ANZACS | Full Gallipoli Documentary | In The Face of War | WWI

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  • @russellcole2235
    @russellcole2235 Рік тому +10

    My grandfather falsified his age went to Gallipoli fought in the conflict then came home
    Unfortunately he lost his mind on return from the war and turned to alcohol .....the memories were horrific for them

    • @yavuzgrimes
      @yavuzgrimes 3 місяці тому

      my grandfather was a Abkhazian Ottoman Consprict during gallipoli war,he was from blacksea region so when he tried to go the gallipoli fought against brits war already was over.

  • @dbdmountainlion9459
    @dbdmountainlion9459 2 роки тому +16

    At school, I heard somebody laughing in the 1 minute of silence. And I can’t believe how rude that is, the anzacs worked so hard to keep us alive.

    • @warstories1790
      @warstories1790 Рік тому +3

      Unfortunately in Australia we just don’t have as much of a sense of respect as you would hope I mean most people these days just see Anzac Day as a day to get pissed and I noticed at the last Anzac Day about a third of people showed up to the dawn service in pjs the rest were in jeans and a T-shirt and very few were in anything formal and or respectful

    • @nissmoguy
      @nissmoguy Рік тому

      @tesko radic they fought for the elites, to secure "their kingdoms " by the deaths of common people ,turks and anzacs alike. unfortunatly the west continues to be led by the warmonger elite, they die while elites eat cake .

    • @sharischoll9411
      @sharischoll9411 Рік тому +1

      Control ALL the ports, control the people, the penal colonies , control the prices on trade, take a big profit on trade, control the people. Control who is allowed to sell to who, control the people.
      Why are we buying a product of India, which is repackaged in Britain, rather than buy directly from India?

    • @user-ze6yk4sd5g
      @user-ze6yk4sd5g Рік тому +1

      No they didn't..

    • @user-ze6yk4sd5g
      @user-ze6yk4sd5g Рік тому +1

      But you should repected the dead anyway no matter what..
      Even if they're morrons for following clearly insane orders and getting involved in another pointless war.

  • @nev707
    @nev707 16 днів тому

    My Great uncle landed with the 6 th Battalion on 25 April.
    He later went to France and survived.
    Full credit to the brave Turks who defended their country.

  • @phoenicss
    @phoenicss 27 днів тому

    my mum passed away after fightning in world war 2 she will always be remembered so as the rest less we forget 😢

  • @Dark_knight1980
    @Dark_knight1980 28 днів тому +1

    Love and respect to New Zealand and Australian soldiers fallen
    ❤🙏🇦🇺 💯🇳🇿🙏❤

  • @terryharris1291
    @terryharris1291 2 роки тому +4

    Lest we Forget.Onward.

    • @switchknowledge8750
      @switchknowledge8750  2 роки тому +2

      Indeed, Terry. The Aussies and Kiwis are among the very best in the world on many levels.

  • @beastagon4205
    @beastagon4205 Рік тому +3

    Today i learned that one of my ancestors was the first to land😅

  • @philc4520
    @philc4520 Рік тому +3

    Full Gallipoli Documentary - WW1? Not….how misleading…

  • @henerymag
    @henerymag Рік тому +1

    Canada sent 1,076 men of the Newfoundland Regiment to Gallipoli They were there for 4 months and were the last to leave, protecting the retreat during the night back to the ships with the wounded and the other soldiers. France and the Indian Army also fought there. I take nothing away from the ANZAC'S who fought so bravely and suffered terribly. Just an a historical note.

    • @mustafakemalataturk7587
      @mustafakemalataturk7587 3 місяці тому +1

      Iyi bok yediniz. Bide marifet gibi anlatiyo hıyar....yok şu kadar asker gönderdik, yok fransa da varmış, yok hint lide oradaymış. 8 ülke olarak geldiniz ama TÜRK'ün tokadını yiyip evinize döndünüz, ya da dònemediniz...

  • @gregnz1
    @gregnz1 2 роки тому

    great pictures, the Maori ones are rare,

  • @anthonyeaton5153
    @anthonyeaton5153 6 місяців тому

    How could it be ANZAC, where were the New Zealanders.

  • @anthonyeaton5153
    @anthonyeaton5153 6 місяців тому +1

    The truth is Australian efforts in SE Asia was relatively ineffective and ended as a mopping up force. An indicator is the number of men KiA. 7,000 plus slightly more than the Americans at Iwo Jima. Two thirds of the Australian army were ensconced back in Australia bored and troublesome. The home front in Australia was disgraceful with strikes and go slows by dockers and miners.

    • @tileux
      @tileux 26 днів тому

      Where did you get that nonsense from? Australians halted the japanese in Papua New Guinea - Milne Bay, multiple victories along the Kokoda track, Buna, Gona, Sanananda - all the first victories over the elite marine landing forces of the japanese army/navy - in brutal conditions that made pretty much anything else look like a picnic. THats not even mentioning the naval contribution.
      The real point is that Macarthur was incensed by Australian victories that made his army forces look bad - and that was bad for him because he was in competition with the navy and marines and was angling for the presidency. So he downplayed the Australian victories and their importance - describing them as "mopping up operations", when they definitely were not: the were decisive strategic victories. Interesting that you use the same language. But macarthur then banished the australians to places where they wouldnt make macarthur's armies look bad. Ironically, the Australians then fought an almost insurgent war against the japanese in Indonesia and the Phillipines, becoming in the process, the best jungle fighters in the world.
      And, no, there were not strikes and go slows. That happened before the war with japan started.

    • @anthonyeaton5153
      @anthonyeaton5153 20 днів тому

      @@tileux There were strikes and go slows in Australia in WW2. Dockers bludging week days to get triple pay on w/ends, refusing to offload vital war materiel when it was raining,and argued for excessive pay rates. The Americans were so inscenced they brought in navy personnel to offload at w/Ends. Miners struck incessantly and the other Nations were wondering if Australia was losing interest in the war. The Australian army was reduced by 22% as being too bloated in mid war.
      Read NEMESIS by Max Hastings its all in there.
      The chapter is called,
      Australia, Bludging and mopping up.

    • @tileux
      @tileux 20 днів тому

      @@anthonyeaton5153 That is a lie. Youre getting your information from sources that rely on the writing of a far right wing guy called Hal Colebatch, who published this nonsense in the right wing journal Quadrant (now defunct, I think). It has been soundly debunked multiple times. But the fascists like to rely on it and you clearly have a bit of a barrow to push so youre quite willing to push a baseless and false narrative.

    • @tileux
      @tileux 20 днів тому

      @@anthonyeaton5153 Not sure where my response to you has gone, but, again, your comment is false. YOure relying on long debunked right wing nonsense. Not surprising because youre name along almost screams at me that youre a former private school boy from the right, whose heads are full of lies like that.

  • @egefitnessfanclubsiirtsube2335
    @egefitnessfanclubsiirtsube2335 5 місяців тому +2

    No matter who they are, you cant defeat religious men who defend their homeland. respect for ottoman from italia

    • @anthonyeaton5153
      @anthonyeaton5153 Місяць тому +1

      Turkey was knocked out of the war in 1918.

  • @chucknichter3233
    @chucknichter3233 4 місяці тому

    This barely had anything to do with Gallipoli.

  • @maulanafadhli8421
    @maulanafadhli8421 Рік тому

    Curang dari dulu main keroyokan

  • @anthonyeaton5153
    @anthonyeaton5153 Рік тому +3

    Decisive battles? The ANZACs were not on the ground in Normandy and not on the road to Berlin, nor in Italy and most definitely were not involved on the Eastern Russian front nor the island hopping campaign by the US Marine Corps. Australias contribution was relatively small in the grand scheme. Where might I ask are the pictures of Gallipoli.

    • @kristinehayes4885
      @kristinehayes4885 Рік тому

      This about the ANZAC'S in WW1 not WW2, you dickhead.

    • @trE3E3
      @trE3E3 Рік тому

      This is World War 1. Are you lost perchance?

    • @anthonyeaton5153
      @anthonyeaton5153 Рік тому +1

      @@charlottemercieca4739Please tell me why is the commentator speaking about WW2.

    • @jammyscouser2583
      @jammyscouser2583 Рік тому +2

      NZ Air Squadrons flying in Normandy, they fought for two years in Italy and the 3rd NZ Division was capturing islands in the pacific

    • @anthonyeaton5153
      @anthonyeaton5153 6 місяців тому

      @@jammyscouser2583I was talking about Australians. Yes kiwis were in Bomber Command and Fighter Command etc as were the Aussies. On the ground in Normandy etc was my central point.

  • @Winchester-hh7vb
    @Winchester-hh7vb 11 місяців тому

    56k Turks were killed at Gallipoli. Not 250k.

    • @ArdaUnhail
      @ArdaUnhail 6 місяців тому

      It is causalities. Causality in war is different from total death count. It includes wounded too. Official numbers around 77.000 deaths, 11.000 missing, 97.000 wounded, 64.000 sick, total sums up around 250.000 causalities.

    • @filizaltman5058
      @filizaltman5058 4 місяці тому

      It was 250 thousand. Go look at their memorials instead of wrongly writing anything about that precious place and the heroes dead or alive who fought against each other because of a half mad man who e as called a genius

    • @Winchester-hh7vb
      @Winchester-hh7vb 3 місяці тому

      @@filizaltman5058 56k Turks were killed by enemies, others died by diseases, etc