Monday, November 21, 2016
Somjee, S.
Legacy of Colonialism, Tyranny of African Nationalism
Viewing Asian
African Heritage Exhibition at the National Museums of Kenya. Weber: The contemporary west Volume 33,
Number 1, Fall 2016. pp. 25- 32
Legacy of Colonialism, Tyranny of African Nationalism
Viewing
Asian African Heritage Exhibition at the National Museums of Kenya
Sultan Somjee
The exhibition, Asian African Heritage: Past and Present
(2000-2005), 1 was staged at the time when forty years of
African nationalism had promulgated into widespread discrimination against the
Asians of East Africa. The display was about being Asian2 and
African. The two identity positions of the descendants of oceanic migrations
were presented in a flux of economic, social, and political changes during
British colonialism from the 1890s to the independence era of 1960. It was
about being exclusive while safeguarding creed bonds, but inclusive in civic
participation. It’s this duality of private and national spaces that has
fashioned the Asian African identity in the twenty-first century. While the
focus of the exhibition was Kenya, its central praxis can be viewed broadly in
the East African context.
This essay is
written in the curator’s voice and carries the exhibition’s tone while
maintaining the vantage of community view points and remembrances.
Rise of African Nationalism
The years following the
independence of Kenya (1963) were filled with vibrant expressions of
nationalism valorizing African Socialism3 while aspiring to
capitalism. Politicians spoke about the three evils of colonialism:
economic
exploitation, waysiding African culture and racism. Asians in Kenya were
pointed out as embodying these three evils.
Thus in the furore of political
speeches inspiring equality and a desire for nationhood, Asian Africans came
first to be excluded from the national re-formation of their homeland, and
thereafter they were demonized by the State for their cultural and moral
failure as a race befitting African
citizenship, traditions and communalism. Making them ‘the Others’ in their
birth land was meant to publicly humiliate the community that albeit carried
trappings of sub-colonial behaviour from the recent days of the Empire when
race and class overlapped. As it was intended, the rhetoric invited cheers for
the leaders at political rallies and sustained their popularity even when signs
of dictatorship, corruption and tribalism that bred poverty were visible. The
latter was declared as the product of Asians ‘milking the economy.’
Over generations Asian community
funds had developed amenities for the benefit of their select religious, ethnic
and caste persons. This had created inward looking self-sustaining diverse
groups within the three race boxes set up by the apartheid system. However
later, in the post-independence era, though the institutions opened their doors
to all, resentment against the Asian presence persisted. The hatred was allowed
to flourish as were the violent ethnic confrontations, while the new government
vigorously pursued in footsteps of colonialists entrenching the class society
and fear of diversity. In such a synthetic ambience, a four-pronged state
propaganda was launched against the community:
Indian women. “Why don’t Asian
girls marry Africans?” was a frequent question, inferring to Asian marriage
customs as contradictory to African, and thus implicitly racist. However, the
attack on the Indian woman was felt by the community as an assault on the
family and values. Like the Indian, the African politician was born into
patriarchy. 4 The show of masculinity by male nationalists
over others has been a global phenomenon. 5 In nearby, Zanzibar for example, after the
revolution in 1964, there were threats of forced marriages of Indian, Arab and
Persian school girls to polygamous black army officers and ministers. And when forced marriages did take place,
some angry and humiliated fathers and brothers who protested were sentenced to
one year’s imprisonment and 24 strokes.6 However, most Asians would
not openly argue against the intimidating power of Black nationalism for fear
of being called racists, harassed and even deported.
Political Hectoring. After the
independence of Kenya in 1963, there came a barrage of scathing presidential
and ministerial speeches jeering Kenya’s Asians at public rallies. This created
a nationwide hateful ebullience against the Indian behind the shop counter, the
teacher in front of the classroom; clerks at the office desk, craftsmen in the
workshop, students in school, and doctors in hospital uniforms.
Theatre. When
President Julius Nyerere of Tanzania translated Shakespeare’s The Merchant of Venice into Swahili, the
most widely spoken language in East Africa, its vocabulary was appropriated by
Kenyan politicians into their anti-Asian diatribes and then applied to the new
theatre. The oriental visage of Shylock the Jew magnificently fitted the Indian
money-making storekeeper carrying the weighing scale. Like Shylock, he was
feverishly protective of his daughter from those not of his kind and he loved
gold. In bringing The Merchant of Venice home,
the racial stigma of anti-Semitism transferred from Europe to East Africa.
“Jews of Africa” was the other name for the Indians in Africa from the early
twentieth century.8 When the
theme of The Merchant of Venice was
put to local context in serial TV
plays satirizing Indian otherness and greed,
it echoed the polemics of nationalism. So popular were the comedies that
the drama’s diction transcended into everyday street, office and campus talk,
and continues to this day. Finally, an all Africa award-winning play with a
strong anti-colonial mass appeal, portrayed the bourgeoisie of Kenya
exclusively as a Gujarati buffoon.9
Needless to say, the emerging
politician businessmen who saw the Asian commercial class in its way, were
pampered by the growing expatriate corporate society appearing sympathetic to
the general population while tutoring black politicians into the new age of
democracy and neo-colonialism.10
School Curriculum. The new Kenya school curriculum rightly favoured
African perspectives in an attempt to unite a nation of multiple ethnicities.
However, the heritage of the descendants of oceanic migrations was noticeably
minimized. Indian trading and working classes were not only the makers of
towns, commerce, and infrastructure but also of modern Kenya as noted by the
celebrated Kenyan novelist Ngũgĩ wa Thiong’o.11 What was omitted was
that Indians ran a free press, workers’ union and the civil society
taking the first steps towards radicalization, freedom, and the making of a
nation hand-in-hand with the Africans.12
Climax. In 1968, the anti-Asian policies culminated in
nationalization of properties in Tanzania mainly targeting assets of Asians
though not declared as such.13 For over a century, Asian Africans
had moved around the three regions of Kenya, Uganda, and Tanzania, and had
close relatives and business interests in the three regions. Then came the
policy of banning Asian trades in rural areas. Ironically, it was often the
forefathers of the “paper citizens” (as they were called), who had put up the
first stores that initiated countryside commerce and the formation of towns. In
1968, the Africanization of jobs held by Asians in the government, parastatals,
and industries affected the large wage earning class that had little or no capital.
Finally, in 1972 came the expulsion order from President Idi Amin to Asians to
leave Uganda in ninety days. A culture of silence, fear, withdrawal from
radical politics, and secrecy developed among Asian Africans as the decade of
the 60s slipped into the 70s.
Result. The community itself, befuddled as it was, split into
several directions. There was mass emigration to the West that fuelled state
bigotry against “the defectors” when nationalism sang the song of patriotism
through the collective efforts of all citizens pulling together. At the same
time, some Asian businessmen found the inter-ethnic rivalries, corruption, and
greed of the political elites that a totalitarian state breeds, to their
advantage. A handful became post-independence millionaires and began investing
overseas, especially in Great Britain, in joint family ventures. Today, some of
them are famously known as the Asian African Global Capitalists.14 The
men and women in the street perceived this handful of Asians, called “the president’s
cronies,” as a stereotype condemnation of the entire community.15
The prejudice intensified as the dictators became increasingly unpopular. Many,
however, remained undecided or unable to emigrate. They were condemned for
‘sitting on the fence’.
Those who openly supported opposition parties, such as the
Kenya People’s Party (KPU), were deported while others slipped into self-exile.16
Ultimately, some began to join the covert anti-dictatorship movements either
directly as members,17 or indirectly through material support and
other means. This was in keeping with the radical tradition against oppressive
regimes from the colonial days.18
However, almost all Asian African
intellectuals, writers and poets moved out of the country. The departure of the
literati and journalists created a vacuum in the once-vibrant arts scene that
for long was the community’s heimat in ethnic languages and English.19
Today, Asian African literature by diaspora writers mirrors the human side of
the story that the exhibition represents. Among the writers are those who tell
the missing stories of the Brown Man (in)
Black Country (1981), as JM Nazareth titled his book. Another writer, Peter
Nazareth, describes the predicament of living In a Brown Mantle (1972). All show concern about The Day After Tomorrow (1971), the
suggestive title of Bahadur Tejani’s first novel.
Finally, it may be noted that what the Asian community
endured under African nationalism was not unlike the pogroms against minorities
of different racial or religious groups in the world history of nationalisms.20
The humiliation of the commercial, intellectual and skilled ethnic minorities
was not uncommon if not an inherent feature of pogroms that are vividly
described in Jewish narratives and films depicting the rise of racism in Europe
and Russia in the 20th Century.
The Discourse
Asian African Heritage: Past and Present generated a discourse on
racial belonging, citizenship and identity in an African democracy. It’s about
being exclusive in community affairs, and open, inclusive and civic in the
public square. These are the two dichotomous spaces that the community has held
over generations in East Africa.21
Today Asian citizen run Kenya-wide
educational institutions, social foundations, medical centres and most
importantly a free press are markers of civil societies to emulate. Yet, they
originate in and continue to be maintained by cloistered racial and religious
groups, volunteers and a few wealthy individuals. Therein is the embedded
dilemma for the young and future generations of Asian Africans. They must
address the legacy of colonialism and deal with African nationalism which means
tackling racism within and without their communities while maintaining the
civic spaces. It’s a heritage of twin responsibility in a class-structured
racialized society of independent Kenya. The exhibition brought this discourse
to the public square.
The Exhibition
The exhibition dioramas were
built around three themes: The Labour Heritage, the Intellectual Heritage, and
the Social Heritage from around the 1890s to the 1960s. Within these three
themes, it was the intent of the curator to juxtapose the secluded and civic
facets of the community. The exhibition was designed using earth colours and
simple wooden structures of walk-in galleries without glass or pedestals. It
incorporated properties relating to the early working-class material culture
and pictures creating immediacy so as not to have barriers between the viewers
and the viewed upon. Visitors could board the dhow and be with the travellers. They could be near the railroad
coolie at work or in the craftsman’s shop and the Indian kitchen. They could be
at the counter of the Indian store witnessing the birth of commerce. They could
stand before the activists who voiced demands for racial equality and freedom,
and shaped the making of the nation.
Descendants of the pioneers created ten key narratives in Frame Story, the literary genre that’s closest to oral tradition. Sixty volunteers drew on memories from their families and communities to build the scenes. They were the community storytellers who would also serve as guides.
Each frame story focused on one
central property. This essay takes a walk along the journey of over one hundred
years, stopping at ten key properties that mark the Asian African history of
East Africa.
Frame Story One: The Dhow. Visuals around the dhow depicted Indian slave and coolie sea routes on the Indian and
Pacific Oceans from around the 1850s. The maps denoted the economic foundations
of the British, French, and Dutch Empires in Africa, Mauritius, Fiji, South
America, and the Caribbean. The entry to the exhibition required a climb up the
stairs to board the dhow and mingle
with the travellers. The dhow itself
was a walk-in gallery, displaying goods and documents on the inside wall of the
prow, while the immigrants sat on the deck. A walk through the rocking boat led
to the landing scene. Here the viewer disembarked into the history of the
Indian Ocean merchant trade and inland routes. There was a case of coins and
bank notes dating back to early 1900s signifying commerce. A picture of the
fifteenth century Fort Jesus in the old town of Mombasa built by Indian workers
opened to the history of labour.
Frame Story Two: Laying the Railroad. The diorama on coolie labour
starts in 1896. Of the 32,000 railway coolies and skilled workers, some
remained behind to reclaim and farm the hostile, swampy, or arid lands rejected
by the white settlers. Sixteen coolies per mile became permanently disabled and
were shipped back to India for replacement from their villages, according to
the contract agreements. About half as many, approximately 2,500, were killed
by diseases, exhaustion, and animals. That made four deaths per mile.
Frame Story Three: Building the Road. The building of the road is
described in a series of illustrations from the graphic journal of Mohamed
Sadiq Cocker, an assistant draughtsman in the road construction team of workers
and technicians between 1926 and 1929. In such personal anecdotes as the
strikingly visual commentary sketched by the roadside in the African
hinterland, the exhibition opened family archives to public view.
Frame Story Four: The Oxcart. At the Cartwright workshop stood a
handcrafted oxcart from Kericho, a town situated in the heartland of the former
White Highlands and the plantation economy. The wheels for animal and hand
carts made by the Indian craftsmen were a critical tool for the export of
coffee and tea and for the vital imports of the time. By the 1930s agricultural
produce became the strength of the colonial economy, and the basis of further
European settlements. The exhibition path links imagery of transportation by
rail, road, and the oxcart that began the process of modernization.
Frame Story Five: Workshops. Other workshops of tradesmen
symbolized specialized services that skilled Asian pioneers provided. The
blacksmith, carpenter, and tinsmith supplied building and repair-making skills,
and made handy products that the Empire needed to function, establish, and
advance. The site of the mason laying a foundation stone represented the
beginnings of urbanization and modern architecture. In this manner was laid the
foundation of the post-coolie-era settlement of merchants, technicians, and
professionals that was to cultivate an independent self sustaining society and
economy.
Frame Story Six: The Bazaar Walk. The walk ushers visitors into a
bustle of thriving small-scale trades and businesses: a grocery store; a
textiles and tailoring shop; a general store carrying household items. Farming
tools, personal, and home necessities were available in the Indian bazaar. All
the races converged here from their otherwise segregated residences. The walk
along the street exhibits featured the beginning of businesses that ultimately
led to the growth of towns. There was also a bead store that told the story of
how the Indian bead merchant and his wife, the Bead Bai, provided aesthetic
material that heightened indigenous art and cultural traditions.
Frame Story Seven: The Ornaments and Stone Mill. The pioneers were
self-supportive, often relying on their families, village folk and religious
communities who had come before them. The ones who prospered helped their
kinsfolk. Stories are told of Jamal Dewji and Allidina Visram as forefathers of
the Khoja merchants, who took penniless teenagers disembarking from the dhows into their care and taught them to
trade. The same was the story of craft castes and families. Some merchant class
migrants came with their savings, and some had ornaments that their wives
carried on their bodies. In times of need, women sold or pawned their sacred
dowry to help the families to survive. In some families, success of businesses
is spoken of in sacrificial tales of women’s jewellery and their labour on the
stone hand mill. The exhibition showed both these items.
Frame Story Eight: Civic Society.
For the pioneers, spirituality, community identity, and work ethics were
central and intertwined. The railway coolie is seen praying by the railroad.
The coolie-poet Roshan begins his poetical address to Colonel Patterson with
God’ name22 Baghali Shah the railway worker became a Sayyid at the Mackinon Road Station.
Each day, before they began their work, carpenters, masons, and blacksmiths,
comprising master craftsmen castes from India, prayed to their specific deity,
giver of skills, tools, and the daily bread. A saw, marigold flowers, silver
coins, and incense were next to the deity’s colourful picture on the puja altar
of the Gujarati Gajjar Suthar carpenter’s shop.
Mohamed Sadiq Cocker in the road builders’ team was an ardent Sufi.
Puran Singh, the master carpenter and maker of oxcarts, is revered as a Sikh sant (saint) of Kenya. Sewa Haji Paroo,
a devout Khoja, built the first open-to-all races hospital in Dar-es-salaam and
a multiracial school in Bagamoyo, Tanganyika. An exhibit of a stone-laying
ceremony showed elements of worship of the Kutchi mason. Under each ornate
building of urban East Africa is a prayer said for blessings of the new land.
Guru Gobind Singh’s apparition on a white horse makes the site of the Makindu
Sikh temple as sacred earth. At this midway station, Indian workers fuelled the
steam engines, lived, and worshipped. Two Asians, a devout Shia Moslem and a
devout Sikh, bequeathed gardens to their hometowns for public resting places.
These were A.M. Jevanjee in Nairobi and Puran Singh in Kericho.
Such visual snippets reflected on the community’s broader civic work. Philanthropy and religion have been integral to the Asian African family’s social esteem, honour, and identity.23
A section of panels shows portraits of Asian African social workers, nurses, teachers, and midwives. Fatima nurse, Jena nurse and Salu ni Ba appear to pose for what looks like a memorable photograph presented at the exhibition. Another memorable photograph is of Dr. Ribeiro, the most loved doctor of Nairobi, riding a zebra. How he made his rounds on a zebra, and how he detected signs of the bubonic plague that ultimately led to the burning of the Indian bazaar two times, is spoken of as a legend. Then the story is told of how once-prosperous businessmen were reduced to poverty because their stores and homes were burned down. One picture tells the story of the only lady counsellor of Mombasa in 1940s. The picture shows her in a sari among a group of all-male councillors in European-style suits.
In one century in East Africa, the first generation of Indian immigrants built rest houses for travellers and then schools, libraries, and health clinics. Later, they started relief and welfare schemes for the poor in their communities. In the second to fourth generations, their welfare structures reached out to the wider Kenyan society. While they make a significant impact on the collective Asian African group identity, they remain distinct as exclusive groups of Sikhs, Arya Samajis, Oshwals, Ismaili and Ithna Asheri Khojas, Bohoras, Lohanas, and others.
Frame Story Nine: Intellectual Heritage—Writers, Journalists, Political
and Social Reformers. The printing press of S Viyarthi, who fought for
freedom of expression in Kenyan languages and was often imprisoned, stood beside
panels of book covers of writings by Asian Africans and portraits of
journalists, political, and social reformers. One portrait among several
others, was of young Makhan Singh, the founder of the trade union movement in
Kenya.26 The portrait of photojournalist Mohamed Amin, who brought
the famines in Africa to world attention, was mounted beside his camera on a
tripod. This East African panel was on the milestones of history in making.
Frame Story Ten: Portrait of a Minority. Pictures from community plays,
sports clubs, and temple-based arts such as the Indic swastika designs and
rangoli, the feminine floor art, represented exclusive community cultural
events.
Finally as a closure there was a wall of montage in sepia presented faces, attires and postures of a people of diverse languages, customs, and beliefs. At this juncture the Asian African display linked with exhibits of Bantu, Nilotic and Cushitic ethnicities in the National Museum’s ethnographic gallery. The forty-odd groups largely live in exclusive cultural diversities yet collectively display one national identity. The Asian African Heritage Exhibition was the missing link in the text. One comment in the visitors’ book at the exhibition was, “I did not know Indians were important in Africa”—a telling statement on the pervasive influence of the colonial text and nationalist propaganda on the perception of Asian Africans.
About the writer
Sultan Somjee is an ethnographer and
has curated several exhibitions and published widely. He curated the Asian African Heritage: Past and Present
Exhibition (2000 – 2005) while he was the Head of
Ethnography at
the National Museums of Kenya. Thereafter, he wrote Bead Bai (2012) and Home
Between
Crossings (2016). Both books are about
the Asian African experience from the 1900s to 1970s. In 2001 the United
Nations named Somjee one of the twelve global “Unsung Heroes of Dialogue Among
Civilizations” in recognition of his foundational work on Museums of Peace in
regions of ethnic conflicts in eastern Africa. In
2002 Somjee was appointed on the Global Advisory Board of Human Dignity and
Humiliation Studies.
Notes
1 See
the exhibition brochure:
http://allafrica.com/download/resource/main/main/idatcs/00010156:d79f24a32c19589e3d389fcbd5baf6b
6.pdf. And also http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/WPcap/2000-03/15/064r-031500-idx.html
2 The
term Asian is used here to mean descendants of migrants from the Indian
subcontinent, present-day India, and Pakistan. It also covers descendants from
Bangladesh and Afghanistan.
3 Kenya.
African socialism and its application to
planning in Kenya. No. 10. Govt. Printer, 1965.
4 In
March, 2014 Kenya’s male-dominated parliament passed a bill making it legal for
a man to marry another woman without the wife’s consent.
http://www.bbc.com/news/world-africa-26681580.
5 Nagel,
Joane. “Masculinity and nationalism: gender and sexuality in the making of
nations.” Ethnic and Racial Studies
21.2 (1998). Web. 2 Dec. 2010.
6 Hameer,
Fidahussein, Crying Out For Freedom: The
Event of Forced Marriages in 1970s – Zanzibar.
United Kingdom.
Sun Behind the Cloud Publications Ltd. 2014. Print.
7 In
one instance, eight Asian African leaders were deported overnight by Jomo
Kenyatta under charges that could not be brought to court. Some were involved
in the independence movement.
Archives
of Africana Orientalia Online Group https://groups.yahoo.com/neo/groups/africana-orientalia/info
Shah, Ramnik, The
Nationality Factor in the Migration of Gujaratis to East Africa and Beyond
in Gujarati Communities Across The Globe: Memory, Identity an d Continuity
(eds) Mawani, S and Mukadam, A. Trentham Books, London. January 2012 Also see note 16.
8 Horowitz,
Terry Fred. Merchant of Words: The Life
of Robert St. John. Rowman & Littlefield, 2014. Print. 9 Mugo,
Micere Githae and wa Thiong’o, Ngũgĩ. The
Trial of Dedan Kimathi. East African Publishers, 1976.
Print. The play
won first prize at the African Cultural Festival in Lagos, Nigeria, in
1977.
10
Chua, Amy. World on Fire: How Exporting Free Market Democracy Breeds Ethnic Hatred
and Global Instability. United Kingdom. Heinemann, 2006. Print.
11
Kapila, Neera. Race, Rail and Society: Roots of Modern Kenya. Nairobi. Kenway
Publications, 2009.
Print.
12
Durrani, Shiraz. Never Be Silent : Publishing & Imperialism in Kenya; 1884-1963.
United Kingdom. Vita Books, 2000. Print.
Gregory, Robert. Quest for Equality: Asian Politics in East
Africa 1900-1967. India. Orient Longman, 1993.
Print.
---. The
Rise and Fall of Philanthropy in East Africa: The Asian Contribution.
United States. Transaction Publishers, 2014. Print.
Singh, Makhan. History of Kenya’s Trade Union Movement to
1952. Nairobi. East African Publishing House, 1969. Print.
13
Aminzade, Ronald. Race, Nation, and Citizenship in Post-Colonial Africa: The Case of
Tanzania.
Cambridge
University Press, 2013. Print.
14
Oonk, Gijsbert. Settled Strangers: Asian Business Elites in East Africa (1800-2000).
SAGE Publications India, 2013. Print.
15
Chua, Amy. World on Fire: How Exporting Free Market Democracy Breeds Ethnic Hatred
and Global Instability. United Kingdom. Heinemann, 2006. Print.
16
Rattansi, Piyo. “Pranlal Sheth,
Conscientious Lawyer Who Championed the Rights of the Marginalised.” The Guardian, July 27 2003.
<http://www.theguardian.com/news/2003/jul/28/guardianobituaries> 17
Gona, George. Zarina Patel: An
Indomitable Spirit. Nairobi. Mvule Africa Publishers, 2014. Print.
18
See Awaaz Magazine <http://www.awaazmagazine.com/> for articles on Asian
African historical personalities and events that have made a marked difference
in political and social spheres in Kenya from last century to the present.
19
Shah, Ramnik. The Exodus Revisited
- Harvest of a Colonial Fruit in Awaaz November, 2011
http://www.awaazmagazine.com/previous/index.php/archives/item/213-the-exodus-revisited-harvest-of-a-
20
Finzsch, Norbert, and Dietmar Schirmer. Identity and Intolerance: Nationalism,
Racism, and Xenophobia in Germany and the United States. Cambridge
University Press, 2002. Print.
21
Examples of these are Nankank Hospital, M
P Shah Hospital, Dr. Ribeiro Goan School, The Rahimtulla Trust, Mohamedally and
Maniben Rattansi Educational Trust, and Aga Khan University.
22
Patterson, John Henry. The Man-Eaters of Tsavo. London:
Macmillian, 1907. Print.
23
Gregory, Robert G. The Rise and Fall of Philanthropy in East Africa: The Asian
Contribution. Transaction Publishers, 1992. Print.
orientalia@yahoogroups.com>
or <EAcircle@yahoogroups.com>
26 Patel,
Zarina. Unquiet: The Life and Times of
Makhan Singh. Nairobi. Zand Graphics, 2006. Print.
27
“Tharia Topan.” Khojawiki. KojaWiki. Web. 2015. <
http://khojawiki.org/Tharia_Topan>.
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