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-- Lest we forget. Anzac day 07.
Lest we forget. Anzac day 07.
They shall not grow old as we who 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.
Lest we forget.
did anyone else go to the dawn service this morning? it brings a tear to your eye every time. it's wonderful to see so many people there.
lest we forget indeed. i think today is an important day in australian history. it is a day to remember the friends and loved ones that people have lost and to commemorate what they did. it is not about celebrating war or fighting, or glorifying battle but remembering what they stood for. you don't have to like the army, you don't have to agree with wars in general and you don't have to think we should be fighting in iraq and afganistan. but i think you have to know that today is bigger than that and it is not about the politics or the economics it is about the people. i think it is important to respect the people that went overseas to fight and respect them for what they had to go through. by grafitiing memorials and calling the soldiers murderers (http://news.ninemsn.com.au/article.aspx?id=262984) you show a complete disrespect and misunderstanding of the situation. it makes me angry when i see things like that, and posters at uni saying the same things by some protest group crying out for attention. the situation and the societies were completely different then and now. i think it is also disrespectful to try and use days like today for political gain and stunts like appearances on tv by politicians live at the dawn service overseas when it isnt the dawn service. i think it is disrespectful for people to trash the place and leave rubbish everywhere where it happened and i think it trivialises the whole thing by having concerts there. but despite that i still feel proud to be australian today and i think everyone else should too 
that's my rant for now hehe
well said Philbs
| quote: |
| Originally posted by Trance Nutter well said Philbs |
+II
Re: Lest we forget. Anzac day 07.
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| Originally posted by walter78 Lest we forget. |
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| The womens� arrival in Australia was a combination of luck and perseverance. The Australian authorities had no idea where the Japanese had taken the nurses during the last months of the war. The search for them had started on 15 August 1945 but since no-one knew where they were, they missed out on the widespread emergency drops of food and medical supplies to the camps located around south-east Asia. By August 1945, they were starving. Three and a half years earlier, after the sinking of the Vyner Brooke on 14 February 1942, 12 of the 65 Australian Army nurses on board were drowned or killed in the water. The rest struggled ashore on Banka Island, some having been in the sea for more than 60 hours. Japanese soldiers captured one group of 22 nurses, plus a civilian woman, ordered them into the sea and machine-gunned them. The only survivor, Sister Vivienne Bullwinkel, lay still in the shallow water until after the Japanese troops had gone. Days later, she was reunited with her surviving colleagues and interned at Muntok on Banka Island for two weeks before the group was transferred by ship to Palembang in Sumatra. Japanese attempts to persuade the nurses to join a brothel were resisted by the women and they were eventually put into bungalows with Dutch women and children at the other end of the town. The conditions were dreadful with inadequate sanitation, mosquitoes, scarce food, and unlike many of the Dutch internees, the Australians had no resources with which to purchase supplements for their diet of low-grade rice and vegetables. In 1943 the women were moved again, this time to a desolate spot in the jungle where they eked out an existence in leaking bamboo huts with mud floors and trench toilets. |
| quote: |
| Originally posted by Thomas Campbell The patriot's blood is the seed of Freedom's tree. |
Big day for those in the defense force, dawn service is a very sobering experience after the long night before.
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