Bill Shorten Speech: Parliament Motion On The Anniversary Of Victorian Bushfires

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4th February 2010, 07:06pm - Views: 720





SPEECH BY BILL SHORTEN, PARLIAMENTARY SECRETARY FOR

VICTORIAN BUSHFIRE RECONSTRUCTION

PARLIAMENTARY MOTION ON THE ANNIVERSARY OF THE

BLACK SATURDAY BUSHFIRES

FEBRUARY 4


I would like to associate myself with the remarks of the Prime Minister, the

Leader of the Opposition and the other members of parliament who have

spoken. It is a long way back from 7 February last year.

Many  people have lived eternities of regret in just one year, sifting

memories from the ashes and recalling faces that are now gone. The

substance of love are the things that we remember having shared and when

those things are gone then, indeed, love itself is threatened unless we jointly

remember and jointly restore what we can.

The towns and the farms are still there, as are the roads, the yards, the hills

and the creeks where people played and grew up.

Many people have experienced circumstances beyond nightmare which one

would hope never to experience.

 

A long rebuild has followed so far after a fire that took everything—the

family photos, the war medals, the books that were passed down from the

parents to the children, the backyard trees that seemed so big when you were

so little, the horse that ran off into the flames and never came back and the

pet dog which was so hurt that it had to be put down.

The long return from such a day can be hard beyond bearing for those who

have lost property. In fact, when you lose property in a fire you realise how

closely and deeply it is linked to the memories that make us who we are.

But there are those for whom it was even worse in the days after the fire—

those who waited weeks for the release from the coroner of perhaps the

remains of a child or a father, and those too-long delayed funerals, and those

who were kept away for days on end from those black and smouldering

crime scenes, which were their family homes, only to return to find that

there was nothing left.

Many of these people carry burdens of their own and they are dealing with

their own losses. Many have coped with the aftermath of the fire by turning

their loss into a desire to rebuild and to help others heal. They have had

leadership thrust upon them and they have coped with this admirably. Some

of the leadership that we have seen in the communities is not flashy or the

barking of orders; it is just the quiet gesture of carrying on and putting one

foot in front of the other.

The work that is being done by the local community recovery committees

deserves particular mention and recognition. It has been essential in

ensuring that the spirit and the essence of communities remain—as has the

work of Premier John Brumby and Christine Nixon, the chair of the

reconstruction authority.

Rebuilding has been a slow process, and I think that we all wish that it was

happening quicker. But, as we travel around the fire-affected communities,

we can see that good things are happening—from the radio station at

Kinglake to the first sods being turned of the new learning hub at

Marysville.

The neighbours faces do help. Their decision, his and hers, to rebuild, to

stay, to confer and to share the memories has been important.

Fundamentally, communities help here. The idea of community helps—the

idea that no one of us is an island and the place we stand on is common

ground.

As we approach this Sunday, we cannot replace the people who are not here

or take back the memories of 7 February last year. We can support the

people who were there and their efforts to rebuild.

We cannot bring back a lot of things and we cannot expunge regret. We can

embrace with feeling what remains and we can build with hope on those

burnt foundations at the first anniversary.

A way of life is being rebuilt which still has joy in it, with neighbourhood

and comradeship, with shared kindness which we all appreciate, and with all

our homes and communities. That process, that rescue, that restoration is

well begun and it will continue past the anniversary.







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