2006年VOA标准英语-New Documentary Honors Doomed WWI South African(在线收听) |
By Suzanne Chislett The forgotten role that black South Africans played in World War I is finally being told. Almost 90 years after the sinking of a ship carrying black South African troops, the story has been turned into a documentary. The film got its first screening at the South Africa High Commission in London - and reporter Suzanne Chislett was there. On February 21, 1917, their ship, the SS Mendi, sank in the English Channel after it was hit by another Allied vessel. The story is little-known. Even in South Africa itself, the role of the so-called native fighters in the war was largely ignored by the country's white leaders, while in Britain only names on a memorial in the port of Southampton commemorate their sacrifice. In collaboration with American cable television's "History Channel", the Commonwealth War Graves Commission has launched an educational resource on CD-ROM which is being distributed to high schools across Britain. Launched at the start of Black History Month in Britain, the documentary is part of a campaign to correct the record, and acknowledge the role played by soldiers from the Commonwealth, and in this case South Africa. The SS Mendi sank in just 20 minutes, but it has taken nearly a century to recognize the sacrifice of those lost souls. |
原文地址:http://www.tingroom.com/voastandard/2006/10/35069.html |