Ike 125 Series: "Women and World War II"
to Be Presented by French Military Historian
Dominique François |
The role of women during World War II is little known, obscured by attention to the men who fought and led. But women were essential to the outcome. In the U.S. and Britain, they volunteered en masse, serving in non-combat roles. Soviet women joined front-line troops. French women helped replace men sent to Germany as forced laborers, joined the resistance, or became "horizontal collaborators" later subjected to punishment and humiliation after their country's liberation.
Women in the U.S. moved into the workforce, symbolized by Rosie the Riveter, the fictional factory laborer performing what was previously considered man's work. Thousands of women in America and other Allied countries enlisted as nurses and served on the front lines.
François will present the program both in Kansas City and Abilene. The Kansas City event opens with a reception at 6 p.m. and the program at 6:30 on Tuesday, June 23 at the Plaza Branch - Kansas City Public Library. François will speak on Wednesday, June 24 at noon for the Brown Bag Lunch program, including light hors d'oeuvres, at the Eisenhower Presidential Library Visitors Center Auditorium.
François returns to the Eisenhower Presidential Library where many will remember his 2014 program, "Normandy: Before and After D-Day." In his Ike 125 lecture, he will examine the roles of women--the true unknown soldiers of World War II. He will also discuss how the Allied armies probably would not have won the war without women's participation and unconditional support.
François, a resident of Basse-Normandie, France, has concentrated his study of World War II on D-Day and the subsequent Normandy military campaign. He has written 16 books and served as a consultant for NBC, the History Channel and Inertia Films.
Ike 125 is made possible by the generous support of the W.T. Kemper Foundation - Commerce Bank, Trustee. From frontier to frontier, the Ike 125 series examines the legacy of the greatest soldier-statesman of the 20th century - from his unquestionably brilliant wartime command to two terms as U.S. President that are viewed with increasing favor by historians and political scientists. It was a time of momentous change, bringing historic civil rights legislation, the Interstate Highway System, space exploration, and a prudent foreign policy that gave the country eight years of peace and prosperity. The series lends fresh analysis and new views of the plain-spoken Kansan who became a model of leadership.
Future programs in the six-month series will be held Aug. 4-5, Sept. 17-18, and Oct. 13-14.
Additional details of the Ike 125 series may be found on www.eisenhower.archives.gov or www.kclibrary.org/events/eisenhower125.
The Eisenhower Presidential Library, Museum and Boyhood Home, a nonpartisan federal institution, is part of the Presidential Libraries network operated by the National Archives and Records Administration. Presidential Libraries promote understanding of the presidency and the American experience. We preserve and provide access to historical materials, support research, and create interactive programs and exhibits that educate and inspire.
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