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Seven World War II veterans will attend the dedication of the
Park of the Australian Soldier at Beersheba in Israel next week
- the site of a famous World War I battle involving Australian
Light Horse regiments. The World War II veterans, in their 80s,
will attend as there are no surviving light horsemen from War
World I.
The centrepiece of
the Israel park is a sculpture of a light horseman leaping the
trenches, designed by the Australian sculptor Peter Corlett.
It marks the charge of the 4th and 12th Light Horse Regiments
against Turkish posts at Beersheba on October 31, 1917.
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Looking back
Dale Robertson before his trip to Israel with fellow
Light Horsemen for a dedication ceremony.
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It will
be dedicated by the Governor-General, Michael Jeffery, and the
President of Israel, Shimon Peres. Alan Griffin, the Minister
for Veterans' Affairs, will also attend. Dale
Robertson, now 86, is one of the seven World War II veterans
to attend the service in Beersheba. He served in Papua New Guinea
and Bougainville for 12 months, beginning in 1944. "I'm
very, very honoured," he said. "Light Horsemen were
all very close companions, [who] respected one another for their
horsemanship and their abilities." Mr Robertson said they
were mostly from the country and all had a very good sense of
humour.
Mr Robertson enlisted
in the 2nd Light Horse Regiment in 1940. It was the oldest regiment
in Australia, Mr Robertson said, having begun as the Moreton
regiment. "They
are men you must admire for their courage
we will never
see [light horsemen from World War I] again in Australia,"
he said.
Mr Robertson has
been a director of the Light Horse Association for 15 years.
He says it is important for the Government to continue to recognise
their unique contribution to Australia's war effort and that
light horsemen should be allowed to march on Anzac Day like
in other states. The party travelling to Israel will also attend
an Anzac Day Dawn Service at Mt Scopus War Cemetery in Jerusalem.
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