Home  /  Stories  / 

Auckland Museum providing a place to remember Christchurch

19 Feb 2012
Aucklanders are being invited to commemorate the one year anniversary of the Christchurch earthquake at Auckland War Memorial Museum.

Aucklanders are being invited to commemorate the one year anniversary of the Christchurch earthquake at Auckland War Memorial Museum on Wednesday.

On February 22 the museum will run the following commemorative activity and collect donations for Christchurch:

We Will Remember – Christchurch Earthquake Commemorations

Aucklanders are being invited to commemorate the one year anniversary of the Christchurch earthquake at Auckland War Memorial Museum on Wednesday.

On February 22 the museum will run the following commemorative activity and collect donations for Christchurch:

We Will Remember – Christchurch Earthquake Commemorations

Wednesday 22 February, Grand Foyer, Auckland War Memorial Museum

  • Midday Performance by Quartet featuring Christchurch musicians
  • 12.30pm Reading by Christchurch author Fiona Farrell
  • 12.40pm Comments from Director Roy Clare
  • 12.51pm 2 minute silence
  • Bell tolls
  • 1pm When A City Falls documentary screening (entry by donation)

Collections for Christchurch will be taken throughout the day

“We are aware that many Aucklanders will be looking for a place to remember the lives that were lost and the destruction of so much of the city and its communities. Auckland is also home to a significant number of people who have moved from Christchurch over the last 12 months and we want to offer a place for them to come,” says Director Roy Clare.

“The museum is a place of memorial and a place for reflection and we owe a debt of recognition to the people of Christchurch and to this great city that has been brought to its knees At last year’s memorial service former Director Sir Don McKinnon pledged that the people of Christchurch would not be forgotten by Auckland War Memorial Museum and we recognise that even once the rebuild of the city is complete, the people will be decades in the healing.”

Christchurch author Fiona Farrell will read from her unreleased book The Quake Year and The Broken Book.

The Suitcase (from The Broken Book) really means a lot to me now as friends begin to move away. More even than when I originally wrote it.”

The Suitcase

When we leave, we take the city

with us. Her bandaged buildings

and her gappy streets lurching

like some old gal who has been

knocked about. Her broken teeth,

black eye. Her shops with their

empty shelves. Her sewers and

their secret, soggy shambles.

We run away from her. Cross

over to the safe side where the

centre holds. Pretty cities

where marigolds will live

for ever. We breathe the scent

of white sheets in a quiet hotel.

But when the suitcase opens,

it’s all there: bricks, the lost

dog, the old gal wheezing her

crazed song down a broken

alley. Something about dust

and ashes and how things

fall. We catch the whiff of

her among our folded socks.