Monday 5 December 2011

The Hell Fighters


It was one of the darkest period in human history - the war to end all wars had turned into a big-time nightmare rather than the expected grand adventure of the new century. New Year's Day, 1918, however offered a modicum of entertainment relief to a certain section of war-time France. To further aid the Allied war effort a new batch of American soldiers had just landed at the coastal town of Brest in Brittany. They were the 15th New York Regiment and were mainly made up of enlisted men from the Harlem District of New York. They were 2000 strong and many of them had joined up not so much from a sense of patriotism as from the hope of social acceptance and justice at the end of the war. For all of these men were black and the irony of being asked to fight injustice abroad while upholding bigotry back home was lost on none of them.

Perhaps the most telling example of the situation back home could be found in the hostile opposition to their after-enlistment training in Spartanburg, South Carolina. The Mayor and other upstanding citizens of this town were so offended and outraged at the idea of having black soldiers in their midst they rattled all the sabers in their closet and vowed not to stoop to treating the new arrivals as fellow human beings. Well, they didn't stoop - they more or less prostrated themselves after they heard the extraordinary Jazz music that the Regimental Band, under its director, Lieutenant James Reese Europe, played in the introductory concert soon afterwards.

It wasn't the first time Jazz had silenced the violent elements and it wouldn't be the last, but Spartanburg wasn't the sort of place that could be converted overnight into a home ground of racial integration, no matter how great the music. In the days to follow, the soldiers of the 15th New York Regiment found themselves on the receiving end of all manners of insults, abuses, and assaults. They were expected to step off the sidewalk to make way for approaching white folks, they were expected to doff their hats when they spoke to them, they weren't served in shops and restaurants - that is, if no one had protested their entry in the first place. The soldiers - some because they did not wish to create 'incidences' and others because they were too basically superior to their tormentors to be able to respond in kind - maintained a stoic calm in face of such aggravating behavior. Their white Army mates, however, having discerned during their association that blacks could be as human as anyone, were infuriated that the rest of the white public couldn't come to the same conclusion and fiercely avenged any perceived slighting of 'their men'. So, of course, there were incidences and quite a few of them - enlightened whites beating up bigoted whites.

With a World War going on, a burgeoning Civil War wasn't likely to delight the Authorities and expectedly it didn't. They decided to resolve the whole problem, not by offering the people of Spartanburg some spartan and much-needed lessons in public relations, but by shipping off the 15th New York Regiment for a less needed French Experience.

It was a welcome change, however, as the French were less neurotic about the color of anyone's skin and moreover were completely bowled over by the music. They had never heard anything quite like it, and the rendition of W.C. Handy's 'Memphis Blues' proved to be an especial hit. It was an extraordinary experience for the soldiers as well - it was perhaps the first time they were subjected to such whole-hearted appreciation from white audiences. The French were smitten further by the undoubted courage that this regiment was to soon enough display under whole-hearted attention of another kind - unrelenting enemy gunfire.

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