By Martin Plaut
BBC Africa analyst:-
BBC Africa analyst:-
The 70th anniversary of World War II is being commemorated around
the world, but the contribution of one group of soldiers is almost
universally ignored. How many now recall the role of more than one
million African troops?
Yet they fought in the deserts of
North Africa, the jungles of Burma and over the skies of Germany. A
shrinking band of veterans, many now living in poverty, bitterly resent
being written out of history.
For Africa, World War II began not in 1939, but in 1935.
Italian Fascist troops, backed by thousands of Eritrean colonial forces, invaded Ethiopia.
Emperor
Haile Selassie was forced to flee to the UK, but others, known as
Patriots,
fought on. Among them was Jagama Kello. Fifteen years old at
the time, he left home and raised a guerrilla force that struck at the
Italian invaders.I greeted Gandhi with a military salute and asked him: 'What are you going to do for Africa now that India is going to be free?'
Marshal Kebby
Nigerian soldier
Mein Kampf
Other Africans learnt what Fascism could mean
for them. Among them was John Henry Smythe of Sierra Leone. His teacher
gave him Adolf Hitler's book, Mein Kampf.
"We read what this man
was going to do to the blacks if he gets into power. And he attacked
the British and Americans for encouraging the blacks to become doctors
and lawyers," Mr Smythe said.
John Henry Smythe, left, read Hitler's Mein Kampf before joining the RAF |
"It was a book which would put any black man's back up and it put mine up."
He volunteered to join the Royal Air Force, becoming a navigator, flying bombers over Germany. Others took a similar view.
Joe Culverwell, who went on to fight for the liberation of Zimbabwe, volunteered the day war was declared in 1939.
"Don't
forget in those days we were very loyal Brits - stupid as that may
sound now," Mr Culverwell says. "We were brainwashed into being little
brown Britishers."
Others were conscripted. They were picked up when they went to visit a local market or on the orders of a local chief.
And
many found that once they enlisted they were badly treated. The reality
of military life for African soldiers like Nigerian Marshall Kebby was
very different from the propaganda.
"As a colonial soldier I had
very rough treatment. At that time we hadn't even a single Nigerian
officer, all were British. And many of us revolted against injustice,
what I might call man's inhumanity to man."
'Hell'
But
once the fighting began there was little time for protest. For men like
Mr Culverwell, serving in Somalia, being bombed by the Italians was a
terrifying experience.
We, the ex-servicemen, gave this country the freedom it's enjoying today.
Marshall Kebby
|
"Boy that was hell. We all had foxholes. I never felt so frightened
in my life. They were bombing 100 yards away. We daren't even look up,
you see."
Mr Smythe took part in air-raids over enemy territory.
But
on the night of 18 November 1943 his plane was shot down over the
German city of Mannheim. He spent 18 months in a prisoner of war camp,
where the Germans tried to extract intelligence from him.
"You must use some special instruments to navigate your way here," his interrogator told Mr Smythe.
"He
said: 'I want you to co-operate to get you out of this place.' I said:
'I will give you my name and number'. He started to scream at me; became
a real Nazi officer.
"He said: 'You know they are talking about
whether to execute you tomorrow or not. Because you, as a black man,
should not involve in white man's war.'"
Meeting Gandhi
On the other side of the world, Mr Kebby was meeting Indians.
Among
them was the leader of India's independence movement, Mahatma Gandhi,
who was addressing a crowd of one million people in Madras. Mr Kebby
worked his way to the front.
"It was one of the greatest things I
did as a soldier. I greeted Gandhi with a military salute and asked
him: 'What are you going to do for Africa now that India is going to be
free?'
"He said: 'India will not do anything for you. But India
will give you moral support on condition you fight the British
non-violently'."
By 1945 the war was over, African troops had helped the allied powers defeat Germany, Italy and Japan.
Mr Culverwell remembers talking to other black soldiers he met about what would happen to them now.
"We
used to have long chats about the colour problem and we were determined
that we were not going to be treated that way any more."
Freedom fighters
But for most Africans independence was still 15 years away.
In the meantime, the veterans had to get home and find a job.
Many found little gratitude for their years of service and no work.
In February 1948 veterans from Ghana, among them Kalimu Glover went to petition the governor.
But instead of receiving them, police opened fire. It sparked off an outpouring of anger on the streets of Accra.
"After
the shooting, we said we should damage all British things in the city.
We got stones, sticks to break down shops. We broke them all down. Those
were wonderful days: February 1948, Saturday to Sunday."
Mr Kebby is convinced that he and others like him helped end colonial rule.
"Every
soldier who went to India got new ideas and learnt new things. We came
back with improved ideas about life. We, the ex-servicemen, gave this
country the freedom it's enjoying today. We gave this freedom and handed
it over to our country."
Source: BBC