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I like the way that ANZAC day is commemorated in the Northern Rivers. I suspect it is similar in many country towns.

The bravery and sacrifice of past and current military are of course central to the day. As happens everywhere, the marches in Alstonville, Lismore and Ballina are lead by our verterans. Some of our current service men and women march behind.

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But the march has also become a celebration of all those people who belong to the other groups that

contribute to our community. Many of these ‘civilian’ marchers spend the whole year sacrificing their time in the service of others.

So today cheer on the SES volunteers, the Surf Life Savers and the Rural Fire Brigade. The Ballina Brass Band is inside a catte truck! There goes the Community Service Clubs, endlessly raffling and sizzling to raise money to build new facilities for the cmmunity. The Scouts and Girl Guides, and the Navy and Air Force Cadets are marching in time – well, almost in time – under the watchful eyes of the men and women who lead teach each week.  And give a special loud clap to the Indigenous Sporting and Support Groups.

Here come the residents of the nursing home, passing along the route in buses- some of them are waving their Australian flags, and those who can’t are helped by the wonderful nurses who look after them. They need a specially loud cheer.

And finally each of the schools and pre-schools march along behind their school captians – the special banners held high. They look quite the part in their uniforms. All the High School and Primary Schools – Government, Catholic, Christian – together in one parade. Its hard to pick out any particular little ones among the crowd – so better take a photo of all of them.

Many of the children wear the medals that belonged to great grandpa or grandma. A special day to be proud of our elders.

Join with your neighbours to line the streets, clap and cheer. Take the opportunity to thank all those people who help us. And then its over. Only thirty minutes! Now that’s a morning well spent.

Some criticise Anzac day as a celebration of war. I know that my father and uncle, like many others who served in WW2, preferred not to remember so publicly. I don’t believe they ever marched.

However, it seems to me that Anzac Day has become unique in the calendar as a celebration of connectedness. We feel connected with our parents and grandparents who lived through WW1 and WW2 and somehow still made good lives for themselves and for us. And we feel connected with the all those people who form our own communities – from the residents of our nursing homes to the little ones just starting school.

I like it like that.

Lest we forget.

 

 

 

 

What I Learnt On 25th April in other years

25th April 2011 Paddy Bugden, VCPaddy Bugden, VC
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P193

2 sodium atoms walk into in a bar.

One says to the other: “I think I’ve lost an electron”.

“Are you sure?”

“Yes, I’m positive”


Hat Tip @dianthusmed via Twitter

What I Learnt On 23rd April in other years

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P170

Can a cat be both alive and dead?

Achilles – or the tortoise?

Can a machine
be truly intelligent?

Can you fit an infinite number of guests in your infinite hotel – even though it is full?

How can you age more slowly than your twin brother?

What would happen if you went back in time and shot your grandfather? That might be better than if he came forward in time to shoot you?

The UK’s Open University explains six of philosophy’s great paradoxes – in one minute each – delightful.

Hat tip – <http: />Creativ.co

What I Learnt On 22nd April in other years

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Apr 19 2012

Owl About This

Richard Wiseman thinks this may be the most beautiful video ever.

What I Learnt On 19th April in other years

19th April 2011 Back of a WebpageBack of a Webpage
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Go Caine

What I Learnt On 17th April in other years

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