Monday, May 21, 2007



The morning started early for me. I was rudely awakened by the bleating of my alarm. “Wake up!” “wake up!” it screeched at me. As my eyes began to slowly focus in the dim heavy cloak of darkness the first thought that filtered through my sleepy mind was a question ‘what was it like for my great grandfather on this day 90 years ago?’ He would have been surrounded by his mates knowing they were going to die, that some of them wouldn’t make it. Gallipoli has become a place that more and more New Zealanders are becoming aware of. It is a place of great tragedy and sorrow, courage and comrademanship.

I pulled myself from the cosy nest and got my self and my son Louis organised for the Dawn ceremony. "Warm clothes" I said," it will be cold!" We quietly dressed and drove to pick up Waiora and Pakari. The sky was filled with stars and the road was quiet and still. As we drove into Motueka more and more cars started to join the procession into the centre of town. We parked and continued our journey on foot. Outside Placemakers other whanau and Parklands students and teachers gathered. Whaea Sue, Mr T and Mr B, with his medals proudly pinned to his warm coat, Mrs Walker, parents and grandparents all milling around waiting for the signal to line up.

An organiser in shiny shoes and military uniform directed us to stand behind the Army cadets; we were jittery with cold and excitement. ‘Attention’ yelled an officer, we were off. The Highland band started the march down High St and turned right into Pah St to bring the parade to a stop in front of the cenotaph at memorial park. The air was frigid against our skin its dank tentacles started to penetrate my warm jacket. The ceremony began. There were speeches and prayers, hymns and poems and then the last post played on the bugle. We were warned but it still came as a shock when the rifles were shot. The dawns early light blanketed us in the memories of those incredible men and women who gave their lives for the freedom of all New Zealanders. The Anzacs who died horribly on Turkish soil, those who died in France and Egypt, The soldiers who died only a few years later in WW2 fighting for peace and freedom in countries on the other side of the world. It was not an adventure; it was pain, fear and grief.

ANZAC day is important for me in so many ways. It reminds me of all those people who were loved, and lost. It reminds me of my past and it reminds me of all I have due to the sacrifices that were made by a group of brave New Zealanders.

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1 Comments:

At 12:11 PM, Blogger mamiejam said...

i was born in motueka and grew up in tasman mapua harakeke
i have been fortunate to work alongside many maori women alive and those who have passed on. at a very young age of 15yrs to 30yrs as like my mum played sports worked for the tobacco and apple farmers had children while bring up my children had opperunities to up skilled my maoritanga me ako nga etahi tikanga he waiata kapahaka tito me mahia raranga all on the kaupapa o te marae o Te Awhina.

to walk softly on earth is a skill very true to ones walk in life. to breath air into my body completes what im working towards in the future.

Currently studing maori mental health studing childcare studing te atarangi maori language which i am really enjoying so very proud of where i comr from

kia ora e nga whanau o pakaranga nga mihi kia koutou ka hikoi ka kata kata katahi ka mahia
he mahitahi he mahitakoro

 

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