The surgery — to repair a hole in his heart that had been diagnosed when he was three — lasted the better part of eight hours. The doctors had given him a grim prognosis at the outset: a wheelchair by 21, and not much of a life beyond that. Malcolm Watt had other ideas.
He survived. More than that, he flourished. And he spent the next six decades repaying what he considered a debt to the world that could, in practical terms, never quite be settled.
The arithmetic of Mal’s community service was, by any measure, staggering. He was a Cub, a Scout, and eventually a Rover Scout, earning the Queen's Scout badge. He was a founding member and charter vice-president of the Shepparton Rotaract Club, which launched in 1970 with 62 members. He served Shepparton Central Rotary for 37 years, becoming a twice-past president, a Paul Harris Fellow, and overseeing Rotary youth leadership activities for more than 20 years — locally, at district level and internationally. He was a reserve fireman with the Mooroopna Urban Fire Brigade for 13 years. He refereed basketball for more than 50 years, administered it, coached it and scored it. He managed under-17 football teams to three premierships. He was a Freemason, a kindergarten president, a school council president, a cemetery trustee, a treasurer of a retirees' association, and a 20-year veteran of Christmas caravan trips to Deniliquin that families had come to count on with the certainty of the season itself.
For 19 years — from 1995 until his retirement in 2014 — he worked as a crisis response and family support worker at The Bridge Youth Service in Shepparton, spending his days with young people whose cards had been dealt as badly as his own once were, and rather worse. It was, he said, the most challenging and the most rewarding work he had ever done. The City of Greater Shepparton agreed. On Australia Day in 2014, he was named Citizen of the Year.
Malcolm Stanley Watt was born on November 21, 1947, in the old Mooroopna Hospital, the eldest of four children. The hole in his heart was discovered when the prognosis for such a condition was bleak and the surgical techniques to address it were only just being pioneered, an ocean away, by American surgeons. That young Malcolm received his operation at all owed much to his parents, both Mooroopna stalwarts: his father, Stan, who worked three jobs to support the family and who lobbied surgeons directly on his son's behalf; and his mother, Lorraine, a determined nurse, who knew enough to keep pushing until the right doors opened.
After recuperating from his surgery, he was finally able to run around with his mates.
He never really stopped running. After school in Mooroopna and Shepparton, he moved to Melbourne in 1966 to work in insurance and study at night. He played basketball, then umpired it, concluding, with admirable self-awareness and a well-honed sense of mischief, that he was too aggressive for the former and better suited to the latter. He returned to the Goulburn Valley in 1969 and spent the following decades in a succession of roles — insurance, roads administration, the water board, the Victorian Young Farmers, youth development — that traced a quiet arc towards the work that suited him best: helping people who needed it.
He married Pamela Klein in 1984 (or she married him: “only because he agreed to wear top hat and tails to the wedding”) and together they adopted a son, Jae, who grew up to be the playing coach of the football club his father managed from the sidelines.
There is a philosophical tradition, found more in lived experience than in textbooks, which holds that a life oriented towards others is not a sacrifice but a strategy — that joy is most reliably found not in accumulation but in contribution. Mal would probably not have put it in those terms. He was more at home with a clipboard at a basketball score table than with abstract propositions. But that’s the way he lived.
“It’s been a fortunate life, and a very fulfilling one,” he told John Lewis in 2020. “I was always encouraged to participate, join in and contribute.” His advice to anyone facing difficulty was equally plain: “Have a go, join in — and hang in there.”
There was, visible on his chest from armpit to armpit, a scar that marked the moment when his life became possible. He wore it without complaint and, one suspects, without much thought. With that perpetual grin on his face, he was too busy to dwell on it.
Mal Watt died on March 11, 2026, aged 78. He is survived by Pam, Jae, grandson Sonny and a burgeoning extended family.