“Forgotten War” veterans

Some American heroes can finally get the recognition they deserve.  Obscured by a tenuous ceasefire and subsequent Cold War crises, the Korean War is often described in terms of conflict, intervention or police action. Nevertheless, the service and sacrifice of these wartime veterans is a necessary component of our national heritage, and as such, the Library of Congress Veterans History Project (VHP) actively seeks the oral histories, personal papers and photographs of these unsung heroes. For full story click here.

Sydney Jewish Museum wants films

The Sydney Jewish Museum has launched its Moving Image and Sound Archive…and is calling for communal contributions.  Curator Shannon Maguire told J-Wire that the museum wants that family footage which is tucked away in a drawer in many homes throughout the State.  She said: “Naturally we want to digitise it…but that is a long and expensive process. Unless those contributing can help us with the the cost of the process, it could take up to nine months before we can return the footage. But it will be held in safe hands and under special conditions to protect the material.” For full story click here.

Cowra stories

What started out as a PhD research project has culminated in a book recording the stories and traditions of the Erambie community in Cowra.  Lawrence Bamblett, who is currently a Research Fellow at the Australian Institute of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Studies, this month released his 'Our stories are our survival' book.  Published by Aboriginal Studies Press, the book is a combination of Mr Bamblett's PhD document-based research project from 2008 and records of stories he grew up listening to about the feats of Erambie athletes. For full story click here.

Oral history of dance in Western Australia

Ausdance WA will be releasing its Oral History of Dance in WA, a collection of interviews with 20 WA dance identities, including Chrissie Parrott, Sue Peacock, Alan Alder, Lucette Aldous, Margrete Helgeby and Louise Howden-Smith. This project is a sequel to a 1990 oral history project kept at the Battye Library. For full story click here.

Reflection on war

77-year-old Werribee author and historian Margaret Campbell softly recites one of her poems included in her recently completed masters thesis, and reflects on how war has always been etched in her consciousness. As a child of the World War II years, Ms Campbell lived through the Korea and Vietnam wars and worked at the Point Cook RAAF base. She has lived in Wyndham since doing her "rookies" in 1954. Titled Searching the Silences of War, her study is part theory and part young adult novel. Finding Sophie, set in Truganina in 1997, is told from the perspective of a teenage girl staying at her grandparents' farm with relatives including a Vietnam veteran and an anti-war protester.  For full story click here.

War veteran Neville Hewitt

This month marks 70 years since an event that resulted in Neville Hewitt being awarded a Military Medal for initiative, courage and fortitude.  The name Neville Hewitt is probably very familiar with many in Central Queensland – after all he was a Country Party Member representing parts of the region from 1956-1980, but well before that, he served in the RAAF during the second world war.  For full story with audio click here.

Oral history of New York Food

As Marcel Proust so famously documented, it's often the simplest of foods that can carry us back to remembrances of things past. And so perhaps it's not so surprising that, when freelance food writer Anne Noyes Saini began asking New York's elderly residents about their memories of the foods of the city during the early- to mid-20th century, it was humble meals like baked beans and the fruits sold by old-timey wagons that most often came to mind. Saini's project, an ongoing oral history called Forgotten Foods of New York City, is accessible via Soundcloud and was also featured last week on the storytelling site Narratively.  For full story click here.