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Sunday, 3 May 2015

ANZAC


Cover story – Busting the Anzac myth
Has a national obsession hijacked centenary commemorations of the Great War? Chris Sheedy and Steve Offner report. 
At a recent conference in the United States, UNSW Canberra military historian Professor Jeffrey Grey found himself at a roundtable discussion in the company of some of the world’s most respected Great War scholars.
As they discussed the centenary of World War I and the commemorations that will begin rolling out on 28 July this year, the panel Chair noted “Australia is without doubt the most aggressive of the centenary commemorators[B1] ”, Grey recalls.
He was immediately struck by the comment.
“I said to her afterwards that I thought ‘aggressive’ was exactly the right word. We Australians have taken the opportunity of the centenary and are spending something in the vicinity of half a billion dollars on the commemoration[B2] ,” he says.
That price tag was calculated by former Australian Army officer and UNSW alumnus James Brown in his book Anzac’s Long Shadow. Brown, who has tours of duty in Afghanistan and Iraq, and is a Military Fellow at the Lowy Institute for International Policy, is a vocal critic of the Australian approach to the centenary.[B3] 
“At the War Memorial in Sydney’s Hyde Park, inscribed words decree: ‘Let silent contemplation be your offering’,” Brown writes in his book. “Instead, Australians are embarking on a discordant, lengthy and exorbitant four-year festival for the dead.”
Brown estimates $325 million is being forked out by the Australian taxpayer for the string of “festivals”. Add more than $300 million expected in private donations and what we will have, Brown predicts, is an Anzac centenary that risks fetishising war.
The national enthusiasm for the centenary project is all the more perplexing when Australia’s part in the war is analysed, says Grey, who is one of Australia’s leading WWI experts. Based at UNSW Canberra’s Australian Centre for the Study of Armed Conflict and Society (ACSACS) Grey has undertaken the writing and editing of Oxford University Press’ new five-volume history of the war to commemorate the centenary – the first since Australia’s official war historian Charles Bean [B4] penned his six-volumeOfficial History of Australia in the War of 1914–1918 from the 1920s to ’40s.
In commemoration of the centenary, Australia is not only spending more than twice what Britain is[B6] , we’re even outspending the French. “And the French, you might think, have more reason than most to remember the Great War,” Grey says.
Grey set out his reservations in an opinion piece published in The Australian. “If Australia’s centenary observance is little more than a four-year long Dawn Service, replete with all the hackneyed cliches [B7] and self-serving a-historical mythology trotted out each Anzac Day, it will be a monumental waste of time and money,” he wrote.
He adds: “I wonder about the commemorations at Anzac Cove next year. I don’t know that I necessarily want to scratch too hard to find out what is below the surface and why all those people will be there.”
The power of myth
According to Grey and his colleagues in ACSACS – Professor Peter Stanley and Associate Professor Craig Stockings – you don’t have to dig too deep to uncover the reasons behind Australia’s obsession.
Anzac Day has arguably replaced Australia Day as our de facto national day and the events surrounding Gallipoli have established themselves as our national story.[B8]  In particular, our soldiers’ bravery at Gallipoli is seen to exemplify idealised virtues that lie at the heart of our self-identity.
From this foundation myth [B10] a whole host of historical misunderstandings has been spawned – and these are not harmless, says Stockings, whose earlier book Zombie Myths also sought to dispel some of the more stubborn misconceptions around Anzac. “These misunderstandings shape our picture of ourselves in obscuring and inaccurate ways … they situate our attitudes to the past falsely, distort our reading of the present and our expectations of the future. They are monsters of the mind.”
With the centenary celebrations it stands to get a lot worse, Stockings predicts.
“These myths are aided as never before by blogs, Wikipedia, Anzac supplements in the weekend papers, and bestselling popular histories not always based on archival research.”
Setting the record straight
One of our most cherished and enduring myths is the idea Australia’s military history [B11] – and by association our national identity – began at Gallipoli in 1915, despite Australia’s military involvement in conflict extending at least to the 1899 Boer War, if not to colonial times.
Other myths “that will not die” include the boast that the Australian Imperial Force was the only all-volunteer army in WWI (it wasn’t), that its volunteer status made Australian soldiers inherently superior to their conscripted counterparts (there is no evidence their skills were inherent), and that Australian soldiers had higher ethics and morality (they demonstrably didn’t).
Stanley, one of Australia’s most active military historians and author of a number of books including Lost Boys of Anzac, and Digger Smith and Australia’s Great War, says what’s seductive is the emotional appeal of military history – especially Gallipoli.
Stanley, who headed the Australian War Memorial’s Historical Research Section from 1987 to 2007, says it has become clear through generations of scholarship that Britain’s Royal Navy could not have navigated to a more exact point than it did, in the dark, using the navigational aids available a century ago.
If blame must be apportioned, he says, it might be better to focus on what happened once the troops made it to shore on 25 April 1915. The Australian commanders simply didn’t follow their orders, [B15] he says.
“They didn’t push on to the objective, to get to the other side of the peninsula. Instead they  told their troops to dig in and that was where the line stopped. The Turks certainly played their part, but so did the Australian commanders. That’s not something most Australians would understand or believe or accept, but it’s true.”
But look more closely and a different picture emerges. It is a picture of ordinary men coping as well as they could in terrifying conditions, says Stanley. He wrote Lost Boys of Anzac, using soldiers’ personal letters and previously unresearched Red Cross records, because he felt a “human gap” existed in the conventional historiography.
“They are very candid records and quite destroy the idea that the landing on Gallipoli was in any way glorious,” he tells Uniken. “I wanted to show that the Anzacs were ordinary young men – if we can understand that we can keep Anzac in perspective and understand Australia’s military history realistically and maturely.”
The ordinariness of the Diggers is reflected in records that show the Australian Imperial Force had a higher rate of desertion than any other force on the Western front and that one in 10 Australian soldiers had some form of venereal disease. The honest accounts of the soldiers’ lives are included in Stanley’s book Bad Characters: Sex, Crime, Mutiny, Murder and the Australian Imperial Force, which was jointly awarded the Prime Minister’s Prize for Australian History in 2011.
“That book was made feasible by the release of the AIF’s court martial files,” Stanley says of Bad Characters. Getting the tone right was critical. “I needed to be honest – this story had largely not been told – but also sympathetic to the situation of young men who in many cases suffered death and wounds in circumstances that none of us experienced. I remembered Madame de Stael’s aphorism ‘to know all is to forgive all’, and that became the book’s epigram.”
The reviews of the book demonstrated the validity of this approach. “To my secret disappointment no one burned the book, and it sold reasonably well,” Stanley says.[B17] 
Despite the warts-and-all stories, one of the things that emerged from the historical accounts was that these ordinary people, when they entered battles and performed their duties in war zones, had a superb reputation.
“New Zealand soldiers were good. Canadians were good. Many Brit divisions were good but Australian divisions were very good and remarkably consistent,” Stanley says. “Were they among the best fighting forces? Everybody at the time seems to agree they were.”
Backlash
Predictably, attempts to set the historical record straight have attracted criticism and angered some.
Former James Cook University academic Dr Mervyn Bendle, writing in the conservative journal Quadrant, distilled the criticism, accusing the UNSW historians and the Lowy Institute’s James Brown, of declaring “a war on the Anzac legend”, an accusation also seized on by The Australian.
According to Bendle, they have embarked on an “elitist project explicitly dedicated to destroying the popular view of these traditions”. Ensconced in elite institutions (located mostly in Canberra, he adds), they exhibit a disdain for ordinary Australians and their beliefs.
“[Australians] should be allowed to honour the centenary without constant sniping from an anti-Anzac elite of obsessive academic leftists and disgruntled ex-officers,” he concludes.
It’s a cheap criticism but not entirely unexpected. After all, no one likes to have closely held beliefs challenged.
Nevertheless, Grey, Stanley and Stockings believe it is essential to continue to make the distinction between historical inquiry and mythology. The military is a reflection of Australian society and an agent of government policy, Grey stresses.
“For the vast majority of Australians their understanding of war and of our defence forces is refracted through  their knowledge of the Great War. If that understanding is partial at best, by the time it is applied to today’s defence force – one that bears no relation to the army of 1914 – it is going to be so skewed as to be deeply misleading.”
Stockings agrees. “I have no problem with the Anzac myth and sentimentality around that. As far as national foundation stories go, it’s a reasonably positive one. My problem is when that type of mythology or sentimentality is mistaken as a substitute for history.
“It’s one thing to believe in the idea of an invincible, seven-foot-tall Anzac soldier. It’s another thing to understand these guys as normal people in harrowing circumstances who still achieved amazing things.
“They were human beings with human frailties. That’s the reality; it’s evidence from the source. Their legacy is far greater in truth than it is in myth,” Stockings says.
What, then, of the upcoming centenary commemorations?
“It’s not the worst thing to happen,” Stockings concedes. “I have friends who were wounded in places like Afghanistan. I have no problem with commemorating loss, but I have no interest in carnival-like, almost joyful celebrations.
“A very large proportion of the first Australian Imperial Force was not interested in marches or the like – they just wanted to get on with their lives.”  






 [B1]This is a Challenge – Why is it a challenge? I never saw Australia as being “aggressive about commemoration”


 [B2]Connection – Maybe aggressive is the right word. Maybe that sort of money can be put into something like a school or hospital.


 [B3]Connection – Expert proof about how much money is being spent. JAMES BROWN


 [B4]Official war correspondent Charles Bean.


 [B5]Extended my knowledge – How many people died in the war.


 [B6]Extent – Australia is spending more than anybody


 [B7]Lots of people talking about how “We almost won” And how we Gallipoli was a necessary battle (It was not)


 [B8]Challenge – Is ANZAC day a de facto national day? A challenge to our current beliefe structure                  


 [B9]Challenge – Do we want our national identity to be a war identity?


 [B10]Foundation Myth, What defines a country. There is more to us than just Gallipoli


 [B11]We didn't only fight in Gallipoli, we have fought in many wars in many places.


 [B12]Australians didn’t only go to the war. We wanted to go. Conscription was bashed down but people were still signing up, knowing it was a death sentence


 [B13]Myth: We landed at the wrong beach. We went to the wrong beach because the original was booby trapped and the next beach was only 4-5 kms off the original


 [B14]The spot they landed was strategically better than the original


 [B15]They didn’t follow orders


 [B16]We stopped looking at the myth of the Australian bush man and looked at the bronze digger, the good bloke, the larrikin


 [B17]Highest rate of Dissertation and V.D

1.     Has our national obsession hijacked centenary commemorations of the Great War?
I believe that matters like these shouldn't really be publicly celebrated or remembered. However if they are i think that it requires the upmost respect of the people there and the people you are remembering, whether we are remembering their courage or bravery it doesn't matter. We need to remember the people who died on that beach with respect for what they did and why they did it. Things like making your money off making people pay to sleep and drink at a beach that wasn't even the one that the Australians landed. I do believe that our obsession has hijacked centenary commemorations and it is easily reversible. We just have to see the way we see our past selves and celebrate and remember with respect. 

Monday, 20 April 2015

The importance of culture, language and identity

 

"Understanding others makes possible a better knowledge of oneself: any form of identity is complex, for individuals are defined in relation to other people - both individually and collectively - and the various groups to which they owe allegiance, in a constantly shifting pattern."

1.     What does this quote mean to you? Write out your ideas in a small paragraph
This quote shows me that we are not only individually unique but we are also unique as a whole. We don't make ourselves unique but others show us how different we really are. Our society is ever changing and nothing will ever be the same.

Understanding and valuing cultural diversity are the keys to countering racism. All individuals must feel free to explore the uniqueness of their culture and identity while developing understandings of the cultural diversity that exists in the world around them. Denying cultural expression means limiting the expression of unique perspectives on life and the transmission of knowledge from generation to generation.

Culture and language
Culture is a defining feature of a person's identity, contributing to how they see themselves and the groups with which they identify. Culture may be broadly defined as the sum total of ways of living built up by a group of human beings, which is transmitted from one generation to another. Every community, cultural group or ethnic group has its own values, beliefs and ways of living.
The observable aspects of culture such as food, clothing, celebrations, religion and language are only part of a person's cultural heritage. The shared values, customs and histories characteristic of culture shape the way a person thinks, behaves and views the world. A shared cultural heritage bonds the members of the group together and creates a sense of belonging through community acceptance.
Language is intrinsic to the expression of culture. As a means of communicating values, beliefs and customs, it has an important social function and fosters feelings of group identity and solidarity. It is the means by which culture and its traditions and shared values may be conveyed and preserved.
"Language is fundamental to cultural identity. This is so for people everywhere. For Bininj, their unique world is expressed in their language. For this reason, it is important that people keep their own language alive."
Kakadu National Park, Warradjan Aboriginal Cultural Centre, NT

2.     What is culture?
The defining factors of a culture generally are a unique or influenced food, art, religion, celebrations, language and even just the way of life. One culture is usually made up of the average way of living or they way that most people in one ethnic group live their lives.
3.     Look up the word intrinsic and write out a definition
Something intrinsic is a necessity. For example a bowling ball for bowling is an intrinsic piece of equipment.
4.     How do shared values, customs and histories shape culture?
You cant have a culture without a rich history, well formed customs and values that allow lesser and higher people to communicate. (Political Hierarchy)
5.     Why is language intrinsic to culture?

A cultures language defines a cultures social structure, without a social structure a culture cannot sustain itself. Language can be formed from religion, significant moments in history and many other key events. A language shows the history of ones culture. For example in Japan when the western civilization brought their ships over the Japanese had to create a whole new alphabet just to add western words to their vocabulary. It is events in history like this that define peoples lifestyles and cultures.

Cultural and linguistic diversity is a feature of most nations today as people from different groups live together as a consequence of historical events and human migrations. Within multilingual societies, the maintenance of the languages of the various ethnic and cultural groups is critical for the preservation of cultural heritage and identity. The loss of language means the loss of culture and identity. In many societies throughout history, the suppression of the languages of minority groups has been used as a deliberate policy in order to suppress those minority cultures. As a result a large number of the world's languages have been lost with the processes of colonisation and migration. 
"As languages disappear, cultures die. The world becomes inherently a less interesting place, but we also sacrifice raw knowledge and the intellectual achievements of millennia."

Research:
1.     How many cultural groups have made Australia their home?
Hundreds of total minority groups have made Australia their home but there are very large contenders for the English-Australian community including Chinese at 7 per cent, Indians at 6 per cent, New Zealanders at 10 per cent and the English-Australians at roughly 60 per cent. Because of our placement on the map we have a large Southeast Asian community making us very multi-cultural.
2.     How many indigenous languages were there?
During the 18th century there were between 350 to 750 total aboriginal languages actively spoken however at the start of the 21st century there were less than 150 languages with 20 plus to be critically endangered of never being spoken again.
3.     Why language skills are so important?
Above languages teaching us about a cultures history they are very efficient at completing necessary tasks. Language makes our government, social structure and culture possible. A good culture has a very complex language; in the case of the English language it is unnecessarily complex to the point of overused gramma and punctuation in writing. But the English language it very good at letting us communicate simply in light terms. Which is why it is the Global language.
Australia's cultural and linguistic diversity
Australia is one of the most culturally and linguistically diverse nations in the world. This diversity has always been embedded in Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander societies and has been broadened over the last two hundred years with the arrival of people from over one hundred and fifty distinct cultures from around the world.

4.    Why has diversity in Australia broadened over the last 200 years?
Because we are surrounded by one of the most cultural parts of the world (South-East Asia) we take a lot of migrants. What accelerated the intake is the wealth that Australia holds. Because of the migrants and the wealth we have an ever-expanding multi cultural population that, as of now we cannot keep up with.

While English is the dominant language, many people speak a language other than English as their first language within their families and communities. Over two hundred languages other than English are spoken in Australia today. The acquisition of proficiency in Standard Australian English, together with the maintenance of community languages is therefore a significant issue in Australia.

5.    How many languages are spoken In Australia today?
Over 200 languages are spoken in Australia today. We would expect that to almost double in the next hundred years if we continue at the same rate.

Proficiency in English is critical for successful participation in Australian society and for exchanging information about the values and perspectives of different cultures. Similarly, proficiency in first language skills is essential for self-enrichment and expression of identity.
In large parts of Australia, the loss of a great number of Aboriginal languages means that for many Aboriginal people, Aboriginal English is their first language and is a particular marker of identity. Aboriginal English developed as a means of communication for Aboriginal people between people of different language groups and with non-Aboriginal people. Torres Strait Creole is similarly an important marker of identity for Torres Strait Islander people and is used as a common language among speakers of different Torres Strait languages. Both Aboriginal English and Torres Strait Creole are spoken as a first or second language by many Indigenous Australians.

6.    Why is language so important in helping to establishing identity?
Just by hearing someones voice you can establish their personality. Language shows a greater understanding. It shows peoples history and experiences. We hear the English language spoken every day so we do not think much of it. But if an Indigenous language is spoken it has a tone to it that explains every tiny detail about their culture. Language shows Culture and Culture shows identity. It is essential to understand culture making it essential to understand language and Identity.

The maintenance of a community's first language is also a significant issue for many people who belong to diverse ethnic communities whose members, or their ancestors, have migrated to Australia. The use of community languages is important both for individual and group identity and for communication across generations. In an increasingly globalised world, linguistic skills strengthen international ties and foster cultural exchange. Linguistic diversity makes Australia more competitive in trade and strengthens its international standing.

7.     What is the argument for linguistic skills?
Linguistics make countries and the world as a whole function. It helps countries and regions to build relationships with others and fortifies things like trade and cultural exchange.

Identity and community
An individual's sense of identity is grounded in their cultural identity.
"I have... come to the conclusion that my identity does not have to be static. Sometimes, I feel Spanish and I like to identify with the Spanish culture while at other times I choose to reinforce my German, Irish-Anglo background. In many ways the two identities have become interwoven. A part of me is expressed through speaking Spanish and singing Spanish songs which is not expressed through speaking English or playing classical music... each language I speak and each music tradition I engage in carries with it a different world of meanings."
Student respondent, quoted in Smolicz, et. al., 1998.
A person's understanding of their own and others' cultural identity develops from birth and is shaped by the values and attitudes prevalent at home and in the surrounding community. This identity becomes more complex and fluid over time as people develop allegiances to different groups within the broader society.

8.    How do we develop a sense of cultural identity?
Based on peoples backgrounds their cultural identity may be smaller or larger. Their identity can be expressed though multiple forms, language, dance, singing, rituals or just engaging in cultural activities. Peoples cultural identity show much more than their physical identity making it harder to express their true culture.

At the same time, cultures themselves are not static but develop and change as the belief systems and ways of life of different groups adapt under other cultural influences including mass media and popular culture to create new identities. In a culturally diverse society like Australia, individuals may have multiple identities through identification with several different sub-cultures. These identities may include identity based on cultural heritage, family or birthplace; religious or social identity; and identity as members of Australian society.

9.    Why may people have multiple identities in a culturally diverse country like Australia?
Because Australia is very influenced by the larger western culture we take a lot of that in with the consumption of our multicultural society. With these influences sub-cultures are made that minority groups will follow. It’s with these sub-cultures that people develop their identity out of their western culture and give them a multi-cultural mind.

The realisation that there are many Australian identities reinforces the need for mutual understanding for achieving a racism-free community. Reconciliation, which aims to encourage co-operation and improve relations between Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Australians and the wider community, is critical in this process. The understanding of how history has shaped our relationship with each other and respect for each other's cultures are key components of the Reconciliation process.

10. How can we achieve a racism free community?
I don't personally believe that racism can completely fade into the past. There will always be some form of racism wether it is publicly expressed or not. That's like saying can we have a crime free community? No, if that was achieved we would have no need for laws. We can slowly reduce racism but no matter how hard we try every attempt will stop and produce racist people and communities.
11. What are the key components of Reconciliation?
To form a less racist community takes a true understanding of ones self and others. We have to understand why we would be in a relationship with these people and that our past selves were during a different time. We need to properly understand and accept other peoples’ culture, history and life.

The policy of multiculturalism is equally vital in achieving a cohesive Australian nation. It recognises and values Australia's cultural and linguistic diversity and accepts and respects the right of all Australians to express and share their individual cultural heritage within an overriding commitment to Australia.
The mistrust and fear of difference, which often stem from isolation from other cultures, can be overcome by fostering cultural understanding and by highlighting the common interests that all Australians share. Working together, Australians can achieve a more equal and fairer society that respects and values its diversity.
More information about the cultures and languages of Australia.

12. Why is the policy of multiculturalism equally important in achieving a cohesive Australia?

Multiculturalism shows and understands the values of linguistic diversity and allows people from all different cultures to express their heritage, beliefs and their commitment to Australia and its culture.