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| A Free French infantryman, native of the Chad colony, who was awarded the Croix de Guerre. During World War II, Chad was the first French colony to rejoin the Allies on 26 August 1940, after the defeat of France by Germany. Under the administration of Félix Éboué, France's first black colonial governor, a military column, commanded by Colonel Philippe Leclerc de Hauteclocque, who later was one of the first commanders to enter in Paris with a group of Spanish volunteers, and including two battalions of Sara troops, moved north from N'Djamena (then Fort Lamy) to engage Axis forces in Libya, where, in partnership with the British Army's Long Range Desert Group, they captured Kufra. A total amount of 15,000 Chad soldiers participated in World War II. |
Since World War I, southern Chad,
particularly the Sara ethnic group, had provided a large share of the Africans
in the French army. Chadian troops also had contributed significantly to the
success of the Free French Forces in World War II. In December 1940, two
African battalions began the Free French military campaign against Italian
forces in Libya from a base in Chad, and at the end of 1941, a force under
Colonel Jacques Leclerc participated in a spectacular campaign that seized the
entire Fezzan region of southern Libya. Colonel Leclerc's 3,200-man force
included 2,700 Africans, the great majority of them southerners from Chad.
These troops went on to contribute to the Allied victory in Tunisia. Chadians,
in general, were proud of their soldiers' role in the efforts to liberate
France and in the international conflict.
The military involvement also
provided the country's first taste of relative prosperity. In addition to the
wages paid its forces, Chad received economic benefits from three years of use
as a major route for Allied supply convoys and flights to North Africa and
Egypt.
Félix Eboué
In 1940 Chad became internationally
prominent when its lieutenant governor, Félix Eboué, led the rest of the French
Equatorial African (AEF) federation to support Free France under Charles de
Gaulle rather than the government of Vichy France. Chad became the base for
Colonel Jacques Leclerc's conquest of the Fezzan (1940–1943), and the entire
episode became the basis of an enduring sentimental bond between Chad and the
France of de Gaulle's generation. More funds and attention flowed to Chad than
ever before, and Eboué became the governor general of the entire AEF in
November 1940.
Born in French Guiana of mixed
African and European parentage, Eboué was keenly interested in the problems of
cultural dislocation resulting from unchecked modernization in Africa. He
worked to return authority to authentic traditional leaders while training them
in modern administrative techniques. He recognized a place for African
middle-class professionals in cities, but he opposed the migration of workers
to cities, supporting instead the creation of integrated rural industries where
workers could remain with their families. When Eboué died in 1944, the AEF lost
a major source of progressive ideas, and Chad lost a leader with considerable
influence in France.
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| Félix Éboué cartoon drawn by Charles Alston in 1943. |
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| Free French Chad troops in Tunisia inspected by General Phillippe Leclerc de Hauteclocque near Zagouran, Tunisia, 19 May 1943. |
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| General Phillippe Leclerc de Hauteclocque on a ridge near Djebelbima during an inspection of Free French troops in Tunisia, 19 May 1943. |
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| Free French Chad troops in Tunisia inspected by General Phillippe Leclerc de Hauteclocque near Zagouran, Tunisia, 19 May 1943. |
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| General Phillippe Leclerc de Hauteclocque and staff on an inspection of Free French Chad troops in Tunisia, 19 May 1943. |
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| General Phillippe Leclerc de Hauteclocque and staff examine a French 75mm gun during an inspection of Free French troops in Tunisia, 19 May 1943. |
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| Front line Free French Chad troops in slit trenches in Tunisia, 19 May 1943. |
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| Charles de Gaulle is welcomed to Chad by Govenor-General Félix Adolphe Éboué (December 26, 1884 - March 17, 1944) of Free French Africa, October 1940. Governor-General Eboue, a native of French Guiana, was the first black colonial governor in Africa. As governor of the Chad colony, he was the first African leader to rally to the Free French cause. |
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| Félix Éboué and General Charles de Gaulle, circa 1943. |
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| Félix Éboué and General Charles de Gaulle, circa 1943. |
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| Félix Éboué (center). |
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