From
Lone Pine one could see apartments not bodies. And
to think it was from here that they played cricket
and saw their mates slaughtered.
We
are back on the bus. The bus has gone quiet. Lest we forget.
The
sun sets on their memories. They are different memories
and a different sun. There are men listed dead who
died our age.
Why
do we go?
To
commemorate mateship, bravery, adventure or joking?
To
see where Australia and New Zealand became nations?
To
ponder upon where exactly the grandfathers and great
grandfathers of our countrymen and women have fallen?
The
English command was pretty much as competent as that
of Mustafa Kemal (Attaturk). But we're not taught
what the Turkish went through. We are not taught that
at school.
"I'm
not ordering you to attack, but to die....
We're
not taught that at school.
And
die they did. It was not unusual for the Turks to lose in
one day what the Australians lost throughout the whole campaign.
When we left, 60,000 gallons of rum were burnt. We evacuated
without drunkenness!
In
Gallipoli:
There
are unbridled hills. Thyme bushes.
And
instead of ducking bullets today we ducked photographs.
They dug tunnels and found shrapnel in their arms.
All
the names on the graves are familiar to me. Even the
14'year'old boys who wanted to fight and die with
their brothers.
Mitchell.
Kirby. Alsop. Crowther. Robinson. Mason. Pryce. Bell.
Broughton. Horrocks. Grims. Primrose. Stevenson. Hudson.
Haynes. Willmott.
There
are seven metres between the frontlines at Lone Pine.
400 fell in one day at the Nek. There was a beach
20 metres wide. Games of cricket were played where
the bowlers might get shot. Certainly added a competitive
twist...
They
were baffled soldiers with steel hearts. An ignorant
rabble with leather skin. They were dug'in jokers
respecting moustaches.
The
Turks threw fruit to us. We exchanged cigarettes.
The enemy fed us. So we could both go on fighting
for another day. They even gave us water because we
were dying of dysentery. We had a peace fire for two
days so we could both clear no'man's lands of the
bodies. We were able to stop fighting to talk and
discuss the state of death that surrounded us.
Why
do we revere this piece of ground?
Why do we take home its sand?
It
is familiar. A knowledge of a bond and tie with other Australians
and New Zealanders. The Sydney person gets along with the
Western Australian. Darwinians with Victorians. Kiwis and
Aussies. Our little corner.
Why
is this site more or less important in our hearts?
Valiant
losses. Curiosity with the barbaric or proof of a
past?
The
poem:
Here's
the poem I wrote in a Turkish cafe across the water,
playing backgammon and thinking about the absurdity
of it all. For Gallipoli achieved nothing but reminiscence
and friendship between the Johnny and the Aussie and
Kiwi. War is absurd. The absurdest of the absurd.
Under a crescent moon they die
Under a setting sun
With
the snow coming
and lieutenants falling
like the pine that stands
at the peak of a ridge
they burn
in
patriotic revelry perhaps,
victims of disease perhaps,
victims
of alliance.
Both
sides
from countries insignificant.
Where
do those country men visit?
Those men that led these useless
battles, waging bullets
for
bottles, and death
for paper and insignia.
The
victim's heirs
visit these graves,
while the suns set,
while the winds blow.
Let's
hope we'll never stand still
like corpses frozen
like blood in snow.
Or
eat grim shells
from respected artillery.
Let's
hope
we shake hands
sharing patches
friendship,
not war.
Glory
of war
with its fingers broken
sank the youth
which fought that day.
Glory
of war
bred confusion
led men to their graves
pulling Australia away.
Glory
of war
may have formed a nation
bred a flag
with hearts and lives.
Glory
of war
destroyed elation
sent bloody eyes
to a bloody choir door.
Lest
we forget
the Gods of politics
who shook hands with bodies
and signed papers in blood.
They
payed for their victory
with the loss of families,
still do.
There's
nothing you can write
when you sit across the water
from the site of a mindless slaughter
where two countries
who respected each other
were ordered to shoot
their friends made into foe.
While
countries exchanged mortar
the frontline threw oranges.
While
royalty confided
their enemy soldiers exchanged water.
While
the Kings fucked the Kaisers,
two countries killed their sons.
Lest
we forget
the British perhaps,
the Germans perhaps,
the Leaders perhaps,
Lest
we forget,
the war in all.
But
not the slaughter,
or the men rotting
or the dysentery in the trenches
or the thousands of unfilled graves.
Under
a crescent moon they died
and under a setting sun.
Faces
in photos resemble faces of friends
as do the names of the dead.
We
salute you.
If
not for the bravery
then for the courage of loss.
Before
war again let there be revolution.
Nothing
is worth killing for
if we have the ability to smile.
Let
us remember
that those who fought
will never forget
for the glory of war
was never theirs.
Under
a crescent moon they die
Under a setting sun