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ANZAC DAY Legacy

5 replies [Last post]
Thu, 04/24/2014 - 19:18
Rotflol's picture
Rotflol

The 25th of April each year is celebrated as ANZAC Day as one of Australia's most deeply regarded and solemn national dates. This Date commemorates the anniversary of the landing at Gallipoli Turkey, where Turkish national forces fought Australian and New Zealand forces during the First World War.

ANZAC is the acronym for Australian and New Zealand Army Corps. The soldiers in those forces quickly became known as ANZACs, a name which in those countries is held in the highest of esteem.

In 1915 Australian and New Zealand soldiers formed a part of the invasion forces tasked with the capture of the Dardanelles, their task was to capture the Gallipoli peninsula and to open the Dardanelles passage for British and French Naval Forces. The Australian and New Zealand forces landed on the Gallipoli peninsular as dawn broke on the 25th April.

As the Allied troops rushed the beaches they were met with a withering hail of fire from a small force of determined Turkish defenders. What had been planned as a knockout blow soon became a stalemate, and the campaign would drag on for eight months ending only after both sides had suffered dreadful numbers of maimed and killed. Some eight thousand Australian and New Zealanders had been killed, the numbers of Turkish casualties are still not fully known to this day. On the home front the results of the landings at ANZAC cove took a devastating toll on Australians and New Zealanders, for such a small population almost no family was left untouched and the 25th of April soon became the day on which Australians remembered the sacrifice of those who had died at Anzac and at later battles in the war.

Ultimately the Gallipoli campaign failed in its military objectives, the Australian and New Zealand actions during the campaign however left an enduring legacy on the Australian and New Zealand peoples. The creation of what became known as the “Anzac legend” became a core piece of the social fabric of each nation.
Today Australians recognise the 25th of April as a day of national remembrance, each year dawn services are held. Later in the day former service members take part in ANZAC Parades in all capital cities and in many small towns. Memorials are held at shrines of remembrance around the country. It is here that ANZAC Day is spent with solemn reverence and in reflection on the sacrifice and legacy of war.

“Today we remember with thanksgiving those who made the supreme sacrifice for us in time of war. We pray that the offering of their lives may not have been in vain. Today we dedicate ourselves to the cause of justice, freedom and peace; and for the wisdom and strength to build a better world.”

They shall grow not old,
As we that are left grow old:
Age shall not weary them,
Nor the years condemn.
At the going down of the sun
And in the morning,
We will remember them.

Lest We Forget

Thu, 04/24/2014 - 20:44
#1
Cinoa's picture
Cinoa
Fun... Is... INFINITE.

EDIT: Ah, sorry. I guess it isn't wrong for you to be in remembrance of what took place there in Australia, just as us Americans and the 9/11 tragedy.

Thu, 04/24/2014 - 19:48
#2
Rotflol's picture
Rotflol
We Shall Remember

@Cinoa
This has no direct relation in anyway to Spiral Knights but it is out of respect to write this article here instead of in the Gremlin Chatter where the same respect would have not been given to these heroeos.

If you want to think of it another way, these Hereos some even as younger then you at the time they went to war and sacraficed their lives to keep us safe. They are the people whom fought the World War to give us what is today. If they never had fought, would Spiral Knight have even been created in the first place? Would we live our lives as of today, or would we be under some unkown ruke of an Anarchy and be forced to do something else?

We need to commemorate these Heroes that risked their lives to a brighter future which we are living in today and we then should not ever forget them, or question would we ever be here if the didn't fight this war?

Fri, 04/25/2014 - 03:28
#3
Thunder-The-Bright's picture
Thunder-The-Bright
gods ain't gonna help you, son.

mmm, the odds.
in Italy, 25th of april is the anniversary of the liberation from fascist regime, and it's national holiday.

Fri, 04/25/2014 - 04:01
#4
Midnight-Dj's picture
Midnight-Dj
PENUMBRA THEORY

Heroes, villains, it is all clear and dandy isn't it? The American soldiers came back from Afganistan or Oki nawa are hailed as heroes, these people who have BBQed japanese soldier cowering in their bomb shelter, killed innocent Afgani civilians. They are awarded with medals and recommendations. I could say the samething about these ANZACs, and since some of them did participate in the Korean war, they all have the blood of my fellow countrymen in their hands. Hmmm, I wondered, if there is such a thing in this world as black or white? Nukeing Japan, killing millions of innocent Japanese civillians for the sake of saving a few million American marines' life from the actual invasion. Whose life worth more? The victim? Or the Executioner? There is no clear point here, only a dark penumbra, a thick grey line.

Conflicts will go on, where there is human, there will always be war. There are those of us who are willing to fight and die for what they do not know or fully understand. Freedom, religion, love and justice, what are they at the end of day? It is up to you to interprete, whether or not those ANZACs died that day for any of the purposes I mentioned. One thing remains true, it is that these men fought for what they believed in and made the ultimate sacrifice, so here is my salute to you, brave human beings who once walked this Earth. salutes

Fri, 04/25/2014 - 15:13
#5
Rothni-Halias
Woah there. I didn't expect to read about that here.

Midnight-DJ, the U.S. nuked Japan because it was very clear that fighting a land war on Japanese soil would have been utterly brutal and costly for both sides. The Japanese had kamikazes, suicided instead of surrendering, rushed U.S. troops with machetes, etc.. A full on land war over Japan would have killed far more Japanese people than the populations of two cities and the U.S. would probably have a much worse relationship with them. (Though honestly it's an awful choice to make.)

There is also a lot of opposition to the war in Afghanistan and beyond the initial greeting most modern soldiers don't get a real hero's praise, just maybe some respect if identified as a veteran. The return of U.S. WW2 soldiers to U.S. Afghanistan/Iraq soldiers is not as similar as you make it sound.

You can't compare the use of flamethrowers inside of bunkers against a fully dedicated enemy to the death of non-combatant civilians who more than likely were in the wrong place at the wrong time in the middle of a war zone.

I have some opinions about that second paragraph but I care far more about correcting your fallacies in the first paragraph.

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