Cape City, South Africa – On January 23, 1915, two boatmen named Dolly Jenniker and Zulu Madhliwa drowned within the Orange River in South Africa. They have been ferrying provides to Union of South Africa forces which had invaded German South West Africa (GSWA, now Namibia) as a part of the Allied marketing campaign in opposition to Germany in World Battle I. When the Allies declared struggle on Germany, each side’ colonies had been robotically included: South Africa was a part of the British Commonwealth and Germany had colonies in GSWA and German East Africa (now Tanzania).
The river was flooded, and the closely laden vessel was no match for the rapids now fashionable amongst white water rafters who take them on for enjoyable. Jenniker’s spouse, Molly, who was ready for him at their residence in Port Elizabeth, by no means received to see him once more. And, again in Amanzimtoti, close to Durban, Madhliwa’s father, Ngobongwana, solely realized of his son’s dying when he acquired his son’s £3 of unpaid wages within the mail.
Past these naked info, little has been recognized for greater than a century about Jenniker and Madhliwa – or any of the opposite 1,700 South Africans of color who died in World Battle I in Africa.
However now, these males will lastly be recognised by a brand new memorial within the Firm’s Gardens – the vegetable gardens established by the Dutch East India Firm once they arrange a victualling station on the Cape in 1652 – within the coronary heart of Cape City.
The memorial, organised and funded by the Commonwealth Battle Graves Fee (CWGC), will likely be unveiled on Wednesday, January 22. It goals to proper a 110-year-old unsuitable by commemorating every of those World Battle I labour corps veterans with an African iroko hardwood submit bearing his identify and the date of his dying.
The Cape City memorial solely commemorates males who didn’t carry arms and who misplaced their lives in Africa – different South Africans who died in World Battle I’ve already been commemorated elsewhere. The memorial is the primary section of a drive to recollect the estimated 100,000 Black Africans who misplaced their lives in Africa on the Allied aspect within the Nice Battle.
One other iroko submit bears the identify of Job Hlakula, an ox driver who died, so far as researchers can inform, on his means residence from East Africa on April 1, 1917. His great-grandson, Zweletu Hlakula, is proud that the household’s sacrifice is lastly being recognised: “All of us say we had a soldier that handed on our behalf who was preventing for our freedom. We’re very happy with him … It’s a pleasure that we’ve received in our identify, in our household about him … For him to be remembered, for him to be within the historical past of our South Africa… that makes us very humble to listen to his identify on the memorial.”
No stone unturned
The CWGC was based in 1917 whereas the bloodiest World Battle I battles have been ongoing to “recognise the sacrifices made by individuals from throughout the British empire”, says George Hay, the fee’s chief historian. Its mandate was subsequently expanded to incorporate World Battle II casualties.
With half one million our bodies it couldn’t account for (a mix of lacking our bodies and unidentified ones), the CWGC began constructing memorials to the lacking, such because the greater than 72,000 commemorated at Thiepval in France and the practically 55,000 at Ypres in Belgium. “The thought was to offer an area to honour and mourn the individuals who have been denied a grave by the fortunes of struggle,” explains Hay.
As Area Marshal Herbert Plumer, one of many primary commanders on the Western Entrance in World Battle I, stated in 1927 on the unveiling of the Ypres Memorial: “He isn’t lacking, he’s right here.”
The CGWC’s founding paperwork “very clearly acknowledged that it will commemorate everybody who died, with out distinction”, says Hay. However this didn’t at all times occur: “Greater than 100 years later we’re nonetheless righting wrongs, filling in gaps,” he provides.
A lot of the estimated 11,500 South Africans – white and Black – who misplaced their lives within the Nice Battle have been commemorated in some form. Because of the nation’s racialised politics, solely white South Africans have been allowed to hold arms throughout World Battle I, and those that died are remembered at graves and memorials each overseas and at residence. The one exception to this “whites-only” rule was the Cape Corps, an “experimental” armed unit of mixed-race, “colored” males who served with distinction in each East Africa and the Center East.
However 1000’s of Black non-combatants who supported their white South African countrymen as labourers and carriers have been additionally killed between 1914 and 1918.

Not all of them have been forgotten. The South African Native Labour Contingent (SANLC) labour corps aiding white South African troops in Europe throughout World Battle I is comparatively well-documented, and the 980 SANLC males who died are commemorated at memorials round Europe.
Nearly all of the SANLC’s casualties occurred on a single day: 607 Black servicemen have been killed when the SS Mendi – which was bringing males from Cape City to France – went down within the English Channel on February 21, 1917. The lads who died on the Mendi have been commemorated at monuments in South Africa, the UK, France and the Netherlands – to not point out in varied place names, books and movies and through a prestigious medal: The Mendi Ornament for Bravery which is awarded by the South African authorities to residents who “carried out a unprecedented act of bravery that positioned their lives in nice hazard”.
Survivors recounted how the lads who died on the Mendi met their destiny with huge dignity, stamping their ft in a “dying dance”. Their pastor, the Reverend Isaac Dyobha, is claimed to have calmed his flock by elevating his arms to the skies and loudly declaring, “Be quiet and calm, my countrymen. What is occurring now’s what you got here to do … You’re going to die, however that’s what you got here to do. Brothers, we’re drilling the dying drill. I, a Xhosa, say you might be my brothers … Swazis, Pondos, Basotho … so allow us to die like brothers. We’re the sons of Africa. Elevate your struggle cries, brothers, for although they made us go away our assegais within the kraal [a reference to the fact that Blacks were not allowed to bear arms], our voices are left with our our bodies.”
However whereas the sinking of the Mendi is known in South Africa, the Black assist crew who misplaced their lives in African theatres of struggle had been roundly forgotten – till now.
That modified with the prospect discovery of a certain assortment of handwritten casualty information in a South African Nationwide Defence Power (SANDF) Documentation Centre in Pretoria in 2017 by somebody engaged on the South African Battle Graves Challenge. “A century in the past, somebody had taken the time to report the sacrifices made by these 1,700 males,” says Hay. “However these information have been by no means shared with the Fee.” Whereas not each man to be commemorated by the brand new memorial belonged to South Africa’s Black inhabitants (there’s no less than one European on the listing – a person who was born in Cornwall, southeast England however who had moved to South Africa earlier than 1900), the overwhelming majority – and all these drawn from these new information – did.
“Why have been these guys unnoticed?” muses Hay. “We could by no means know if it was unintentional or deliberate.” Both means, it’s not stunning that the forgotten males died in Africa and have been dark-skinned. On the Versailles Peace Convention in 1919, American delegate George Beer famous he “had not seen the story of native victims in any official publication”.

Africans who died in Africa
Of the 1,772 males remembered by the brand new Cape City memorial, says Hay, most likely fewer than 100 misplaced their lives as a consequence of their involvement within the comparatively hassle-free German South West Africa marketing campaign of 1914 and 1915. The remaining are believed to have died within the East Africa Marketing campaign which, thanks primarily to the relentless guerilla ways of German commander Colonel Paul von Lettow-Vorbeck, dragged on for 4 years and killed a whole lot of 1000’s. Greater than 90 % of the individuals who died have been Black – and most of them died from malnutrition and illness, particularly malaria.
“Regardless of its price in males and cash [about $13bn in today’s money] the marketing campaign in East Africa was, and is, sometimes called a mere sideshow,” writes Edward Paice in Tip and Run: The Untold Tragedy of the Nice Battle in Africa. Whereas the East Africa marketing campaign did have little bearing on the general outcomes of the struggle, it shouldn’t be dismissed, argues Paice: “The struggle in Africa put imperialism itself, and all of the highfalutin speak of the European Powers’ ‘civilising mission’ on trial.”
Because the legendary civil rights activist WEB DuBois wrote in a 1915 essay titled The African Roots of Battle: “In a really actual sense Africa is a main reason for this horrible overturning of civilisation which we’ve lived to see [because] within the Darkish Continent are hidden the roots not merely of struggle at this time however of the menace of wars tomorrow.”
DuBois continued: “Twenty centuries after Christ, Black Africa, prostrate, raped, and shamed, lies on the ft of the conquering Philistines of Europe.”
White European troopers outlined simply how difficult the circumstances in East Africa have been for them. One younger British officer, named as Lewis, had watched in horror as each man in his unit was slaughtered within the trenches of Europe. However, 16 months later, Lewis wrote to his mom from East Africa to say: “I’d somewhat be in France than right here.”
Colonel HL Pritchard, a British soldier, wrote of his experiences in a “nation thrice the dimensions of Germany, principally lined by dense bush, with no roads and solely two railways, and both sweltering underneath a tropical solar or swept by torrential rain which makes the friable soil impassable to wheeled site visitors”. He wrote of malaria and bugs in a terrain “the place crocodiles and lions seize unwary porters, giraffe destroy telegraph traces, elephants harm tracks, hippopotami assault boats, rhinoceroses cost troops on the march, and bees put complete battalions to flight…”
If something, Lewis and Pritchard – white commissioned officers – had it simpler than the Black carriers who facilitated the East African struggle effort. As one British official, Hector Livingston Duff who served within the Nyasaland Area Power in World Battle I, wrote in 1925: “Are you able to marvel that [the carriers] suffered, and suffered terribly? After all they did. These poor, spiritless, ragged creatures needed to hump their heavy packs and observe a few of the most lively and hardy troops that ever took to the sector, over fearfully troublesome nation, via some of the extended and speedy wars of motion ever recognized.”

The ‘Aragon incident’
Illness was one of many chief causes of dying for these staff. Greater than half of the lads commemorated within the Cape City memorial died of malaria, whereas others fell sufferer to different illnesses together with dysentery, pneumonia and influenza. Nearly all of the lads died on terra firma, however greater than 100 died from illness and malnourishment on board the HMT Aragon in March and April 1917, whereas being repatriated from the East African entrance to South Africa on well being grounds.
Revealed in 1918, the Pike Report on Medical and Sanitary Issues in German East Africa is a mannequin of bland understatement. Even so, its account of the “Aragon incident” is chilling.
When the ship left Kilwa Kisiwani, off the coast of present-day Tanzania, the Aragon was carrying 1,362 “natives”, all of whom have been “unfit, stuffed with malaria, and appeared to don’t have any resisting energy left for relapses”, in accordance with Surgeon Basic William Watson Pike. To make issues worse, “the Aragon was detained in Kisiwani harbour for about 9-10 days and through that point 74 deaths occurred.” By the point it reached Durban, this quantity had swelled to no less than 129.
One of many males who died on the ship was Maeli Makhaleyane, an ox driver who enlisted with the South African Labour Corps on the diamond mining city of Kimberley on November 21, 1916. His dying certificates notes that, after two hospital stays in East Africa, he was “repatriated per Aragon”. He boarded the ship on March 30 and died of malaria 16 days later.
In his report, Pike concluded that the senior medical officer dedicated “an error of judgement in sending these 1,362 males, realizing their previous historical past as he did, to sea with out making enough medical provision to fulfill their necessities”. Pike added that the “common situation of these on the Aragon was a lot under the typical” for varied causes together with being “saturated with malaria and dysentery” and being “very depressed by the [many] delays”.
Being buried at sea in a easy ceremony which noticed every physique “dedicated to the deep” meant a distressing lack of closure for his or her family members. As Mbonsiwa Maliya, the grandson of Magwayi Maliwa who died on April 15, 1917, says: “It has impacted us rather a lot, particularly me. I struggled looking for out what occurred to him. His physique was not introduced residence.”
Now, the households of Aragon victims together with Jack December (who got here from Kimberley and labored as a driver in East Africa), Mack Mokgade (a railway employee from Paulpietersburg) and Piet September (an ox-driver from Kimberley) will pay their respects at their respective iroko posts in Cape City.
Often, the CGWC builds memorials within the theatres of struggle themselves. This time, the choice was made to mark the lads’s deaths of their nation of origin – partly as a result of it wasn’t doable to establish the place every of the lads fell, and likewise “to pay attention the commemoration of a physique of males who had been excluded on the time and successfully written out of historical past since”, says Hay.
The Fee is at the moment engaged on a a lot bigger venture to commemorate no less than 89,000 Black East Africans who died for the Allied trigger in World Battle I. Whereas no formal plans have been made but, the fee says it’s dedicated to honouring these individuals – in collaboration with the affected communities.
Much more Black Africans, together with tens of 1000’s of girls and youngsters, are thought to have died on the German aspect. There aren’t any recognized plans to commemorate these individuals, though Germany is – finally – starting to come to terms with the atrocities it committed in East Africa.

For now, nevertheless, the Cape City memorial will likely be celebrated. Situated in the identical precinct as South Africa’s Nationwide Museum, Nationwide Gallery and Nationwide Library – and a reproduction of the Delville Wooden Memorial (the unique, in France, commemorates the two,500 South Africans who died whereas heroically defending their place in a dense thicket often known as Delville Wooden in July 1916) – it is going to give the 1,772 males’s descendants a spot to mourn them, whereas additionally highlighting their sacrifice to the tens of millions of people that move via the gardens annually.
“This memorial, devoted to the South African males of the Labour Corps who served in World Battle I, is a reminder of a historical past that’s typically unnoticed of textbooks and public discourse,” says South African poet Koleka Putuma, who co-wrote a poem to have a good time the memorial’s unveiling.
“These males – grandfathers, sons, brothers, and descendants of chiefs – have been despatched removed from residence to battle in a struggle that was not theirs. They left behind households, villages, and traditions, and plenty of by no means returned.”
Their names and tales have been obscured by time, provides Putuma, “however this memorial seeks to appropriate that, to present voice to their lives, and to recollect them as greater than only a footnote”.