While Libya has dominated media reports over the past months, the remaining handful of an almost extinct generation of South African old soldiers might still reflect back to the end of 1941 seventy years ago, to the Battle of Sidi Rezegh and the hundreds of South African prisoners of war who after the battle were to suffer the deprivations of the "thirst march" to the enemy prison cages. But that it a story for another time; what happened at Sidi Rezegh is an event worth relating to generations of contemporary South Africans of all languages and cultural groupings, ignorant of the sacrifices made by their grandparents and great-grand parents in the global struggle all those years ago against Nazism and fascism. For South Africans Sidi Rezegh was a bloody clash between Union Defence Force (UDF) troops and the German Afrika Korps in North Africa.
For South Africans Sidi Rezegh was a bloody clash between Union Defence Force (UDF) troops and the German Afrika Korps in North Africa. Take yourself to Sidi Rezeg via Google Earth; the general area is located about thirty kilometres south-east of Tobruk and labelled with a few war-related place marks. From afar technology depicts the area as featureless and remote as it would have appeared for the 5th SA Brigade seven decades ago. Except that those 5 700 South Africans, all men but with our familiar cultural diversity: white English and Afrikaans, coloured and black, were not entirely alone; they constituted one component of the Commonwealth forces attempting to relieve their besieged garrison at Tobruk.
The bigger ambition of the Commonwealth 8th Army was to use numerical armour, aircraft and men power strength to overwhelm German General Rommel's crack African expeditionary force. 8th Army plans went awry early after a series of inconclusive clashes between Allied and Afrika Korps led to the near annihilation of the British 7th Armoured Division. Rommel's tank commanders made skilled use of their technically superior vehicles employing effective tactics of operating in large formations.
Manoeuvring his massed armour into a counter-attack, Rommel's path was blocked by the static 5th SA Brigade. The South Africans were only partly dug in on rocky ground where sparks flew off picks and spades during digging. They waited in a defensive box approximately five by two and a half kilometres, while from the south west a German mass charge was launched consisting of nearly one hundred tanks with mechanised infantry behind in support.
While their nineteen artillery guns fired solid armour piecing shells the infantry fought back from slit trenches with rifles and light machine guns. Within three hours the battle was over. At least seventy knocked out German tanks littered the desert; but after the artillery had run out of ammunition, infantry small arms were little use against tanks.
But Rommel's armour had been severely hammered - a critical outcome for it temporarily precluded the Afrika Korps from further haranguing the 8th Army. Though the South African cost was high: 224 men killed and nearly 3000 taken prisoner. The trauma and desolation of the Sidi Rezeg aftermath is poignantly captured in writer Uys Krige's short story Death of a Zulu - an account of a battlefield mercy-killing recorded by the author who was amongst those captured.