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The aftermath
An increasing number of Africans reasoned that a war in which Europeans slaughtered fellow Europeans, meant that colonial regimes had little right to lecture African leaders and people about how to conduct their affairs. The savage effects of the war were compounded by a world wide influenza pandemic in 1918-1919. It is estimated that two percent of the population in Africa fell victim to the spread of this dangerous type of influenza and died. The peace settlements However India was the only country allowed to send delegates. Others were turned away. For example, Liberia was not allowed to attend. Members of the ANC (known then as the South African Natives Congress), and the Egyptian nationalist, Sa'ad Zaghlul, wanted to attend Versailles along with Egypt's Prime Minister Husayn Rushdi. Sierra Leoneans also felt their demands should be taken into account. Instead the European powers divided up Germany's African colonies without consulting anyone in Africa, and without any attention being paid to the geographical spread of different ethnic groups. "After Africa's sons had shed their blood on the altar of liberty and after having experienced that terrible plague called the influenza epidemic, are we not the same manna loving people? The South African Natives Congress has decided to send a delegation to England to place before the Imperial authorities the disabilities of which the coloured people complain. Liberia has asked for a place in the Peace Conference. What is Sierra Leone doing? We have been sleeping too long. It is high time we take up the world's cry and work - reconstruction!" - Sierra Leone Weekly News, 8 March 1918. Effects of the war in Africa Within Africa, the price of commodities went up. However, in the case of cotton grown in Egypt, the increase was not passed onto the growers. All negotiations ceased with Germany, which had been a big trading partner to many colonies. Sierra Leone's trade had been 80 per cent dependent on Germany. In Calabar, on the Coast of Nigeria, there were shortages of milk, sugar and salt, causing panic hoarding. As large numbers of Europeans went off to fight, more Africans moved into key positions. This was particularly true in French West Africa where jobs previously held only by Europeans, were now held by Africans. But when Europeans came home Africans were again demoted. In Britain the demobbing of black seamen and service men resulted in bitter competition for jobs. In 1919 racist mobs caused riots and waves of vicious anti-black feeling in Liverpool, Cardiff and London. Many seamen were simply signed off from work to make way for demobbed white soldiers. The Trinidadian Felix Eugene Michael Hercules voiced the bitterness suffered by people from the Caribbean as well as Africa. "He (Caribbean and African man) fought with the white man to save the white man's home and the war was won. Black men all the world over are asking to-day: "What have we got? What are we going to get out of it all? The answer, in effect, comes clear, convincing and conclusive: 'Get back to your kennel you damned dog of a nigger." - Felix Eugene Michael Hercules, quoted by Peter Fryer in his book Staying Power. The shabby treatment of African and Caribbean people in Britain prompted a large number to return home, disaffected, but also politicised and radicalised. There was a growing sense of solidarity among people of African descent in America, the Caribbean as well as Africa, and the black Diaspora took political expression in a number of Pan African Congresses. |
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