Monument to the Moroccan Division - Vimy
On the 107 hectares of the Vimy Ridge National Historic Site of Canada, near the grandiose memorial to the 66,000 Canadian soldiers who lost their lives in the Great War, stands a more modest monument which is dedicated 'to the memory […] of the officers, non-commissioned officers and soldiers of the Moroccan Division who in glory fell' in May 1915.
Before the Canadian Corps finally removed the German Army from Vimy, in April 1917, another company of soldiers had already succeeded in reaching the ridge but was unable to hold its position for want of reinforcements and sufficient artillery support. These brave infantrymen were Zouaves, in their red fezzes and baggy trousers, and volunteers from fifty-two countries enrolled in the Foreign Legion who fought under the standard of the Moroccan Division.
On the morning of 9 May 1915 the Zouaves broke through the German lines, crossed Folie Wood and started the climb to Vimy Ridge. In order to follow the Moroccan Division's movements and range their artillery, the French Army had white squares sewn on to the infantrymen's backs but this also made them easy targets for the Germans positioned on their flank. To make matters worse, the artillery started running out of ammunition and the expected reinforcements did not arrive. The order to retreat was delivered as darkness fell and the Moroccan soldiers had to abandon the ground they had conquered at such great cost.
To the men of the Moroccan Division who died on Vimy Ridge.
In all 820,000 men were mobilized in the French colonies and protectorates during the First World War, including 636,000 who were sent to France as soldiers or unskilled workers. The 449,000 men who enlisted as soldiers came from Algeria (150,000), sub-Saharan Africa (135,000), Indo-China (43,000) Tunisia (39,000) and Morocco (34,000).
Seventy thousand of these men lost their lives on French soil.
Some commemorative plaques on the memorial pay tribute to soldiers from Greece, Sudan and Czechoslovakia who also fought in the French Army.
Practical information
Map:
Find out about access, tourist offices and a selection of quality accommodation and restaurants around the site.
Contact details
Address: Chemins des Canadiens - 62580 VIMY
Contact: OFFICE DE TOURISME ET DU PATRIMOINE DE LENS-LIÉVIN
Call: +33 (0)3 21 67 66 66
Website: www.tourisme-lenslievin.fr

























































































































































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