The April 26 Show

Voices Across the World on Anzac Weekend

From the cliffs of Gallipoli to a super yacht in the Atlantic, the April 26 broadcast unfolded as it so often does — a patchwork of voices, stitched together by memory, distance and the quiet weight of Anzac weekend.

Gallipoli: Trying to Understand the Inexplicable

Calling from the Gallipoli Peninsula, Angela Lathouras wasn’t trying to retell history — she was trying to make sense of it.

Travelling with historians including Professor Sinan Özdemir from Çanakkale University, she described the terrain as something that defies explanation until you see it.

“You just shake your head everywhere you go,” she said.

Standing at Anzac Cove and walking the ridgelines, she spoke about how small the battlefield really is — and how impossible it feels that so many fought and died in such a confined space.

Reading epitaphs in the cemeteries brought it home.

“Angel mark the spot, Mother.”

“Well done, Ted.”

“They’re just… so moving,” she said. “You could sob the whole time.”

It wasn’t her first visit, but this time was different — less about tracing individual stories, more about understanding the broader picture.

“It’s very hard to reconcile the beauty… with what happened there.”

A Stadium, A City, A Moment

From Christchurch, Jason called with a different kind of milestone — the opening of Te Kaha Stadium.

After 15 years without a major venue following the earthquakes, the city finally had its stadium back — and it was packed.

“Full house all weekend,” he said.

Super Rugby returned in force, but for him, the moment was bigger than sport.

“It’s a big thing for Christchurch.”

Closer to home, he also spoke about his son’s school Anzac ceremony — run entirely by the students.

“I was so proud of the little boys and girls.”

Keeping the Country Moving

In southern New South Wales, Kelvin Baxter’s world is measured in kilometres, crops and fuel.

Running a fleet of trucks across Queensland, New South Wales and Victoria, he’s spent decades moving grain, cotton and fertiliser — the quiet logistics behind Australian life.

“We’re quite busy,” he said. “There’s always something moving.”

But rising costs — especially diesel — remain front of mind.

“People talk about electric trucks… we’re a long way from that.”

His Anzac Day, though, is about something else entirely.

Each year, he and a group of locals take restored WWII jeeps through Berrigan, Jerilderie and Finley, carrying veterans who can’t march.

“We load up the old diggers and lead the parade.”

It’s something he’s done for decades — a small act that keeps connection alive.

War, Medicine and Perspective

In studio, hand surgeon and former umpire David Dilley offered a different lens on Gallipoli — the medical one.

“The planning was appalling,” he said, referencing findings from the Dardanelles Commission.

Basic supplies. Limited understanding. Conditions few had ever encountered.

“They had bandages… a bit of chloroform… and not much else.”

He explained how World War I reshaped medicine — from plastic surgery to trauma care — driven by the scale and nature of injuries.

“It was the first war where more died from enemy action than disease.”

The conversation drifted easily between surgery, cricket and history — as it often does — grounded in experience rather than theory.

Australians Abroad: A Different Kind of Move

Wayne didn’t just travel — he left.

Originally from Sydney’s Northern Beaches, he and his partner now live in what is likely Tulum, trading rising costs at home for something simpler.

“Australia’s getting dearer and dearer,” he said. “Everything costs more.”

After years caravanning across Australia, they wanted a new kind of adventure.

“There’s two economies here,” he said. “The tourist one… and the local one. We’re trying to live the local.”

The weather feels familiar — “like North Queensland” — but the lifestyle is still evolving. They’ve bought a place, are settling into a community, and plan to explore more of the country.

For Wayne, it’s less about escape and more about perspective — seeing how life looks somewhere else.

Remembering, Questioning, Reflecting

Emails filled the spaces between calls, adding context and contrast.

A retired CSIRO ecologist pushed back on claims of widespread reef decline, arguing many remain “healthy and actively growing.”

Another listener described visiting war sites across France and Papua New Guinea, noting how strongly Australia’s contribution is remembered overseas.

“In France, the gratitude is very evident,” he wrote.

Further reflections from listeners touched on family histories, lost relatives, and the long shadow of war — stories carried across generations.

From Japan to Borneo: Memory That Travels

Calls from abroad reinforced how far those memories reach.

In Yokohama, Nan described the Commonwealth War Cemetery — where eucalyptus trees mark the Australian section among carefully tended gardens.

In Sandakan, historian Lynette Silver reflected on decades spent guiding families through the legacy of the Sandakan death marches.

“There’s nothing glorious about being a dead soldier,” she said.

Her work continues to bring people back to those places — not for closure, but for understanding.

Poetry and the Everyday Voice

Poet Kate Llewellyn was named Australian All Over’s contributor of the year — a nod to a lifetime of quiet contribution.

“Poetry is about putting something into the world that wasn’t there before,” she said.

Her work, like the program itself, finds meaning in small, everyday observations — the kind that might otherwise go unnoticed.

Mid-Ocean, Still Connected

Then came Charlotte — calling from the middle of the Atlantic.

“I’m halfway through a crossing,” she said. “Day six… no land in sight.”

At 24, the nurse from near Lismore is working aboard a 60-metre super yacht, moving between the Mediterranean and Caribbean.

“It’s awesome… eternal summer.”

The yacht is worth tens of millions. The guests arrive by private jet. But the crossing itself is all crew — long days, open ocean, and routine.

“They look like normal people,” she said of the ultra-wealthy guests. “Just polos… normal.”

She handles medical needs onboard, blending her training with a lifestyle built around travel.

But the reason she called was simple.

“Mum and Dad listen every Sunday.”

So from the middle of the Atlantic, she rang in — just to say hello.

Harness Racing, Pride and a Christchurch Crossover

Back in Christchurch, Jason slipped in another moment that captured the spirit of the show — where sport, pride and everyday achievement intersect.

He pointed to Brittany Graham, a Queenslander now working in New Zealand racing, who had just pulled off something rare.

“She was presenting… then jumped in the sulky, drove her own horse — and won.”

It wasn’t a feature race — just a meet at Allington Raceway — but the image stuck. From sideline presenter to driver in a matter of minutes.

“She does a lot for racing over here,” he said. “She’s an amazing young lady.”

A small moment, but one that fit the morning — Australians abroad, quietly making their mark.

Trucks, Towns and the Long Way Round

Kelvin Baxter’s call didn’t stop at fuel and freight — it stretched into something bigger.

He spoke about taking part in “Crawling the Hume,” a convoy of more than 300 restored trucks travelling the old highway route through towns long bypassed by the freeway.

Starting near Wallan and winding through places like Broadford, Kilmore and Wangaratta before finishing near Albury, the convoy turned the old road back into a main street, if only for a day.

“People were sitting in camp chairs… cheering us on,” he said.

“They were so pleased to see us come through.”

For towns that once lived off that passing traffic, it was more than nostalgia — it was a reminder they hadn’t been forgotten.

War Stories Carried Through Generations

Among the emails, one stood out for its detail and weight.

A listener shared the story of two brothers — both pilots in World War II, but with very different outcomes.

One survived being shot down over Germany, captured and held as a prisoner of war for years.

The other did not return.

His aircraft, unable to make it back to base, was deliberately steered away from a village in France before crashing — killing all on board but sparing those on the ground.

Decades later, that village still holds a ceremony each year in their memory — a quiet act of gratitude carried on by people who never met them.

Coral, Perspective and Pushing Back

Not every contribution leaned into reflection — some pushed back.

A retired CSIRO ecologist wrote in to challenge claims about dying reefs.

“The majority of reefs I’ve seen are healthy and actively growing,” he said.

He acknowledged localised damage — storms, cyclones, patches of decline — but warned against sweeping statements that miss the bigger picture.

“Reports need context.”

In a morning built on lived experience, it was a reminder that perspective can shift depending on where — and how closely — you look.

War Cemeteries and the Weight of Place

The discussion around remembrance extended beyond Gallipoli.

Listeners spoke about cemeteries across the world — from Villers-Bretonneux to Port Moresby — where Australian stories are preserved far from home.

At places like Labuan War Cemetery, rows of headstones — many unnamed — carry the same inscription:

“Known unto God.”

Walking those rows, some reflected, gives a clearer sense of scale than any history book — line after line, name after name, and sometimes none at all.

“They were united while they were alive… and they’re united still.”

One Conversation at a Time

From Gallipoli to Christchurch, from country highways to open ocean, the program moved without agenda — just people sharing where they are and what they’ve seen.

Stories of war and memory sat alongside everyday life, travel, work and change.

And as always, it worked the same way.

One voice at a time.

Listen to the podcast episode here.

Disclaimer:Australia All Over’ is a program produced and broadcast by the ABC Local Radio Network and hosted by Ian McNamara. Brisbane Suburbs Online News has no affiliation with Ian McNamara, the ABC, or the ‘Australia All Over’ program. This weekly review is an independent summary based on publicly available episodes. All original content and recordings remain the property of the ABC. Our summaries are written in our own words and are intended for commentary and review purposes only. Readers can listen to the full episodes via the official ABC platforms.

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