WWI exhibit examines role of Asian, African troops

Written by Writer on Tuesday, November 11th, 2008

WWI exhibit examines role of Asian,

11-NOV-2008 | AP
Nov 11, 2008 - 7:00:00 AM

After the guns of World War I fell silent, a young Vietnamese petitioned the leaders of the at the 1919 to support independence for his country.

The appeal went unheeded, and ended up leading the movement that decades later liberated Vietnam from .

There’s a connection, and it’s evident at a Belgian exhibition that coincides with Tuesday’s 90th anniversary of the end of World War I.

More than a million soldiers from Europe’s African and Asian colonies answered the , yet they were largely forgotten afterward, and promises of freedom were not fulfilled. The betrayal laid the foundations of the that ultimately brought an end to the .

“Man, Culture and War,” an exhibit at Brussels’ Museum, seeks to set the record straight about the contribution of during the 1914-1918 conflict that became known as the Great War.

The fought alongside France, Britain, the US, Belgium, Canada, Australia and others on the Western Front. They accounted for more than 100,000 of the almost 4 million killed on that front, but their sacrifice was long overlooked by the history books and the governments that sent them into battle.

“Asian and African units played an immensely important role on the throughout the war,” said Piet Chielens, head of the In Museum in the town of . “But very quickly after the war their contribution was reduced to a footnote in history.”

“The worldwide surge of which came after had its origins in the disappointments and humiliations suffered by during and after the Great War,” he said.

The soldiers-all volunteers since there was no in the colonies0were lured in part by promises of greater freedom for their homelands in Africa, Southeast Asia and the Indian subcontinent. But after returning home they saw the promises being broken, and the resentment fed their liberation movements.

The British apparently foresaw the problem. They were reluctant to arm and train black lest they turn their know-how against their colonial masters once they received home, according to the exhibition captions.

They were used instead as auxiliaries along with tens of thousands of Chinese labourers for digging trenches and clearing unexploded ordnance.

The French had no such qualms. They armed 140 battalions from West Africa and Madagascar and sent them into the carnage of trench warfare. Whole divisions of North Africans0mainly Moroccan, Algerians, and Tunisians-also took part in the fighting. More than 35,000 of them were killed.

Germany used local troops in its African colonies, but could not bring them to Europe because sea lanes were blocked.

were mobilised again by France and Britain in .

North African units in France’s World War I army, such as Zouave infantrymen or Spahi cavalrymen, gained fame for their battlefield courage and for the splendour of their colourful uniforms. Although most of the rank and file were Arabs, the units included European settlers and North African Jews who rallied to the French cause.

The exhibit also details the discrimination the colonial soldiers suffered.

In the British and Belgian armies, non-Europeans could rise no higher than sergeant. Only the French allowed them to become officers-captains at best. The troops were inadequately trained and equipped, and discipline was harsh.

“Care should be taken to prevent all familiarity between Europeans and Natives as it is subversive of discipline and impairs their efficiency,” reads an order by the British commander of a South African labour battalion, which is part of the exhibit.

Solomon Plaatje, a South African writer, witnessed the treatment of his fellow blacks in the ranks. Plaatje, who also tried unsuccessfully to address the , became one of the founders of the African National Congress which in the 1990s ended apartheid rule in his homeland.

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