Forest of the Fallen - we did it, and you can too
Commemorating the gene-vaccine dead and injured has never been more important as our government seeks to divide and distract us
Letters From Australia has been quiet in recent weeks due to putting together a Forest of the Fallen with friends from Coogee Stand in the Park.
This wonderful expression of support for the gene-vaccine injured has been popping up all over Australia and you can do it, too.
The power is in the silence and space. Letting people discover the stories for themselves, without anybody telling them what to think or how to feel.
Each stake holds the story of a person injured or killed by the covid gene-vaccines, and there are now more than 500 of them.
Although there are so many, this is just a tiny fraction of the number of people who have been hurt by these badly tested products, as hardly any stories reach the media. Few people seek out Jab Injuries Australia, a support group that documents the stories of the gene-vaccine injured.
Putting up a display of Forest of the Fallen helps raise awareness of the scale of the problem.
Because gene-vaccine-injured Australians had their stories censored and suppressed in the media and on the internet, most people have no idea of the scale of the problem.
Forest of the Fallen makes that clear. It tells the gene-vaccine injured that they are not alone, that we acknowledge them, and that we want to help them.
Coogee Stand In The Park came to help laminate the stories and stick them on the bamboo stakes, and then popped them up on the beach on Sunday.
It is not too difficult to do, and doesn’t take too long with helpful friends. Even though the stories are so sad, it’s quite enjoyable putting the tribute together.
If you want to make a Forest of the Fallen the first step is to contact Selki, the Tasmanian inventor, through her website here.
After talking to Selki, the next step is to acquire 500 bamboo stakes at 1.5m length. I bought mine at Mitre 10, but any way you can get them is fine.
Selki then sends you the PDF file she has painstakingly curated, and you print it out in colour.
Then you laminate each sheet, and stick them to a stake, treating each story with dignity and care.
We have only just finished our Forest of the Fallen and we took it for a test run at Coogee on Sunday, September 17. We’re still learning.
It was a rewarding experience - many people came forward with stories of their own.
Seeing the issue acknowledged has a powerful effect as people suddenly realise they are not alone.
Bystanders even helped put up the stakes.
If you want to put together a Forest of the Fallen, you’ll have plenty of help. You can find people through Stand in the Park.
Communities and discussion groups resisting medical tyranny have popped up everywhere since the injections and lockdowns were forced on us.
Coogee Stand in the Park, in Sydney’s east, is on Sundays from about 10am to 12.30pm in a picnic gazebo near the southern end of the beach. Look for the yellow T-shirts.
Everyone has their reasons - for me, I was motivated to help Forest of the Fallen because my friend Phil had a brother killed by his first Pfizer shot.
Special thanks to talented videographer Kevin, whose video appears above.
Forest of the Fallen can be contacted here.
Stand in the Park can be searched for a location near you here.
It’s never too late to report a suspected gene-vaccine injury to the TGA through their online reporting system here.
Thank you Alison. I was meaning to do this when it gets warmer in Perth. It has been cold and rainy. People should do this outside MP offices.
Great work! A friend has one that tours the outer eastern suburbs of Melbourne. We help set up when it’s near us. Around 500 stories now. I am always surprised by just how many people take the time to read and ask questions. It’s really powerful.