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Home means different things to different people. Because our
news headlines have lately featured countless people fleeing their homeland and
searching (currently mostly unsuccessfully) for a peaceful place to live, far
away from war and destruction, it got me to imagining what it must be like to
be totally homeless and without support of any kind. In fact the thought makes
me shudder. I could not imagine life without a permanent home to come back to,
without the sense of security that comes from being surrounded by familiar
people and possessions.
Love for our homeland is another matter. I’ve had two in my
life. My allegiance was to England during my early years, and I wouldn’t have
considered back then calling myself anything but British. But ask me now and my
immediate response would be “I am Australian”. One of my proudest moments was
becoming a citizen of this country and receiving the proof of that citizenship.
There are degrees of love for one’s homeland. We are free to criticize and say
what we like, but let an outsider caste any sort of criticism on the land that
we love, and we are quick to spring to its defense. It saddens me when I hear
of people abusing the privileges bestowed on them or their parents who have
been allowed to live here as free citizens and then decide, for reasons only
logical to them, to go off and fight in far off places for causes against the
country that offered them this freedom of choice.
My husband and I migrated to Australia many years ago as what
was called back then ‘ten pound Poms’. In case you are too young to know the
meaning of this term I will explain. Australia was calling for tradespeople to
come here for a better life and to enjoy the prosperity of this land as long as
we were willing to work hard and do our best. I already had three sisters
living here so the decision was easy for me. Not so easy for my husband who
left all his family behind. Our fare out was paid on the understanding that
should we decide to return we would take care of the expense. I am pleased to
say that once settled here returning to England was out of the question—for me.
Not so my husband. He would have gone back at any time (if I agreed) because
England was and always remained his homeland.
That is not to say he wasn’t happy here and we had a good life. We arrived on a
Wednesday, and with a letter of referral from his company in England, he
started work the following Monday. I too had a job within a week. As a matter
of interest, we arrived in the year Australia changed over to decimal currency and
by the time we exchanged our pounds shillings and pence for dollars we had
precisely $AU100 to start our lives here. Within five years we owned our own
home.
I worked in a clothing manufacturing company and it was what
was called back then ‘A league of Nations’. There were people from Italy,
Greece, Czechoslovakia, Serbia, South Africa, and countless other countries.
All came here with little and most ended up if not wealthy, comfortable, by
sheer hard work. One man I worked alongside arrived on a ship with one spare
pair of shoes tucked under his arm, and little else but the clothes he wore.
Our home while traveling |
So, what does home mean to me? In our traveling days, for
short periods of time our caravan was home, because that is where we returned
to sleep at night, and it was our security. But I have to say that while on the
road I was never totally content and always glad to return to my permanent home
and my own bed. This is where my personal possessions are all in one place.
This is where my memories are stored. I’ve had quite a few moves in my life and
each new house has become my home and the center of my world.
The dogs always came along on the trips |
I recall the first trip we set out on, towing our temporary
home behind us. We’d spent about three days on the road heading to Far North
Queensland. I awoke in a state of panic. It hit me that I was a long way from
‘home’ here in Victoria, and that should something go wrong then I could not
just hop back home in a few hours. Of course there was always the option of
flying, but that didn’t occur to me back then. This panic subsided as I got
used to traveling, but nonetheless I always did, and still do, experience a
feeling of contentment when I near my home.
There was one instance that I was too young to remember, but
apparently my eldest sister took me away from war ravaged London to somewhere
in the countryside. I did nothing but cry for our mother and home, so much so
that she took me back after only a couple of days. I was told years later that
our mum took me in her arms and cried, for she was just as happy to have me
home as I was to be there. So, my desire to be in a familiar place goes back a
long time. I never strayed far from home from then on, and had our mother still
been alive I would not have left England when I did.
So, here I sit in my lovely present home, surrounded by my mementos and personal treasures, and thank whatever chance, be it God, or
Fate, has allowed me the privilege of always having a place that I can call
home. Home is where the heart is, yes?
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