Opportunity, and reason, was cause to visit Melbourne ’s Shrine of Remembrance last week.
The St Kilda Rd sign pointing to the exhibit. |
Entering from the nearby St Kilda Rd a sign alerted me to the
reason for my visit, a temporary exhibition entitled “Peace”.
The overall energy of the exhibition warranted curiosity,
but particular interest arose from that fact and that included in the display
was the print, “Journeys and Destinations” by Melbourne’s Benjamin McKeon and
Nathalia’s Bill Kelly.
Bill and Ben’s collaborative print represented Australia at
the 50th anniversary of the United Nations Declaration of Human
Rights International Print Portfolio.
This print was inspired by the human right: “Everyone has
the right to the liberty and security of person” and one of the limited edition
prints sits in the collection of the United Nations Office at Geneva (UNOG) library,
Switzerland.
Being at the height of the remembrance “season”, the shrine
was alive with people from guides and advisors through to a seemingly ceaseless
steam of school groups and others obviously eager to see the shrine and experience
the sense the wonderment it invoked.
Interestingly, while the “war” section of the shrine
captured the interest of most, while the “Peace” exhibit languished almost
unnoticed in one corner of the main entrance area.
The drama of conflict appeals to, and seems to ignite, human
emotions, while peace, the reason for the shrine appears to escape the
understanding and interest of most, and so the idea that today we can live peaceably
appears well down the hierarchy of importance.
Remembrance is obviously a key reason for the shrine,
emphasized by its exquisite placement on high ground just south of the city
making it obvious and ensuring the reality of conflicts to which Australia has
been a party are constantly considered.
“Journeys and Destinations” by Melbourne’s Benjamin McKeon and Nathalia’s Bill Kelly. |
The idea that we acknowledge those who died or suffered to
preserve the life we presently enjoy warrants applause, but as we do that, it
is important we escape the violent and quarrelsome paradigm promoted by the
military/industrial complex.
Just last week a climatologist told an Echuca conference
considering an indigenous response to climate change that a world-wide effort
to mitigate that unfolding difficulty would cost some $30-40 billion a year,
which is considered by most to be too costly.
However, confusingly and in what was a stark contrast, he
pointed out, that the world spends about $780 billion each year of military
machinations, not including the death or injury to thousands of people, the
damage to property or the accumulating injury to the earth’s atmosphere.
Peace was one of the four “pillars” on which the shrine was
founded, but it is something that will forever elude us unless we expand our
thinking, challenge and change our adversarial behaviour, understand mutuality
and be cautious with our use of language.