Browse Exhibits (2 total)

Armenian Quest for Independence

Word Map Armenia.jpg

Maps....Money......Mandates

The story of Armenia in Paris 1919 can be summed up by the three words, Maps, Money and Mandates. The redefining of the maps of the world, the price of victory and the cost of losing and the concept that the big four USA, Britain, France and Italy should be given a mandate to rule new, emerging or strategic nations.

In this exhibit the three "m's" will tell the story of Armenia.

The heart wrenching claim the Armenian delegates make to the conference detailing the horror of the Armenian Genocide. The promise of self-determination and dream of a homeland scuttled by the unwillingness of the Americans to back the rhetoric of their President with the price they needed to pay to deliver safety and security to a shattered people.

The maps upon maps upon maps, the claim from Armenia, the counter claim by the USA, the history of the map of Armenia. The map with the most heartbreaking key, the story of the Near East Relief map and the multitude of red stars showing where the orphanages are located.

The Korean Independence Movement

Syngman Rhee.jpg

The quest for Korean Independence was the embodiment of the ideals that President Woodrow Wilson sought to promoted at the Paris Peace Conference in 1919, but this sovereignty plea was ahead of its time and met with resistance on all fronts by the bigger nations at Paris.

I find this quote comes closest to expressing Korea’s struggle against Japan and the other big nations; “when they seek to oppress you and destroy you; rise and rise again and again like The Phoenix from the ashes; until the lambs have become lions and the rule of Darkness is no more.” (1)  

In this exhibit you can experience this journey and the diplomats, protestors and entrepreneurs that argued, fought and financed this independence movement from around the world. From rejection at the foot of the Versailles Palace in Paris to the brutal suppression of passionate non-violent protestors on the streets of Seoul, Korea. From the establishment of the first provisional government of the Republic of Korea in the conference halls of Shanghai to the first Korean Congress in the churches of Philadelphia.

These men and women laid the foundations for their country’s future, with their blood, sweat and tears and paid for it with every single penny they owned, rising and rising again until Korea was set free and Japan’s influence was banished from its country.