Tomorrow is ANZAC Day and last year DH and I were fortunate enough to be able to attend the dawn service at the Australian War Memorial in the French town of Villers Bretonneux in the Somme region. (So much of WW1 was fought in this area and many Aussie 'boys' lie in graves in France and Belgium)
This service was one of the most memorable events of our holiday. However, this year we will watch the service on TV. This year is the 100th Anniversary of the Gallipoli Landing with our Prime Minister visiting Turkey for the Commemoration.
Here is what I wrote last year...
This service was one of the most memorable events of our holiday. However, this year we will watch the service on TV. This year is the 100th Anniversary of the Gallipoli Landing with our Prime Minister visiting Turkey for the Commemoration.
Here is what I wrote last year...
ANZAC Day 2014...
This day, April 25, is like the Aussie and New Zealand version of Memorial Day in the US, where service men and women are paid tribute for their efforts in times of war...and especially those who died while serving. Services, marches, and ceremonies honour these people. This year DH and I were fortunate in that we were able to join some friends of ours at 2 ANZAC ceremonies in France. In France...you may wonder??
We were on the B series of shuttle buses so we had a little longer to wait. My friend had brought over some wreaths made with sprays of wattle (artificial of course) which she would place at the 2 ceremonies.
I had heard over the years of French villagers who continued to honour the Australian soldiers who, during the First World War helped save these villages from the enemy...I had read articles of how these villagers came to idolise the Aussie soldiers...and this was passed on to the subsequent generations. One such village was Villers Bretonneux. They have never forgotten...each year there would be wreathe laying ceremonies on ANZAC Day. Just outside the village there is a war cemetery where Allied soldiers are buried.
There is also a huge Australian War Memorial which is the scene of an ANZAC Dawn service each year, attended by dignities from government ( Australian, NZ, Canadian, British, French etc) and all 3 military services plus thousands of ordinary Australians (and some NZ ers) and many employees from the Department of Veterans' Affairs in the Federal government.
My friend Carmen's great uncle lost his life in this area and is buried in one of the war cemeteries, and we teamed up with her family and another friend, to be there. ( I also saw another friend who was also there among the 6000...she knew DH and I would be there from Facebook but we didn't know she was even in France...lovely surprise)
It was the most awe inspiring and emotional experience to have!
Our alarm was set for 2 am but none of us had gotten much sleep after we had said goodnight at 10pm after meeting up for dinner the night before in Amiens...
We had to meet at the square near the Carlton Hotel in Amiens at 2.55 am to catch our shuttle buses which would take us out to Villers Bretonneux...it was a five minute stroll from our hotel. There were hundreds of people already there when we arrived at 2.45 am...
The buses start to arrive...
The drive to the war memorial took approximately 30 minutes. When we arrived we saw the huge numbers if people making their way up the hill to the memorial. It was eerie...people walked silently in the dark...plastic matting made temporary pathways thus avoiding the muddy wet ground.
The Australian flag and the French flag at half mast...
An army officer who served with Carmen's son stops to have a word with him and his family...
The camera crews at the side rush to get footage of a French soldier who was obviously very important...
Before the service, music and vocalists were provided by the Australian Army Band and choirs from The Hutchins School and St Michael's Collegiate School of Hobart. And images from WW1 were projected on the wall of the tower of the memorial.
Near the end of the service was the wreath laying...governments first and finally families...Carmen and her son laid the wreath of wattle sprays...
By the end of the service the sun was up and it was very very cold...
The names of the dead are on the wall you can see in this photo above...they are grouped by battalion and battlefield of the Western Front as it was known in WW1.
I said it was cold didn't I?
After a very welcome hot drink in one of the hospitality tents we headed to where we had to meet B4 shuttle bus which would take us to the village for the next ceremony.
The banner on the village hall building...
The Town Hall was decorated with green and gold bunting and sported 'kangaroos' grazing on the lawn!
Three of the ladies in the centre of the photo are employees of the Dept of Veterans Affairs in the Australian Government and they were organising before the ceremony began...
A representative of the NZ military hands in a wreath to be presented during the ceremony...
More last minute organising...
The second ceremony was much shorter and of course had more speeches in French from the local dignitaries.the Australian government was against represented by Julie Bishop...the Foreign Minister.
Carmen gets instructions from the paparazzi before she lays the wreath...she ended up having to do it twice ...
And just a few more photos in this lovely village in the Somme district...
We'd seen 2 ladies with glittery Stetson like hats with Aussie flag scarves the day before...sure enough we saw them at the smaller ceremony...here's one of the ladies talking to our bus organiser...
Even though we were exhausted by the time we got back to Amiens...we wouldn't have missed that opportunity for anything!
2 comments:
What a wonderful experience, you are fortunate to have been able to take part. like you i too will be watching the Dawn Service on telly and then going to watch youngest grandson (8) march in the parade at 10am. Around 11pm we will watch the service taking place at Tunuck Bair.
I hope you enjoy your ANZAC weekend.
Diana
Trivial I know....but I love Carmen's coat, and I kept thinking she must've had awfully cold feet! A wonderfully moving experience for you all, and lovely to look back on this year.
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