African, Indian, Caribbean and other colonial troops and personnel played a crucial role in supporting the Allied cause in World War Two. So much so, that Marika Sherwood wonders whether the war could have been won without their help.
By Marika Sherwood
Last updated 2011-03-30
African, Indian, Caribbean and other colonial troops and personnel played a crucial role in supporting the Allied cause in World War Two. So much so, that Marika Sherwood wonders whether the war could have been won without their help.
Troops from the British Empire fought in every theatre of war through the years of World War Two - as they had fought in a range of conflicts, on the side of Britain, for the past 150 years or so.
There were over two and a half million Indian citizens in uniform during the war. The Fifth Indian Division, for example, fought in the Sudan against the Italians, and then in Libya against the Germans. From North Africa the Division was moved to Iraq to protect the oilfields.
After this relatively easy posting, the Division was moved to the Burma front, together with eight other Indian Divisions, and then occupied Malaya. It was then moved to Java to disarm the Japanese garrison there. The men from this Division won four Victoria Crosses. In addition, Indians served in the Royal Indian Navy and in the Indian Air Force which, in recognition of it's war contribution, was granted royal status in 1945.
... Indian personnel received 4,000 awards for gallantry, and 31 VCs.
The Fourth Indian Division also fought in North Africa, Syria, Palestine, Cyprus and then in Italy. Together with the 8th and 10th Division it participated in the taking of Monte Cassino, after which it was moved to Greece. Four men of the Fourth were awarded Victoria Crosses.
Over 36,000 Indian members of the armed forces were killed or went missing in action, and 64,354 were wounded during the war. Indian personnel received 4,000 awards for gallantry, and 31 VCs. The only VC winner from elsewhere in the Empire was Corporal Sefanaia Sukanaivalu, of the Fiji Military Forces, who earned this highest of all commendations in June 1944, at Bougainville.
The story of one of the 31 recipients of the VC is that of Havildar Gaje Ghale, who, in May 1943 was in command of D platoon, 2nd battalion, 5th Royal Gurkha Rifles. Although badly wounded, he continued to lead a charge against the Japanese forces on the Tiddim Road in Burma.
The citation for his Victoria Cross stated that he had 'dominated the fight' with 'his outstanding example, doubtless courage and superb leadership...[C]overed in blood from his own wounds, he led assault after assault'.
The land of India also served as an assault and training base, and provided vast quantities of foods and other materials to British and Commonwealth forces, and to the British at home. This necessitated the involvement of more millions of men and women in war work and war production.
Britain's colonies in West Africa, Gambia, Sierra Leone, the Gold Coast (now Ghana) and Nigeria also served as staging posts and military bases during World War Two. Aircraft destined for the 'Middle East' and the North African front had to fly via West Africa ,and were serviced there.
Ships bound for India and the east, unable to use the Suez Canal, had to sail via the Cape, and were serviced and victualled at West African ports. This, of course, necessitated the employment of vast numbers in war work, for example, in building and maintaining airfields and naval bases.
For example, the US military in Accra employed 6,000 men in construction and other war work. By December 1944 some 5,000 were enlisted in the West African Air Corps as groundcrew. A very small number served as aircrew with the RAF. The war also meant increased demands for raw materials, which were sometimes produced by forced labour.
Palm oil, nuts, rubber, tin, bauxite, sisal and food stuffs were among the ever-increasing exports. Usually produced by mainly British-owned companies, these exports provided the firms with vastly increased profits, at the expense of badly housed and underfed African labour. Recruitment in both East and West Africa had begun early in the war. One East and one West African brigade participated in the re-taking of Abyssinia and one man from each was awarded the Military Medal.
In the US, black pilots and doctors who had offered to volunteer were refused ...
When the French colonies in West Africa were freed from Vichy domination, British West African troops, no longer needed in such numbers for Home Guard duties, were moved to Burma, together with some East African brigades. In all, some 166,500 Africans were involved in helping to defeat the Japanese. They, and most Indian troops, had to serve under British officers, as colonials were not thought to be 'officer material'.
Although the colour bar in the British services had been lifted for the duration of the war, in fact very few black men - or women - served in the British army, and none in the Royal Navy. With only two exceptions, even qualified black medical practitioners were refused.
Although Churchill lifted the colour bar, he sent telegrams to every Embassy and High Commission, telling them to find 'adminstrative means' to reject black volunteers. In the US, black pilots and doctors who had offered to volunteer were refused, as a result of this instruction.
Among the specialist units provided by West Africa were four Medical Units, comprising orderlies trained by the West African Army Medical Corps. They were attached to British hospitals in Sicily and Italy. South Africans were also drawn into the war. The Native Military Corps were formed in 1940. They and the 'coloureds' in the South African Army were not trained in the use of firearms.
Generally, it was not thought appropriate for Africans or people of African descent to kill whites but this view didn't apply to Indians. Troops from Bechuanaland, for example, were at first used as pioneer (labour) corps and for guard duty in North Africa and Syria. However, in 1943, six Bechuana companies were re-trained as anti-aircraft crew and stationed in North Africa and then in Sicily.
Some, re-trained for smoke-making, supported the Indian and Maori assault troops at Monte Cassino. Bechuana pioneers moved northwards through Italy with the Allied troops. Of these 10,000 Bechuana troops, 17 were killed and 42 were 'mentioned in despatches' for their bravery. One was awarded the MBE and another the British Empire Medal.
The British colonies in the West Indies were under direct threat by German submarines, who were hunting for oil tankers and bauxite carriers making their way from the Caribbean to the USA and the UK.
On the islands, the available manpower was taken up guarding the ports and POW camps, as well as providing the labour for the increased production of primary produce necessitated by the war.
Rather bizarrely, 800 forestry workers were brought from tropical British Honduras to work in the freezing highlands of Scotland.
Protests by West Indians at the lack of recruitment for service abroad, however, and the need for labour in Britain and for RAF personnel, resulted in the enlistment of men for RAF ground-duty training in 1941. West Indians were also recruited to fill certain skill shortages to aid the war effort. Rather bizarrely, 800 forestry workers were brought from tropical British Honduras to work in the freezing highlands of Scotland.
On their arrival, some discovered that they had to build their own barracks - and they all discovered that they were to be paid less than they had been promised. The period of their service was reduced, and some were repatriated before their contracts had expired. However, some remained in the UK after they had fulfilled their contracts, and found other war work.
Some 520 men came from the Caribbean colonies to work, mainly in munitions factories in the north-west. About 80 West Indian women, at first only if they were white, were recruited for the ATS.
It was probably only the lack of sufficient men with appropriate qualifications that forced the RAF to accept black colonials as aircrew. Some 300 or so West Indians served as aircrew, and some 90 men received decorations. This included seven Distinguished Service Orders, and 64 DFC's.
Probably the most decorated was Squadron Leader Ulric Cross, who was awarded both the DSO and the DFC. The citation for the latter notes his 'exceptional navigational ability' and the 'very large number of sorties' he had flown 'against heavily defended targets' in Germany.
The Caribbean Regiment wasn't recruited until 1944, when it was posted to Egypt to guard PoWs. There they were in fights with white South African troops, billeted nearby, who objected to the regiment being allowed to carry arms.
The colonies contributed more than just manpower to the army. In many colonies, the pre-war naval volunteer forces were expanded. In addition, seamen from the Empire also crewed British merchant ships.
These ships were usually the oldest, slowest ones, in which the men shovelled coal below decks at rates of pay far below that of white sailors doing the same work. Their death toll was high. Of the approximately 15,000 colonial merchant seamen who brought food and raw materials to Britain and transported war materiel to various battlefronts, 5,000 perished. Some are buried in Commonwealth War Graves as far away as Murmansk.
One could ask: without the colonial contributions, could the Allies have won the war?
The colonies also helped with funds for the Allied war effort. For example, the Bechuana (total pop. c.250,000) sent £10,400 to purchase two Spitfires for the RAF, and collected thousands of pounds for the many war charities. They also paid extra taxes, and their government sent £50,000 as a free gift to Britain.
The 25 million people of Nigeria sent a quarter of a million pounds to the war charities. This, and other such contributions, have to be seen in the context of local wages. In Nigeria, it was only two shillings (10p) per day. The West African colonies sent a total of one and a half million pounds to the charities, and their governments granted Britain £1 million in interest-free loans.
Such loans must also be seen in context. In no British colony were there sufficient numbers of schools or hospitals, for example. The total contribution of the colonial empire was £23.3 million in gifts and £10.7 million in interest-free loans, as well as £14 million low-interest loans. India also had to pay for its two and a half million citizens in uniform, as well as for the highly paid white British officers.
One could ask: without the colonial contributions, could the Allies have won the war?
Marika Sherwood is senior research fellow at the Institute of Commonwealth Studies. She is author of Kwame Nkrumah: The Years Abroad 1935-1947 (Legon, 1996), Claudia Jones: A Life in Exile (London, 2000), and Whose Freedom were African, Caribbean and Indians Defending in World War II? (London, 2000), a workpack for schools, co-authored with Martin Spafford.
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