With all the talk of Black Lives Mattering, it's topical that France 24 should point out something I hadn't heard of before - the appalling treatment by the Nazis of
black soldiers fighting for France in World War 2:
“It started at the end of May 1940, in the Somme region,” Fargettas
explained. “There was no order from high up saying that colonial
prisoners of war should be killed or even ill-treated. It was impulsive,
but the German military hierarchy did nothing to even try to stop it.”
This hatred of black soldiers goes back to the First World War,
Fargettas continued: “The Germans used them to accuse the Allies of
savagery on the battlefield. The German army had itself been rightly
accused of atrocities against civilians, especially in Belgium.
Consequently, in response they used the image of the African
sharpshooter as a propaganda weapon.”
The peace settlement
adumbrated in the Treaty of Versailles meant that the Ruhr and
Rhineland, along Germany’s western border, were occupied by France. Many
troops from French colonies were stationed there. “In Germany there was
a very intensive, mendacious propaganda campaign accusing African
soldiers of mass rape and kidnapping. This is what the Germans called
the “black horror on the Rhine”; slander which the Nazis would reuse.”
When many Wehrmacht soldiers entered France in May 1940, they had
memories of this propaganda. African soldiers were abused by the
invaders throughout the country. “These troops often fought very well,
while of course the Germans sustained many losses despite their success
in the Battle of France, so that produced anger which added to all the
resentment already stored up,” said Fargettas.
On June 19, 1940,
the violence culminated in the Chasselay massacre. This was two days
after Marshal Philippe Pétain’s notorious announcement that he would
seek an armistice with the Nazis. The 25th regiment of
Senegalese riflemen was posted to the northwest of Lyon, to delay the
enemy’s entry into France’s third largest city.
“The Germans
expected to seize Lyon quite easily,” Fargettas recounted. “But on the
morning of June 19, they faced very strong resistance, in battles
lasting for several hours. After the Wehrmacht won the first battles in
the afternoon, they executed French as well as African prisoners. But on
the next day – after the last pockets of resistance were defeated –
they divided the prisoners into two: The French on one side, the
Africans on the other. They led the latter down an isolated road. They
were sent to a field and machine-gunned.” During these massacres, some
French soldiers were also executed or wounded for trying to intervene.
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