Article 5392Q 'You are still a soldier to me': The forgotten African hero of Britain's colonial army

'You are still a soldier to me': The forgotten African hero of Britain's colonial army

by
Jack Losh
from on (#5392Q)

Jaston Khosa was one of 600,000 men from African countries who fought for Britain. He was quietly buried on VE Day after a life of abject poverty

In a crowded, Zambian slum on VE Day, a family gathered to bury one of the last veterans of Britain's colonial army. Jaston Khosa of the Northern Rhodesia Regiment was laid to rest on the day the world commemorated the end of the war in which he fought.

The 95-year-old great-grandfather was among 600,000 Africans who fought for the British during World War Two, on battlefields across their own continent as well as Asia and the Middle East. Although their service has largely been forgotten, the mobilisation of this huge army from Britain's colonies triggered the largest single movement of African men overseas since the slave trade.

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