Bodies are everywhere. Thousands of them. Quiet, and still against the blasting wind of Anzac Cove.
Some are wrapped tight in our flag, but mostly they’re dressed in green and gold – beanies, footy socks, rugby jerseys – as they bunker down in their sleeping bags, determined to stay awake until until dawn.
It’s an image that makes many of us cringe, and for good reason: young Australians making the pilgrimage to Gallipoli for Anzac Day haven’t always done us proud. The boozing, the bogan behaviour, the event’s MC Warren Brown has seen the very worst of it.
‘Dickheads pissing on Turkish war graves, throwing beer bottles. One year, a group of drunk yobbos threatened to punch a Turkish security guard. It was appalling.”
Behaviour that should make us all ashamed to call ourselves Aussies.
A study, commissioned by the Department of Veteran Affairs in March, revealed we’re concerned our most sacred military site is in danger of becoming a place to party for Australians living abroad. But that’s not what I saw when I travelled to Gallipoli last April, on assignment for Channel Nine.
The green and gold invasion starts the day before the dawn service. They’re mostly in their 20’s, living in London, working crappy bar and temp jobs, making just enough money to fund their European adventures. They’re bussed in by the hundreds. ‘It’s effing FREEZING!’ mutters a girl from Melbourne. ‘Imagine how those poor bloody diggers must’ve felt.’. She has the Australian flag painted on her face. Another bus load of Aussies arrive.