Allied ships are evacuating thousands of women, children and older people from Singapore, the island is on the brink of falling to the Japanese Imperial forces and why did they leave it so late? The Vyner Brooke is one of the last ships to leave and it's overcrowded, aboard are sixty five Australian nurses who are trying their best to stay calm and help.
Two spotter planes fly over the Vyner Brooke, and it’s just a matter of time before others return, it’s bombed and sinks. The survivors swim and paddle for hours in the ocean, taking turns to rest in the few life rafts that weren't destroyed, they eventually make it to Radji Beach on Bangka Island, Indonesia.
One of the survivors is Australian Army nurse Dorothy ‘Bud’ Elmes, she did her training at Corowa Hospital, New South Wales, and she decided to join up. Bud is a real character, she has an older sister Jean and her mum and dad and she has funny nicknames for them all. Bud is sporty, she likes to play tennis in her spare time, she’s strong and dependable.
Bud and her colleagues and Matron Irene Drummond tend to the wounded, gather wood for a fire and try to work out what they should do next. A group of women and children set off on foot for Muntok, they don’t have a lot of choice, and two days later the Japanese soldiers arrive at the beach.
Georgina Banks is the great-niece of Bud, as a child she remembers seeing a photo of an army nurse and she’s knows very little about her great-aunt Bud. Seventy-five later, Georgina receives an invitation to a memorial service for her great-aunt and her husband encourages her to attend. Georgina retraces Bud’s footsteps in Indonesia, she arrives back in Australia with a sense she doesn’t really know what happened to Bud and her fellow nurses on the sixteenth of February 1942.
Back to Bangka is a moving and very emotional inter-generational family story; the facts about the Vyner Brooke leaving Singapore, the ship being sunk, and the survivors making it to Radji Beach on Bangka Island is all well documented and it’s what happened afterwards that Georgina wants to uncover.
So many unanswered questions, one person who knew what occurred was Lieutenant Vivian Bullwinkle, she survived the atrocity, gave evidence at the Tokyo War Crimes Tribunal in 1947 and did the Australian government make her keep somethings a secret from the public?
A fascinating and well written biography, it included letters from Bud, family photographs and the telegrams sent to her parents, a sad chapter in Australian wartime history, I will never forget the bravery and sacrifice of Dorothy Elmes, and her fellow nurses and five stars from me.