
Thursday, February 10, 2011
A New Artwork: The Never Ceasing Rhythm Cocos Culture and History

Saturday, January 22, 2011
Cultural Discussion
Tuesday, September 14, 2010
NT veteran's big seat safe
A daring revolt, by Sanji Gunasekara, adapted from http://www.himalmag.com
A daring revolt September 2010
By: Sanji GunasekaraJust six years before Ceylon’s independence, a still-disputed mutiny in the Cocos Islands exemplified the anti-colonial frustration among soldier and the Ceylonese in general.![]()
A significant World War II mutiny took place on the night of 8 May 1942 in a lonely atoll in the Indian Ocean. It occurred in a setting of intrigue, rebellion and the blood and tears of war. Japanese naval forces were at the peak of their southward thrust, and the Ceylonese contingent on the Cocos (Keeling) Islands was restless.– Noel Crusz in The Cocos Islands Mutiny
With the outbreak of hostilities in Europe, many Ceylonese had enthusiastically volunteered for service with the Allied Forces. Seeking adventure and the chance to travel abroad, most were from the Anglicised middle classes and had been educated in the island’s leading colleges. However, this period also coincided with growing pressure within the island for independence from Britain. Although most Ceylonese wholeheartedly supported the war effort, the left movement, spearheaded by the Trotskyist Lanka Sama Samaja Party (LSSP), opposed what they termed an ‘imperialist’ war – a stance that resonated with the sentiments of many youths.
Ceylonese volunteers from the CGA and the Ceylon Light Infantry (CLI) were posted to the Cocos Islands from March 1941. A group of atolls located approximately halfway between the southwestern tip of Australia and Ceylon, the Cocos served as an important cable relay and wireless station enabling secure communications between Australia, Southeast Asia and Britain. It also functioned as an aviation fuel depot and, from 1944, as an airstrip from which bombing missions were to be conducted deep into Japanese-occupied territory.
The Ceylonese detachment on Cocos was deployed to the two northern atolls in the group – Horsburgh Island and Direction Island. Their prime task was to defend the island’s communications’ facilities against Japanese attack; to this end, Horsburgh atoll was equipped with a battery of two six-inch field guns. On the other atolls, to the south, lived about 1400 islanders of Malay descent. Cocos was certainly no tropical paradise. The supply of fresh water was limited, mosquitoes, centipedes and scorpions could make life miserable, and there was little scope for recreational facilities.
In the months prior to the mutiny, a dramatic turn of events had brought the war much closer to home for the Ceylonese. Japan’s unprecedented advances in East Asia were being closely followed by all Ceylonese, including those who had volunteered on Cocos. Many watched with amazement as, for the first time, Western forces were being routed at the hands of an Asian power. Nightly propaganda broadcasts on Radio Tokyo Rose extolled the slogan of ‘Asia for the Asians’, igniting the belief for some that a Japanese intervention was the best way to end British rule in Ceylon. Nevertheless, this view was tempered by a real fear of the consequences of such an invasion, as news had spread of atrocities being committed by Japanese soldiers in East Asia. Compounding these developments was the resentment that many Ceylonese volunteers felt at the preferential treatment given to their white-skinned counterparts. Barred from the ‘whites only’ clubs where scotch and soda flowed freely, the irony of fighting to advance the cause of freedom while encountering second-class treatment in their own country did not escape attention.
On Cocos, Gratien Fernando too found himself increasingly embittered at what he perceived as the racism of the commander, Captain George Gardiner. A British citizen and chartered accountant who had obtained his commission in Ceylon, Gardiner was by many accounts a very strict disciplinarian. His deputy, Lieutenant Henry Stephens, was a Eurasian planter in Ceylon who had flaunted his English ancestry even as a schoolboy. Gardiner’s predecessor, Captain Lyn Wickramasuriya, a Ceylonese, was wary of both men’s attitude to the soldiers under their command, and on ending his tour of duty advised Gardiner: ‘These are Ceylonese volunteers who are part of the war machine. Do not ever treat them like black cattle. They must be never be driven. They must be led. Treat them as equals in the common cause. Be firm, be ruthless but above all be fair and they will be loyal to you to a man.’ It seems Gardiner did not heed these words.
White man’s clemency
The Japanese attack on Ceylon in April 1942 only heightened the fears of the Ceylonese defenders on Cocos. The atoll had already been bombarded several months earlier, and another attack seemed imminent. The authoritarian leadership style of Captain Gardiner and his deputy soon manifested in a host of disciplinary problems among the men. It was against this backdrop of deteriorating morale, fuelled by isolation as well as a vision of the end of British dominance in Asia, that Fernando hatched a mutinous scheme, discreetly sounding out the views of several other men he deemed sympathetic. The plan was to seize Gardiner and Stephens, gain control of the defences of Cocos, signal the Japanese High Command and proceed to finalise surrender. It was a daring and risky proposal, but not beyond realisation. The date set for the mutiny was the night of 8 May 1942.
Initially, the plan appeared to proceed smoothly. Fernando’s men succeeded in disarming several of the non-mutineers while they slept. But soon things began to go awry. Roused by the commotion, several loyal troops sought to investigate what was happening. In the ensuing confusion, Gunner Samuel Jayasekera was shot and died – and with him, the possibility of a bloodless mutiny. In a defining twist of fate, the Bren gun that Fernando hoped to train on those resisting the mutiny inexplicably jammed. In an instant, the momentum was lost and Fernando realised that his plan had failed. Negotiating a surrender with Stephens, Fernando’s fate, along with those of his fellow conspirators, now lay in the hands of a furious lieutenant.
Convening a field-general court martial with himself presiding (a self-appointed jurisdiction that was certainly questionable), Stephens informed Ceylon of the events and asked for reinforcements. One by one, those implicated in the mutiny took the stand. When the Court eventually delivered its verdict on 16 May, seven men were found guilty on three charges, including causing a mutiny or conspiring to cause a mutiny in His Majesty’s Forces. Although Gardiner wanted the condemned men to be executed at dawn, confirmation from the Ceylon Army Command was not forthcoming. Instead, preparations were made to transport the mutineers to Ceylon. This was done amidst great secrecy, as there were grave fears of the political consequences that news of their predicament would have. When they arrived in Ceylon, the mutineers were marched under heavy guard at night to the military prison in Flagstaff Street in Colombo.
Despite strict wartime censorship, details of the mutineers’ plight soon leaked to the general population. Meanwhile, although a ruling by the assistant judge advocate-general had amended the findings of the original court martial, it had confirmed the sentence of death for three men, with the others now receiving extended jail terms. Despite the intervention of leading local political figures and desperate pleas for clemency by family members to then Governor Andrew Caldecott and Commander in Chief Admiral Geoffrey Layton, the death sentences were not commuted. Fernando himself rejected what he called ‘the White man’s clemency’ and went to the gallows on 5 August 1942. The two other condemned men – gunners Carlo Gauder and Benny de Silva – were hanged shortly afterwards.
The circumstances surrounding the Cocos Islands mutiny continue to generate controversy. Missing wartime records, conflicting accounts by those who served on Cocos regarding what actually transpired prior to the mutiny and a general reluctance by family members to speak of the events have meant that the exact course of events leading up to the mutiny remained shrouded in mystery for many years after the war. Today, the circumstances surrounding the revolt are better known, especially following the publication of The Cocos Islands Mutiny (2001) by Noel Crusz, perhaps the most thorough account of the mutiny to date. While mutiny is considered among the gravest of military offences, it is now clear that there were many extenuating circumstances, not least poor command and racism, and that the military justice meted out to the mutineers was flawed.
In a startling disclosure, former Sri Lankan President J R Jayewardene revealed at an imperial banquet held in his honour in Tokyo in 1979 that he had held secret discussions with the Japanese consul during the 1940s to discuss how to be of help should the Japanese invade Ceylon, providing they helped the island attain independence. While Fernando was at the time vilified as a traitor by the colonial administration, his sentiments and longing for an independent Ceylon were clearly shared by many other Ceylonese. Remaining defiant to the end, on the eve of his execution he proclaimed, ‘Loyalty to a country under the heel of a white man is disloyalty.’ Little could he have imagined that within six years of the failed mutiny, the yoke of colonial rule would be lifted and a newly independent Ceylon would take its place among the free countries of the world.
~ Sanji Gunasekara is a freelance writer based in Wellington, New Zealand, with a background in medicine, international relations and public policy.
Thursday, September 2, 2010
Richard Jervis RAF veteran returns to Cocos Islands
An RAF veteran, 87-year-old Richard Jervis from Scarcroft, has returned to a remote atoll in the Indian ocean.
The Cocos Islands were to be used as a springboard to launch aircraft for the invasion of Japan.
Surrender came first with the dropping of the atomic bombs at Hiroshima and Nagasaki.
Instead of fighting, Richard was given the job of keeping the troops on the island entertained during the long wait to be shipped back home.
Richard remembers how he got to the Cocos Island: "I was a young Bomber Command navigator... I flew on 36 bombing raids over Germany."
Continuing the fight
On these bombing raids into Germany Richard's plane sustained flak damage several times - once the log recorded nine different holes in the plane and it also landed with a bomb, that failed to drop, still in the bomb bay.
Six weeks after his tour the war in Europe ended and Richard answered a call for young experienced navigators to help in the continuing fight against the Japanese.
"I set sail through the Mediterranean on a ship with 600 other airmen heading towards Bombay."
Onboard Richard made such an impression looking out for the troops that he was made the Welfare Officer and headed for Delhi.
"By the time I got there I found out that the war had been ended and the atomic bombs had been dropped. I was promoted in Delhi to Flight Lieutenant, and flew out to Ceylon and on to Cocos."
There are two atolls and 27 coral islands in the group. The islands are in the Indian Ocean around 1500 miles from both Australia and Sri Lanka.
Raising morale
Gracie Fields kept up wartime spirits (pictured in 1947) |
During his time on the atoll Richard personally escorted famous singing star Gracie Fields on a morale-raising tour and oversaw the broadcast of Hollywood movies (some still unreleased) on to a white sheet in the jungle.
Some of the films were in colour - a rarity for 1945.
A football league was arranged with games played on the beach when the tide went out.
He was on the island for more than a year in charge of the welfare of two bomber squadrons, a fighter squadron and a squadron of torpedo-carrying aircraft, and thousands of Indian troops that had helped build the air base.
The base was also the location of a cable and wireless station for a secret undersea communications cable.
Return to Cocos
Richard still has his flying logbook and details of the bombing raids |
In order to be demobbed Richard navigated a aircraft all the way back to Germany from the atoll. His long journey included stops at Bombay, Bahrain, Baghdad, Haifa and Paris before landing in Germany, a total of 44 hours in flight.
Now thanks to a lottery grant Richard has been back to the remote island, midway between Sri Lanka and Australia.
"When I went back to the island in January it was good to go and see the place, it seemed a lot more overgrown than it was at the end of the war. One of the jetties was still there and I saw where my tent used to be located but the jungle had taken over the spot."
Richard back in Scarcroft after his return to the remote islands. |
The Big Lottery Fund is helping Second World War veterans with its Heroes Return scheme, awarding grants for ex-servicemen and women to return on commemorative trips back to places across the world where they saw action.
Veterans or their widows/widowers can still apply to the fund as it remains open for applications until January 2011.
-Adapted from BBC UKWednesday, July 21, 2010
Cultural discussions and interactions with the Europeans
Sunday, June 13, 2010
Gathering in a birthday party
Saturday, June 12, 2010
Suggestion to propose an idea
Thursday, May 27, 2010
An event for the gathering of Cocos Islander Community
The proposed venue and time has not been confirmed but there's suggestion:
Venue:
1. Tanjung Lipat Corner
2. 1Borneo Hypermall Starbucks
Time:
Around 19th June 2010
Friday, May 21, 2010
Kotobian Tadau Tagazo do Kaamatan
In conjunction with the celebration month of Kaamatan, I would like to wish all the Cocos Islander Community to have great times with the Kadazan Dusun community together celebrating this big festival.
KOTOBIAN TADAU TAGAZO DO KAAMATAN
