Remembering some of those who died before the guns fell silent

Audrey Dewjee shares her thoughts.

This year’s Service of Remembrance at the Cenotaph has been like no other because of covid-19.  It has set me thinking about previous Remembrance Sunday commemorations – and omissions – which, to some extent, have been corrected in the very recent past.

For years and years, the BBC presenter of the Remembrance Sunday programme recited the same old script in a solemn pompous voice – while simultaneously revealing either his ignorance or his racism. For years and years the virtues of “Commonwealth” participation in the two World Wars were extolled and tribute was paid to the contribution of people from Australia, Canada, and New Zealand, but there was little or no mention of the sacrifices made by people of colour, whether from the Indian subcontinent, Africa, the Caribbean or any other part of the former British Empire from which they came.  I used to watch in fury, every year, and many times wrote to the BBC to tell them that they must acknowledge these contributions.  Colleagues at the time did the same, but perhaps none did so for as many years as my friend Kusoom Vadgama.  Our protests fell on deaf ears.

I was especially infuriated when the commentator, usually David Dimbleby, would mention the countries from which the various High Commissioners came, without ever mentioning that the people of those countries had fought and died side by side with their comrades from the British Isles.  The insult was even greater when you knew that two of the High Commissioners themselves had fought in the war – Arthur Wint (Jamaican High Commissioner from 1974-1978) and Ulric Cross (High Commissioner for Trinidad and Tobago from 1990-1993).  Arthur Wint was a pilot and Ulric Cross a navigator in the RAF.

Something else that has never been commented on – the shape of the Cenotaph itself.  Many war memorials in British towns and cities include a cross, but a cross is significantly absent from the Cenotaph.  As Mary Lutyens pointed out in an article in Ms London (16 November, 1981), her father, the architect Sir Edwin Lutyens who designed the monument, “refused to put a cross on it, because he said the troops marching past were of many different religions.”  Good for you Sir Edwin! – at least someone had awareness and integrity.

Gradually, and possibly grudgingly, over recent years, things changed a little and Britons began to hear stories in the media about those who had been omitted for so long.  However, the Black Lives Matter movement, the 75th anniversary of the ending of World War 2 and, in particular the VJ day anniversary this year, have resulted in a sea-change in reporting and suddenly the stories of veterans from all over the world are starting to be told – too late for many of those who would have appreciated this recognition.

I watched the 2020 Remembrance Sunday Ceremony on TV and noted with pleasure that the Queen’s equerry, Ghanaian-born Lieutenant Colonel Nana Kofi Twumasi-Ankrah, was in attendance, as he was at the private ceremony earlier in the week, when the Queen laid a bouquet on the tomb of the Unknown Soldier.  [Find out more about Lt. Col. Twumasi-Ankrah on this link:  https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iqRUjE2MAV8 ]

 

On Wednesday 11th November, the actual Remembrance Day – I will be thinking, among others, of the following:

Adolphus Meheux a Sierra Leone-born merchant seaman from Hull who lost his life off the Netherlands when his ship the SS Cito was attacked by German destroyers on 17 May, 1917.  His name appears on the memorial boards at the entrance to Hull Station. https://www.africansinyorkshireproject.com/adolphus-meheux.html

Jim Bailey

 

 

James Bailey, brother of Lilian Bader, a merchant seaman who along with 21 of his shipmates on board the SS Western Chief went down in the Atlantic on 14 March, 1941, after being torpedoed by an Italian submarine.  He is commemorated on the Trinity House Memorial at Tower Hill in London.

The following who all died in World War 2 and are buried or commemorated in Stonefall Cemetery, North Yorkshire:

Grave of Selemani Shabani

 

 

Private Selemani Shabani of the African Pioneer Corps [East Africa]

Sgt. Pilot Isikeli Doviverata Komaisavai

 

Sgt. Pilot Isikeli Doviverata Komaisavai of Fiji served with 234 Squadron. He died on 19th October 1944 at the age of 24.

Flying Officer Ulric Look Yan (IWM D 15031)

 

 

Flying Officer Ulric Leslie Look Yan of Trinidad, aged 21.

Flying Officer Edward Fred Hutchinson Haly DFC of British Guiana [now Guyana], aged 23.

This site https://www.caribbeanaircrew-ww2.com/ is an unparalleled source of information about Caribbean aircrew.  It contains information about the Caribbean aircrew mentioned above and many more besides.

 

Leading Aircraftman Isaac Roland Bryan of Jamaica, aged 21.

AC2 Ivan Copeland Ashman of Jamaica.

AC2 Wilfred Octavius Dawns of Jamaica, aged 24.

AC2 Patrick Constantine Marshall of Jamaica, aged 19

AC2 Byron Martin of Jamaica, aged 19.

The last five were ground crew members of the RAF.  Just because you didn’t go into battle, didn’t mean you were safe from accident or illness.  A number of non-combatants never returned to their families.

The hundreds of thousands of East Africans killed in World War 1 who don’t have individual marked graves, but who are commemorated on three memorials: one in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania, the others in Mombasa and Nairobi in Kenya.

The inscription (in English, Kiswahili and Arabic) on both monuments reads as follows:

This is to the memory of the native African troops who fought: to the carriers who were the feet and hands of the army: and to all other men who served and died for their King and Country in Eastern Africa in the Great War 1914-1918.

If you fight for your Country even if you die your sons will remember your name.


Karun Krishna Majumdar (IWM CL 1176)

 

Wing Commander Karun Krishna Majumdar, who flew and survived the war in Europe, only to die fighting in Burma in February, 1945.

 

Man Mohan Singh

 

Flying Officer Man Mohan Singh, who came to Britain in 1939 and was eventually stationed in Australia where he was killed in a Japanese air raid.

http://www.australiansikhheritage.com/flying-officer-manmohan-singh

Pilot Officer Gurbachan Singh, who was killed in an accident when his plane hit a telephone wire in Wiltshire and crashed on 12 April, 1941, aged 21.

Pilot Officer Hukum Chand Mehta, who died when his Hurricane IIB flew into the ground at Kielder in Northumberland, during a formation practice on 3 November 1941, aged 24.

 

Flight Sergeant James Hyde (he was promoted to Warrant Officer before he died) (IWM CH 11978)

 

Warrant Officer James Hyde

 

a Spitfire pilot from Trinidad (featured on this film around minute 7:   https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ViGwxJloI70 ), who was killed in a dogfight over Nijmegen in the Battle of Arnhem on 25 September, 1944, aged 27.

Sergeant Osmund William St. Clair Alleyne, Wireless Operator/Gunner, from Dominica, killed in action on 5 August, 1943.

 

Victor Emmanuel Tucker (IWM CH5312)

Pilot Officer Victor Emmanuel Tucker from Jamaica, he was shot down 4 May 1941 and crashed into the Channel, aged 25.

These are just a handful of stories of the people who were lost in two World Wars.  Their stories are important: we need to tell them, especially to our children, and we need to ensure that they become part of mainstream British history.

WE WILL REMEMBER THEM