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All continents on the western front |
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By Khaled Diab It is time European countries acknowledged the part soldiers from
their former colonies played in the First World War. |
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January
2009
Ninety
years ago, on the eleventh hour of the eleventh day of the eleventh month,
the Great War that was supposed to end all wars finally ended, leaving some 20
million dead and another 20 million wounded. The horrendousness of the
conflict is well summed up by Wilfred Owen in Anthem for doomed youth. Rightly,
the memory of the ‘lost generation’ who perished so pointlessly should be
kept alive. Sadly, amid the carnage, a proverbial army has gone missing in
action from the theatre of history, unrecognised and unmourned
in the official narrative. It is
estimated that well over 600,000 soldiers from British and French colonies
fought on the Western Front: 270,000 from the Maghreb
in North Africa, 153,000 from the Indian subcontinent and 134,000 from Add to
that, the smaller numbers from more than 50 different cultures who landed in
Flanders Fields, even from such unexpected provenances as American Indians, the
Inuit of Canada, the Maori of New Zealand and a smattering of Aborigines from
Australia, even though they were not officially allowed to serve. That’s not
to mention the enormous and shockingly treated Chinese Labour Corp. Of
course, we should not overlook the fact that the forces of the Central Powers
were also hardly homogenous: Slavs, Danes, Francophones,
Arabs, Kurds, Albanians, Jews and even Armenians who were simultaneously
being butchered. Despite
the fascinating multiethnic and multicultural reality of the trenches, it is
still conventional wisdom that the First World War was largely a European war
fought by Europeans, with the aid of their western allies. “This
Eurocentric view of writing the history of the two world wars has excluded...
colonised peoples as major participants,” writes Driss Maghraoui of the A recent exhibition at Looking
at some of the photos from the time, it seems almost surreal to see Sikhs
sitting cross-legged praying in a wet and sodden field, kefiya-clad
Algerian Spehis mounted on white steeds marching
alongside an old industrial canal, or drinking tea on the ground outside a
converted stable with Arabic script on the doors. The scenes are certainly
outlandish to our eyes, but how depressing and alien must it have felt for
the poor fellows who had to endure it? In
addition to the alien surroundings and hardships, soldiers from the colonies
often had to endure massive prejudice. They were largely recruited from
so-called ‘martial races’
– ethnicities believed to be warrior-like but lacking in intelligence and
civilisation. Top of the heap, in British eyes at least, were the Sikhs. In
justifying his attempts to assemble an “armée
noire”, the French general Charles Mangin, claimed that: “Africans are primitive and
belligerent… they are exceptionally suited to becoming storm troopers at the
front.” The
upshot of these racist theories was that colonial soldiers, especially black
Africans, often provoked fear and mistrust among local populations, and this
was not helped by bloodthirsty caricatures in the media. The
Germans took full advantage of this angst in their fear-mongering propaganda,
but it backfired when some of their own fighters started to flee their
positions when they heard that African soldiers were approaching. Some saw
through this prejudice and propaganda. A Belgian military doctor, Maurice Duwez described, in There was
also resistance on racial grounds, with critics fearing that the mixing of
races on the battlefield could lead to the weakening and even downfall of
western civilisation. These concerns eventually led, in the latter years of
the war, to Then
there was the fear that fighting shoulder to shoulder with their colonial
masters might give ‘subject races’ ideas above their station, and lead them
to revolt against colonial rule. In fact, many colonial soldiers regarded
serving in the army as a good start on their own quest for independence and
national development. Blaise Diagne, the first
black parliamentarian in War-ravaged
as Chanda
Singh, a Sikh lance dafadar, wrote to his wife: “Here,
it is truly a free land… A man and a woman can go outside arm in arm and no
one will say anything.” Some of
Singh and Lal’s words have survived. But little
record remains of the thoughts and lives of other colonial soldiers, who were
conveniently whitewashed out of European history and did not fit comfortably
into the post-independence narrative of their native lands. Nine decades on,
it is time for A
shorter version of this column appeared in The Guardian Unlimited’s Comment is Free section
on 11 November 2008. Read the related
discussion. ãCopyright 2009 – Khaled Diab.
Unless otherwise stated, all the content on this website is the copyright of Khaled Diab. |