Naval Warrant Officer Ian Waller reflected on a letter sent home by Second Lieutenant David Martin Gillies of the 15th Australian Infantry Battalion, who fought at Gallipoli on April 25, 1915.
“I don’t know how ever our boys got ashore at all,” he wrote.
“They had to land under fire from rifles, machine-guns and shrapnel.
“They jumped out of boats up to their waists in water, fixed bayonets, charged straight up a hill nearly as straight as a wall.”
Warrant Officer Waller honoured the almost 103,000 service personnel who have given their lives in the line of duty.
“For a century we have drawn courage from those original great-hearted Anzacs like Second Lt Gillies,” he said.
“Whether we wear a uniform or not, or have ever done so, all of us owe the original 1915 Anzacs and those who have served after them respect and remembrance.
“We can remember them by living our lives in their spirit of looking out for those among us who need a hand up, through care for our families and service to our community.
“On this Anzac Day we honour the sacrifice of all those men and women who lost their lives, far from home in the last 100 years, so that Australian and New Zealand may remain places of peace and liberty.”