Women in War
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WOMEN IN THE WAR
In the present day Australian armed forces, women are trained to use high powered weapons, to drive trucks and tanks and aero planes, and to engage in combat. Women serve as officers and as ordinary soldiers, sailors and aircrew personnel.
In 1914, however, a womens place was not considered to be on the battlefield, but in the home. No women at all served with the Anzacs, other than nurses, but nurses did not have an army rank. During world war one; many women felt that they should be permitted to do more than serve as home-makers back in Australia. Womens organization sent urgent petition to the government offering to serve as cooks, ambulance scouts, stretcher bearers, motor-car drivers but all these pleas were rejected.
Nursing was the one occupation that was considered suitable for women to perform close to a battlefield. Even so, nurses were kept off the battlefield itself in hospitals and clinics behind the lines. The conditions under which army nurses worked were often dreadful, and they showed great courage and stamina to keep going. They saw everything that a solider in the trenches saw Ð- every sort of wound, everything that an exploding shells or bullet or poison gas could do to a human body. And they often worked very long hours at a single stretch.
Back in Australia, women were asked to take on a different sort of war occupation. They were given the job of encouraging men to enlist. Organizations such as the Australian womens service corps and the Australian womens national league took part in recruitment drives. They often tried to shame men into enlisting, by suggesting that only cowards and Ðshirkers stayed behind when their mates were fighting and dying.
Women didnt take over many of the jobs left by men who had gone to fight. At that time it was not considered proper for women to do mens work. Except in such occupations as teaching and shop keeping, women found few new employment opportunities. Ever factories owners were reluctant to take on women, although in some cases the shortage of men meant that they had no choice. Fund raising to assist war widows and knitting socks for the boys at the front was considerate the ideal ways for women to help the war effort.