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This is a study of the African veterans of a European war. It is a
story of men from the Cote d'Ivoire, many of whom had seldom
traveled more than a few miles from their villages, who served
France as tirailleurs (riflemen) during World War II.
Thousands of them took part in the doomed attempt to hold back the
armies of the Third Reich in 1940; many were to spend the rest of
the war as prisoners in Germany or Occupied France.
Others more fortunate came under the authority of Vichy France, and
were deployed in the Defense of the Motherland and its overseas
possessions against the threat posed by the Allies. By 1943, the
tirailleur regiments had passed into the service of de Gaulle's
free French and under Allied command, played a significant role in
the liberation of Europe.
In describing these complex events, Dr. Lawler draws upon archives
in both France and the Cote d'Ivoire. She also carried out an
extensive series of interviews with Ivoirien veterans principally,
but not exclusively, from the Korhogo region. The vividness of
their testimony gives this study a special character. They talk
freely not only of their wartime exploits, but also of their
experiences after repatriation.
Lawler allows them to speak for themselves. They express their
hatred of forced labor and military conscription, which were
features of the colonial system, yet at the same time reveal a
pride in having come to the defense of France. They describe their
role in the nationalist struggle, as foot soldiers of Felix
Houphouet-Boigny, but also convey their sense of having become a
lost generation. They recognize that their experiences as French
soldiers had become sadly irrelevant in a new nation in quest of
its history.
The fall of France in June 1940 left the Gold Coast surrounded by
potentially hostile French colonies that had rejected de Gaulle's
call to continue the fight, signaling instead their support for
Marshall Petain's pro-German Vichy regime. In Soldiers, Airmen,
Spies, and Whisperers, Nancy Lawler describes how the Gold Coast
Regiment, denuded of battalions fighting in East Africa, was
rapidly expanded at home to meet the threat of invasion. Professor
Lawler also shows how the small airport at Takoradi was converted
into a major Royal Air Force base and came to play a vital role in
the supply of aircraft to the British Eighth Army in North Africa.
The importance of the Gold Coast to the Allied war effort
necessitated the creation of elaborate propaganda and espionage
networks, the activities of which ranged from rumor-mongering to
smuggling and sabotage. The London-based Special Operations
Executive moved into West Africa, where it worked closely with de
Gaulle's Free French Intelligence. Lawler presents a vivid account
of SOE's major triumph-masterminding the migration of a substantial
part of the Gyaman people from Vichy Cote d'Ivoire to the Gold
Coast. As she looks at the plethora of military and civil
organizations involved in the war, Lawler throws light on decision
making in Brazzaville, London, and Washington. This is an account
of World War II in one colony, but the story is firmly set within
the wider context of a world at war.
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