Seven Continents, One Story
In 1942, Japan stood within sight of Port Moresby — within bombing range of Australia itself. The only thing standing between them was a 96-kilometre jungle track through the Owen Stanley Range, and a battalion of Australian militia whose average age was eighteen and a half. They were called "Chocos" — chocolate soldiers who would melt under fire. They did not melt. Welcome to Seven Continents, One Story. Nils, Céline, and Ethan take you inside the Kokoda Track campaign of 1942 — one of the most brutal, most important, and least-known battles of the Second World War. A campaign fought in mud and rain and jungle, by teenagers, sustained by Papua New Guinean carriers whose contribution saved hundreds of lives and whose names are mostly unrecorded. 🔍 ARTEFACT DETECTIVE — The Australian WWII Identity Disc Nils holds a small piece of aluminium, stamped with a name, a number, a religion, a blood type. An identity disc — worn in pairs around the neck by every Australian soldier on the Kokoda Track. In the event of death, one disc stayed with the body. The other went to the next of kin. Or, if the body could not be recovered, it was the only record that the man had ever been there. Hundreds of Australians on the Kokoda Track have no known grave. The Bomana War Cemetery outside Port Moresby holds over 3,800 graves — many of them boys who should have been at home in Sydney or Melbourne. The Papua New Guinean carriers who died have no equivalent disc. They were not issued identity equipment. In many cases they have no official records at all. That gap in the historical record is itself a form of injustice. 🦸 UNSUNG HERO — Raphael Oimbari Christmas Day, 1942. Near Buna on the north coast of Papua. New Zealand photographer George Silk is walking toward the front when he sees a column of wounded men. He steps to the side. He raises his camera. He takes one photograph. A tall, young Papuan man is walking through the kunai grass, his right hand extended behind him. In that hand, he holds the hand of a bandaged Australian soldier — Private George Whittington, 22, shot above the eye by a sniper, partially blinded, his head wrapped in white. The Papuan man is leading him forward. Gently. Carefully. Through the grass toward safety. His name was Raphael Oimbari. A carrier. A villager. A man from Papua New Guinea whose land this war was fought on — who had chosen, on Christmas Day, in the middle of a battle, to take the hand of a stranger and lead him home. Private George Whittington died of scrub typhus six weeks later. Raphael Oimbari outlived the war by decades. Remember Raphael Oimbari. Remember that hand. 🤔 CHOOSE YOUR OWN HISTORY — Isurava, August 1942 It is late August 1942. The Australian position at Isurava is on the verge of collapse. The Japanese are attacking in waves — over 2,000 men against approximately 530 Australians. Your men are outnumbered, exhausted, sick with malaria. The Japanese have broken through on one flank. Option A: Hold at Isurava. Risk complete encirclement — possibly the destruction of the entire force — but refuse to give ground. Option B: Fighting withdrawal south. Preserve the force, buy time for reinforcements, give ground but keep men alive. Brigadier Arnold Potts chose Option B. MacArthur condemned it as cowardice. Every historian since has concluded it was the only decision that could have saved Port Moresby. If the 39th Battalion and the 21st Brigade had stood and died at Isurava, there would have been nothing left between Japan and Australia. The fighting withdrawal — painful, costly, agonising — was the strategy that saved the country. 📖 WHAT YOU'LL DISCOVER: - Why the fall of Singapore sent shockwaves through Australia — and why Port Moresby was the key to everything - The 39th Battalion: shop assistants, farmers, factory workers. Average age 18.5. The "Chocos" who didn't melt - The Battle of Isurava — the largest engagement of the campaign, and the charge of Private Bruce Kingsbury VC - Milne Bay: the first defeat of Japanese ground forces in the entire Second World War - The Papua New Guinean carriers — how they sustained the entire Australian effort, and why their contribution was never adequately recognised - General MacArthur's comfortable hotel in Brisbane, and what he said about the men dying in the mud - The Japanese collapse: starvation, disease, and Major General Horii drowning in the Kumusi River - "Track" vs "Trail" — the most passionate argument in Australian military history about a single word - 625 Australians killed in action. Thousands more casualties. Papua New Guinean dead: not fully counted 📚 SOURCES: Ham, P. (2012). Kokoda. HarperCollins Australia. Brune, P. (2004). A Bastard of a Place. Allen & Unwin. Horner, D. (1993). Crisis of Command: Australian Generalship and the Japanese Threat 1941–43. ANU Press. Souter, G. (1963). New Guinea: The Last Unknown. Angus & Robertson. Australian War Memorial: awm.gov.au/kokoda 🎧 SUBSCRIBE: Spotify | Apple Podcasts | YouTube Join Nils, Céline, and Ethan as we explore history across seven continents. Where Expert Knowledge Meets Curious Minds. #Kokoda #WWII #PacificWar #AustralianHistory #PapuaNewGuinea #RaphaelOimbari #HistoryPodcast #SecondWorldWar #SevenContinents #MilitaryHistory
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