The Forgotten Arabs
January 8 marked the anniversary of the end of the Gallipoli campaign during World War I, and Al-Jazeera's English-language website has an interesting story on the forgotten Arabs fighting in Turkish ranks.
?The Arabs are not mentioned much in the history,? says Selim Meric, a member of the historical society of the town of Eceabat, located close to the old battlefields…
?It is only in diaries of the time that you find reference to them. They have been forgotten.?
Why is this interesting? First, because, as a Turkish historian points out: "With an estimated 300,000 Arabs in the Ottoman forces in 1914, a third of the total men under arms, there were far more Arabs serving in the ranks of the Ottoman army than those who followed the banners of the Arab revolt."
Indeed, thanks to David Lean and Peter O'Toole, the Arabs were long associated in popular culture almost solely with the rebellion against the Ottomans in the Arabian peninsula, when the reality was far more complex: Istanbul was until the empire's end the Middle East's Gotham, and to this day the scions of old notable Arab families can be called upon to mutter words in Turkish.
Second, because it is never pleasant to see people airbrushed out of their own history. The Arabs not only fought under often brutal constraints, they were instrumental in defending Gallipoli, and the Ottoman Empire, thanks to their role in Mustafa Kemal Ataturk's 19th Division that twice thwarted Allied attacks.
?Two thirds of the troops who made up his 19th Division that faced the first wave of the Allied invasion were Syrian Arabs, comprising the 72nd and 77th regiments of the Ottoman army,? says Turkey-based Australian writer and historian Bill Sellars.
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Forgotten, indeed.
Only 3 posts.
Don, Stephen Amborse relates the story in "D-Day" of two east Asians captured in a pillbox in Normandy. Eventually, they are discovered to be Korean. They were drafted in the Japanese Army, captured in the border skirmishes withe Russians in northern China, send to fight the Germans, captured by the Germans, and sent to fight the Americans. Koreans in German uniforms defending French territory from the Americans.
Don,
They are most famously know as the 33rd Waffen-Grenadier-Division der SS Charlemagne, though their name changed frequently during WWII.
They were not a single unit but a series of succeeding French collaborationist volunteer units that fought originally in the German Army and later the Waffen-SS (recycling the same original volunteer group into new groups, with ever decreasing numbers in each). The first unit was the LVF, or "L?gion des Voluntaires Fran?ais," followed by La Legion Tricolore, which existed for just 6 months in 1942, both units participating in antipartisan sweeps in the occupied Soviet Union (indeed, their rationale for enlistment was to fight the Soviets, being good anti-communists that they were). After this initial recruitment period, later attempts to bring in further volunteers are fruitless. By late 1943, the remaining French volunteers (less than half the initial group of volunteers)were inducted into the Waffen-SS Franz?sische SS-Freiwilligen-Grenadier-Regiment, later upgraded to an Assault brigade.
Though upgraded to divisional status in February 1945, this unit of French volunteers was rather understrength (some sources say as low as ~300, others as high as ~1,200 - given that Hitler was managing imaginary armies by this point, this should not be surprising). The "division" ended fighting against the Soviets in Poland and some of the sparse remnants of the division fought in the April 1945 Battle of Berlin. In May 1945, 30 members of the "division" surrendered to the Soviets; and another portion surrendered to the British. All of the surviving officers, and most of the NCOs were executed after the war by the French government (along with approximately ~4,000 other collaborationists, war criminals, etc.).
And while we're at it, there was a Chinaman (excuse me, Chinese-American), Pvt. Joseph Pierce, serving in the 14th Connecticut at Gettysburg, allegedly the only serving Asian in the Army of the Potomac.
The Turkish Army included everyone from Kuwaitis and Iraqis to Anatolians and Palestinians and fair-skinned, blue-eyed Circassians, just as the Austro-Hungarian army included Italians, Croats, Serbs, Albanians, Ruthenians, Bosnians and Slovenians.
Jean Bart,
I recall reading about how a native of French West Africa (who obviously didn't look a bit like Heinrich Himmler) tried to enlist in the LVF on the grounds that he was a citizen of France and staunchly anti-Bolshevik. He was politely shown the door by the Germans. Is this just a good story, or anything to it?
BTW, some of the worst atrocities committed in France in WWII were Alsations in SS uniforms; people who had only recently been French citizens. Such was the case with Oradour-sur-Glane.
URL: http://www.oradour.info/
Tom From Texas,
Though I've never heard the story, it wouldn't particularly surprise me if it were true. One can only say that what we see clearly today, was somewhat more muddy in the past.
If you want to see some footage from the air of Oradour-sur-Glane (the village was never rebuilt, but stands ruined as a memorial to those massacred there), you can watch one of the latter episodes of the "World at War."
It's interesting to note that the "Muslim Crescent" is actually a Turkish crescent, from the Ottoman Empire.
The crescent appears on the flags of many Muslim nations, including former members of the Ottoman Empire, but it is conspicuously absent on the flags of Arab nations.
"How well I remember that terrible day
When the blood stained the sand and the water
And how in that hell that they called Suvla Bay
We were butchered like lambs at the slaughter
Johnny Turk he was ready, he primed himself well
He showered us with bullets,
He rained us with shells
And in five minutes flat he'd blown us all to hell
Nearly blew us right back to Australia
But the band played Waltzing Matilda
As we stopped to bury our slain
And we buried ours and the Turks buried theirs
Then it started all over again"
Yep, no mention of the Arabs, just Turks.
Well we all know how George W only partly succeded in having 'foreign' soldiers fighting for the US in Iraq. Of course back in the Age of Empires it was much easier to have all nationalities fighting for you.
Ah... the end of an era
Jon H wrote: "The crescent appears on the flags of many Muslim nations, including former members of the Ottoman Empire, but it is conspicuously absent on the flags of Arab nations."
I think Algerians and Tunisians would be rather shocked to learn they aren't Arabs.
Likewise, a large number of the "Germans" at the Normandy beachhead were not actualy Germans but Frenchmen, Czechs, etc.
Likewise, many of the SS divisions contained non Germans. SS Charlamane, which perished defending Berlin, was a French SS division. In fact, most of the SS wasn't German. Much of the non-German SS was poor quality, but a number of the non-German units were very much first rate (like the Frogs who fought to the death in Berlin).
On the other hand, there were quite a few men in the Red Army who didn't speak Russian. Quite a few spoke only German.
But the other side tends to charcterize and catagorize based upon the uniform, and the direction in which they are shooting . . .
"I think Algerians and Tunisians would be rather shocked to learn they aren't Arabs."
Okay, then make that Arabian nations, as in 'Arabs of the Arabian Peninsula and immediate vicinity'.
The crescent is an Islamic symbol, which I think refers to the crescent moon and can be found atop many mosques. I don't think the Turkish crescent had anything to do with it, though the Turks may have made punning use of the similarity. I may be wrong about that, but I know for sure that plenty of Mosques in the Levant today have crescents, including newly built ones.
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