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Two decades on from the Port Arthur massacre, CEO of the Alannah & Madeline Foundation, Lesley Podesta asks if we are willing to talk common sense on guns, to ensure our children can grow up in a safe society.
I visited Hobart to see my son recently. He has happily settled into university life, he is safe and thriving and it gave me a warm feeling to see him enjoying his independence.
On my trip, I also visited Port Arthur, the site of one of the deadliest shootings worldwide committed by a single person. This particular visit was in preparation for my new role as CEO with the Alannah & Madeline Foundation, an organisation born of that devastating mass-shooting and to commemorate Alannah and Madeline Mikac who lost their lives that day, along their mother and 32 other innocent people.
As I walked around the historic site, I recalled watching the news that awful day… I remember it clearly as so many Australians do. In my case I was holding my infant son, shocked and horrified and trying to make some sense of it all.
I reflected on how, 20 years on, my son has never known a mass shooting in his country in his lifetime and how incredibly fortunate he and his peers are to have grown up in a country with strict gun control measures.
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