• PugJesus@kbin.socialM
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    1 year ago

    For other enlistees, the institution of the tirailleurs sénégalais provided an opportunity to
    escape oppressive, patriarchal, and gerontocratic hierarchies of socio-political authority. Bakary
    Diallo, a Senegalese soldier who served in Morocco, joined the tirailleurs sénégalais to flee poor
    familial relations and life employment as a shepherd. Diallo claimed other recruits also viewed
    military service as an economic opportunity for themselves and their families. Veterans, and
    active tirailleurs sénégalais, served to positively influence West Africans to enlist in the colonial
    military institutions. These men sported uniforms, exhibited wealth, and carried the authority of
    the French military. A French general observed that men living near French posts, who had
    more contact with the French and their African intermediaries, were more likely to see France’s
    cause as their own.

    https://escholarship.org/content/qt4x19q2xb/qt4x19q2xb_noSplash_2942fea742a58073726feee3e08216d5.pdf

    This piece actually also goes through some of the disillusionment present in the Great War and the effect of military service on post-WW2 nationalism in Francophone colonies, which you may find interesting. Sadly, short it is not.