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Old 06-05-14, 04:20
Lang Lang is offline
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You are right about the significance to the two countries in establishing some sort of independent identity (while still fighting a war under command of the mother country). While always aware that one should barrack for the home team I think we should try to keep things in perspective and recognise the efforts of the others on the field, in any conflict, including the enemy.

As far as the long term myth about the ANZAC force going ashore at the wrong beach, General Bridges maps show Ari Burnu (the little bump on the north end of ANZAC Cove)quite clearly being included in the invasion with ANZAC Cove and North Beach either side of it as the beach head.

There was an excellent TV documentary last week on this subject which demonstrated how much the British knew about the Turkish positions from Aerial observation. The Anzacs went ashore silently with relatively little opposition. The smart diversionary approach by the British to the north held the Turkish main reserve back allowing the ANZACs a free kick to get about 8,000 men ashore before Ataturk overstepped his authority and committed the local Turkish reserve. It was all downhill for the invaders after that.

The British decided to announce their arrival with a naval barrage and as a result were slaughtered in the Clyde operation.

North Beach became the centre of operations and is where the memorial services are held today.

Lang
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Old 06-05-14, 04:55
Dianaa Dianaa is offline
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Hi lang

I remember recently a doco on the Hitler Channel talking about mapping the invasion beaches and one officer recommending against the site that is now Anzac Cove because of exactly the steep inclines the troops would have to endure after landing. Sorry I don't remember the name of the doco or the officer involved.

Diana
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Old 06-05-14, 06:51
Lang Lang is offline
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Diana

The slopes behind ANZAC Cove are actually more broken and easily climbed than behind North Beach (I have climbed both). The thick bushes seemed to be a major problem as the troops ran around in a shambolic way unable to see each other and the officers unable to maintain control. It is reported that a few people actually got to the top of the hill but had insufficient organisation or force to hold any high ground.

The whole point of the exercise was to get to the top of the hill and you can't do that without climbing into overlooking defensive positions at some stage. As I mentioned above the ANZAC force knew in very fine detail where all the Turkish defensive positions were from aerial surveillance in the days before the attack. It was Mustafa Kemel (Ataturk) throwing in the substantial Turkish reserve to reinforce the fairly sparse known defensive positions that turned the tide. In the whole sorry expedition the Kiwis were the ones who came closest to getting to the crest but after a hugely courageous and costly effort, they too failed.

Lang

Last edited by Lang; 06-05-14 at 06:58.
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Old 06-05-14, 11:01
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Tony Wheeler Tony Wheeler is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Lang View Post
There was an excellent TV documentary last week on this subject
Yes it's the 2012 doco Gallipoli From Above: The Untold Story. It's compulsory viewing for every Australian and New Zealander and should be shown in schools. You cannot speak credibly about Gallipoli without the facts contained in this doco. Everything we've been taught since the cradle is complete garbage.
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Old 06-05-14, 12:59
Lynn Eades Lynn Eades is offline
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For myself, I have learned a fair bit from this thread and have to say that my previous uneducated view, with regards the use of the acronym "ANZAC" and the word "Anzac", has resulted in a position shift. I now understand that there is no bias in the use of the word "Anzac".
Peace comes from understanding.

Strange we are, that join the forces, to uphold peace, and develop a passion for the equipment of war.
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Old 06-05-14, 20:14
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I've certainly learned a lot myself as a result of this thread Lynn. To be honest I wasn't even aware of this issue until Mike raised it here. By pure coincidence I'd just been helping my sister draft a letter about Anzac Day and I noticed she spelt it ANZAC Day, but I didn't give it a second thought until I saw Mike's post next day. I thought she might find it interesting so I copied it to her by email, and judging by her reply she'd never given it any thought either: "Now THERE is a can of worms for me, having been an editor, working at the AWM, etc. - let's put on agenda for when we get together!" Maybe she picked up the habit at AWM.

Personally I'm always suspicious of attempts to control language, and the more I looked into this one the more it looked like political correctness to me, at the expense of history. It's well intentioned but as we all know the road to hell is paved with good intentions. The surprising thing for me is that the RSL are so insistent on the use of ANZAC, even for biscuits. They've completely eradicated the word Anzac from their website.

There's an interesting parallel going on in Israel where they object to the trivialization of the word Nazi: "Israel is on the brink of banning the N-word. N as in Nazi, that is. Parliament gave preliminary approval on Wednesday to a bill that would make it a crime to call someone a Nazi..."

http://www.nytimes.com/2014/01/16/wo...ions.html?_r=0
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Old 07-05-14, 10:29
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Coincidently I stumbled into this ANZAC/Anzac difficulty all on my own today when I e-mailed an American before even being aware of this thread. (I've been away from home for two weeks).
In the letter I mentioned Anzac Day. As I was writing to somebody who had most likely never heard of it I explained that it was like their Veteran's Day. I then went on to give a break down of the title i.e. (ANZAC - Australian & New Zealand Army Corp). Having set out what the title stood for I felt compelled to go back and change the Anzac Day to ANZAC Day as I had made it clear that it was an acronym.
In common, spoken usage, Anzac is a word and nobody in conversation would dream of spelling it out. It may defy convention but IMHO it probably depends as much who you are writing to as to whether you use the word or the acronym.
Maybe to save arguments and avoid offending anyone we could use 'anzac'. That's funny, my spell check just tagged that and suggested Anzac?
Frankly, my dear IDGAD. Or is that Idgad? Either way, none of this is worth getting upset about.

David
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Last edited by motto; 07-05-14 at 11:20.
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Old 07-05-14, 15:02
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Either way, none of this is worth getting upset about.
I'm not so sure about that David. I think there's reason to be concerned when State governments legislate against the word Anzac. Fortunately it's protected under Federal law, and any attempt to amend that would be opposed by Army. Politicians are ignorant in these matters, they should stay right out of it. And even if they're knowledgeable, they have no right to unilaterally amend laws around Anzac.
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Last edited by Tony Wheeler; 07-05-14 at 15:14.
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Old 08-05-14, 01:18
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Politicians? Is that not the bunch of retards who tell us not to judge people of a certain faith by the actions of a few radical nutters but are happy to condemn all gun owners on that basis?
Surely not a group whose opinions you would value. The thought police will only win if we let them. As Monty Python would have it - Jehovah! Jehovah! Jehovah! ANZAC! Anzac! anzac!

David
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Last edited by motto; 08-05-14 at 01:29.
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  #10  
Old 08-05-14, 01:21
Dianaa Dianaa is offline
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Imho We Should Commemorate aNZAC And Leave The Semantics Aside!
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