The date of the landing at ANZAC, the 25th April was chosen to be the day that would become our national day of commemoration.
Initially, ANZAC day was a mark of respect for those who served and sacrificed their lives in the Great War for Civilisation, the war as many hoped, to end all wars. However, because of the vicissitudes of man, the date has become the day on which the nation remembers those who served and those who made the ultimate sacrifice in all the conflicts that Australia has participated up to the present day in the continuing struggle to preserve our freedoms in the attempt to rid the world of tyranny.
ANZAC, originally an acronym for
the Australian and New Zealand Army Corps, that was used by the clerks
of General Birdwood’s staff at his headquarters in Shepheard’s Hotel in
Cario, Egypt. The word ANZAC was approved by General Birdwood as the
code for the Corps, when the word was proposed by a Major CM Wagstaff.
It is thought the suggestion came from a Lieutenant AT White of the
Royal Army Service Corps. It is recorded in the official history that
“it was some time before the code word came into general use, and at the
Landing (on the 25th April, 1915) many men in the divisions had not
heard of it”. After the landing, General Birdwood gained permission to
use the name for the area occupied by the Australian and New Zealand
Forces.
At ANZAC on the Dardanelles
Peninsula, Australian and New Zealand troops landed on the 25th April
1915 where they, along with other Commonwealth Forces, held ground
against almost impossible odds for the next eight months, against a
Turkish force determined to defend to the death their homeland. The
British action planned to secure the heights overlooking the forts
guarding the narrow straits at the entrance to the Sea of Marmora.
The
purpose to silence them and allow the French and British Navy to proceed
to Constantinople (now Istanbul) and by a show of force convince the
Turkish Government to capitulate and to come on the side of the Allies.
The plans did not bear fruit and
what ensued was a tremendous series of battles by both sides over the
next eight months. It was all the British forces (of which the
Australian and New Zealand force were a part), could do to hold ground
against a Turkish army determined to drive them into the sea. It was a
battlefield where no one, not even General Birdwood and his staff were
safely out of the range of Turkish guns. The odds against them were
tremendous, but they held on repulsing many Turkish counterattacks in
conditions of hardship that tested the hardiest.
Both sides suffered horrendous
casualties amongst the many ravines and gullies of that rugged
battleground on which the ANZAC tradition was formed and that has become
the benchmark for standards of courage, mateship, humour and a
determination to complete a given task, and has set an example for all
Australians to follow whenever faced with difficulties.
The ANZACs, as they became known
went on to continue that tradition on the Western Front and Palestine
throughout the 1914 – 1918 conflict where conditions at times were a
greater trial than at ANZAC. In that war the first Australians fought
and proved themselves as a Nation to be reckoned. ANZAC forces in the
field suffered over 270,000 casualties of which in excess of 78,000
Australians and New Zealanders were either killed in action or died of
wounds. There have been many more since.
The Price of Liberty is Eternal Vigilance
Lest We Forget
Lest We Forget
R. Parisi
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