For 77 Years the Truth Stayed Buried—Until the Survivor of a Wartime Nurse Massacre Spoke
The Bullet That Missed: How the Australian Government Silenced the Horrific Truth of the Radji Beach Massacre for 77 Years

The tide at Radji Beach on Bangka Island, Indonesia, usually brings with it the tranquil sounds of the sea. But on February 16, 1942, the water turned a deep, sickening red. Twenty-two Australian Army nurses, dressed in their grey and white uniforms with Red Cross brassards still pinned to their sleeves, were ordered to walk into the surf. They walked in a straight line, shoulder to shoulder, with their backs to a Japanese machine gun. When the water reached their waists, the firing began. Twenty-one of those women died where they stood. One, a 26-year-old nurse named Vivian Bullwinkle, felt a bullet pass clean through her left side, missing her vital organs by a fraction of an inch. She fell forward, floated among the bodies of her friends for over an hour, and eventually crawled back to land as the sole witness to one of the most heinous war crimes of World War II.
For decades, Vivian Bullwinkle was celebrated as a national hero, the brave survivor of a brutal execution. However, what the public did not know—and what the Australian government went to great lengths to ensure no one would ever know—was that the machine gun fire was only the final act of their suffering. Before the nurses were sent into the ocean, they were subjected to a horrific campaign of sexual violence. Vivian Bullwinkle was ordered by her own government to take that secret to her grave. It would take seventy-seven years for the full truth to finally emerge, revealing not just a story of wartime cruelty, but a systematic cover-up that prioritized political convenience over the dignity of the victims.
The Fall of Singapore and the SS Vyner Brooke
The tragedy began in the chaotic final days of the Battle of Singapore. By February 12, 1942, the “Gibraltar of the East” was crumbling under the relentless advance of the Japanese Imperial Army. In the largest capitulation in British military history, over 130,000 Allied troops were about to become prisoners of war. Amidst the smoke and fire, 65 Australian Army nurses from the 2/13th Australian General Hospital were ordered to evacuate. They boarded the SS Vyner Brooke, a small passenger vessel already dangerously overcrowded with wounded soldiers and civilians.
Two days into their voyage, Japanese bombers spotted the ship in the Bangka Strait. The Vyner Brooke took multiple direct hits and sank within minutes. While some nurses perished in the initial attack, many managed to struggle through the shark-infested waters to reach the shores of Bangka Island. A group of 22 nurses, including Vivian Bullwinkle, washed up on Radji Beach. They were joined by wounded British and Australian soldiers and a handful of civilians. Exhausted, injured, and without food or weapons, the group made the only logical choice for non-combatants: they would surrender and claim protection under the Geneva Convention.
The Massacre and the Stolen Dignity
On the morning of February 16, a Japanese patrol arrived. The soldiers immediately separated the men from the women. The wounded men, some still on stretchers, were marched behind a rocky headland. The nurses heard the rhythmic chatter of a machine gun followed by a heavy, haunting silence. When the soldiers returned, they sat in front of the women and began cleaning their bayonets and rifles.
It was during this window of time that the atrocity took its most sinister turn. For decades, the official narrative skipped directly to the execution. However, historian Lynette Silver and broadcaster Tess Lawrence have since provided the missing pieces of the puzzle. Physical forensic evidence, including the recovered uniform of Vivian Bullwinkle, showed that the bodice of her dress had been ripped open at the waist and down the front before she was shot. A Japanese soldier’s later account confirmed he had heard screams and was told by his platoon that they were “pleasuring themselves.”
After the assault, the nurses were ordered to walk into the sea. They did so with a haunting level of discipline, maintaining their formation as they marched toward their deaths. Vivian Bullwinkle recalled the moment the bullets hit. She fell into the water, held her breath, and waited. When the soldiers waded through the surf to bayonet the survivors, she lay perfectly still, the moving water the only sign of life around her.

A Survivor’s Silence: The Government’s Gag Order
Vivian Bullwinkle survived twelve days in the jungle, caring for a wounded British soldier named Private Cecil Kingsley, before they were forced to surrender again. She spent the next three and a half years in a brutal Japanese prisoner of war camp in Sumatra. Throughout her captivity, she and her fellow surviving nurses kept her identity as the Radji Beach witness a total secret. They knew that if the Japanese realized she had seen the massacre, she would be executed immediately.
When the war ended in 1945, Vivian returned to Australia as a symbol of resilience. In 1947, she traveled to Tokyo to testify at the International Military Tribunal for the Far East. She spoke eloquently about the sinking of the ship and the machine-gunning of her colleagues. But she did not mention the rapes. This omission was not a choice made out of shame, but a direct order from the Australian military and government.
Historians believe the censorship was driven by several factors. In the 1940s, there was an immense social stigma surrounding sexual violence. The government claimed they wanted to protect the families of the deceased nurses from the “shame” of what had occurred. However, a more cynical motive lay beneath: guilt. High-ranking Allied officers had known for weeks that Japanese troops had raped and murdered British nurses during the fall of Hong Kong in 1941. Despite this knowledge, they delayed the evacuation of the Australian nurses from Singapore. Acknowledging the rapes at Radji Beach would have forced the government to admit they had knowingly left these women in harm’s way.
The Truth Unearthed

Vivian Bullwinkle spent the rest of her life dedicated to nursing and the memory of her fallen sisters. She became the Director of Nursing at Fairfield Hospital in Melbourne and served on the council of the Australian War Memorial. While she accepted honors on behalf of her colleagues, she remained haunted by the secret she was forced to keep. Shortly before her death in 2000, she finally spoke to Tess Lawrence, requesting that the truth be revealed so that the 21 nurses would not be remembered only as “statistics.”
In 2019, the publication of Lynette Silver’s research and the emergence of previously suppressed documents finally brought the full story to light. The 21 nurses—women like Matron Irene Drummond, who famously told her girls “Don’t cry, I’m proud of you and I love you all” before they walked into the water—were finally granted the full truth of their history.
The Radji Beach massacre remains a dark chapter in military history, made darker by the decades of silence imposed on its only survivor. The perpetrators were never identified or brought to justice; the Australian government’s official position for years was that they had simply “escaped.” Today, we remember Vivian Bullwinkle not just for surviving the bullet that missed, but for the courage it took to live with a truth the world wasn’t ready to hear. The least we can do now is ensure that their names, and the full extent of their sacrifice, are never forgotten again.
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