Phaphamani Zulu!

Martial metaphors in the THE RECRUITMENT OF ZULU SERVICE IN WORLD WAR I and World War II

Liz Timbs

Ph.D. Candidate

Michigan State University

Department of History

the South African Native Labour Contingent (SANLC), 1916-1918

John Langalibalele Dube

First president of South African Native National Congress (SANNC)

Portrait of Solomon ka Dinuzulu.

Photo c/o Killie Campbell Africana Library

The decision to join the Contingent “rests with the Zulus for sake of their own good name to make very much more generous and hearty response than heretofore, and thus remove reproach of being of all South African tribes the most deaf to [the] King’s call for labour overseas.”

 

C.A. Wheelwright, November 14, 1916

The Western Front, June 1917: Zulu members of the South African Native Labour Contingent perform in a War Dance and Sports event at Dannes, France (Copyright Imperial War Museum)

Province Number of Recruits
Cape Province 7,000
Transvaal 13,500
Natal 1,500
Orange Free State 800
Bechuanaland 600
Basutoland 1,500
Swaziland 100

Recruits for the South African Native Labour Contingent*

*Statistics pulled from Norman Clothier’s Black Valour (1987), p. 149

Establishing The Native military corps, 1939-1945

Mshiyeni ka Dinuzulu

Photo c/o Killie Campbell Africana Library

Funeral of Solomon ka Dinuzulu

1933

C/O KwaZulu-Natal Heritage Preservation Network

Title Text

The Corps are “expected to fight aeroplanes, tanks and artillery with knobkerries and assegais. What mockery! It is demeaning. How degrading for a soldier to be reduced in standing to that of some common tribesman.”

 

A.B. Xuma, 1941

Photo c/o South African History Online

In the days of Shaka “[ . . .] the impi that formed his front-line troops and his personal bodyguard, hand-picked by Chaka himself from strapping young volunteers, proved their valour and strength in a death struggle with lions trapped in the Zululand mountains; the young warriors employed no other weapons than their bare hands and riempies to overcome and truss up the savage, rending beasts. That same fearlessness is being turned today to an even finer purpose on the battlefields.”

 

Libertas, July 1944

Zulu cultural stakeholders & NMC Recruitment

“I have come to you again to appeal to you young men to follow me in the work of supporting His Majesty, the King, in the mighty work of opposing our common enemies, against peace, goodwill, and freedom of the people of the Earth."

 

Mshiyeni ka Dinuzulu

May 10, 1942

Photo by A.M. Duggan-Cronin

Albert Luthuli

Adams College

Let us greet you valiant men

Let us greet you hosts of his majesty!

Let us greet you who clear the dark clouds

Before the rising sun,

Who plunge into a pond inhabited by a crocodile

Which snarled its teeth

And resorted to its aboriginal home.

 

We greet you who stab and push the foes,

Chasing them towards the setting sun,

Until Tunisia’s gates are passed

And the foes cleared off Africa’s soil.

 

We greet you who have the enchantment of a song

Blending the voices of the living and the dead

For you enjoy the admiration of Sikhwishikhwishi

Among the White people

And you enjoy the admiration of Bova

Among those of Mjokwana, son of Ndaba.

 

We greet you destroyers of bodies sheltered in hiding

For in Algeria you destroyed the foe—

In Somaliland, you destroyed the foe—

In Egypt, you destroyed the foe—

In Cyrenaica, you destroyed the foe—

In Abyssinia, you destroyed the foe—

And in Libya, you destroyed the foe.

The unquenchable Fire, (South African Army)

which envelopes all mountains,

to give relief to jaded warriors,

Warriors of Abyssinia—

who on seeing it sought their shields,

Amid the accumulation of their womenfolk,

Beholding the Fire of the Unquenchables—

the cockroach that penetrated

The ears of Mussolini.

And denied sleep to his warriors. 

 

Zulu Society Broadcast, June 13, 1944

I have listened quietly and attentively as you took the young men across the drifts of their brave doings. I only wish I could see them with my own eyes. Wow! Although this physical body of mine may grow feeble—yet the heart is young and remains with its wailings. How can this be myself—remaining behind the roll-up mats when men have taken up arms? Am I not born of a brave man? .  . . For even when I see them in my old age, fresh blood runs through my veins and I am moved to take my shield and giya.

 

Nongejeni Zuma, Zulu Society Broadcast, October 25, 1943

Nongejeni Zuma

Photo c/o Killie Campbell Africana Library

“Your honour will be spoken of when the dust-raising battles of war have ended—when brave men will be reviewing their experiences round the fire-hearths at home. Continue to be a source of pride to your officers, by your behaviour. And thus, you will help to uphold the prestige of the Zulu nation in the world.”

Pika Zulu kaSiteku kaMpande, Zulu Society Broadcast, January 14, 1944.

Pika Zulu

Photo c/o Killie Campbell Africana Library

It is not one man who goes out to attack the enemy. It is the cooperation of whole regiments that drive away the foe. I am sure our brave men in the army are learning the value of co-operation, and that when they return they will use the learning thus obtained and co-operate to maintain the welfare of their families.

 

A.H. Ngidi

March 13, 1944

A.H. Ngidi

Photo c/o South African History Online

Transvaal 52,037
Cape 9,555
Natal 7,366
Orange Free State 4,521
South West Africa 7,000
Total 80,479

Recruitment into the Native Military Corps, by Province

Cited in Grundy (1983), p. 77

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Twitter: @tizlimbs

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