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  • Ancestral ties of the Great War

    The Calgary Herald (Alberta)
    November 10, 2006 Friday
    Final Edition

    Ancestral ties of the Great War

    by John Weissenberger and George Koch, For The Calgary Herald


    When tomorrow we remember the sacrifice in Canada's wars, the names
    Vimy Ridge, Ypres and Passchendaele will be mentioned.

    The slaughter of the now almost century-past Great War still evokes
    emotion -- the muddy trenches that served to fill fields with tight
    rows of white headstones or grim ossuaries holding anonymous fallen.
    Many Canadians have family ties to the young men who fought and died
    there.

    The family stories passed around in Canadian homes may not all have
    to do with Flanders fields, however. For the conflict was the First
    World War. If you lost an ancestor, it could well have happened in an
    even more distant land.

    If you're of east Asian origin, you may have ancestors among the more
    than one million British Indian troops who fought. These colonial
    soldiers were sent to the Middle East, to Africa and to the Western
    Front. More than 40,000 were killed, to Canada's 57,000.

    In contrast to the relentless, industrial-scale slaughter in Europe,
    the exotic East Africa campaign fascinated audiences. The British
    used thousands of Indian troops to chase the small but resourceful
    German force, made up largely of locals. Fighting continued until the
    Germans received belated word of the Armistice from an English
    prisoner.

    When the Ottoman Empire (now Turkey) entered the war as a German
    ally, it triggered almost four years of fighting ranging from the
    Suez Canal to Britain's conquest of Jerusalem. A similar campaign
    took place in Mesopotamia -- now Iraq. Canadians of Middle Eastern
    origin may have had family fighting with or against the Turks.

    The Turks suffered 250,000 killed in the war, while inflicting
    massive casualties on others, including Armenians. A few years ago, a
    Canadian filmmaker chronicled aspects of the Armenian genocide in the
    film Ararat.

    Numerous Canadians likely have ancestors among the almost 700,000
    Italian dead of the Great War. This figure is 40,000 greater than
    Britain's losses, which ripped the guts out of a whole generation of
    young men. Most of the Italians were slaughtered in 12 battles along
    the Isonzo River, near today's border with Slovenia.

    Italy also saw some of the only alpine fighting in the war, with
    barbed war strung along precipitous rock ridges and huge bunker
    networks carved into glaciers. The Austrians once blasted away an
    entire mountainside, collapsing it onto the Italian trenches.
    Glaciers to this day disgorge detritus from the war, plus the
    occasional body.

    Michael Ignatieff's grandfather was the Russian czar's minister of
    education, concerned about the fate of a different "nation." The
    Russian "steamroller" was meant to crush the Germans and
    Austro-Hungarians but, after more than two years of war and almost
    1.5 million men killed, the czar's empire was sliding toward
    revolution. Inadequate equipment, primitive logistics and clumsy
    leadership sealed her fate.

    One of our grandfathers, as an Austrian infantryman, tried his best
    to speed the demise of Ignatieff the elder's regime. His story
    reflects the complexity of eastern Europe's ethnic mix. Some members
    of the multi-national Austro-Hungarian Empire were less than enthused
    about getting killed for the Habsburg emperor. German-speaking
    regiments were interspersed along the front to shore up their less
    enthusiastic comrades.

    During the Russian attack on Lutsk in Ukraine in 1916, the Czech
    regiments on either side of grandfather W.'s position gladly threw
    down their arms and crossed over. Instead of receiving a bayonet to
    the midriff, grandpa W. spent 18 leisurely months in pleasant
    captivity in the Caucasus, making his way home during Russia's
    revolution. Meanwhile, the Czechs were formed into a kind of foreign
    legion and dragged into the Russian civil war. Scores of idealistic
    Bohemians perished in the wastes of Siberia fighting Trotsky's Red
    Army.

    If your family is Serb or Romanian, your relatives might have fought
    "alongside" Canada in distant corners of the war. But if you're
    Polish or Ukrainian, they could as easily have been fighting with
    Canada's past enemy, or even on both sides of the conflict.

    Nor did the Armistice of Nov. 11, 1918, truly stop the war.

    Brutal ethnic cleansing of minority Greeks and Turks in each obverse
    country occurred years later, ending only after a huge population
    swap. There are probably Canadians whose ancestors were among them.

    As we admire the newly restored Canadian memorial at Vimy, we are
    reminded of those who paid with their lives in battles that helped
    forge our nation. We should also remember those with nothing to mark
    their final resting place -- in the wilds of Africa, the wastes of
    Iraq or the forests of Siberia.

    John Weissenberger is a Calgary geologist. George Koch is a Calgary
    writer. More of their writing can be read at the weblog: drjandmrk.com

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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