Ceylonese
planters, too, died at Gallipoli
By
GEORGE BRAINE
My sister and I were at the
Beach Cemetery in Gallipoli, where 285 British Commonwealth troops are buried.
Our Turkish guide was listing the countries from where the fallen were from,
and Ceylon was not mentioned. I was wondering around, peering closely at the
gravestones, when I spotted three graves of riflemen from the Ceylon Planters
Rifle Corps. I shouted out that Ceylonese were also buried there, and the guide
came running to check. From now on, he assured me, Ceylon would be among the
countries he listed.
The
Beach Cemetery
The three graves, of A.
Forrest, G. Middlemiss, and H.A. Carlisle, are located next to each other. The
first landing by the Corps at Anzac Cove was on April 25, 1915, so these three had
succumbed within about ten days of the landing.
I am not an Australian or a New Zealander, nor do I have
an ancestor who fought at Gallipoli, but the annual ANZAC commemoration ceremonies,
and the near reverential tones in which Gallipoli is referred to, made me
curious. So, we took the 10-hour strenuous roundtrip by coach to Gallipoli from
Istanbul.
During World War I, Turkey was an ally of the Germans,
and the purpose of the Gallipoli campaign was to force Turkey out of the war.
Winston Churchill, as the First Lord of Admiralty, spearheaded the effort,
which eventually cost 120,000 British casualties (killed or wounded), half of
them from illness due to the extremely unsanitary conditions. An untold number
died in the ships that were sunk. The debacle led to Churchill’s resignation.
The Ceylon Planters Rifle Corps (CPRC) was formed in
1900, and consisted mainly of European tea and rubber planters, all volunteers.
During World War I, eight officers and 221 other ranks embarked for Egypt, and
were trained there. Eighty of these troops were sent to Gallipoli, the first
group landing there on April 25, 1915. The troops were mainly used as the ANZAC commander’s bodyguard. In addition to the three buried at the Beach
Cemetery, three more, who died on board hospital ships on the way home, are said
to be buried in Colombo.
One CPRC soldier who survived was Herbert Brett, who
planted at Pannala, in the NWP, on a coconut estate named Yakwila. He was a
close friend of my English grandfather, who was also planted nearby. Brett,
like many others in the Corps, joined the British army, was commissioned,
eventually rising to the rank of major. He landed at Gallipoli on May 29. After
the battalion he commanded was decimated (out of 500 soldiers, only 18 men and
one officer were left), Brett surrendered to the Turks on August 6, and was
mistreated as a POW. He did not return to Ceylon.
The 31 Allied cemeteries at Gallipoli are managed by the
Commonwealth War Graves Commission, and are situated in beautifully landscaped,
picturesque locations. All are meticulously maintained, and some have
intriguing names like Pink Farm, Twelve Tree Copse, Canterbury, Johnston’s
Jolly, and Lone Pine. Of the 22,000 Allied troops buried at Gallipoli, only
about 9000 have been identified.
In addition to the huge casualties suffered by the UK,
the French suffered 27,000 casualties, the Australians, 28,000 (8700 dead), and
the New Zealanders 7400 (2779 dead). The total Allied deaths were around
44,000.
Due to the heavy casualties they suffered, Australia and
New Zealand regard the Gallipoli campaign as a baptism of fire, leading to
their emergence as independent countries.
According to one estimate, despite their victory, 325,000
Ottoman (Turkish and Arab) troops died during the eleven-month campaign. Of this number, 85,000 were combat
related and 240,000 were due to sickness. A staggering 1,965,000 were
permanently wounded, sick, or missing.
Mustafa Kemal Atatürk
(1881-1938) rose to prominence as a commander at Gallipoli, became the founding
president of Turkey in 1923. Despite the massive losses his country had
suffered at Gallipoli, Atatürk made a magnanimous speech in 1934, which
contained the following words:
Those heroes that shed their blood and lost their lives … you
are now lying in the soil of a friendly country. Therefore rest in peace. There
is no difference between the Johnnies and the Mehmets to us where they lie side
by side here in this country of ours … You, the mothers, who sent their sons
from far away countries wipe away your tears; your sons are now lying in our
bosom and are in peace. After having lost their lives on this land they have
become our sons as well.
The
Memorial at Anzac Cove, with Atatürk’s words
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