PM Transcripts

Transcripts from the Prime Ministers of Australia

Keating, Paul

Period of Service: 20/12/1991 - 11/03/1996
Release Date:
02/07/1992
Release Type:
Speech
Transcript ID:
8567
Document:
00008567.pdf 3 Page(s)
Released by:
  • Keating, Paul John
SPEECH BY THE PRIME MINISTER, THE HON P.J. KEATING MP. ENTOMBING CEREMONY, CANBERRA, 2 JULY 1992

PRIME MINISTER
SPEECH BY THE PRIME MINISTER, THE HON P. J. KEATING MPENTOMBING
CEREMONY, CANBERRA, 2 JULY 1992
On behalf of the Australian government and people it is
my pleasure to welcome you here.
I extend a particular welcome to those who are veterans
of the Vietnam War, and to the many relatives d~ d-fr-en-s
of those -who died in Vietnam and whose memory we are
honouring today.
I thank you all for coming to this historic ceremony in
the life of our nation.
The men to whom we pay tribute gave their lives for their
beliefs. They believed in Australia.
They went to Vietnam as their fathers' generation had
gone to Europe and the Middle East and Asia and the
Pacific; and as their grandfathers' had also gone to
Gallipoli and France and other foreign battlefields.
They went in defence of their country and the things they
had been raised to believe in.
Like those previous generations, they saw no incongruity
in travelling far from home to defend their country's
freedom. They saw their duty.
They went believing that in defending democracy in
Vietnam they were defending democracy everywhere and,
most particularly, Australian democracy.
Today we do not judge the political wisdom which sent
them there, or which-delivered Australians to other
theatres of war throughout this century.
These people gave their lives for Australia.
We pay tribute today to their bravery and sacrifice. We
pay tribute to their love of this country and their faith
in its traditions and its future.

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And in commemorating them we hope and trust that this and
future generations of Australians will find in themselves
the same love of Australia, and the same faith in its
future.
The Vietnam War cut deeply into Australia's soul.
By comparison with the two World Wars the list of names
recorded here is small.
Yet this is somehow a measure of the burden the veterans
of Vietnam had to bear and have borne ever since.
Vietnam touched us all: it went deep into Australian
politics, Australian life, Australian thinking.
It divided the country to an extent unequalled since
1917. It did great damage. It did some good.
Its effects are still with us.
They always will be.
But no Australian knows these effects half as well as
those who fought and suffered there.
And no others paid the price that these 504 Australians
paid. In honouring their valour and sacrifice today, we
acknowledge that in this most debated and disputed of all
wars, the first war to be televised, the real burden
remained where it has always been in war on those who
fought and on their families and friends.
I think it can be said that the passionate debates at
home contrived to obscure this fact: as if the war was
really being fought here.
It was not. As these 504 Australians knew. As the
veterans of this and all other wars know. As their loved
ones know.
In fact I think it is true that our forgetting this was
an extra burden, an extra pain, for the veterans of
Vietnam and their families and friends to bear.
That is why today those words " Lest We Forget" have a
profound meaning.
The memorial will be henceforth the symbolic resting
place of all those who died serving Australia in Vietnam.

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Those who visit the memorial in future years will know
that Australia did not forget.
They will know that these Australians were heroes of the
same order as the Anzacs, as those who fought in France,
the Middle East, New Guinea and every other place where
Australians have gallantly fought and died.
From now on Australians will know that and they will
know it better if our hopes today are realised:
I mean our hope that now we are putting aside for all
time the differences and the bitterness which the Vietnam
War engendered in our community.
Our hope that such faith and courage as these Australians
had will not be found wanting in this and future
generations. Our hope that this commemoration of those who died will
be taken as a symbol of the gratitude which the nation
owes them and their loved ones.
And our hope that we will succeed in building in
Australia a fair and just democracy, faithful to our best
traditions and brave enough to embrace the future.
For there can be no better way to honour the memory of
those whose names are recorded here.
Thank you.

8567