Only in 2023, First Nations men who served during the Vietnam War are being added to the Australian War Memorial's (AWM) official history. There was no conscription for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people, but many still volunteered to serve.
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| John Wade |
Corporal John Wade, who was a technician in the Royal Australian Signal Corps during the Vietnam War, is one of those diggers. He recalls one of his most prized memories — an unscheduled humanitarian mission to an orphanage. "It was on a Sunday with a couple of mates we went to an orphanage to feed the children," the Birpai man says. "Their hands were out, like grabbing the food … I was absolutely taken with those children. "We handed them the food and they ate it straight away."
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| Australian soldiers providing food aid in Vietnam |
Back home in Australia, the same humanitarian spirit was not shown to Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people. This extended to the army, where Indigenous men were exempt from service.
Hundreds volunteered regardless, and those who could, like
Mr Wade, kept their Aboriginality a secret.


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