Building on the results of the scavenger hunt or other diagnostic work, use the following questions to help you learn about any experiences your students might have had with Anzac Day.
These can be completed as written answers or as the basis of class discussion. The following links will be useful for the purposes of this exercise:
Imagine you are an exchange student visiting from Switzerland. Your host family has taken you to an Anzac Day Dawn Service at their local war memorial. In a letter back home to your family outline to them what the purpose of the day is and why the ceremony takes place at dawn. Describe some of the sights and sounds you experienced at the ceremony and your impressions of it.
The notion of remembrance is a key part of the tradition of Anzac Day. We honour and remember New Zealanders killed in war and honour returned servicemen and women. Gallipoli was a costly failure for the Allies, and the campaign itself was a relatively minor part of the First World War. The event itself was characterised by military blunders that resulted in the deaths of many of thousands of people.
Even as early as 1950 there was some concern that Anzac Day was not being 'observed in the spirit of which it was instituted'. Was it relevant to New Zealand society? Listen to Today in New Zealand History, 25 April 1950, The Spirit of ANZAC, to help set the scene for this debate.
'Anzac Day and the whole Gallipoli thing: seeing as we lost and it was full of blunders, shouldn't we forget it?'
Alternatively
There will be students in your class for whom Anzac Day and its connection with commemorating the war dead will have absolutely no meaning. Perhaps their family ethnicity meant they had no involvement in any of these wars. As an alternative debate you could put forward the topic that 'Anzac Day has no relevance to New Zealand in the 21st century.'
In 1967 two members of the left-wing Progressive Youth Movement used Anzac Day as an opportunity to highlight their opposition to the Vietnam War. They laid a protest wreath in Christchurch and were subsequently convicted of disorderly behaviour. Further incidents followed at later Anzac Days as protestors sought to bring attention to their anti-war cause.
In 1978 renewed controversy arose when a women's group laid a wreath in memory of women killed and raped in war.
During the 1980s other lobby groups – feminists, gays, anti-nuclear and peace activists, and Maori radicals – all laid wreathes at the Anzac Day services. Anzac Day had become more than a commemoration of New Zealand war dead and war service; it was increasingly being used to make statements about war and society.
Such actions bewildered and angered many returned servicemen who felt that their day was being hijacked by other groups. However, these actions forced the community to re-evaluate Anzac Day and its purpose. Increasingly Anzac Day was regarded as an appropriate day on which to debate defence and war-related issues. For instance, ex-servicemen and politicians used Anzac Day ceremonies to speak out on anti-nuclear policy during the 1980s. In 1996 Prime Minister Jim Bolger suggested that Anzac Day should have the dual function of commemorating the war dead and celebrating nationhood. Anzac Day continues to be redefined by each succeeding generation, especially as the last of the Second World War veterans pass away.
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