Thursday, April 25, 2019

Quote for the Day

They went with songs to the battle, they were young,
Straight of limb, true of eye, steady and aglow.
They were staunch to the end against odds uncounted,
They fell with their faces to the foe.

They shall grow not old, as we that are left grow old;
Age shall not weary them, nor the years condemn.
At the going down of the sun and in the morning
We will remember them.

- From For the Fallen, Laurence Binyon




Anzac Day 2019

The photographs and commentaries below, being a selection of photographs taken during the Gallipoli campaign, are a repost from 2014.

A Turkish sniper, disguised as a bush. The 2 Australian soldiers are wearing regulation uniform, which suggests that the photo was taken early in the campaign. As the campaign wore on, the heat caused uniforms to be discarded. Bare chests and singlets were not uncommon.

To make the Turks think that the Anzacs were still on Gallipoli when their evacuation took place under cover of night, the soldiers rigged up devices that caused rifles to fire periodically. This was done by dripping water into cans connected to rifle triggers, causing the rifles to fire even long after being left.

Dummy soldiers used to make the Turks think that the trenches were still manned.

When the Anzacs left Gallipoli they took their artillery with them. So as not to alert the Turks, they replaced the withdrawn pieces with wooden mockups.

The lessons learned at Gallipoli came in handy in other campaigns. The above horse mockups were erected in the Jordan Valley to trick the Turks into believing that there was a strong concentration of Desert Mounted Corps, part of the Light Horse.

On 17 December 1915, a famous game of cricket was played at Shell Green, Anzac, as Turkish shells passed overhead. The batsman, Major George Macarthur Onslow, 7th Light Horse Regiment, NSW, has just been caught out. The game was part of the various deceptions planned to deceive the Turks that all was normal at Anzac while the evacuation was being carried out

Periscope rifle developed by Sergeant William Beech (pictured above with his invention) of the 2nd Battalion Australian Imperial Force (AIF), in May 1915, during the Gallipoli campaign. The device allowed a soldier to aim and fire a rifle from a trench, without being exposed to enemy fire.

Australian light horseman using a periscope rifle, Gallipoli 1915. Note the relaxation of uniforms, the trench conditions and the depth of the trences, as well as the rifles and bayonets.

An Australian officer visits a comrade's grave at Lancashire Landing Cemetery, Helles, Gallipoli, 

When the Anzacs secretly evacuated Gallipoli, taking with them every soldier, their animals and equipment without the loss of a single man, it was nonetheless disturbing for many that they were leaving behind dead friends and comrades. Men in two’s and threes visited the cemeteries to tidy graves of friends and erect new crosses. Ons soldier said to General Birdwood on the final day, pointing to a little cemetery, "I hope they won't hear us marching down the deres [gullies]"
(Official History of Australia in the War; The Story of Anzac, Volume II, p 882)

Chaplain Walter Dexter looking out over North Beach, Anzac. On 16 December 1915, three days before the final evacuation, Dexter walked around Anzac leaving behind him something of Australia:
…I went up the gullies and through the cemeteries, scattering silver wattle seed. If we have to leave here, I intend that a bit of Australia, shall be here. I soaked the seed for about 20 hours, and they seem to be well and thriving."
- Chaplain Walter Dexter, 16-17 December 1915

Australian soldier on the day of evacuation.

8 Australian Graves at Gallipoli in a small fenced off area next to a walkway. The head and foot of each grave is marked by two large round bombs.

Australian 'Diggers' burying dead Anzac comrades between lines during ceasefire May 24, 1915

Unidentified Australian soldier offering a wounded Turkish soldier a cup of water at Gallipoli, 1915.

"They were some of our newer Australian soldiers – 17th Infantry – and that is how they regard the Turk and the Turk regards them. The most pathetic evidence that I have heard of is a little wooden cross found in the scrub, just two splinters of biscuit box tacked together, with the inscription “Here lies a Turk.” The poor soul would probably turn in his grave if his ghost could see that rough cross above him. But he need not worry. It was put there in all sincerity. Some Australian found him and buried him exactly as he would bury one of his own men – with that last little homage to mark the resting-place of a man fighting for his country."
[Charles Bean, dispatch, Commonwealth of Australia Gazette, 13 January 1916, p 92]

Remains of dead bodies on Hill 60. Anzac. Australian war Graves Photographic Archive.

The bleached bones of Australians, New Zealanders and Turks look the same, giving added meaning to the words of Mustafa Ataturk, front line commander of the Turkish forces at Gallipoli, the founder of the Republic of Turkey and its first President:

Heroes who shed their blood and lost their lives! You are now lying in the soil of a friendly country. Therefore rest in peace. There is no difference between the Johnnies and Mehmets to us where they lie side by side here in this country of ours. You, the mothers, who sent their sons from far away countries wipe away your tears; your sons are now lying in our bosom and are in peace. After having lost their lives on this land they have become our sons as well.

- Ataturk’s tribute in 1934 to the Anzacs who died at Gallipoli, inscribed on a memorial in Gallipoli and on the Kemal Ataturk Memorial, Canberra.
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Postscript:

At a time when there is so much hate, hostility and violence in the world, whether based on religion, race, politics, geography or ideology, the above words remain a symbol of love, acceptance, tolerance, respect and hope.

In honour of those who gave all and with respect those who served . . . 

Lest We Forget.



Wednesday, April 24, 2019

Thought for the Day



I read the news today, oh boy . . .



Lest We Forget:

Tomorrow is Anzac Day in Oz, a particularly revered day.

From Wikipedia: 
Anzac Day is a national day of remembrance in Australia and New Zealand that broadly commemorates all Australians and New Zealanders "who served and died in all wars, conflicts, and peacekeeping operations" and "the contribution and suffering of all those who have served". Observed on 25 April each year, Anzac Day was originally devised to honour the members of the Australian and New Zealand Army Corps (ANZAC) who served in the Gallipoli Campaign, their first engagement in the Great War (1914–1918). 
The day is marked by dawn services in most cities and major towns,  the playing of the Last Post, a minute’s silence, Anzac Day marches and a blind eye by the police to gambling (a game called Two Up) in the pubs.

The symbols of Anzac Day are the wearing of a sprig of rosemary (remembrance) and the reciting of The Ode in the remembrance services:
They shall grow not old, as we that are left grow old;
Age shall not weary them, nor the years condemn.
At the going down of the sun and in the morning
We will remember them.

This is usually followed by the response “We will remember them.  Lest we forget.”

Many war memorials and monuments bear the words “Lest we forget.”

You will probably have gathered at least a little of the sacredness of the day and what it stands for.

It is therefore mindboggling that a local Sydney Council – the City of Canada Bay Council – erected commemorative banners showing pictures of servicemen with the words “Lest we forgot” instead of “Lest we forget”.


 It’s not even grammatical, for God’s sake.

How many hands must these banners have passed through and yet it was only after they had been erected and a member of the public drew the Council’s attention to it that the penny finally dropped.

According to the Council’s General Manager, Peter Gainsford: “I have today been made aware of banners that have been erected in our area containing an extremely unfortunate and disrespectful error.  I am extremely disappointed and accept full responsibility.  I have spoken to representatives of the Concord, Five Dock and Drummoyne RSL branches this morning and unreservedly apologised for any offence.”

According to ne comment left by a reader:

“At least we know it wasn't a deliberate mistake from those of the Left, they would have written Best We Forget.”



Anzac Buscuits:

Elsewhere in the news, the Department of Veterans Affairs, the holder of the rights to the use of the word “Anzac”, has warned that if bakeries and small businesses tamper with the classic Anzac biscuit they could be fined up to $51,000, while individual sellers are looking at a $10,000 fine.

A permit must be issued from Veterans’ Affairs to sell products using the word “Anzac” and, for Anzac biscuits, words such as cookies and bikkies are not permitted.

The original Anzac biscuits were made from rolled oats, flour, golden syrup and sugar with a later version adding coconut, being made in Oz from those ingredients (without eggs etc) so that they could be sent to the serving troops overseas during WW1.

Attitudes towards the warning, which is part of a wider crackdown by the federal government and RSL on businesses exploiting the s Anzac spirit for commercial gain, have ranged from denunciation to strong support.



Right to use (or not use) the word "Anzac":

The use of the word Anzac is protected by Government legislation dating from 1916, the only World War I-related regulations still in force in Australia, and it is strictly enforced.

One writer, Damien Murphy, has referred to it as “the most regulated word in the world. . . . a sort of secular holy word.”


Some examples of enforcement:
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Melbourne photographer James Armstrong's Anzac Art Photo Enlargement Co in High Street, Northcote, was the first to be charged under the War Precautions Supplementary Regulations. Convicted and fined 10 shillings ($1) in October 1916, he appealed saying he named the store to honour his brother, a serving soldier.  He was unsuccessful.
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In August 1917, a poster advertising a performance of "The Anzac Gollywog Co, featuring Dog Anzac ... who has seen 858 days active service" fell foul of the Anzac veto.  Dog owner Hector Walker told police he had taken the dog to Gallipoli and France but the Crown solicitor moved against him and Walker fled across the Murray to sanctuary in Melbourne. Due to jurisdiction problems the prosecution was discontinued.
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In 1934 one of Australia's heroes and favourite sons, Sir Charles Kingsford Smith, painted the word Anzac on a plane he intended to fly in the Centenary Race celebrating 100 years of European settlement in Victoria, see photo above. Smithy had served at Gallipoli, and was a great and heroic commercial brand at the height of the Depression.  However the powers that be refused permission and he renamed the plane Lady Southern Cross.  That was the plane in which he disappeared in 1935.
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Much more recently, in 2015, Woolworths (the Australian Woolworths is a different entity to the US Woolworths, someone registered the name in Oz early on) – “The Fresh Food People” – took flak for its cynical exploitation of the word.  The supermarket giant was attempting to associate its "Fresh Food People" logo with "Lest We Forget" in a campaign named “Fresh in Our Memories” but abandoned it amid widespread outrage.  Permission to use the word had not been requested.  Woolworths denied that the campaign had been a marketing one but shut down the website and took down the posters.