We stood
wedged in a thick crowd lining the side of the road, around us flags were waving
and people clapped and occasionally wiped away tears. Unknown to Maia she was
getting a history lesson in heartbreak and hope: Gallipoli, Passchendaele, El
Alamein, Buka, Bougainville, Han River, Seoul, Babang, Duc Lap, Long Tan, Al Rumaythah, Doan and Kakarak.
Congo, Cyprus, Uganda,
Yugoslavia, Haiti, Solomon
Islands and Darfur.
She thought
she was watching a parade with pipe bands and soldiers, and old men and women—their chests
heavy with ribbons and medals, sprigs of rosemary and poppies. And we decided not to
explain a world of conflicts; a small country on the edge of the earth that tries
to bring peace; brave men and women who believe in freedom.
It’s enough
that she witnessed the long parade of battles gone and forgotten, and of peacekeeping
that never ends. It’s enough that she sees us plan a cruising route around a
world where risks are ever-changing, as peace gives way to strife, and then war retreats to truce.
This wasn’t
a day to judge the wisdom of war; this was the day to honour valour and believe
in heroes.
Lest we
forget.
* ANZAC Day commemorates and honours the
members of the Australian and New
Zealand Army Corps (ANZAC) who fought at
Gallipoli during World War I. It’s become a national day of remembrance and
celebrates the distinct Aussie spirit of courage, ingenuity and good humour. And when the parade is over they all head to the pub to gamble and drink like, umm, Australians...
2 comments:
So simple. So moving. Bawling.
Thank-you:)
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