The Northland Age

A very special Anzac Day

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New Zealand Army Reservist officer Lieutenant Colonel Olly Te Ua followed in the footsteps of his great-grandfathe­r when he stepped on to the battlefiel­ds of Gallipoli on Anzac Day.

Lieutenant Colonel Te Ua, who was born in Whangarei and raised in Okaihau, was representi­ng New Zealand and the New Zealand Defence Force as the contingent commander at the Anzac dawn service and the New Zealand memorial service at Chunuk Bair.

This year marks the centenary of New Zealanders returning to Gallipoli to commemorat­e the 1915 campaign.

Lieutenant Colonel Te Ua also had the honour of wearing the Nga¯ Tupuwae kahu huruhuru cloak at the dawn service.

“It is a privilege to be selected to wear the Nga¯ Tupuwae. One of my teammates from Afghanista­n wore it to Gallipoli a couple of years ago, and it is great to have that shared connection with him,” he said.

The cloak’s pattern tells the story of all New Zealand military deployment­s overseas — the enduring sorrow for those whose final resting place is across oceans, and those who fought and returned to Aotearoa New Zealand, often with the unseen scars of conflict.

Lieutenant Colonel Te Ua’s greatgrand­father, Corporal Cedric Oswald Bennett, served with the Auckland Infantry Battalion as part of the 16th Waikato Company at Gallipoli from June to August 1915. In August he became ill and was taken out of theatre, and began the long journey back to New Zealand.

Lieutenant Colonel Te Ua has childhood memories of his great-grandfathe­r.

“Unfortunat­ely I was too small to ask him what it was like fighting at Gallipoli. Notwithsta­nding that, our family connection to Gallipoli is very special to me, and I am especially grateful to have the opportunit­y to walk in his footsteps, although in much different circumstan­ces, 103 years later,” he said.

Lieutenant Colonel Te Ua is the Commanding Officer of 3rd/6th Battalion Royal New Zealand Infantry Regiment, the reserve battalion based out of Auckland, Whangarei and Tauranga.

“The best part of being a reservist is the ability to represent New Zealand and serve our country overseas,” he said.

“The bonds developed with people you serve with, both in New Zealand and overseas, are lifelong, and this makes the NZDF such a unique organisati­on.

“As a reservist you can also have a mainstream career and a career in the military.”

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