Getting ready for ANZAC day

To prepare the visit on Friday,April 24th 2015 at the cemetery of Bourail for ANZAC Day, we worked on a song called "And The Band Played Waltzing Mathilda" by Eric Bogle.We gathered so many times around Mrs Dedieu, our music teacher, to rehearse the song for the D day.

To pay a tribute to the soldiers, we also worked on the Poppy Story. We watched a video that explained why on November 11th,in the United Kingdom and on April 25th in Australia and New Zealand, people wear a poppy as a brooch.
After the video , our teachers proposed us to make our own brooch that we could wear on Friday 24th.
We decided to mix a poppy and a corn flower because we are French and, the corn flower is the emblem of the French soldiers.






Extract from "The Band Played Waltzing Matilda" by Eric Bogle

Now when I was a young man, I carried me pack,
and I lived the free life of the rover
From the Murray Green Basin to the dusty Outback,
well, I waltzed my Matilda all over.

Then in 1915, my country said  Son,
it's time you stopped rambling, there's work to be done.
So they gave me a tin hat, and they gave me a gun,
and they marched me away to the war.

And the band played Waltzing Matilda,
as the ship pulled away from the quay
And amidst all the cheers,
the flag-waving and tears, we sailed off for Gallipoli

And how well I remember that terrible day,
how our blood stained the sand and the water
And of how in that hell that they called Suvla Bay,
we were butchered like lambs at the slaughter.

Johnny Turk he was waiting, he'd primed himself well.
He shorwer'd us with bullets, and he rained us with shell.
And in five minutes flat, he'd blown us all to hell
Nearly blew us right back to Australia.

But the band played Waltzing Matilda,