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THE Y.M.C.A.

MEMORIAL HUT OPENED LORD BLEDISLOE’S TRIBUTE “GREAT ORGANISATION” [Special to “Northern Advocate”] WELLINGTON, This Day. A memorial Y.M.C.A. hut which has an interesting history was officially opened yesterday afternoon by the Governor-General, Lord Bledisloe, After the Armistice, and prior to demobolisation, New Zealand soldiers contributed a sum of approximately £ISOO as an expression of their gratitude for the work which had been done for the New Zealand Expeditionary* Force through the Y.M.C.A. The money was placed on deposit until the total increased to over £2OOO, and at the last conference of the New Zealand Y.M.C.A. movement, the decision was made to build a war memorial hut at Petone. “It would be'difficult to overstate the value to our Dominion soldiers of the noble, far-reaching and selfless work of this great organisation of Christian philanthropy during the Great War, or of its unflagging devotion to the highest interests of youth of the country since peace was declared,” said His Excellency in performing the opening ceremony in the presence of a large gathering. “No organisation in war time contributed more to the physical and spiritual comfort and happiness of our soldiers while away from their homes than the Y.M.C.A.,” said His Excellency,* “and it is equally true to say that no organisation during the stressful and anxious period of the last three years has done more to in- i spire hope and happiness in the youth of this nation, to save them from moral degradation and decadence, or to find them employment in conditions of unprecedented difficulty. “For the strenuous unremitting fight for the maintenance of Christian ideals, and against the perils of despair and idleness, the people of the Dominion owe to the Y.M.C.A. a debt which I can find no words adequately to acknowledge, which can only be fittingly recognised by extending to them and the public-spirited leaders and workers all the assistance, moral, practical and financial, that we possibly can.

“That public support and sympathy had not been lacking was evidenced by the. fact that during the war the people of New Zealand contributed no less than £361,000 to the work of the Y.M.C.A. overseas,’’ said His Excellency. “I doubt whether any part of the Empire with a similar population, or the same amount of material resources, could have put up such a fine achievement in the matter,’’ he added. “I notice with satisfaction that in certain districts an attempt is being made to co-operate the Y.M.C.A. and Y.W.C.A., so that, by a reduction in ovdrhead, they may be able to carry on more efficiently in some districts. Both bodies have suffered considerably during the last few years, and where it is possible to rejuvenate the movement by joining forces in administration, it is well worth sympathetic consideration.” Included in the gathering this afternoon were a number of former Y.M.C.A. field secretaries, who served in various theatres of war. They held a reunion dinner last Saturday in the Y.M.C.A. hut at Trentham.

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Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/NA19341105.2.49

Bibliographic details

Northern Advocate, 5 November 1934, Page 5

Word Count
494

THE Y.M.C.A. Northern Advocate, 5 November 1934, Page 5

THE Y.M.C.A. Northern Advocate, 5 November 1934, Page 5