Sydney-born investigative journalist, author and filmmaker John Pilger passed away on December 31, 2023.
He should be remembered and honoured not just for his impressive body of work, but for being a brave — and at times near-lone — voice for truth against power.
In early 2002, the “war on terror”, launched by United States President George W Bush in the wake of the 9/11 attack, was in full swing.
After two decades, more than 4 million would be killed in Iraq, Libya, Philippines, Pakistan, Somalia, Syria, Yemen and elsewhere under this bloody banner, and ten times more displaced.
The propaganda campaign to justify this ferocious, global punitive US-led expedition cowed many voices, not least in the settler-colonial state of Australia.
But there was one prominent Australian voice that was not silenced — and it was John’s.
Sydney's Town Hall was packed out with people on March 10 that year, to hear John speak in a 91̳ public meeting titled “Breaking the silence: war, propaganda and the new empire”.
More than 100 people who could not squeeze in stayed outside to show their solidarity.
Pilger described the war on terror as “a war on worldwide popular resistance to an economic system that determines who will live well and who will be expendable”.
“opposition to a so-called war on terrorism, that is really a war of terrorism”.
The meeting played an important role in helping build resistance in this country to the many US-led imperial wars that followed the US’ bloody retribution exacted on millions of Afghans who had never even heard of the 9/11 attacks, let alone bore any responsibility for them.
That Sydney Town Hall meeting cemented a strong bond between GL and John.
GL is proud to be the Australian newspaper and media platform that has published the most articles by John over the years.
For much of the past two decades, the so-called mainstream media were always reluctant to run his pieces because he refused to obediently follow the unspoken war-on-terror line.
He refused to go along with the argument that every military expedition that the US launched (and which Australia and other loyal allies promptly followed) to protect privilege and empire were in defence of “shared democratic values”.
The collaboration between ҳand John was based on real shared values, which he summed up succinctly in his introduction to his 1992 book Distant Voices: “I have tried to rescue from media oblivion uncomfortable facts which may serve as antidotes to the official truth; and in doing so, I hope to have given support to those ‘distant voices’ who understand how vital, yet fragile, is the link between the right of people to know and to be heard, and the exercise of liberty and political democracy…”
ҳeditors have had many exchanges with John over the years. At times, there were political differences. But each such exchange only built up a mutual respect, based on a shared commitment to truth and justice.
The last two decades of John’s moral leadership against Empire were inadvertently confirmed a few weeks before his passing when US President Joe Biden Israeli President Benjamin Netanyahu not to repeat the US’ mistakes after 9/11. “There’s no reason we did so many of the things we did,” Biden told Netanyahu.
John had long focused on Palestine’s struggle for self-determination from the Israeli colonial settler state. He condemned Israel’s most recent genocidal campaign against Gaza and, on X, those marching for “peaceful decency”. He urged people to (re)watch his 2002 documentary Palestine is Still The Issue, in which he returned to film in Gaza and the West Bank, after having first done so in 1977.
John was outspoken about Australia’s treatment of its First Peoples; he didn’t agree with Labor’s Voice to Parliament plan, saying it offered “no real democracy, no sovereignty, no treaty between equals”.
His 2013 film Utopia broke the silence on the ongoing dispossession of First Nations peoples, with many telling their first-hand stories.
“Whether it is Indigenous people or refugees, the desperation of voiceless people has been long regarded by Australian politicians as an electorally valuable issue. The real issue, of course, is race, on whose myths and bigoted exploitation Australia was settled.”
John criticised Labor’s embrace of AUKUS, saying it was about a new war with China, a campaign he took up in his documentary . While recognising China’s abuse of human and democratic rights, he said the US views China’s embrace of capitalist growth as the key threat.
John campaigned hard for WikiLeaks publisher Julian Assange’s release; he visited him several times in Belmarsh Prison and condemned a gutless Labor Prime Minister for refusing to meet with Stella Assange when she was in Australia. He spoke out for other whistleblowers, including , who exposed Australian war crimes in Afghanistan.
John did not mince words, which is why, especially during the war on terror, most mainstream media refused to publish him — unless a counterposed article was run side-by-side. He never agreed to this pretence of “balance”.
John wrote about his own, early, conscientisation. “I was very young when I arrived in Saigon and I learned a great deal,” he said on the anniversary of the last day of the longest war of the 20th century — Vietnam.
“I learned to recognise the distinctive drone of the engines of giant B-52s, which dropped their carnage from above the clouds and spared nothing and no one; I learned not to turn away when faced with a charred tree festooned with human parts; I learned to value kindness as never before; I learned that Joseph Heller was right in his masterly Catch-22: that war was not suited to sane people; and I learned about ‘our’ propaganda.”
John will be remembered by all those who know that facts and history matter, and that only through struggle will people’s movements ever have a chance of winning justice.