World War I in Africa

What happened in Africa should not stay in Africa.
Reblogged from katebomz

Dynamic Africa sounds off on The WWIAfrica Project

The World War I in Africa Project Sheds Light On An Often Forgotten Part of History.

As a student of history for all my years of secondary education, I can’t say that I never learned about World War I, the events leading up to it as well as the aftermath it had on Europe and to some extent the United States. Perhaps we never delved into it in quite as much depth as we did World War II, but even then, I’d be hard-pressed to think of time where my history teacher (bless her soul) ever mentioned the impact that the First World War had on Africa and Africans. Such a truth wouldn’t concern me if the circumstances were different; if I wasn’t at a school in an African country, if I weren’t an African myself, if I wasn’t one of five black students in a history class of over 20, if I didn’t come from a country that was colonized by the British (who, as history goes, love war).

But all these things were and still are a part of who I am, and it is for these reasons – and so many more, that the World War I in Africa project is incredibly important learning for me. Even beyond the personal connection of history and heritage, the ignorance of many to the involvement of Africans in World War I and the integral roles the played speak to a much broader concern of the omission and reduction of black people and Africans in many important events in Western history.

It’s been 100 years since the First World War began. 100 years since the first shot fired by British troops occurred in what is today known as Togo, on August 7th, 1914. 100 years gone by and still, the world is yet to actively include and universally commemorate the lives of the estimated two million Africans who in some way contributed to the efforts of their colonial empires during this bitter war of the 1910s. World War I was indeed what its title refers to it as – a war that saw involvement on a global scale.

From the Gold Coast to German East Africa, Algeria to the southernmost tip of Africa, a new initiative is bringing to light the forgotten ways in which European politics brought the Great War to African homes. Through the efforts of World War I in Africa project, we are provided with a multimedia database that both highlights and archives the ways in which African lives were affected by a war they had no agency in. Because what happens in Africa should be told around the world.“ 

World War I in Africa.

Notes

  1. squeackygee reblogged this from blackinamerica
  2. ehonauta reblogged this from note-a-bear
  3. aguacatito reblogged this from crossguild
  4. firelakie reblogged this from seriesofnonsequiturs
  5. xpityx reblogged this from lurkinghistoric
  6. flowersfangsandfire reblogged this from lurkinghistoric
  7. lurkinghistoric reblogged this from notcuddles
  8. alicerobertstext reblogged this from tehnakki
  9. melcirsium reblogged this from jenniferrpovey
  10. blackestglass reblogged this from buckysleftarm
  11. mybladderisabagel-deactivated-jk reblogged this from jenniferrpovey
  12. wishfantastic reblogged this from tehnakki
  13. hearteyesmcgarrett reblogged this from understandabletangerine
  14. understandabletangerine reblogged this from levynite
  15. renniejoy reblogged this from jenniferrpovey
  16. kk-maker reblogged this from mazarinedrake
  17. sea-lark reblogged this from jenniferrpovey
  18. nimthecat reblogged this from jenniferrpovey
  19. jenniferrpovey reblogged this from mazarinedrake
  20. dynamicafrica posted this