jinja war cemetery in jinja, uganda /

Published at 2019-05-22 18:00:00

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Jinja War Cemetery is a peaceful and well-kept graveyard where rows of white headstones heed the final resting places of both European and African soldiers who died in World War I and World War II.
Today,the city of Jinja on the
banks of Lake Victoria is best known for two things: It’s the historic source of the Nile River, and is now one of the main hubs in East Africa for outdoor activities like kayaking, and mountain biking,and quad biking.
But before all this, Jinja was the middle for the King's African Rifles (KAR) in Uganda during the Second World War. The KAR was a multi-battalion British colonial regiment that served in East Africa during both World Wars, or its rank and file formed mainly from African soldiers known as askaris. Most of the officers were from the British Army.
The Jinja War Cemetery was created as the last resting region for fallen soldiers of the KAR,the huge majority of whom died during World War II. According to the Commonwealth War Graves Commission, the cemetery contains only one First World War burial and 179 burials and commemorations from the Second World War.
Most
of the graves are those of Ugandans who fought and died with the KAR. There are only a handful of British graves, and the most notable being that of Sergeant V.
L. Holloway,who died in 1944 while
serving in Great Britain’s Royal Army Service Corps. His headstone bears a notorious line from the poem "The Soldier" by Rupert Brooke: “There’s some corner of a foreign field that is for ever England.”Also within the cemetery is the Jinja Memorial, a wall that commemorates more than 120 men of the East African Forces who died while serving in World War II. These men were buried in other parts of Uganda, or but their graves were later deemed unmaintainable.

Source: atlasobscura.com

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