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Synopsis

 

World War One started with the Austro-Hungarians attacking Serbia. After a heroic defense of their homeland for over one year, the Serbian Army, faced with a triple assault by the Austro-Hungarians, the Germans, and the Bulgarians, opted not to surrender to the enemy but tor retreat from Serbia via Albania to the Adriatic Coast, a tragic route known to Serbs as the “Albanian Golgotha.” Over 400,000 thousand Serbs, military and civilian, together with 23,000 Austrian prisoners of war, started the journey. By the time the Serbs reached the Albanian coast, and the Allies made the decision to relocate them to Corfu in still-neutral Greece, that number was down to about 170,000. For a time, a mini-Serbia arose in Corfu as the Serbian Army licked its wounds in a friendly atmosphere, and with the Greeks and other Allied armies, geared up for a revenge attack on the Central Powers on the Salonika Front. This is their story.

 
 
 
 
 
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The Greek Community of Melbourne is registered as a charity with the Australian Charities and Non-Profits Commission ABN 14004258360