When the WWI ended, a mountain in Canada was named Putnik, after the Serbian Duke Radomir Putnik. Canadians wanted to pay tribute to the allied Serbian fighters who suffered great losses in the WWI and under Putnik’s command inflicted the first defeat on the Central Powers.
Faraway in Canada’s Rocky Mountains, in the Kananaskis mountain range, among the few mountains with names that are hard to remember, there is one name that rings a bell with every citizen of Serbia. Putnik. It was named, neither more nor less but after the Serbian Duke, Radomir Putnik.
Canadians named it that in 1918, after the horrible war that raged on around the world for the whole four years and in which Serbians were allies. In appreciation of the sacrifices of Chief of the General Staff of the Serbian army who in the Battle of Cer inflicted the first defeat on Central Powers in WWI, they dedicated a piece of their land to him.
The Duke knew how to win against an overwhelmingly strong enemy, but when he was losing, he was losing in a way that left the honor of Serbia intact. After the Tripartite invasion of Central Powers on Serbia, at the end of 1915, instead of a humiliating separate peace, he ordered a retreat of the Serbian army towards Kosovo and Albanian seaside across the Albanian mountains. This event is known as the Serbian army’s retreat through Albania, or “Albanian Golgotha”, for numerous losses that the Serbian army suffered. It is estimated that from the beginning of the retreat 72,000 lives were lost.
A hundred years after the WWI ended, Ravna Gora Serbian Heritage Society from Calgary, the biggest city of Canadian province Alberta (to which mountain Putnik belongs) and the group of people from Edmonton, immortalized the Putnik mountain by unveiling and consecrating the memorial plaque on which are carved the following words in English:
“Mount Putnik is named in perpetual remembrance of the men and women of the allied armed forces in Serbia and their leader Field Marshal Radomir Putnik (1847-1917). Serbia lost a quarter of its population, both army and civilian, during WWI (1914-1918). This sacrifice was part of Canadian and Allied efforts in Europe against three empires to protect the rights and freedoms of humankind.”
Mountain range Kananaskis is an extremely popular tourist attraction of Canada. Ergo, Canadian Serbs are very proud to have something “of their own” on this side of the globe. Even though they are thousands of miles away, Serbians residing in Serbia may never see the mount Putnik, but they are still extremely proud as well.