Ryan Butta Ryan Butta i(24412226 works by)
Gender: Male
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Works By

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1 How Did We Forget This Hero? Ryan Butta , 2024 extract biography (The Bravest Scout at Gallipoli)
— Appears in: The Weekend Australian , 27-28 July 2024; (p. 16)
2 y separately published work icon The Bravest Scout at Gallipoli Ryan Butta , Mulgrave : Affirm Press , 2024 28257881 2024 single work biography 'The many lives and tragic death of Harry Freame, the Anzac hero betrayed by his nation Harry Freame was the first Australian to win the Distinguished Conduct Medal at Gallipoli. Raised as a samurai, he risked his life again and again to scout the beaches and hills of the battlefield, reporting invaluable intelligence back to his officers and relieving stranded soldiers who otherwise would surely have died. Some say he should have got the VC but didn't because he was half-Japanese, a fact he tried hard to conceal. After the war, Harry (real name Henry Wykeham Koba Freame) became a soldier settler and champion apple grower. But when Japan emerged as a perceived threat to Australia, Harry was recruited into Australian intelligence to spy on the Japanese community in Sydney. Before Japan's entry into World War II, Australia opened a diplomatic legation in Tokyo, and Harry was sent as a translator - but his real role was a spy. Extraordinarily, his cover was leaked by the Australian press, and the Japanese secret police tried to assassinate him not long after his arrival in Tokyo in 1941. Harry died back in Australia a few weeks later, but his sacrifice has never been acknowledged by Australia. Until now. Featuring never-before-seen material, The Bravest Scout at Gallipoli is a fascinating and immersive investigation into a grievous historical wrong.' 

 (Publication summary)

1 y separately published work icon The Ballad of Abdul Wade Ryan Butta , Mulgrave : Affirm Press , 2022 24412255 2022 single work biography

'When Afghan entrepreneur Abdul Wade first brought his camel trains to the outback, he was hailed as a hero. Horses couldn't access many remote settlements, especially those stricken by flood or drought, and camel trains rode to the rescue time and time again.

'But with success came fierce opposition fuelled by prejudice. The camel was not even classed as an animal under Australian law, and in a climate of colonial misinformation, hyperbole and fear, camel drivers like Wade were shown almost as little respect. Yet all the while, for those in need, the ships of the desert continued to appear on the outback horizon.

'After his interest was piqued by a 19th-century photo of a camel train in a country town, Ryan Butta soon found himself on the trail of Australia's earliest Afghan camel drivers. Separating the bulldust from the bush poetry, he reveals the breadth and depth of white Australian protectionism and prejudice. Told with flair and authority, this gritty alternative history defies the standard horse-powered folklore to reveal the untold debt this country owes to the humble dromedary, its drivers and those who brought them here.' (Publication summary)

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