ArmInfo. French Ambassador to Armenia Olivier Decottignies has posted the following message on his X account:
"The names of Raphael Lemkin and French Admiral Louis Dartige du Fournet will soon be added to the Memorial Wall located at the Armenian Genocide Memorial Complex. This was announced by the Director of the Armenian Genocide Museum-Institute, Edita Gzoyan. The Memorial Wall honors individuals who have spoken out about the Armenian Genocide. Among the names already inscribed are Fridtjof Nansen, Anatole France, Henry Morgenthau, and others. Raphael Lemkin is one of the founders of genocide studies, the author of the term "genocide," and one of the initiators of the UN Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide. His name will be added to the Memorial Wall on June 24, his birthday. Louis Dartige du Fournet organized the evacuation of about 4,000 Armenians during the heroic self-defense of Musa Dagh, saving their lives."
Director of the Armenian Genocide Museum-Institute (AGMI) Edita Gzoyan reported on April 21 that two new names will appear on the wall of memory in the Tsitserankaberd memorial complex to the victims of the Armenian Genocide: genocide scholar Raphael Lemkin and French general Louis Dartige du Fournet.
In the fall of 1915, Louis Dartige du Fournet gave an unauthorized order to evacuate more than 4,000 Armenian men, women, and children. If not for du Fournet's courage, these people would have perished in the foothills of Musa Dagh in the southeast of modern-day Turkey. This story began in the summer of 1915, when most residents of six Armenian villages refused to join the columns of Armenians who were to be deported by order of the Turkish authorities. The few who did decide to obey were sent on a death march. Almost all of them died on the way, never reaching the Syrian desert. The remaining villagers - about 5,000 people left their homes and took refuge in the foothills of Musa Dagh (Mount Moses or Jebel Musa). There they organized a militia and courageously fought off Turkish attacks for more than fifty days. Among the Armenians, there were only 600 fighters.
On September 5, when the Musa Dagh people had been fighting for a month, the crew of the French warship Guichen saw their signals. One of the militia members, Pierre Dimlakian, reached the cruiser, boarded it and directly addressed the French commander asking for help. He promised to do everything possible.
According to the diary entry of Louis du Fournet, on September 6, 1915, the vice admiral received a telegram describing the situation and changed the ship's course. The next day, the flagship Saint Jeanne d'Arc approached the shore to conduct reconnaissance. This time, one of the militia leaders, Tigran Andreasian, boarded it. He asked to take away at least those who were not participating in the fighting: women, children and the elderly. He was again assured that the French fleet would come to the aid of the Armenians.
"I realized that it was our duty to help these unfortunates," du Fournet wrote in his diary. He sent an urgent telegram, but feared that the slow bureaucracy of the French command could turn into a tragedy for the besieged.
Risking his career, the vice-admiral, without waiting for a response, ordered all the ships at his disposal to head for Musa Dagh and begin the evacuation immediately.
"There was no time to wait. Whatever the answer, everyone had to be evacuated," wrote du Fournet, whose words are quoted by the Aurora humanitarian initiative.