One of the most significant days
in my life was the Australia Day of 1979. I must confess that until this
particular day I was not aware of the 26th of January being a
holiday. But on the day I and my husband landed at Mascot to start calling Australia
home. We were tired after the 30 hours flight, a bit anxious about how this new
life is going to be for us, but generally, very positive and happy. Definitely
a good New Beginning! It was a cool day and we were expecting 40 degrees plus!
Since we were coming from a very cold weather in Frankfurt ,
minus 20 or close to it, I had my marten coat with me and I even put it on to
free my hands for luggage collection. It was the only time I had this coat on
in Australia ,
but at the time I thought that some stories about the Australian weather are
not all that accurate.
The natives were very friendly and
took care of the couple of migrants warmly and well. As our prior arrangements
did not work out as planned we took the offer of an migration officer who
waited for us at the airport to take us to the Endeavour Migrant Hostel at Coogee. It was great, we got
our own little flat with a little kitchen, and we only needed to share the
communal bathroom. A woman in a marten coat must have looked really strange in Sydney
summer staying at the hostel for migrants. But, boy, what a happy day it was! I
will always remember this Australia Day very fondly.
The second memorable Australia Day
was in 1985. This was the day when I officially became an Australian. It took a
very sad event for me to feel that my links with Poland are
broken. My mother’s death. I was then free to change my country officially and in
my heart. Australia
welcomed me again.
The North
Sydney council organized a ceremony for new Australians. It
was a reception, pictures, certificates and souvenirs. I was moved. For many, many years I felt exclusively
Australian and did not think much about Poland . I
did not meet Poles so I did not speak the language and I had very seldom
contacts with family and friends in Poland .
When I was asked about my
nationality due to my “charming” accent, I was typically a bit irritated and my
answer was: Australian, I only sound funny. Since then my contacts with Poland got
much closer and now I have two home countries in my heart and two passports to
show for it. At times I feel a bit confused about my identity.
The third Australia Day I remember
well was in 2009. It was the thirties anniversary of me coming to live here. I
thought that it would be good to visit Coogee on the day. I traveled a long
time on a bus to get there, but I could not find the old hostel for migrants.
It may not even exist any more; so many years have passed…
I have not planned anything
special for today except for small self indulgence of doing things I like. Reading ,
writing this post, watching tennis, planning etc. Agnieszka Radwanska gave me a
little present with her victory and qualifying to the semifinal of the
Australian Open. I have stuck a little Australian flag, complements of the
local council, in my geranium pot and feel that I am a celebrating Australian.
It was really a coincidence - land in Australia on such a day.
ReplyDeleteFirst impressions very interesting.
Happy Australia Day!
Thank you Lech-Pharlap and happy Australia Day back!
ReplyDeleteIt is really a coincidence, looks that we both do things very properly.
Some of my friends and family members in Australia, citizens all of them but of Indian ancestry celebrate the day along with India's own Republic Day and the facebook is full of such emotions!
ReplyDeleteI did not know that our two nations can celebrate on the same day for two different occasions. I may consider a joint celebration for the next year with some of my Indian friends.
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