Showing posts with label Royal West African Frontier Force. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Royal West African Frontier Force. Show all posts

Saturday, January 15, 2022

NIGERIA ARMED FORCES REMEMBRANCE DAY: Today I Salute My Great Father, Sunday Eke

NIGERIA ARMED FORCES REMEMBRANCE DAY

January 15, 2022.

#Nigeria

#Nigerians

#RWAFF

#Nigerianarmy

#soldiers 

#waroffice

#Britishempire

#RoyalWestAfricanfrontierforce

#worldwar2 

#Nigerianregiment

#father 

#memorial

#remembrance 

#Burma

Today, I Salute My Great Father.

Sunday Eke who was a Nigerian soldier of the Royal West African Frontier Force (RWAFF). with the battalions of the Nigeria Regiment that served in Burma during the second World War (1939-1945).

I saw my father as a war hero and I was proud of him until his last days on Earth on November 19, 1983.

The most daring warriors are soldiers without uniform and I am one of them.

Friday, May 27, 2011

Lest you forget, my father fought in Burma


An African soldier during World War 2
The following true story is for Memorial Day and is published on the Red Room.

Lest you forget, my father fought in Burma

~ by Chima Michael Ekenyerengozi

May 26, 2011, 3:41 pm

(In memory of my father Sunday Eke, who fought and survived the World War II in Burma)

I have kept my father's identity card of Royal West African Frontier Force (RWAFF). But I have forgotten everything he told me about the role he and other thousands of Nigerians played as soldiers who fought for the British Empire and the allies in World War II. I do not know if my father won the coveted Burma Star. Marshall Kebby wrote about their exploits in Burma before he passed away over a decade ago. My father never kept a diary and it was after he died on November 19, 1983, that I knew that keeping a diary like Mr. Kebby would have helped me to know more about his past life as a soldier and ambulance driver before I was born.


African soldiers of the Royal West African Frontier Force (RWAFF) during World War 2

Every Memorial Day or V-J Day reminds me of my father and the other unsung African heroes of the Whiteman's war that the Blackman was forced to fight against Adolf Hitler's Germany and Japan. No war film on World War Two has ever included them, except in 2009 when the BBC News reported about a documentary that revealed that only two in 10 of the soldiers who fought in Burma were white!


Click here to read the complete story.

Releases displayed in Africa/Lagos time 27 May 2011



26 May 2011







25 May 2011