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Weekly Worker 540 Thursday August 5 2004
Obituary
Josh Heuchan - red salute
On July 30 Josh Heuchan died tragically in a skiing accident while
holidaying in New Zealand. He was only 33. Josh was a special human
being, a dear friend and comrade: he was committed to the ideals
of communism and human freedom.
This is an obituary that should not be written. Josh died too young
with too much to offer the world. His warmth and humanity will be
missed by all who knew him. He was a thoroughly ethical person in
all his dealings - personal and political.
Josh grew up on the central coast of New South Wales before attending
the privileged halls of Barker College in Sydney. He was dux of
his class. His experience at Barker bred in him a loathing of such
privilege and the need to connect with working class life. At university,
he became active in campus politics, joining Left Alliance. He tasted
a number of jobs: graphic designer for the Liquor, Hospitality and
Miscellaneous Workers Union in Sydney, executive officer for the
National Tertiary Education Union at Sydney University, a geography
teacher (and intrepid world traveller), among others. He finally
worked for the NSW Commission for Children and Young People. He
was active supporting youth rights against the police. He was a
member of the Progressive Public Service Association, the left faction
of the PSA union in NSW.
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A sometime member of the Socialist Alliance in Australia, Josh
tired easily of the lefts myopia. The continual happy
clappy attitude of the lefts revivalism and its dead-end
sect perspectives irked him. He was an avid reader and financial
supporter of the Communist Party of Great Britains Weekly
Worker.
While privately committed to the idea of refounding a genuine Communist
Party in Australia, he latterly spent much of his formidable energy
in his personal relationships and on his outstanding sporting abilities.
The love of a wonderful woman, Gwen, saw him happier and more relaxed
than at any time I knew him.
He was fiercely competitive without ever being obnoxious in victory.
A keen sportsman and a bit of an adrenaline junky, Josh had been
a skier since childhood. A skilled soccer player and a polymath
of sport, he took up surfing, wrestling and kick-boxing to pass
his time. Man, was he fit.
I first met Josh while teaching at Macquarie University in Sydney.
He was a student of mine. Through our activity in campus politics
we became friends. As he moved away from his earlier anarchist and
green leanings, we became firm comrades. He was without
doubt one of the finest human beings I have ever met.
Josh took his life seriously and was committed to his friends and
family without a trace of cynicism. My comrade saw the perverse
and absurd side of life and was happy to laugh along with it over
a nice rare steak and a beer. He was bloody good company and a top
cook.
Words fail me. I will grieve Joshs passing for a long time
to come and will look for him and his humanity in our friends and
comrades for years to come. His body is trapped permanently in a
glacier beneath the mountain that took him. It is fitting that a
mountain stands as a monument to Josh. His was a huge personality
and his love was boundless.
My dear friend and comrade, you are desperately missed. My thoughts
are with Gwen, as well as Carol, Bill and Angela. And from all your
friends and comrades, Josh, a red salute. You are not forgotten.
Marcus Ström
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