Monument to Léon Trulin - Lille
As you walk past the opera-house you cannot help but notice the life-size statue of a young man with the collar of his jacket turned up. This is Lille's memorial to the 'glorious teenager' whose name can be seen on the street sign nearby: Léon Trulin.
Born in Ath in Belgium in 1897, Léon Trulin came to Lille with his family after the death of his father and went to work in a factory to help his mother bring up his brothers and sisters. And then war broke out.
In June 1915, with Lille and much of Belgium occupied by the Germans, Léon Trulin went to England to join the Belgian Army in exile only to be turned away because of his diminutive stature; however the British Army proposed that he collect information on the occupied zone. He set up an organization which he called 'Noel Lurtin', an anagram of his name, to which he recruited his teenage friends, some of whom were still children: Marcel Gotti was fifteen, Marcel Lemaire and Marcel Denèque were barely seventeen and the oldest – Raymond Derain, André Herman, Lucien Dewalf – were only eighteen, like their leader. Together they sent reports, photos and plans back to Britain.
Léon Trulin and his band of 'glorious' teenagers
Arrested near Antwerp and sent to Lille, Trulin, Derain and Gotti were sentenced to death on 5 November 1915. His two colleagues saw their sentences reduced however Trulin was executed in the ditch before the Citadel three days later.
Léon Trulin occupies a prominent position in Lille's memorial to the men of the Resistance. The monument stands on the very spot where he was executed in the defensive ditch of the Citadel. His grave in Lille East Cemetery is marked by a statue of him awaiting execution, his back to the wall. The monument to the Lille Resistance in Daubenton Square shows him lying on the ground next to members of the Jacquet Network.
Another statue was erected in his honour in 1934 on avenue du Peuple Belge before being moved to its current location on the street which now bears his name. The plinth of the statue bears an inscription taken from his final letter to his mother, 'I forgive everyone, friend and foe. I show them mercy because of the mercy they have not shown me'.
Practical information
Map:
Find out about access, tourist offices and a selection of quality accommodation and restaurants around the site.
Contact details
Address: Rue Léon Trulin - 59000 LILLE
Contact: OFFICE DE TOURISME DE LILLE
Call: 08 91 56 20 04 - +33 (0)3 59 57 94 00
Website: www.lilletourism.com

























































































































































Print
Share
Bookmark






