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ALMA Armenian Legionnaire Traveling Exhibit Begins Nationwide Tour

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  • ALMA Armenian Legionnaire Traveling Exhibit Begins Nationwide Tour

    ALMA ARMENIAN LEGIONNAIRE TRAVELING EXHIBIT BEGINS NATIONWIDE TOUR

    http://www.reporter.am/index.cfm?furl=/go/ar ticle/2009-08-19-alma-armenian-legionnaire-traveli ng-exhibit-begins-nationwide-tour&pg=2
    Wednesd ay August 19, 2009

    Watertown, Mass. - Legion Armenienne: The Armenian Legion and Its
    Heroism in the Middle East is a traveling exhibit developed and
    prepared by the Armenian Library and Museum of America (ALMA) in
    honor of the Legionnaires and their devotion to their nation and to
    the cause of liberty during World War I. The exhibit explores the
    formation, training, military action, and postwar activities of this
    all-volunteer force through photographs and narratives.

    ALMA will premiere the exhibit at Northbridge Town Hall (7 Main St.,
    Whitinsville Mass.) from Aug. 31 through Sept. 22. The exhibit is
    open to the public Monday 8:30 am to 7 pm; Tuesday, Wednesday and
    Thursday 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.; and Friday 8:30 a.m. to 1 p.m.

    On Monday, Sept. 14, ALMA will host a free public reception at
    Northbridge Town Hall from 5 to 7 p.m. in celebration of the exhibit
    embarking on its first nationwide tour. Following its premiere in
    Whitinsville, "Legion Armenienne" will travel to the West Coast
    in October.

    The story of the Armenian Legion reflects the community's attempts
    to come to grips with the destruction and devastation following
    the Armenian Genocide. It also represents the successful efforts of
    Armenians from different social, economic, and political backgrounds
    to work together for a common cause. The Legion encompassed a
    group of remarkable individuals--some of them officers, others of no
    special rank or distinction--who volunteered throughout the Diaspora,
    overcoming tremendous difficulties in order to serve their people and
    nation courageously, often at great personal sacrifice. Their lives
    are well worth remembering.

    Example of dedication

    One of these individuals, Hagop Arevian, provides an example of
    the dedication exhibited by the Legionnaires under extraordinary
    circumstances. Born in 1894 in a small village near Sebastia (Turkey),
    he experienced the tragedy and dislocation that have affected so many
    Armenians. His family miraculously survived the massacres ordered
    by Sultan Abdul Hamid in 1894-1896, and moved to the capital of
    Constantinople (Istanbul), where Hagop's father, Nazareth, obtained
    work as a port supervisor. However Nazareth was soon arrested and
    imprisoned by Ottoman officials on charges of illegal political
    activism. Despite repeated appeals to the authorities, even to the
    Sultan himself, Nazareth remained in prison and ultimately died there.

    Hagop received his education in Mekhitarist schools in the capital, and
    in 1914 he went to Alexandria, Egypt, to join his older brother. With
    the outbreak of World War I, he resolved to fight for the Allies and he
    went to Marseilles, France, to volunteer for the French Foreign Legion.

    After training in Algeria, he joined the French Army in France. On
    leave in Paris, he met Boghos Nubar Pasha and learned of the plans
    to form the Armenian Legion to fight with the French/British forces
    in the Middle East; as part of the plan the Armenians were promised
    autonomy in the regions of Cilicia, southern Turkey, which had been
    allocated to France, according to World War I secret agreements
    between the Allies (France, England, and Russia).

    Arevian, now a corporal first class, returned to the battlefield in
    France and was seriously wounded at Vitry-le-Francois. Receiving the
    valued Croix de Guerre, he was detached from the Foreign Legion in 1917
    and assigned to the Armenian Legion, which was then training in Cyprus.

    After helping to train the Armenian volunteers in Cyprus, Arevian
    joined the Legion as it marched to Palestine to join in the campaign
    being waged by British General Edmund Allenby. As a member of the Fifth
    Battalion, Arevian participated in the Legion's victory at the Battle
    of Arara (near Rafat, Palestine) against a combined Turkish/German
    Army commanded by Mustapha Kemal (later Ataturk). The victory marked
    the collapse of the Turkish/German forces and culminated in the end
    of the war in November 1918.

    Marching north with General Allenby's forces, Arevian joined
    other Legionnaires in rescuing Armenian women and children who had
    survived the death marches of the Genocide. The Armenian Legion was
    now assigned as the advanced guard to occupy Cilicia. Lt. Col. Louis
    Romieu, commander of the Legion, granted Arevian's request for his
    section to have the honor of being the first to land in Cilicia,
    at the port of Mersin. Arevian was subsequently stationed in Adana,
    the center of the French occupation in Cilicia, where he served for
    the following two years.

    By 1920 the political landscape had shifted drastically. France
    turned Cilicia over to the Turkish nationalists, thus abandoning
    thousands of Armenians who had returned to their homes under the
    promise of French occupation and protection. France quietly disbanded
    the Armenian Legion, and Arevian (now a citizen of France) returned
    to Egypt, where he married and established a family and a successful
    business. He died in Paris in 1965.

    Enthusiastic response

    In recognition of the importance of remembering the Legionnaires
    and their devotion to their nation and to the cause of liberty,
    the Armenian Library and Museum of America prepared a major exhibit
    in 2001. The exhibit was curated by Ardemis Matteosian in close
    collaboration with ALMA Board Members Dr. Barbara J. Merguerian and
    Arakel Almasian. The enthusiastic response to the exhibit revealed
    a tremendous interest in this overlooked and in many ways unwritten
    story.

    In response to requests to bring the exhibit to other locations in
    the United States and as part of its goal of a broader community
    outreach, ALMA commissioned this traveling exhibit, incorporating
    the community spirit of the original into an informative historic,
    literary, and artistic presentation.

    The traveling exhibit was made possible by a grant from K. George
    and Carolann S. Najarian, M.D. Foundation with additional support
    provided by The Armenian-American Veterans of Milford, Mass., Inc.
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