How were the Indigenous peoples of Australia drawn into World War II? Some material in official records suggest that some European Australians were nervous about the possible loyalty of Aborigines in the northern parts of the country. For example, on 1 April 1942, A Mr S McClintock from Perth wrote to the Prime Minister, the Honourable Mr John Curtin, with a suggestion:
As the Australian aborigines up North are wonderful
bushmen- and unbeatable at finding water etc. – and as they will help
anyone for a plug of tobacco and gaudy clothes, it seems to me that they
should all be removed far inland from any likely enemy landing places –
Darwin, Wyndham, Broome, Carnarvon etc. – as if taken by the Japanese
they might prove very useful to them as guides, and in securing water
etc.
[Item 82/712/1773 Series MP508, NAA]
[AWM 014283]
The Prime Minister acknowledged his letter and forwarded
it to the Minister for the Army, the Honourable Frank Forde. On 18 May 1942,
Mr Forde replied to Mr McClintock saying:
Your interest in putting forward
this suggestion is much appreciated and, while the idea is basically
sound, it is not considered practicable with the means or time at our
disposal.
[Item 82/712/1773 Series MP508, NAA]
[AWM P01659.001]
But it was not only Mr McClintock who didn’t want
the Australian Aborigines anywhere near the enemy. Neither did the
Australian Army nor the Royal Australian Navy, both of which excluded
persons ‘not substantially of European origin or descent’ until the
threat of Japanese invasion necessitated the recruitment of Aboriginal
and Torres Strait Islanders. The Royal Australian Air Force (RAAF) was
more lenient, accepting Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islanders early on
because of a critical shortage of manpower due to the demands of the
Empire Air Training Scheme.
[AWM F00519]
Despite the early ban on their enlistment, a number
of Aboriginal volunteers either claimed another nationality or
just renounced their Aboriginality. Some recruiting officers
either through indifference or confusion allowed Indigenous Australians
to slip through. Outstanding soldiers such as Reg Saunders and
Charles Mene slipped through and demonstrated that fears
of disharmony between
black and white personnel were unfounded. In some other instances,
however, there were various repercussions when some of those who were keen to
enlist were sent
home.
In mid-1941, changes in attitude towards Indigenous
Australians enabled numerous Aborigines to enlist in some of
the smaller units of the services where they were able to integrate
and sometimes to become NCOs, commanding white soldiers. In these
smaller units the Indigenous Australians were able to leave the
prejudices of their civilian world behind them and be accepted
as Australian servicemen. The Torres Strait Light Infantry battalion
was one example of the Indigenous contribution.
[AWM 083166]
Much thought was given to the use of Indigenous
manpower for the war effort. In Northern Australia, the Special Reconnaissance
Unit raised in 1941 by anthropologist Flight Lieutenant Donald Thomson
was formed almost exclusively of Aborigines and Torres Strait Islanders.
Similar units were formed at Bathurst and Melville Island, at Groote
Eylant and on the Cox Peninsula. The Aboriginals who served in those
units were not formally enlisted and nor were they paid. In 1992
they were finally awarded medals and remuneration.
On 2 April 1942, Professor Adolphus Elkin, Professor
of Anthropology at the University of Sydney wrote to the Prime Minister
about the military authorities’ refusal to accept a number of mixed blood
Aboriginal men for military service. He felt that the government should ‘take
every opportunity’ to give the Aborigines a chance of helping their country ‘either
in the fighting services or in auxiliaries to these services or in factories.’
Another anthropologist, William Stanner, personal assistant
to Frank Forde, Minister for the Army, had suggested a mobile unit
based on the Boer commandos during the Boer War as well as on Australia’s
own Lighthorse tradition and he was tasked with raising and organising
the mobile unit colloquially known as the ‘Nackeroos’ [North Australia Observer
Unit].
It is estimated that approximately 3000 Indigenous
Australians served in the regular armed forces and possibly up
to 150 in irregular units. Even now it is impossible to estimate how
many Indigenous men and women enlisted to serve in World War II. Australian
Defence Force enlistment forms did not allow for Aboriginals
to declare their heritage until 1980 and so we can only guess how many
thousands volunteered for both home and overseas service. Some 3000
others were employed as labourers performing vital tasks for the military.
They salvaged crashed aircraft, located unexploded bombs, built roads
and airfields and assisted in the delivery of civilian and military
supplies.
[Watercolour and lithographic crayon heightened with white 27.6 x 37.3 cm. AWM ART25601]
In Katherine in the Northern Territory, Aboriginal
compounds were located near the Army units and most of the men worked
as labourers. They were employed in ammunition stacking, timber cutting
and cement works, maintaining gardens, slaughtering cattle, and assembling
and clearing gearboxes. The Army eventually employed 20 percent of
the Territory’s Aboriginal population. Aboriginal women were employed
in domestic duties or as hospital orderlies at the 121/101 Australian
General Hospital at Katherine.
full
story
In Port Hedland in Western Australia, many
local Aborigines who were man-powered [in occupations which were
essential for the production of equipment or supplies for the war
effort] on stations and in the pastoral industry, were also members of
the Voluntary Defence Corps (VDC) operating coastal defences,
searchlights and anti-aircraft batteries in emergencies. One resident,
Mr Teddy Allen, was a VDC member on De Grey Station. He, and a couple of
the other Aboriginal station workers, received some military training
and were responsible for ensuring that the Aboriginal station workers
and their families complied with blackout provisions. They also moved
them to safety in air raid shelters on the banks of the nearby river
whenever a military plane flew overhead.
Although they were not classed or treated as
Australian citizens, many Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander
servicemen and women fought and died for Australia during World War II.
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