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« Evolutionary tongue | Main | Visiting New Britain: The faces behind the masks »

22 September 2012

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Thankyou, Sylvester and all. I am embarrassed and grateful. Mi tu wankain.

I really enjoyed reading the poem. It reminds me of the history lessons that we had in the classroom and the movies that we had watched about the Second World War.

The figures of speech that the poet used in the poem were very sensitive to me as I read through each lines of the poem. It made me feel sad for the Papua New Guineans because they are the ones who made our country to be known in the world.

Because we are now living in a modernized world, we seem to forget about how our grandparents had struggled to bring our country to its present state. When reading through such poems it will help us to acknowledge the heroes of the past, who are our grandparents.

My comment to the writer is that keep writing because your poems are very inspirational. I would like to thank the poet for the wonderful poem and encourage him to write more poems like this one.

Thanks for this wonderful poem in honour of the Papuan Infantry Battalion made up of 550 natives and the carriers.

The PIB and the carriers contributed a lot to World War II. During the war they establish a strong relationship with the Aussie, even though the war is not ours, our land was used as a battlefield.

The native people involved in the war did not have any idea about the war but fought for their colonisers.

The famous expedition and the most harsh one was along the Kokoda Track where many lost their lives. It is now the famous war site.
They were brave and courages solders.

The 1st Papuan Infantry Battalion and the Native Carriers are remembered with a bronze plaque on our new (2010 built) War Remembrance Monument at Ramu.

They are also celebrated in our Ramu War Museum, together with Australian and US forces who fought in our area from Kaiapit to Shaggy Ridge. Cheers from Ramu, thank you PIB and carriers.

Our PNG men were born to be brave and strong warriors therefore, they did not give up fighting even though many innocent lives were lost. That's what we call patriotism.

Thankyou MS & BS for kind remarks. But we never forget!

A very inspirational poem......

They fought side by side with the white men, they died side by side with the white men.
Lest we forget.....

Thank you for this wonderful poem in honour of the Papuan Infantry Battalion and their carriers.

I will think on them next time I go with Epping Probus for a bar-b-q lunch at the Kokoda Memorial Park at Rhodes.

I've heard how the local RSL men take school groups on conducted tours of the park where there are special plaques and a sound system that explains the story of Kokoda.

All PNGians who visit Sydney should spend time at this park. It is becoming a sacred place for Aussies and PNGians.

Lest we forget.

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