She survived a massacre. Then her own government ordered her to lie about it. For 58 years, she obeyed. The water was already red when she stopped pretending to be dead. 21 women lay behind her. Nurses in uniform, Red Cross armbands still on their sleeves, shot from behind by a machine gun on a beach. She was the only one who walked back out. And what she witnessed, her government buried it for 77 years. February 12th, 1942. Singapore is burning. The Japanese Imperial Army has swept through
the Malay Peninsula in 70 days. One of the fastest military advances in modern history. 130,000 Allied soldiers are surrendering. On the docks, 65 Australian Army nurses are ordered to evacuate. Sister Vivian Bullwinkle is 26 years old. She boards the SS Biner Brookke already overloaded with wounded soldiers and civilians. Two days later, Japanese bombers find the ship. It sinks in minutes. The survivors wash ashore on Bona Island, Indonesia. Viven reaches Raji Beach with 21 other
nurses, wounded soldiers, and a few civilians. They have no food, no weapons, no radio. They make the only decision that seems rational. They will surrender. They are nurses, non-combatants, protected by the Geneva Convention. On February 16th, a Japanese patrol arrives. The soldiers separate the men from the women. The wounded, men on stretchers who cannot walk, are taken around a rocky headland. The nurses hear a machine gun, then silence. Then the soldiers come back. They sit
down in front of the women. They clean their bayonets. What happened next was hidden for nearly 8 decades. >> I can confirm it myself from a private interview. It was before the year 2000. >> Forensic evidence confirmed it. A Japanese soldier’s own account confirmed it. The bullet holes in her recovered uniform told the story her government tried to erase. The bodice was open at the waist and down the front when she was shot. After the assault, an officer gave the order. The

22 nurses were told to walk into the surf. They walked in a line in uniform, Red Cross armbands still on until the water reached their waists. The machine gun opened fire from behind. Viven was hit. The bullet passed clean through her left side, missing every organ. She fell forward. She did not move. She did not breathe. She floated among her dead colleagues for over an hour. She crawled back onto the beach alone. She found a wounded British soldier, Private Kinsley, hiding in the jungle.
She treated his wounds with nothing for 12 days. When he became too sick to survive, they surrendered together. He died shortly after. Viven spent the next three and a half years as a prisoner of war in Somatra, keeping her survival secret because if the Japanese had known she witnessed the massacre, she would have been executed immediately. In 1947, she stood before the Tokyo War Crimes Tribunal. She described the beach. She described the machine gun. She described watching her
colleagues die, but she did not mention what happened before the machine gun. She had been ordered not to by her own government. The Australian government’s reasoning, according to historian Lynette Silver, the stigma of sexual violence in the 1940s, concern for the families, and guilt because Allied commanders had already known for weeks before the evacuation that Japanese soldiers had raped and murdered British nurses in Hong Kong in December 1941. They knew they delayed the evacuation
anyway. The perpetrators of the Raji Beach massacre were never identified, never charged, never tried. They escaped justice entirely. Vivian Bullwinkle spent the rest of her life in nursing. She raised funds for a nurse’s memorial. She returned to Banka Island in 1992 to unveil a shrine. She accepted every honor on behalf of her dead colleagues, never for herself. Before she died in the year 2000, she told broadcaster Tess Lawrence the full truth. She asked
her to make sure the world finally heard it. She was tortured by the secret. Lawrence said she wanted it in her statement at the tribunal. She was ordered not to. In 2019, 77 years after Raji Beachch, historian Lynette Silver published Angels of Mercy. For the first time, all the evidence was assembled. Forensic proof, witness accounts, a 10-page army investigators report with several pages removed by someone who didn’t want them read. It’s taken a long while, Silver
said, for enough evidence to come together to say, “Yes, this happened. The perpetrators of the Raji Beach massacre were never identified, never charged, never tried. They escaped justice entirely. Vivien Bullwinkle spent the rest of her life in nursing. She raised funds for a nurse’s memorial. She returned to Banka Island in 1992 to unveil a shrine. She accepted every honor on behalf of her dead colleagues, never for herself. Before she died in the year
2000, she told broadcaster Tess Lawrence the full truth. She asked her to make sure the world finally heard it. She was tortured by the secret. Lawrence said she wanted it in her statement at the tribunal. She was ordered not to. In 2019, 77 years after Raji Beach, historian Lynette Silver published Angels of Mercy. For the first time, all the evidence was assembled. Forensic proof, witness accounts, a 10-page Army investigators report with several pages removed by
someone who didn’t want them read. It’s taken a long while, Silver said, for enough evidence to come together to say, “Yes, this happened.
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