For release: Thursday February 19, 2009
Bringing History Back to Life – Passchendaele Comes To New Zealand.
An exhibition commemorating the World War 1 sacrifice of New Zealand soldiers on Flanders fields will begin its New
Zealand tour in Wellington in early March.
Called Passchendaele: the Belgians Have Not Forgotten, the exhibition features photographs, images and artefacts
highlighting the memories of New Zealand that still live on in Flanders today.
The exhibition has been developed by the Memorial Museum Passchendaele 1917 and aims to bring the devastating battles
for the Western Front, where losses far outweighed those at Gallipoli, back into the national conscience.
Of the 18,500 New Zealanders killed during the Great War, some 5,000 died fighting in Belgium (almost twice the death
toll recorded at Gallipoli) and 13,000 others were wounded.
Passchendaele Society President Freddy Declerck says, “it is a very significant loss for New Zealand. 18,000 casualties
from 100 thousand New Zealanders who served from a population of a little over one million. I think there is no original
family who has nobody lost, not only at Gallipoli, but also Passchendaele.
“Passchendaele should be significant in your country also.”
In four hours time on one day alone, October 12, 1917, New Zealand forces suffered 2700 casualties, including 845
fatalities, trying to capture the Bellevue Heights on the outskirts of Passchendaele. They were slaughtered and had to
be withdrawn. It took two days to clear the battlefield of bodies.
It remains our bloodiest day with the losses here, more than the combined total from the eruption of Mt Tarawera, the
Hawkes Bay earthquake, Tangiwai rail disaster, sinking of the Wahine, and Erebus.
Passchendaele Museum Curator, Franky Bostyn says the people of Flanders and, more widely, the people of Belgium have
never forgotten the New Zealand sacrifice.
“In 1917 your country left an important part of its history here in Flanders, not only the events, but also the men, the
men are all here, a part of our land.
“90 years later we have what we have now – one of the most prosperous areas in Europe, rebuilt and with great economics
– and it is thanks to these men who came here, voluntarily to fight for freedom. Our gratitude to them will last
forever.”
Passchendaele: The Belgians Have Not Forgotten reverses the journey made by those soldiers from the “uttermost ends of
the earth” bringing the Belgian memories of the New Zealand sacrifice to life through images, movies and artefacts.
It features photographs by award winning British photographer, Michael St. Maur Sheil, sculptures by Belgian artist Rik
Ryon made from driving bands of shells, and relics from the battlefields themselves.
Freddy Declerck says we want to show New Zealanders how we care for the dead and how we remember and live everyday with
their history.
“In the early years after the war, New Zealanders couldn’t afford to come to Belgium to commemorate your people, your
people who are here under the graveyards, our graveyards and so it has been our duty to guard and commemorate them.
“Today, more and more ordinary people are thinking of an uncle, a great uncle, who they have not known and who they have
heard stories about, that has come to Flanders battlefields. But where it is not possible for them to see it with their
own eyes, they can never really know what happened here, where they have been, how they have suffered, what the mud was
like and so on.
“We are saying to you, we will take care of your dead, but you are always welcome here in Flanders. Come – travel in the
footsteps of your ancestors. We would love to see you.”
The exhibition will tour six centres, opening at the Hall of Memories at the National War Memorial in Buckle Street in
Wellington on March 6th, 2009.
From there it will move to Christchurch, Dunedin, Featherston, Waiouru and Auckland.
The New Zealand Army is managing all the logistics and transportation throughout New Zealand.
Ends: