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Reading: Remembering the fallen — and those who came home changed
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Local Ipswich News > Blog > Community > Remembering the fallen — and those who came home changed
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Remembering the fallen — and those who came home changed

Rowan Anderson
Rowan Anderson
Published: November 13, 2025
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ABOVE: The next generations remembering everything those who served have and continue to do for our freedom. RIGHT: Abigail West.
ABOVE: The next generations remembering everything those who served have and continue to do for our freedom. RIGHT: Abigail West.
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ON the eleventh hour of the eleventh day of the eleventh month, the nation falls silent – a collective pause to honour those who served, those who never came home, and those who did, forever changed.

As one of Australia’s largest garrison cities, Ipswich wears its military pride like a badge of honour. Here, Remembrance Day resonates deeply – with memories, gratitude, and the enduring flame of freedom burning bright.

For Ipswich Legacy President Donna Reggett, the day is about more than remembering the fallen. It’s about those who returned and the families who continue to carry the invisible weight of war.

“We train our troops to go to war, but no one trains them to come home to their families,” Ms Reggett said. “It is important to remember those who went to wars and never returned, but equally important to remember those who came home never to be the same – and the families that care for them.”

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Veteran and President of the Greater Springfield RSL Sub-Branch, Glenn West, reflected on how Remembrance Day reminds us of the human cost behind every battle.

“World War I signified a change in battle tactics and the creation of new ones,” he said. “Most people assume the worst of the Great War for our Anzacs was in Turkey, but after Gallipoli they faced an even fiercer opponent – the Germans – on the Western Front.”

He recalled the devastating Battle of Fromelles in France on 19 July 1916, where the AIF’s 5th Division suffered catastrophic losses, entire battalions wiped out in a single night.

Beyond the history, Mr West said, lies the deeper meaning of the phrase “Lest we forget”.

“The word ‘lest’ means ‘for fear that’,” he said. “When we say ‘Lest we forget,’ we’re really saying – may we always remember the tragedy and sacrifice of war, for fear that we repeat it.”

And in today’s uncertain world, he said, that reminder was more vital than ever.

It’s a call to remember, and to be fearful of war’s reality: death and destruction on all sides.

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