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Sydney: Past Campaigns Give Heart To Hockey

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  • Sydney: Past Campaigns Give Heart To Hockey

    PAST CAMPAIGNS GIVE HEART TO HOCKEY
    Malcolm Brown

    Sydney Morning Herald, Australia
    http://www.smh.com.au/news/national/past -campaigns-give-heart-to-hockey/2007/06/29/1182624 165403.html
    June 30 2007

    JOE HOCKEY, defending the Federal Government's workplace relations
    policy and campaigning to hold his North Sydney seat, will be looking
    further back this weekend: to his Palestinian roots and the charge
    of the Australian Light Horse 90 years ago.

    The charge by the 4th Light Horse Brigade on October 31, 1917, took
    the Turkish defenders by surprise and took the town, capturing the
    all important wells and breaking the Turkish defensive line from Gaza.

    The attack led to the capture more than 730 Turks, for the loss of
    31 killed and 38 wounded. It was to go down as one of the landmark
    events of Australian military history.

    Mr Hockey, accompanied by his two-year-old son, Xavier, will be a
    special guest at the Reserve Forces Day parade tomorrow, which will
    commemorate the victory.

    The parade will feature 90 horses and standards flown by the 15
    regiments that served in World War I.

    Mr Hockey said: "My roots lie in that part of the world. My
    grandfather, Joseph Hokeidonian, an Armenian, was sent by the Catholic
    Church in Jerusalem to go to Palestine as a spy."

    Grandfather Hokeidonian appears to have performed his duties well,
    though his war service cost him an eye. After hostilities ended he
    became deputy town clerk of Beersheba and helped to rebuild the city.

    Mr Hockey's father, Richard, was born in Bethlehem in 1927. But Joseph
    disappeared afterwards. He was apparently hit by a car in Egypt.

    After serving in the British Army in World War II, Richard migrated
    to Australia in 1948, where he married an Australian, Beverley,
    and had four children, the youngest, Joseph, born in 1965.

    Mr Hockey has visited Beersheba and the Middle East numerous times,
    the last being in 1998 when he took his father on a parliamentary
    delegation.

    There are other links between Beersheba and the North Sydney
    electorate. In World War I the Liberal member for North Sydney,
    Sir Granville Ryrie, who had served in the Boer War, volunteered for
    service as commander of the 2nd Light Horse.

    With a horse presented to him by his North Sydney constituents, he
    went on to serve at Gallipoli and in the Middle East and took part
    in fighting that led to the capture of Jerusalem.

    The victory at Beersheba signalled the beginning of the end for the
    800-year Ottoman Empire in the Middle East, an event not missed by
    Australia's Jewish community.

    The Melbourne-based Pratt Foundation has helped fund a memorial park
    in Beersheba, which will feature a sculpture by Australian artist
    Peter Corlette of a charging Australian light-horseman.

    Sam Lipski, the foundation's executive director, said he had been
    inspired to establish the park because there was nothing else, other
    than a war graves cemetery, to mark the extraordinary feat of arms
    by Australia, which had such big repercussions for the future state
    of Israel.

    The park, representing total investment of about $2 million, has been
    established in

    co-operation with the city of Beersheba, the United Israel Appeal and
    some charitable foundations. To be known as the Park of the Australian
    Soldier, it will be opened on April 28.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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