them for anything. Ernie understood that the Japanese were doing what they thought was right for their country. They were affected by war and they were proud people. They did as they were told.

Ernie last year - and his three mates this year on ANZAC Day

Ernie last year - and his three mates this year on ANZAC Day

The camera continues to roll as Ernie takes his new friends to Hellfire Pass for the A.N.Z.A.C. Dawn Service. Here Ernie sheds a tear for his mates; mates who never made it, the same mates who helped him to survive. He’ll always be indebted to his mates. Ernie is also deeply thrilled that his new young friends can gain a greater sense of what A.N.Z.A.C. really means. Ernie’s small camcorder continues to capture it all.

The thing is, Ernie, who turns ninety one this year, has had to endure small battles himself to make sure students get the opportunity to take the tour each year. He sits in the Post Office Square selling raffle tickets for two months. He talks to local councillors and parliamentarians for six months; then sells more tickets for Easter buns and quiz night tables. Every year his efforts help to reduce the fare for all the students. He gets a major kick out of working alongside his new mates to make it happen.

Farewell Ernie. And don't worry; someone else picked up your camera.

Farewell Ernie. And don't worry about the camera; someone else picked it up.

Every student or ex-student I spoke to who has accompanied Ernie to The River Kwai and Hellfire Pass talks about how lucky they were to have experienced it with such a good bloke. They all refer to Ernie as “the best”.

Ernie is due to pick up his camera in the next couple of days. He’s going to ask the same question. How much do I owe you? It is at that moment that I’ll think about how good it is to be an Australian and how responsible Ernie and his mates are for that feeling. Once again I’m going to give him the same answer, “Nothing mate”.

For photos of this year’s  ANZAC Day in Thailand, see the Vietnam Swans web album.

4 Responses to “What’s it mean to be Australian? A tribute to Ernie”

  1. David Piesse said

    Thankyou for your tribute to Ernie, he will be greatly missed on our Quiet Lion tours and also by the community of Esperance, especially the Esperance Senior High School.
    I have attended all the ANZAC Cup matches that have been played over the years and enjoyed every one. Thanks for your hospitality and the tenacity in which you play the game.
    As for ANZAC Day, I thank you for placing the addresses given by Bill Haskell and Brook Barrington on your website as I think that they need to be published as often as possible.
    Regards David Piesse. BTRMA.

  2. Dear David

    We weren’t lucky enough to meet Ernie. But we were lucky enough to meet Bill, Neil and Snow.

    It was an extremely humbling and moving weekend for all the Vietnam Swans. An amazing weekend.

    It was a great privilege for the Vietnam Swans that Chris Greenwood agreed to let us post his Tribute to Ernie article – and then to receive copies of Bill’s and Brook’s speeches and Patrick’s article.

    Thanks very much for your feedback, David.

    Regards

    Phil Johns, National President

  3. Laeticia Muller said

    What a surprise! I was looking for information on Esperance Senior High School and stubbled upon this true and beautiful reflection of Ernie Redman and his mates. I am a teacher at the ESHS and had te priveledge to accompany the Quiet Lion 2008 group, including students, ex-POWs and others. It was truely a memorable event for us. My sons, Joan-dre and Runaldo was also in the group. We are originally from South Africa, after spending 8 years in the UK, we found a home in the beautiful coastal town of Esperance on the West coast of WA. The Quiet Lion Tour made us feel the true Australian spirit and made us feel even more at home and at peace in our new country. Ernie is (as he has been and will always be) a true legend in Esperance. What a priveledge to have been counted under his friends! As the words of the Dawn Service still echos in my ear – we shall not forget!

    • Hi Laeticia

      Thank you for your post on the Vietnam Swans website.

      Unfortunately, the Vietnam Swans did not get the chance to meet Ernie this year as he suffered his heart attack just prior to when he was to fly from Australia to Thailand for ANZAC Day. However, we were very lucky that Grant Harris introduced himself to us and gave us that reflection on Ernie. It gave us a special insight into the man who we nearly met.

      The Quiet Lion Tour seems like it’s a an amazing tour and it must have been particularly special for you as you knew Ernie so well.

      It was a great honour for the Vietnam Swans to have been invited by the Thailand Tigers to play them in the Anzac Day clash at Kanchanaburi this year.

      Regards

      Phil Johns
      National President, Vietnam Swans

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