John Alan Edward Mulgan (1911–1945) was a New Zealand
writer, journalist and editor, and the elder son of journalist and writer Alan
Mulgan. His influence on New Zealand literature and identity grew in the years
after his death. He is best known for his novel Man Alone (1939).
Mulgan held leftish political views and was alarmed by the
rise of fascism in Europe and the response of the British government to it. In
1936, he was an observer for the New Zealand government at the League of
Nations in Geneva. During this time, he wrote a series of articles on foreign
affairs, titled "Behind the Cables", for the Auckland Star newspaper.
His view that war in Europe was inevitable led Mulgan to
join the army in 1938, and he was made second lieutenant in an
infantry regiment. Posted to the Middle East in 1942, Mulgan was promoted to
major and made second-in-command of his regiment. He saw action at El Alamein
and fought alongside the New Zealand Expeditionary Force. He was impressed by
the calibre of his compatriots and found meeting New Zealanders after being in
England for so long to be a kind of "homecoming". He left the Royal
West Kents Regiment after reporting his last Colonel as quite incompetent.
In 1943, Mulgan joined the Special Operations Executive and
was sent to Greece to coordinate guerilla action against the German forces. He
was awarded the Military Cross for his actions. After the German withdrawal in
1944, Mulgan oversaw British compensation to Greek families who had helped the
Allied forces.
In the evening of Anzac Day 1945, Mulgan intentionally took
an overdose of morphine. Speculation continues as to why he committed suicide.
He is buried at Heliopolis military cemetery in Cairo. Mulgan was survived by
his wife Gabrielle (married 1937) and son Richard (born 1940).
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