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Lebanese ANZACs of World War One

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April 25, 2018

low is a list of Australians of Lebanese heritage who served during World War One. They are represented in all Australian campaigns including Gallipoli. Some were killed in action, some wounded and some were prisoners of war.


RANK FIRST NAME SURNAME ENLISTED SERVED RTA/Discharged BIRTHPLACE


Private Ambrose Abdullah  13/11/1915 Western Front 06/09/18 Tumut NSW
Private Thomas Abdullah 28/08/1917 Western Front 09/12/18 Tumut NSW
Private Charles Abdullah 05/06/17 Middle East / Western Front 19/10/1918 Mt Lebanon
Gunner Herbert Abotomey 26/09/1916 France 28/09/1919 Lebanon
Sapper Alfred Alexander Abotomey 15/02/1917 Western Front 18/07/1919 Petersburg SA
Sergeant Walter Abotomey 06/12/15 Middle East 01/10/20 Adelaide SA
Private Michael Antony 19/04/16 Western Front KIA 10/05/17 Adelaide SA
Horse Driver Stanton Ayoub 06/05/15 Gallipoli France 03/01/19 Dubbo NSW
Private George Joseph Beshewatie 28/03/1917 Western Front KIA 16/08/1918 Orange NSW
Sergeant William Norman Bookallil 12/11/14 Middle East – Cooma NSW
Driver William Taseef Keeami 20/07/1915 Middle East 20/01/1916 Launceston
Gunner Elias Keeami 18/06/1915 Western Front KIA 15/11/1917 Lebanon
Private Vincent Lahood 06/01/16 Western Front 31/03/1919 Redfern
Private Vincent Mahboub 15/06/1917 Western Front KIA 08/08/1918 Lebanon
Trooper Alfred Malouf 7/10/1915 Middle East 04/08/1919
Private John Mansour 26/01/1916 France 04/05/17 Mt Lebanon
2nd Air Mechanic John Mellick 27/11/1916 Western Front – Melbourne
Private Aziz Michael 05/06/18 France depot 23/07/1919 Toowoomba
Private Najeeb Elias Moses 11/05/15 Discharged in Australia 23/06/1915 Lebanon
Sergeant Faig Nassoor 27/08/1917 Middle East – Mt Lebanon
Driver Richard George Saleeba 20/11/1915 Western Front 01/11/17 Melbourne
Lance Sgt. Christopher Joseph Saleeba 21/09/1916 Western Front 1 9/06/1920 Melbourne
Private Joseph Saleeba 30/07/1917 Western Front KIA Mt Lebanon
Private Edward Shalala 26/04/1917 Flying Corps 17/04/1919 Bourke NSW
Private Alexander Tartoosie 05/08/15 Middle East / Western Front 17/03/1919 Mt Lebanon
Private George Keeami 8/11/1918 Discharged in Australia – Launceston

As well, a number of other Australian Lebanese tried to enlist but were discharged for reasons such as being under age or medically unfit. Richard Lahood was discharged as an enemy alien, a Turkish subject. Some enlisted too late to be posted overseas.


FIRST NAME SURNAME ENLISTED DISCHARGE BIRTHPLACE AGE Reason for Discharge

William N Ferris 18/09/1916 15/10/16 Orange 19 Discharged Under Age – 19
Frances Paul Hashem 02/07/17 04/07/17 Tripoli, Syrian 34 Medically unfit
Richard Lahood 29/12/1916 05/01/17 Mt Lebanon 21 Discharged – Enemy Alien
Frank Picone Malouf 27/08/1917 29/08/17 Sydney 16 Discharged as too young -16
Norman Moses 14/05/1918 17/05/18 Mt Lebanon 40 Invalided out – over age
Wadeh Shadie 22/10/1918 15/03/19 Cootamundra 19 Joined near Armistice
Alfred Tutungi 30/10/1918 11/11/18 Lebanon 28 Discharged at Armistice


First to Join

Private James Callel Ferry, for instance, was one of the first Australians to enlist 17th August 1914. He saw active service at Gallipoli and on the Western Front. Luck was on his side because he survived to return to Australia in May 1919.
Vincent Mahboub – Killed in Action
Private Vincent Mahboub of the 35th Battalion AIF enlisted on 15th June 1917 but was killed in action on the 8th August 1918. He was the son of Michael and Rosie Mahboub, of Excelsior, New South Wales and was born in North Lebanon.

Sergeant Walter Abotomey

Sergeant Walter Abotomey embarked with the 1st Battalion, as a Private, aboard HMAT Orsova (A67) on 14 July 1915. He served at Gallipoli as a temporary corporal from October 1915 until evacuated with influenza a few weeks later. From August 1916 he served in France with the 61st Battalion and 1st Battalion. He was wounded in action in October 1917 and promoted to corporal. In December 1917 Cpl Abotomey was selected, along with other members of the AIF, to serve with ‘Dunster Force’; a special force established to reorganise resistance to enemy advances in Mesopotamia and Persia. In March 1918 he was promoted to the rank of sergeant. In May Sergeant Abotomey was diagnosed with severe tuberculosis. He returned to Australia in March 1919 where he died on 1 October 1920, aged 27.

Michael George Antony – Killed in Action
Private Michael George Antony was born in Adelaide to George and Touminie Antony from Aintourine in Lebanon. He enlisted in April 1916 and joined the 5th Infantry Battalion. He enlisted under the name “Michael George” with the enlistment number 6266. He was killed in action at Bullecourt, France on the 10th May 1917. Records differ on his surname. The digitised National Archives of Australia file lists “Michael George”, but the Australian War Memorial lists him as “Michael Antony”. Under the Arabic system, as son of George was Michael George, but the Anglo-Celtic system would have taken his father’s last name as a hereditary surname.

Edward George Shalala – Australian Flying Corps
Private Edward George Shala, born Bourke NSW was an electrician prior to enlisting on 26th April, 1917 and was discharged in England on 17th April 1919. He was with the Australian Flying Corps, Aeroplane Repair Section. When discharge in England he quickly found a job with a British company, R. A. Lister & Co. Ltd. In their electrical department for six months then transferred back to Australia with his wife (whom he married in England) and worked with the same company in Sydney. His father was George Shalala, born in Ramoon, Mount Lebanon who applied for this Naturalisation Certificate in 1924 and gave his address as “hawker”.

Many Stories
Second Air Mechanic John Mellick from Rockhampton, served on the Western Front in the air corps. Private Vincent Lahood, while serving on the Western Front, was captured by the Germans and spent time as a Prisoner of War. Some, like Private John Mansour, completed their active service, in his case in France, and rather than return directly to Australia, took the opportunity of visiting their home villages in Lebanon.
The list is not exhaustive and the Society is anxious to hear of any other Australians of Lebanese heritage who served with the armed forces during World War One, and/or their photographs.

Paul Convy

References
Australian War Memorial database (www.awm.gov.au)
Newsletter No. 49 2014 of the Australian Lebanese Historical Society Inc.
Newsletter No. 51, 2015 of the Australian Lebanese Historical Society Inc.
Collection of the Australian Lebanese Historical Society Inc.
Correspondence from Geraldine Khachan re: Waheh Shadie & Edward Shalala




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2 Reviews

Reviews

Fred Rouady
Sydney NSW
Recognition

Less we forget..

April 2018

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Suzi Waite
Morwell
My lost pop in world war I

My pop died in the war before I was born. And i was born in 1968.

April 2018

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