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'Legion Armenienne' Exhibit Opening At French Cultural Center On Apr

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  • 'Legion Armenienne' Exhibit Opening At French Cultural Center On Apr

    'LEGION ARMENIENNE' EXHIBIT OPENING AT FRENCH CULTURAL CENTER ON APRIL 4

    http://www.mirrorspectator.com/2013/03/20/legion-armenienne-exhibit-opening-at-french-cultural-center-on-april-4/
    BOSTON | MARCH 20, 2013 5:14 PM

    BOSTON - The French Cultural Center in Boston will host a public
    reception on April 4 from 6:30 to 8:30 p.m. to mark the official
    opening of an exhibit about the Armenian Legion in World War I.

    Developed by the Armenian Library and Museum of America (ALMA) in
    Watertown, this traveling exhibit offers a glimpse into the formation,
    training, military action and postwar activities of the Armenian Legion
    volunteers, who fought with the Allies to victory in the Middle East
    during the Great War, and risked all in defense of human rights.

    The story of the Armenian Legion forms a chapter in the long history
    of relations between the French and Armenian peoples. The Legion
    was formed during the darkest days of WWI, when the Allies (France,
    England and Russia) were deadlocked in a military stalemate on both
    the European and Middle Eastern fronts against the combined forces
    of Germany, Austria and Turkey. Leaders of the Armenian Diaspora
    determined to raise a volunteer fighting force to support the Allies.

    In October 1916, an agreement was reached in London between the
    Armenian representative Boghos Nubar Pasha and the governments
    of France and Great Britain to form an Armenian Legion, made up
    of volunteers who were to be organized, trained and led by French
    officers.

    Consisting of a force of more than 4,000 Armenians from all parts of
    the world, the Legionnaires were trained in Cyprus and then joined
    the Allied forces on the Palestine front, under the overall command
    of the British General Edmund Allenby. Allenby's brilliant military
    strategy soon forced Turkey to withdraw from the war. The Armenian
    Legion served as the advance guard as the Allied forces moved into
    the Cilician region of Turkey, occupying Adana, Aintab, Marash and
    Urfa, and other centers. Political conditions following the Great War
    impelled the Allies to withdraw their forces from Turkish territory
    and the Legion was disbanded.

    The story of the Armenian Legion, told in this exhibit through
    photographs and narratives, 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.

    ALMA's traveling exhibit about the Armenian Legion has been exhibited
    in several venues, from California State University, Fresno, to the
    University of Michigan-Dearborn and Whitinsville (MA) Town Hall.

    The opening is free and open to the public. The exhibit will be on
    display from April 3 through May 1. The French Cultural Center is
    located at 53 Marlborough St. For times and further details, visit
    http://www.frenchculturalcenter.org/.

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