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The Guardian - AU
The Guardian - AU
National
Christine Tondorf

Light at the darkest time: lantern parade a source of healing for flood-ravaged Lismore

Lismore’s annual lantern parade took on extra significance this year following the town’s devastation by flooding.
Lismore’s annual lantern parade took on extra significance this year following the town’s devastation by flooding. Photograph: David Maurice Smith/The Guardian

Lismore’s lantern parade is a celebration of nature, to mark the passing of the longest night of winter, but the New South Wales northern rivers town has a troubled relationship with nature.

Lismore was twice swallowed by the Wilsons River this year, and that is why the festival director, Jyllie Jackson, decided the parade of mammoth electrified lanterns must finish on the banks of the river.

“I wanted to provide another perspective on what has happened,” Jackson said.

“When I told some people we were doing it down by the river, and it was about healing our relationship with the river, they felt quite triggered by that, and I get that, but this is about starting that conversation, starting that connection back to the river.”

A flotilla of wire and paper tinnies led the parade – a tribute to the boaties and SES crews who plucked thousands from flooded homes on 28 February.

A source of hope and healing: the lantern parade snakes its way through Lismore.
A source of hope and healing: the lantern parade snakes its way through Lismore. Photograph: David Maurice Smith/The Guardian
Lismore lantern parade
The parade was also a source of light for the flood-ravaged town. Photograph: David Maurice Smith/The Guardian

Lismore lawyer Binnie O’Dwyer visited the parade’s workshop with the intention of volunteering for a couple of hours, but ended up spending days working on the fleet, in what became her “lantern therapy”.

O’Dwyer’s house was inundated and she has not yet been able to return to work.

“It was pretty bad. It was up over 1.5 metres in our house and my son’s work and daughter’s school also flooded,” she said.

volunteer Binnie O’Dwyer
‘Lantern therapy’: volunteer Binnie O’Dwyer: Photograph: David Maurice Smith/The Guardian

O’Dwyer sent her children to stay with family in Queensland while she repaired her home and health.

“Going in there [the lantern workshop], it was not my house and I got to play with paper and glue and scissors and wire, and it was nice. I put the people in the tinnies,” she said.

“There was something even meditative about it … and this year is really special because we are honouring the people who risked their lives to save others.”

Among the estimated crowd of 15,000 was Japan’s ambassador to Australia, Yamagami Shingo.

Yamagami said Lismore was the first town in Australia to set up a sister city relationship with Japan, 59 years ago, and the floods received extensive coverage in his country.

“Coming from a country which is so prone to natural disasters, we have a tremendous amount of sympathy for the people of Lismore,” he said.

He said Japan also had a history of lantern parades.

Lismore’s 28-year-old winter solstice parade is traditionally a festival of light and hope at the darkest time. The Lismore mayor, Steve Krieg, said literally turning the lights back on in Lismore had been challenging. He estimated that only 10% of shops and houses in Lismore’s CBD again had lighting.

A smoking ceremony, led by Gilbert Laurie of the Yaegl and Widjabul tribes of the Bundjalung Nation, opens the lantern parade.
A smoking ceremony, led by Gilbert Laurie of the Yaegl and Widjabul tribes of the Bundjalung nation, opens the lantern parade. Photograph: David Maurice Smith/The Guardian

“You need to get the electricity company to come in and install a new smart meter, and then an electrician can come in and wire up,” he said.

Krieg said electricity to the CBD was cut during the floods, and since then only a double powerpoint can operate in affected properties until a level-two certified electrician visits. The Lismore CBD, still extensively damaged, also has limited street lighting.

“It’s pretty dark,” the mayor said.

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