Had It Tough Lately Men !!!! ????
A 2007 Australia Day Tribute to a Vietnam Veteran
Sapper John Thompson OAM arrived in Australia as an immigrant on 26 January
1957. As we celebrated Australia Day all over the country the 50th
anniversary of his arrival was spent in Greenslopes Repatriation
Hospital undergoing emergency surgery from wounds received in the
Vietnam war 40 years ago. This story is a tribute to him.
" ..................Happy Birthday Australia - Happy Anniversary Jethro !!!!! .........."
by Charlie Lynn
" Forty days before he woke from a landmine that blew his right leg
into the Niu Dat minefield, blasted his right arm off, shattered his
left arm, ripped his stomach to shreds, and peppered his body with
shrapnel, Sapper John 'Jethro' Thompson mumbled to me: 'I'm not
getting out of the army mate - they're gunna have to build a special
dozer I can drive'. 'No worries Jethro', I said 'they'll do that!'
........ "
He was a handsome 21 year old regular soldier who had already seen
active service in Borneo during confrontation. I was a 21 year old
raw nasho. We were on exercise in North Queensland in late '66 when
the call came for volunteers to go to Vietnam. Within 24 hours we
were on our way to the jungle warfare school at Canungra and a month
later we touched down in Saigon on the 4th January 1967 - a day before
my first wedding anniversary!
Jethro was assigned to the minefield at Nui Dat. I was operating
bulldozers constructing our logistic base at Vung Tau. The helipad
near the US Army field hospital was one of our early tasks.
It was just four months after the crucial battle of Long Tan and
Australian commanders were driving our sappers to lay a protective
minefield around the Task Force base. It was hot, sweaty, dangerous
work.
Nobody knows what happened that day. Jethro was arming land-mines
when they were hit. An explosion lifted him in the air and threw him
onto his back. His mates in the squad were blasted but Jethro took the
full brunt of the deadly mix of explosive powder and jagged shrapnel.
As I raced to the helipad the bloodied bodies had just arrived and
were carried by desperate medics into the field hospital. Surgical
teams went into immediate action and six hours later Jethro, his body
swathed in bloody bandages, was wheeled into the ward. Stumps stuck
out where his arms used to be. Another stump where his leg used to
be. Huge clamps held his stomach together. Shrapnel fragments
peppered his face.
Within a couple of days two sappers in the squad died of their wounds.
Jethro defied the odds - his subconscious mind was already planning
what he was going to do when he got better - not if. He has no
conscious memory of his first 40 days in that ward full of young
limbless soldiers. I recall many conversations with him - all of them
positive.
During my vigil at his bedside I received news that one of my five
brothers had been killed in a car accident at home. It took two weeks
to find out which one. A far cry from the 'embedded' communications
we have in army units today.
Six months later Jethro was a patient at Heidelberg Repat Hospital - I
was a student at the Officer Cadet School, Portsea. It was a dramatic
upgrade for both of us. During a weekend visit he looked down at his
healing stumps and mused, 'this is all I've got left mate - I've got
to make the best use of it'.
He did just that.
Fitted with a new arm complete with a shining chrome hook, and a
mechanical leg, he settled into a new job with the Public Service.
Soon after he met Judy, an attractive Vietnam war widow with two
children, Justine and Dominic. After a brief courtship they married
and soon Danielle, Diedre and Judith joined the family roll. He
boasted that he didn't lose everything in that fateful land-mine
blast.
The bliss of family life was soon shattered when Judy was diagnosed
with terminal cancer. She was just 31. How could life be so cruel to
one so beautiful? He nursed her until the day she died.
Now a single dad with 5 children he learned that changing nappies was
not easy for a bloke with only a reconstructed thumb and finger. He
joked that the babies got more pinpricks than the shrapnel pellets he
got from the land-mine explosion! Simple chores were major challenges
but Jethro was a sapper - and sappers are trained to find ways around
obstacles. The role of the Royal Australian Engineers is to enhance
the mobility of our troops and impede the mobility of the enemy. It
often requires a high degree of 'sappernuity'.
Hanging nappies on the Hills Hoist was just one of the daily
challenges he faced. How we take things for granted!
Jethro was not alone in his struggle. His army mates and Legacy kept
a watchful eye on the family and were ever ready to help. But as time
went by he noticed some of them starting to fall apart.
A stunning woman caught his eye at a Legacy function. He learned her
name was Perle and she was an army widow with two young boys, Ian and
Anthony. They chatted and it was soon game over for Jethro. They
married soon after.
The plight of Vietnam Veterans was recognised amongst peers but
ignored by government and the RSL at the time. An association of
Vietnam Veterans was established and Jethro left his job to become a
full time advocate for his mates. He joined Legacy to help other
service widows and their children. It was the least he could for them.
During our bicentennial year in 1988 he received the 'RSL Achiever of
the Year Award' for his selfless service to veterans.
In 2006 he was made a member of the Order of Australia.
It has been a remarkable journey for the skinny 11 year old immigrant
who arrived in Australia on 26 January 1956. Flags were not an issue
in those days. Australia had fought off the Japanese just eleven
years before. We knew who and what we were.
But forty years on Jethro's war injuries are creeping up on him. His
left shoulder needed major surgery because of the years supporting his
large frame on crutches. His left arm, the only one he has, is now
useless. Excruciating lower back pain keeps him immobile for days on
end. Last year open heart surgery was required to replace a faulty
mitral valve.
A later keyhole operation resulted in an infection that attacked his
new valve. A blood clot broke off and lodged in his spleen. Repat
surgeons decided there was no option but to replace the valve with a
mechanical device - immediately!
As the sun rose on the 50th anniversary of Jethro's arrival in his
adopted country an emergency team scrubbed up for a marathon operation
at Greenslopes Repatriation Hospital. Jethro had just one request.
He wanted to see an Australian flag on the end of his bed when he woke
up.
I was lucky to get a late flight to Brisbane on the eve of Australia
Day. I met Perle who had little sleep from the night before. We
expected a three hour operation. Four hours went by - we pretended
not to notice the time. Five hours. It was getting harder to maintain
the pretence. Perle picked up the phone in the intensive care waiting
room. He was OK. The valve had ulcerated and it took them an
additional couple of hours to work through the complications.
The call ended but Perle held the phone for a few seconds as the
relief washed through her. We were told he would take a few hours to
come round. Perle had time for a quiet rest at home.
I waited because I was the first bloke Jethro saw when he came out of
the operating theatre in Vung Tau 40 years ago. I thought it might be
a good omen to be around when he woke up this time as we all feared
the worst.
I will never forget the moment. He reached out with his stump and I
grabbed it - his eyes expressed an urgency I had never seen before.
We stayed gripped together for the next hour while he dozed in and out
of consciousness. As he came to he began to grin and squeeze my hand
between his stump and his side.
He was in good care. A charming, attractive nurse maintained an
attentive vigil at the end of his bed. A young doctor hovered around.
High tech instruments monitored every bodily function - a far cry
from the pressurized ward in that army field hospital 40 years ago!
This time he opened his eyes a little further and his face lit up - he
sighted the Australian flag on the end of his bed!
Australia Day has different meanings for different people. For
Jethro's family -his wife Perle, their seven children and 12
grandchildren, and to all the mates who know of his plight, it is the
celebration of the survival of a young immigrant digger who has given
his all for his adopted country.
Jethro's spirit is an inspiration to us all. His laconic wit has
never left him. Before Christmas he wanted to go to a show in the
city. His mate, Peter Ferguson, called him to say the prices were
outrageous - it would cost an arm and a leg. 'I'll send Perle then',
Jethro said, 'I can't afford to go'.
On arrival back in Sydney I received note from Annie Philiben:
'I was the nurse on duty when he arrived on the post op ward. I never
forgot that fighter. One of the things you probably didn't know was
that after 7 or so surgeries to clean his amputations (shorten the
limbs) he was doing real well. Then he became extremely ill and for
days we had no idea what the problem was. Finally they took him to
surgery and found he had an infected gall bladder. The surgeons just
wanted to drain the gall bladder but a false move caused the gall
bladder to rupture and all that infected goo went over his belly. This
is really a bad thing to happen. We were very worried about him. He
had such high fevers and was so out of it. One day a nurse noted that
my uniform was full of holes. It was from the silver nitrate solution
we used on burns, it used to splash back on us and made holes in our
uniforms. She said "Annie what happened to your uniform." I told her
about the silver nitrate and said "one of these days the whole uniform
is just going to fall off." John lifted his head and said "I sure
hope I'm there that day." He was better.
It was hard not to cry'.................It still is Annie! ..........."
Jethro will remain in Greenslopes Private Hospital for a further 4
weeks. If you would like to send him a get-well card his contact
details are:
John Thompson OAM
Greenslopes Private Hospital
Newdegate Street
GREENSLOPES
QLD 4120
Charlie Lynn MLC
Parliament House
Macquarie Street
SYDNEY NSW 2000
02 9230 3350
0419 257 462
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