Answer:
r the fall of France in 1940, Admiral Georges Robert, high commissioner for the French West Indies – known to locals as Tan Robé – threw in his lot with Pétain. Two French warships were blockaded in the harbour at Fort-de-France, leaving several thousand white French sailors idle. For the next three years they behaved like an occupying force. Fanon’s elders adopted a wait-and-see attitude: why get mixed up in a white man’s war? Fanon, however, insisted that ‘whenever human dignity and freedom are at stake, it involves us.’ In 1943 he made his way to Dominica, paying for his passage with cloth he had stolen from his father, to enlist in De Gaulle’s army. He was too late: soon after his arrival in Dominica, Tan Robé surrendered to the Allied forces, and Fanon was sent home.
But when the USS Oregon left Fort-de-France in March 1944, he was on board, with a thousand black volunteers and not a single béké. During training at a camp in Morocco, he discovered a world of fraternity without equality: white soldiers were at the top of a strict racial hierarchy
Explanation:
Georgia only has two deep water ports. Brunswick is one while Savannah is the other one.
The Georgia shipyard was home to the Southeastern Shipbuilding Corporation. It was located on the Savannah river, off the eastern tip of the Hutchinson Island.
Southeastern Shipbuilding Corporation operated the Savannah shipyard from 1942 until 1945. They built 106 vessels wherein 88 of these were Liberty ships.
Liberty ships were cargo ships built in the United States to provide allies with much needed merchant tonnage during World War 2.
Answer:
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Explanation: