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Introduction: peace and patriotism in twentieth-century Australia

journal contribution
posted on 2023-05-21, 19:14 authored by Kyle HarveyKyle Harvey, Irving, N
In the early hours of Friday, 23 April 1971, four young peace activists painted the word ‘PEACE!’ in large white letters on columns of the Shrine of Remembrance in Melbourne. Classed as vandalism by the press, the activists made a brash, visible statement of protest at Australia’s military involvement in Vietnam. That the graffiti would be visible to the estimated 13,000 returned servicemen and women who marched in the annual Anzac Day parade two days later was additionally controversial. The perpetrators also injured an unarmed Government House guard, stationed that night at the Shrine, when he interrupted their painting. The outcry over the act of protest – and the assault – was typically fervent. The acting Victorian Police Commissioner called it ‘an outrage’, whilst Victorian Premier Sir Henry Bolt said the perpetrators ought to receive a ‘flogging’. The acting chairman of the Shrine Trustees, former colonel Alfred Kemsley, went further, stating in the Age: ‘If I could become a soldier again I’d kill the bastards … I’d shoot them or hang them all from the nearest tree.’ Melbourne’s Sun also featured a photograph of five Gallipoli veterans in front of the Shrine on its front page, quoting one as muttering ‘What the hell do they think we fought for?’

History

Publication title

History Australia

Volume

14

Pagination

159-168

ISSN

1449-0854

Department/School

College Office - College of Arts, Law and Education

Publisher

Taylor & Francis Australasia

Place of publication

Australia

Repository Status

  • Restricted

Socio-economic Objectives

Expanding knowledge in history, heritage and archaeology

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