At the end of the War over three million men were under
arms, 2½ million of them in the Indian Army, over 200,
000 from East Africa and 150,000 from West Africa. This
is a hugely impressive figure given that many thousands
more civilians from the Empire were also involved in the
war effort. The vast majority were volunteers (but some
colonies did use limited forms of conscription) who played
a major part in the operations in Italy, the Mediterranean,
the Middle East, East Africa and the Far East.
Britain’s population of about 7,000 people from the
ethnic minorities also played a significant role. Many
were merchant seamen who prior to the outbreak of war
had settled around the ports of London, Cardiff, Liverpool
and South Shields. As the war progressed, the Merchant
Navy, which had continued to employ sailors from all over
the world, lost many of its men to the Royal Navy, recruited
under the Naval Discipline Act. Seafarers from India,
Africa, Malaya, Burma, the West Indies, China and Malta
also provided manpower to assist the Allied cause at sea.
The Royal Air Force also looked to recruit personnel
from across the Commonwealth. At first, recruitment concentrated
on British subjects of European descent. However after
October 1939 questions of nationality and race were put
aside, and all Commonwealth people became eligible to
join the Royal Air Force on equal terms. By the end of
the Second World War, over 17,500 such men and women had
volunteered to join the RAF, in a variety of roles, and
a further 25,000 served in the Royal Indian Air Force.