
Medical doctor Yondon Dungu had migrated to Australia with his wife and three children, and had been in Australia for just one week when he drowned at Bondi Beach. Left without a breadwinner, his wife and children returned to Mongolia after the tragedy. This was the first drowning at Bondi for four years and the lifeguards are terribly depressed after the event. They gather together in the tower to talk about things and help each other with their feelings. Summary by Janet Bell.
Cory, the oldest of the group and one of those who has seen it all, talks to the others about the role of the lifeguard and how to help each other through this tragic event. Their easy camaraderie and mateship have a serious side when it comes to a moment like this, when they need to help each other through the slump. The ability to talk about how they feel is an important element in coming to terms with what has just happened, at odds with the traditional view of the bronzed Australian as the strong, silent type. Many of the lifeguards attended the funeral, which was appreciated by the family. Each lifeguard received a copy of a letter of thanks from by the family, and as they read it through, the program offers a moment for quiet reflection.
The whole tone of this episode reminds us that the surf can be dangerous and must be respected. The appeal that was set up to help the family allows the audience to feel that they can do something to help and as Tom says at the end of the program, maybe the family will be able to return to Australia some time in the future.
The second series of Bondi Rescue features the young trainee Blake from the western suburbs of Sydney and we’ve been following his progress as he develops into a useful member of the team. His maturity in dealing with the drowned man’s family is proof that he’ll be a valuable member of this fraternity of lifeguards. He experienced the family’s realisation that the husband and father was gone. He talks frankly and openly about the need to have the others around to help him over this terrible day.
A tragedy unfolds at Bondi Beach when the lifeguards see someone in difficulty in treacherous water who then disappears from view behind the waves. There are 20,000 people at the beach that day and when no-one is reported missing, the lifeguards desperately hope that the person in difficulty was somehow able to leave the water. Two hours later a 16-year-old reports that his father is missing and the lifeguards are plunged into despair.
In the first series of Bondi Rescue, filmed during the summer of 2006, there was a near drowning when a Japanese student was discovered face down in the water and was resuscitated with the use of the paddles to restart his heart. This time, a new arrival to Australia who can’t swim, a Mongolian doctor with a young family, loses his footing in a rip and is soon lost to view. With all the lifeguards’ skills he can’t be found. Two hours later the rescue helicopter finds a body under the water and he is pronounced dead by ambulance personnel after a futile attempt to revive him.
The producer of the series Michael Cordell, and the broadcaster Network Ten are to be commended for the sensitivity with which this tragic story is told. The program opens with one of the lifeguards, nicknamed Whippet (otherwise known as Ryan Clark), alerting us to the content of the program to follow. A fund was set up by the broadcaster and producer for the family left without its breadwinner to which viewers generously contributed. The lifeguards hope this program will help to emphasise the very real dangers of the surf. The family returned to Mongolia and soon afterwards sent a letter to the lifeguards. It’s a moving tribute to these dedicated men and women who patrol the beach even when, as in this case, they are unable to avert a tragedy.
This episode is for everyone who visits the beach. It’s about the unforgiving nature of the sea and the need for all beachgoers to be aware of the dangers of ocean swimming, even on a patrolled beach.
Notes by Janet Bell
Education Notes
This clip shows lifeguards at Sydney’s famous Bondi Beach discussing their reactions after a man drowns at the beach. Scenes of the lifeguards coming off duty after the drowning are interspersed with interviews with three lifeguards. Blake McKeown, a young trainee, speaks of the personal impact of the tragedy; Andrew Reid ('Reidy’) says that it is an unfortunate part of being a lifeguard; and at the end of the clip Tom Bunting gives some details of the drowned man’s recent arrival in Australia. The interviews are underscored by slow-beat surf music.
Educational value points
Education notes provided by The Learning Federation and Education Services Australia
This clip starts approximately 21 minutes into the TV program.
A group of lifeguards are coming off duty at Bondi Beach, discussing their reactions after a man drowns at the beach.
Lifeguard (to Blake) You alright?
Trainee lifeguard Blake McKeown is being interviewed.
Blake McKeown How do you have this kid come up to you, and you know that his father is dead? The hardest part was walking along the beach and kind of asking him the questions, like ‘Can your dad swim, did he have anywhere else to go?’, and you saw it click in his head and then his mum’s head that, like, there isn’t much hope. Like, he was in the water. He didn’t have anywhere else to go. He couldn’t swim. And I think that was the toughest part for me was, was watching them realise that their husband, like, their father, is gone.
Scenes of the beach at sunset as the lifeguards go home for the day. Lifeguard Andrew ‘Reidy’ Reid is being interviewed.
Andrew Reid No-one ever wants to finish a day at work knowing that someone died while they were on. For us to do this job, we have to expect things like this. It’s hard to deal with at the time, but I think it’s going to be a lot harder on the guys that it was their first time.
The interviews are interspersed with shots of the lifeguards and people at the beach.
McKeown I think the best thing was going through it as a group. Like, that night, I felt a lot more part of the team, like we’d all worked together and done everything we could, and we were all feeling exactly the same. It was, yeah, one of the things I took out of it – was the great sense of being part of the team and being a lifeguard now.
Reid I think it will make him a better lifeguard because in his first year, he’s just realised that people drown. You know, this isn’t just a walk-in-the-park job. Like, lifeguarding’s lifeguarding and you’re guarding lives. You know, people will drown.
Lifeguard Tom Bunting is also interviewed.
Tom Bunting From what I gathered from his family and friends, Yondon Dungu himself was 42 years of age. He’d been in Australia for one week, and his family would have absolutely been thriving on the fact that they’d been given this new opportunity and about to kick-start a new life, and in the blink of an eye, as it occurs down here sometimes at Bondi, it was just taken away from him.
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