Remembering the Veterans
Today is Veterans Day. If you know a bit about the history of Veterans Day, you may know that its purpose is to raise awareness of the past and continuing contributions of those who have served in the Armed Forces. Veterans Day originally came from Armistice Day, which was the signing of the Versailles Treaty by the Central Powers (including Germany, Austria-Hungary, and Ottoman Turkey) and the Entente Powers (including Britain, France, the U.S. and Russia), which took place on the 11th day of the 11th month in 1918. This Veterans Day marks the 90th anniversary of the end of World War I.
In my quest to find out what the Slovaks’ role was in World War I, I’ve come across some pretty interesting information about the story of the “Czecho-Slovak” army. Though it seems there were no major battles fought on present day Czech and Slovak lands, the contributions of its many soldiers is important, not only in determining the outcome of the war but also in laying the groundwork for the recognition of Czechoslovakia as an independent country at the end of the war in 1918.
Many people—including a lot of Americans—don’t know that Czechoslovakia has ceased to exist. Since most adults learn their basic geography in elementary school and have had little reason to revisit geography lessons after that, for my fellow Americans I would say most have a vague idea that there is a country called Czechoslovakia but don’t know how it relates to the Czech and Slovak Republics.
These last few years there’s been a lot of chatter about the film Bathory, the story of 