Warrigal
SF VIP
- Location
- Sydney, Australia
ANZAC Day, April 25, is the day Australians and New Zealanders commemorate the landings at Gallipoli in 1915. Originally it was just to remember the fallen of the Great War but over the years it has become a day of remembrance of all the men and women who have served overseas. Some came back but many, like two of my father's brothers, lie forever in foreign soil.
This year because of social distancing and the vulnerability of the veterans the usual marches are cancelled and dawn services are restricted to a few participants. There are no services at overseas locations due to travel restrictions and the need to avoid spreading COVID-19.
A suggestion was made that we might like to stand at the end of our driveways at 6 am with a light or candle in silent tribute. People who can play The Last Post have been invited to do so today as the dawn breaks.
This is my experience of ANZAC Day 2020.
I set the alarm early so that I could stand outside at 6 am today but woke fully an hour too early. I lay in bed awake and started to wonder whether I was long for this world because there was a newsreel of my life playing in my head. It wasn't about my life's events or achievements. It was a parade of people who had been significant to me down the many years. Of course, many are long dead or gone from my life years ago but they are still vivid in my memories.
There were not many people in their driveway that I could see. Just a group of three further down the street holding lights. I turned up my radio for The Last Post so that the sound could perhaps carry to them. In the minute's silence that followed I heard the local birds greeting the dawn and from the radio, the magpies at the War Museum in Canberra in a glorious chorus. It was anything but silent but absolutely Australian.
I am glad I went out because there will likely never be an Anzac Day like this one in my lifetime.

LEST WE FORGET
This year because of social distancing and the vulnerability of the veterans the usual marches are cancelled and dawn services are restricted to a few participants. There are no services at overseas locations due to travel restrictions and the need to avoid spreading COVID-19.
A suggestion was made that we might like to stand at the end of our driveways at 6 am with a light or candle in silent tribute. People who can play The Last Post have been invited to do so today as the dawn breaks.
This is my experience of ANZAC Day 2020.
I set the alarm early so that I could stand outside at 6 am today but woke fully an hour too early. I lay in bed awake and started to wonder whether I was long for this world because there was a newsreel of my life playing in my head. It wasn't about my life's events or achievements. It was a parade of people who had been significant to me down the many years. Of course, many are long dead or gone from my life years ago but they are still vivid in my memories.
There were not many people in their driveway that I could see. Just a group of three further down the street holding lights. I turned up my radio for The Last Post so that the sound could perhaps carry to them. In the minute's silence that followed I heard the local birds greeting the dawn and from the radio, the magpies at the War Museum in Canberra in a glorious chorus. It was anything but silent but absolutely Australian.
I am glad I went out because there will likely never be an Anzac Day like this one in my lifetime.

LEST WE FORGET