http://www.wspd.wellington.net.nz/resources/anzac.htm ANZAC Day: ANZAC Day is the national war remembrance day for both New Zealand and Australia. There is no official New Zealand Government site about ANZAC Day, so we have provided a brief account of the ANZAC story as well as links to a number of useful ANZAC Day and War Remembrance sites throughout the Commonwealth. The ANZAC Story: One night in November 1915 the ANZACs withdrew from Gallipoli, losing no men in the evacuation, but leaving behind thousands of their fallen friends. The soldiers who took Chunuk Bair were the only ones ever to see the Dardanelles. Strategically, the poorly planned and executed campaign was an unqualified failure. But its social impact was tremendous. It is commonly regarded as the point at which New Zealanders and Australians lost their colonial innocence and began to see themselves as distinct from Britons. The campaign came to represent all that was best about the national character of each country. C E W Bean, the Official War Historian of the Gallipoli Campaign said that the ANZAC spirit "stood, and still stands, for reckless valour in a good cause, for enterprise, resourcefulness, fidelity, comradeship and endurance that will never own defeat". The official recognition of ANZAC Day was immediate in both Australia and New Zealand. Originally known as Landing Day, the name was soon changed to ANZAC Day to embrace all of the Australian and New Zealand war dead, and the men and women who have served in the armed forces. ANZAC Day is unique in being a remembrance day shared between two countries. In recent years ANZAC Day has become something of a focus for nationalistic
interests in both countries, particularly in terms of republicanism, but
it remains primarily a day of remembrance as it should. An unfortunate
consequence of the renewed interest in ANZAC Day has been the attempts
of commercial organisations to "cash-in" on the ANZAC legend.
Here is an article about the legal protection of the word "ANZAC".
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