Support Medallica!
What is Medallica?
This is the website about awards and history that you could learn through the path of medals and orders. The website and collection are the pure enthusiasm of a single person, and they exist solely on savings and earnings.
What is the plan?
Every soldier must believe in becoming a general one day. Medallica hopes that, eventually, from the humble personal collection, it will transform into a museum.
How to support?
Alongside your contribution in the form of a subscription to the newsletter and demonstrating your interest in what is happening here, you have another option.
You can subscribe to a regular donation to Medallica or make a one-time contribution.
What will you receive?
Every person who funds the project up to 100€ will be included in our online memorial book forever, listed under the name or nickname they choose. You can remain incognito, unmentioned or withdraw if you want to keep your privacy.
Every person who funds the project over time with a higher amount will remain in our memory book. On the day when the project transforms into a moving exhibition or a stationary museum, people who contribute more than € 100 will be included in a physical memorial, listed under the name or nickname they choose. Admission to the exhibition is free. You can remain incognito, or unmentioned, if you want to keep your privacy. However, withdrawing from the physical memorial would be problematic, so Medallica can’t really guarantee it.
Where will the funds go?
As fast as Medallica has enough orders and medals, it will soon become a museum. Funding will primarily support the purchase of awards, guarantee storage facilities, and cover some marginal expenses for web hosting and domain registration for the project.
Is it morally right to buy someone’s medals?
As long as someone decides to refuse their or their relatives’ awards, and if that could be called reasonable, there is someone who desires to have them. Regardless of the reasons people sold their medals, collectors are motivated by their respect, historical interest, and the desire to enhance their collection experience.
There is a story behind every award and a real person who lived, or perhaps still lives. There are historical events and lessons of history that we must remember. Respecting our past is the best moral that we can have to sustain our future. After all, we are only temporary tenants of the lands that we lend from our future generations.