FEDERAL MEMBER FOR MACQUARIE
ANZAC DAY 2025
the sacrifice, lest we forget
What does it mean today? Australians recognise 25 April as a day of national remembrance, which takes two forms. Commemorative services are held across the nation at dawn – the time of the original landing, while later in the day, former servicemen and servicewomen meet to take part in marches through the country’ s major cities and in many smaller centres. Commemorative ceremonies are more formal, and are held at war memorials around the country. In these ways, Anzac Day is a time at which Australians reflect on the many different meanings of war.
The Dawn Service It is often suggested that the Dawn Service observed on Anzac Day has its origins in a military routine still followed by the Australian Army. The half-light of dawn was one of the times favoured for launching an attack. Soldiers in defensive positions were woken in the dark before dawn, so by the time first light crept across the battlefield they were awake, alert, and manning their weapons; this is still known as the“ stand-to”. As dusk is equally favourable for battle, the stand-to was repeated at sunset.
After the First World War, returned
25 April 1916: Australian and New Zealand troops marching down Whitehall London to Westminster Abbey. Collection Item C1084383 Accession Number: P04497.004.
soldiers sought the comradeship they had felt in those quiet, peaceful moments before dawn. A dawn vigil became the basis for commemoration in several places after the war. It is difficult to say when the first dawn services were held, as many were instigated by veterans, clergymen, and civilians from all over the country. A dawn requiem mass was held at Albany as early as 1918, and a wreath laying and commemoration took place at dawn in Toowoomba the following year.
In 1927 a group of returned men returning at dawn from an Anzac Day function held the night before came upon
Crowds line the route of the Anzac Day National Ceremony march, 25 April 2011.
an elderly woman laying flowers at the as yet unfinished Sydney Cenotaph. Joining her in this private remembrance, the men later resolved to institute a dawn service the following year. Some 150 people gathered at the Cenotaph in 1928 for a wreath laying and two minutes’ silence. This is generally regarded as the beginning of organised dawn services. Over the years the ceremonies have developed into their modern forms and have seen an increased association with the dawn landings of 25 April 1915. The National Ceremony At the Australian War Memorial, the National Ceremony begins with the traditional order of service, including the veteran’ s march, Commemorative Address, laying of wreaths, hymns, the sounding of the Last Post, and observance of one minute’ s silence, and the national anthems of New Zealand and Australia.
Attend the 2025 Anzac Day Dawn Service and March in Sydney
The Anzac Day Dawn Service will be held at The Cenotaph in Martin Place, Sydney from 4:20am to 5:30am on Friday 25 April 2025.
The Dawn Service will be followed by the Anzac Day March, which takes place along Elizabeth Street in the Sydney CBD. There are many locations to view the March on both sides of Elizabeth Street.
The March commences at 9am and will conclude at midday.
The public is invited to attend the Service and March in person, or will be able to watch the events from home on TV and online. Broadcast details will be advised closer to the day.
For more information of ceremonies in the local area, please visit the RSL NSW www. rslnsw. org. au.
[ Article Courtesy of https:// www. awm. gov. au / commemoration / anzac-day / traditions ]
REMEMBERING THOSE WHO SERVED
SUSAN TEMPLEMAN MP
FEDERAL MEMBER FOR MACQUARIE
susan. templeman. mp @ aph. gov. au |( 02) 4573 8222
Authorised by Susan Templeman, ALP( NSW Branch), 299 George Street, Windsor NSW 2756
THE HAWKESBURY INDEPENDENT theindependentmagazine. com. au ISSUE 179 // APRIL 2025 25