The 28th (Māori) Battalion was part of the 2nd New Zealand Division, the fighting arm of the 2nd New Zealand Expeditionary Force (2NZEF) during the Second World War (1939-45). A frontline infantry unit made up entirely of volunteers, the Battalion usually contained 700-750 men, divided into five companies.
Many Māori were
quick to answer the call to arms when war broke out in September 1939. In
October,
in response to calls from Sir Apirana Ngata and the other Māori MPs for an
all-Māori unit, the government agreed to the formation of the 28th (Māori) Battalion. After training in Palmerston North, the main body of the Battalion sailed for war in May 1940.
It was a baptism of fire in the ancient lands of the Mediterranean.The Allied defence of Greece and Crete against German attack in April and May 1941 was to end in crushing defeat. The New Zealanders suffered heavy losses, but in ferocious hand-to-hand fighting at Maleme and 42nd Street, the legend of the Māori Battalion was born.
The ordeal of Greece and Crete was followed by a lengthy
period of reorganisation, training and reinforcement in Egypt. From
late 1941 to early 1943 the Māori Battalion would
confront Erwin Rommel's Afrika Korps and
Italian forces in the vast North African desert
- a harsh environment of extreme temperatures, ferocious sandstorms and swarming flies.
The Māori Battalion and other New Zealand troops would spend the last two years of the war fighting the Germans in Italy. Gone was the arid, sparsely populated desert, well suited to tank battles and mobile warfare. Instead, the Māori troops would encounter mud and snow, mountains and rivers, a deeply entrenched enemy - and the warm-hearted Italian people.
Soldiers often say the reality of war is months of boredom interspersed with brief moments of terror. Much of a soldier’s time is spent behind the lines, training, ‘square-bashing’, and carrying out the many mundane tasks of camp life. Sport and entertainment kept the troops occupied, while periods of leave offered welcome opportunities for recreation and sightseeing.
Throughout the war Māori back home played an active role on the ‘home front’, serving in the Home Guard, growing food, working in essential industries and raising funds to support the war effort. Many Māori came to the cities for the first time to work in munitions and other factories, beginning the pattern of urban migration that would accelerate after the war.
The Second World
War was an important event in Māori-Pākehā relations. The efforts and
reputation of the Māori Battalion was a source of great pride to the wider New
Zealand community. Apirana Ngata had argued that Māori participation in the
First World War was the ‘price of citizenship’ – after the Second World War it
was clear that Māori had paid in full.
To mark the 70th anniversary of the 28 Māori Battalion's part in the Second World War we provided detailed monthly accounts of their activities derived from the original war diaries.