A day to remember: the story of ANZAC Day by Jackie French and Mark Wilson
Angus and Robertson, 2012.
Highly recommended. April 25, 1915 is a date imprinted on the
Australian psyche. In fact, some say, that despite the political
calendar of January 1, 1901, this was the day that Australia became
a nation.
Much has been written for students to help them understand the
events and the significance of this day, and in a way, this book
honours that because after providing an outline of those events on
that Turkish beach, author Jackie French and illustrator Mark Wilson
trace the commemoration of that day from its shaky, tentative
beginnings of parades in Australia, New Zealand and London in 1916
to the huge crowds that now gather annually to honour those who have
served their country in this way.At intervals throughout Australia's
history, French and Wilson pause on April 25 and examine what was
happening on that day. We learn about the vast difference between
the excitement and anticipation when the troops left in 1914, and
their return in 1919; the touching story behind the advent of the
Dawn Service and how men only were allowed to attend in case the
women's crying disturbed the silence; the desperation of many
veterans left jobless as drought and the Depression hit; and then
Australia is plunged into war again.
Throughout the book, tribute is paid to all those in the conflicts
that Australians have been involved in as well as their peacekeeping
roles. There is the sad reminder that after the Vietnam War which
had so divided the nation's young, so few marched and watched that
perhaps 'no one would march at all.' But awareness was growing
behind the scenes through teachers teaching Australia's history and
the recognition of the sacrifices of Australia's young people
through iconic songs like Eric Bogle's And the Band Played
Waltzing Matilda and Redgum's Only 19. In 1985 the
Turkish government officially recognised the name Anzac Cove and in
1990 the first dawn service was held there, attended by those few
veterans of the original conflict who were still left to honour.
Being at Anzac Cove for the Dawn Service has become a pilgrimage for
many; an item on the bucket list for others. Ceremonies are held
wherever Anzacs have served and suffered and wherever their
sacrifice can be acknowledged. Who can imagine what the centenary in
2015 will be like? In my opinion, this is Jackie French and Mark
Wilson at their best. As the granddaughter of a Gallipoli survivor
and the daughter of an ordinary New Zealand soldier who spent his
war as a POW in Germany after being captured on Crete, the words and
illustrations of this beautiful, haunting book touch me in a way I
find hard to describe. Jackie grew up, as I did, 'with the battered
and weary of world war two around me, men still scarred in body and
mind by Japanese prison camps or the Burma railway, women who had
survived concentration camps' and 'saw boys of my own generation
march away as conscripts, while I marched in anti war
demonstrations' and yet we know so little about where Australians
have served or how often they have.
The story of 100 years of history is a difficult one to tell, and
even more so in a picture book, yet it is encapsulated perfectly in
this partnership. On the one hand, the text could not live without
the pictures and vice versa; yet on the other, both media are so
perfect within themselves that they stand alone. Jackie and Mark
give their own interpretations in teachers
notes. I can do no better than that, but if you only have the
money for five books this year, this HAS to be one of them.
Lest we forget.
Barbara Braxton