NSCnews Online April 2017 | Page 32

Secret war diary The third part of the citation notes three separate occasions on which his platoon located and engaged occupied enemy defensive positions. “2LT Weekes’ personal bravery, tactical skill and calmness under fi re was an inspiration to his men, and resulted in the platoon’s marked successes during this period,” the citation reads. Forty years later, in the comfort of his Thuringowa home, BRIG Weekes fl icks through the diary, dipping into it at random, suddenly bursting into laughter when he fi nds an entry noting the birth of his fi rst child, a daughter. “That cost me a lot,” he said, still laughing. He knew the arrival of his fi rst-born was imminent and had bet the men in his platoon that it would be a boy. A telegram from his mother-in-law arrived congratulating him on the birth of a daughter. On the strength of it, he duly shouted the bar and everybody “collected” on their bet. But a couple of days later, a letter arrived that said little “Neil William” was putting on weight rapidly and generally doing well. “I thought ‘that’s a strange name for a girl’,” BRIG Weekes said. It turns out that wife Lyn’s mother had seen a notice posted on the babies room at the hospital indicating her daughter had delivered a baby girl and, without checking, had rushed straight off to send Neil the good news by telegram. When she returned to the hospital, she was astonished to fi nd Lyn was very obviously still pregnant. Rather than send another telegram and possibly causing alarm, they decided to wait. Neil William Weekes duly arrived and, with mother and son doing well, Lyn wrote to Neil to deliver the news and explain the mistake. “The mail was unreliable and as it happened, the second letter she wrote was the one I got fi rst, so it was a day or two before I really understood what had happened,” he said. A non-drinker, the platoon commander was still keen on redressing the balance and collecting a soft drink or two from the men he had already paid in beer. “Do you think those Diggers would buy me so much as a softdrink?,” he said. “No way!” He said his diary also proved, for him, the existence of a kind of ESP between married couples. The diary entry for November 18, 1968 notes he was suff ering “terrifi c pains” in his abdomen. Then, on November 19: “Pains until 0100h. Wonder if little Weekesy is arriving.” November 20: “Telegram. Pains correct. Daughter born.” BRIG Weekes fl icked through the diary a bit further, then burst into laughter again. “That’s the key to my Army trunk,” he said. “I wish I had remembered I put it there. I had to force it open when I got home.” BRIG Weekes revisited the diary during the commemorations surrounding the Battle of Coral. He took the diary with him to the dedication of a replica cross to one made in Nui Dat. The cross at 1RAR honours the 1RAR members lost in two tours of Vietnam in 165-66 and 1968-69. The commemoration and 1RAR reunion was one of the biggest ever held by the battalion. 32 | APRIL 2017 If the hat fi ts.... A CASUAL conversation at the kitchen table in Neil Weekes’ Thuringowa house led to him becoming a newspaper reporter in a warzone. And, such was his generosity, he did it as a favour. As we sipped our tea, we each set out the terms under which he would represent the Northern Services Courier (the hardcopy predecessor of this publication) on an ADF- sponsored media tour of the Middle East Area of Operations in 2012. He wanted to be sure we wouldn’t “whitewash” his copy and that we would print the truth. Promised. I wanted to be sure he felt confi dent the trip would not be problematic for him - was he sure it would not trigger some sort of PTSD relapse? No problem. Although I probably couldn’t help smirking, I also insisted he had to wear clothing appropriate to a “reporter” of his vintage - specifi cally, a dark fedora with a piece of white card in the brim that proclaimed him as “PRESS No bloody way! That exchange came back to him at the dinner to welcome th visiting journalists to the ADF’s HQ in the Middle East at Al Minhad Air Base in the United Arab Emirates, hosted by one of his former RMC pupils, COMD JTF633 MAJGEN Stu Smith. It was Neil’s birthday and Stu used that as the perfect cover to surprise him with a presentation of exactly THAT hat (pictured). Neil took it with typical grace and humour, but, although he ke the hat, I don’t think he ever wo it other than just long enough for this photograph to be taken. - TED BR