Case study: Concientious objectors in the first and second world wars Flashcards
What did the Military Service Act make compulsory?
March 1916: Unmarried men 18-41 had to go to war.
May 1916: Married men too
1918: From Ages 18-51
What were Conscientious objectors (COs)?
Men who refused to fight due to their:
Religion
conscience
political view
What were “absolutists”?
Pacifists - Refused to support the war.
What were “alternatives”?
refused to carry weapons but did jobs such as stretcher-bearers, food suppliers, and drivers.
What was the job of Tribunals?
To check the reasons of COs as almost 16500 men made the request not to go to war in the UK.
What were the issues with Tribunals?
- Tribunals were local so it was not all done at the same harshness (Varied outcome).
- Panel Members were old men with traditional views.
What was the treatment of Absolutists?
Faced imprisonment or solitary confinement, some COs were punished by being sent to France (the front line of the fighting), sentenced to death, or 10 years of imprisonment.
Why were COs treated so harshly?
- Bad influence on others
- They were harassed for not going
- fighting was presented as a man’s duty
- the government saw it as necessary to force people into fighting as they were desperate for men.
What was the treatment of COs during WW2?
- Prison became a last resort, otherwise, COs would be used as farmworkers, etc.
- WW2 was represented as fighting against tyranny: Propaganda. brutal government.
- Public opinion is more hostile against COs, some COs were abused or attacked.
- Peace Pledge Union, actively campaigned against war, they were put on trial but their case was dismissed.