Leroy Vail - The Creation of Tribalism in Southern Africa
Leroy Vail - The Creation of Tribalism in Southern Africa
London
Berkeley: Currey University of California Press, 1989.
http://ark.cdlib.org/ark:/13030/ft158004rs/
Preferred Citation: Vail, Leroy, editor. The Creation of Tribalism in Southern Africa. London
Berkeley: Currey University of California Press, 1989.
http://ark.cdlib.org/ark:/13030/ft158004rs/
Preface
― ix ―
It was clear that this answer both puzzled and frustrated him, and he then
assured me that, as I continued my journey, I would soon recognize that the
Northern Region was a better place than the south because its people were
'more civilized' and 'more progressive'. To clinch his argument, he pointed
out that in the south 'people actually live in round houses, while we here in
the North use square ones'! This proud claim of cultural superiority for the
people of the Northern Region on the basis of the design of their houses
called to mind the attitude of many of my students from the Northern
Region. In 1968, the year of the Nigerian Civil War, many had predicted,
with abundant optimism, that 'Northern Malawi is going to be the next
Biafra'!
It was evident that despite the fact that Malawi had won its independence
from Britain just four years earlier, its nationalist movement was already a
spent ideological force. The official rhetoric in the government-controlled
press and radio about 'building the nation' and the Malawi Congress Party's
endless sloganeering for 'Unity, Loyalty, Obedience and Discipline' were
belied by the fact that many Malawians who, according to the received
wisdom of the times, should have known better, were ardent 'tribalists' with
no love for the Party and its grandees or for its stated goals. Why had
nationalism and nationalist unity evaporated so rapidly?
―x―
It was also partly the result of the Malawi Congress Party's actions against
the strongly entrenched position within Malawian society of comparatively
welleducated bureaucrats and civil servants from the Northern Region. This
assault was broad in its scope, but it had been most strikingly symbolized for
all Malawians by President Kamuzu Banda's decision in 1968 to remove the
Tumbuka language—spoken by the great majority of the Northern Region's
people—from its status as an official language of the country, banning it
wholly from radio broadcasts and newspapers.
As I explored the manner in which this vision of a glorious past had been
constructed and deployed, I further discovered that the narrower Tumbuka
'tribalism', based on the carefully crafted version of local history that dated
from the turn of the century, had been transformed in the 1930s into a
broader, more powerful northern regionalism that rested on two pillars: the
widespread acceptance of the importance of the Tumbuka language; and the
assumption that, as northerners were better educated than other peoples of
colonial Malawi, they deserved powerful positions in society acquired through
merit. Once again, this was an ideological transformation that occurred at a
time of political and economic struggle.
― xi ―
It struck me that what had occurred in Malawi was likely to have occurred in
other parts of southern Africa as well. If ethnic consciousness was a product
of historical experience, then its creation and elaboration would be a proper
subject of enquiry for historians. Moreover, it seemed important to
understand the historical dynamics of the creation of ethnic consciousness
because it seemed likely that the process would continue into the future and
retain great political salience. It was with these ideas in mind that I decided
to organize a conference to explore the issue. I had two goals for this
conference.
First, I wanted a set of case studies that would deploy fresh empirical data
illuminating the historical processes involved in the creation of specific
examples of ethnic ideology. The widely-held assumption that 'tribalism'
would soon disappear, coupled with the moral opprobrium associated with it
as a topic of study, meant that. many academics had tended to shy away
from it, apprehensive lest such studies undermine officially supported goals
of national unity and 'nation-building' by succouring parochialism.[3] As a
consequence, studies exploring the inception and growth of such ideological
constructs in southern Africa were relatively rare. There was, then, a real
need for detailed case studies based on original research that might
illuminate the historical process involved.
By emphasizing the historicity of the process and by placing the case studies
within a comparative framework, I hoped that ethnicity might, at least
partially, be explained. The tautological argument that Africans acted
'tribalistically' because they were 'tribal' people would thus be replaced by an
explanation with greater power. This explanation would be important not
only for its own sake, but, more practically, because ethnicity remains a
political reality in the region today and because the potential for ethnic
conflict in a future black-ruled South Africa is something to be taken very
seriously indeed. Should such occur, it will be highly disruptive—as ethnic
conflict in Nigeria has been—because it will be occurring in the industrial,
social and political centre of the entire region and would in all likelihood lead
to its political destabilization.
The conference itself was held in April 1983 at the University of Virginia, in
Charlottesville, under the auspices of the Carter G. Woodson Institute.
Armstead Robinson, the Director of the Institute, was unfailing in his
support. I must make
― xii ―
special note of the work done by the Institute's staff, especially Mary Rose,
in ensuring that the conference took place smoothly and for aid in the
subsequent editing of the volume.
I owe a great deal of gratitude for the conference's success to all the
contributors to this volume, whose papers comprised the bulk of the work
discussed at the conference itself and whose patience through an
exceedingly long period of editing has been both monumental and deeply
appreciated. Other participants who contributed to the conference's
intellectual vitality were Hoyt Alverson, Colin Bundy, James Carragher, David
Coplan, Jill Dias, Robert Edgar, Alexis Gardella, Stanley Greenberg, Halisi,
Richard Hodder-Williams, Mary Rayner, and Richard Sigwalt.
Special mention must be made of two people without whose support this
book would never have been brought to a conclusion. First, although Joseph
Miller did not present a paper, he did virtually everything else he could to
ensure that the conference took place and that it would be a success.
Whenever I was depressed about organizational problems, I could count on
him to convince me of its worth and that I should carry on. He served as my
intellectual guide, sending me memos about obscure publications on
ethnicity and freely giving me his own ideas on the topic. And at the
conference itself, he shone both as a representative of the University of
Virginia and as an acute commentator on several papers.
LEROY VAIL
Notes on Contributors
Ian Goldin , since completing his M.Sc. at the London School of Economics
and D.Phil, at Oxford University, has worked as an economist. His work on
the Western Cape arises out of an interest begun while studying at the
University of Cape Town and later explored in his doctoral dissertation. His
published work on the subject of class and race includes Making Race: The
Politics and Economics of Coloured Identity in South Africa (London, 1987)
and a number of articles.
includes Reluctant Rebellion (1971). She has edited three influential volumes
on South African social and economic history.
Brian Siegel teaches anthropology and race and ethnic relations to the
Sociology Department of Furman University, Greenville, South Carolina. His
interest in the Lamba and their history derives from his dissertation research
for the University of Wisconsin-Madison on ethnic stereotypes and
antagonisms to the rural Zambian Copperbelt.
― xv ―
1
Southern Africa
― xvi ―
2
Bantustans in South Africa
― xvii ―
3
The Eastern Transvaal, Swaziland and southern Mozambique
― xviii ―
4
North-eastern Zimbabwe and the Mozambique border
― xix ―
5
Malawi
6
The Tabwa area with surrounding ethnic groups
― xx ―
7
Swaziland and the Eastern Transvaal
― xxi ―
8
The Upper Zambezi region of Zambia and the Central African Copperbelt
― xxii ―
9
The Ciskei and surrounding area
―1―
Leroy Vail
For those on the Left, too, 'modernization' was the key, although it was
viewed
―2―
With its power to divide people politically, then, and with its sturdy
resistance to erosion by the ideological forces of national or class
consciousness, ethnicity came to demand close—albeit it often very grudging
—attention after decades of neglect. Its source and appeal needed
reasonable explanations, and interpretations of it have ranged widely,
reflecting its multidimensional nature.
―3―
deriving from the distant past of rural Africa. It should have evaporated with
the passage of time, but, inexplicably, something went wrong, and it
continues to refuse to obey the laws of social and political change. It thus
remains able to motivate Africans to frequent actions of conflict and
violence. Ethnic consciousness is, in this view, a form of collective
irrationality.
The problems with this interpretation are clear. First, it is always dangerous
to assume that people consistently act out of mass irrationality. People tend
to act rationally, and there is no reason on the face of it to accept that
Africans are exceptions. Second, this argument is, in effect, also a tautology
with no analytical power, arguing as it does that Africans act 'tribalistically'
because they are naturally 'tribal'. Third, and most tellingly, empirical
evidence shows clearly that ethnic consciousness is very much a new
phenomenon, an ideological construct, usually of the twentieth century, and
not an anachronistic cultural artifact from the past. As an offspring of the
changes associated with so-called 'modernization', therefore, it is unlikely to
be destroyed by the continuation of these same processes. For all these
reasons, then, this interpretation must be discarded.
Second, all these interpretations are also marked by the fact that they have
evolved out of the nationalist paradigm dominant from the 1950s into the
1970s. They implicitly accept a basically evolutionary view of human history.
In this view, the future ought to be better than the past, and 'better' has
been identified with improvements assumed to flow from an increase in
political scale and the growth of national unity—in short, from 'nation-
building'. As a consequence, most such analyses of ethnicity are concerned
with the way it has traduced the promise of modernizing nationalism and are
thus predisposed to negative judgments. Their emphasis, therefore, has
been on ethnicity's role as a disrupter of the promising trends of secular
nationalism that seemed to characterize African politics in the late 1950s and
early 1960s and to promise a rosy future.
―4―
more than either collaborating dupes or naive and gullible people, beguiled
by clever colonial administrators and untrustworthy anthropologists, a
situation which empirical evidence fails to corroborate. Finally, it does not
explain how, three decades after the departure of the colonialists, 'tribalism',
or its close kin, 'regionalism', lives on as strongly as ever in independent
African states, the governments of which have been actively trying to
suppress it, and why in some places it is growing up for the first time. The
clever blandishments of subtle European administrators are clearly
insufficient to explain either the origins of ethnic consciousness or its
continuing appeal today.
―5―
Again, this interpretation, with its emphasis on the pivotal roles of influential
petty bourgeois intellectuals functioning as culture brokers and on smart
politicians craftily manipulating popular opinion, especially in the post-
colonial period, has obvious elements of truth in it. It also goes far towards
explaining why some cultural groups who have had such a 'modernizing'
petty bourgeoisie within them are more 'tribal' than other groups within the
same country who lack such a class. Yet, on its own, it too ultimately fails to
explain ethnicity's appeal. This is so because it goes too far in depicting
ordinary people as being credulous, blindly accepting the ethnic party line
from their devious betters. It fails to explain why, today as in the colonial
period, the ethnic message should find such resonance with ordinary people.
Why, in short, have ordinary people chosen so often to support ethnic
politicians rather than national politicians? What is in the ethnic message
that is not in the nationalist message? One must once again guard against
the assumption, necessary to this interpretation, that ordinary Africans act
either irrationally or sentimentally.
represent and embody the unity of the cultural group. In this view, ethnicity
is a kind of romantic rejection of the present. Enduring rather as religious
fundamentalism or faith healing do in western societies, it is a reaction to
the sterility of modern positivism and has become something akin to a civil
religion with great emotional appeal.
Yet there are three serious problems with this interpretation. First, the mere
appeal of, or belief in, a generalized idyllic past and the presumed unity of
the ethnic group seem insufficiently definite to explain the relevance to
people in specific historical situations of the statements that comprise
constructed ethnic ideologies. Why have vague cultural statements about
language or a common history or a hero from the past succeeded in
'comforting' people or mobilizing them? Does ethnicity appeal because it is
intrinsically 'primordial', or is it constructed as 'primordial' in its discourse to
render it more generally appealing? What specific messages within the
ethnic ideology actually appeal the most and to whom? And why? In short,
the stress upon the 'primordial' aspect of ethnicity tends to overlook both
the actual intellectual content of the message, which can vary from group to
group, and its varying appeal among different members of the same ethnic
group.
One may easily conclude then that ethnicity, or 'tribalism', when analyzed
abstractly, is Protean, with different appeals on different levels and in
different situations. In this respect, it is quintessentially situational and
multi-dimensional.
―7―
A History
Thus far historians have not devoted much attention to the history of
ethnicity and ethnic ideologies in southern Africa. This is somewhat puzzling,
especially as many have been aware for some time that ethnicity is not a
natural cultural residue but a consciously crafted ideological creation.[8] It
is likely that the explanation for this relative neglect lies in the fact that
historians were, like other scholars, caught up in the nationalist paradigm
that dominated the entire range of African studies in the 1950s and 1960s.
They thus saw studies of the growth of ethnic consciousness as parochial,
misconceived, and largely irrelevant to their main concerns at that time: the
recovery of Africa's pre-colonial past and the exploration of the growth of
anti-colonial resistance and its flowering into progressive nationalism. In the
optimistic nation-building mood of the time, studies of ethnicity were also
extremely unpopular with African opinion-makers, embarrassing even to
mention, and they exerted pressure against studies that might further
divisiveness in the new nation states they thought they were 'building'.
Thus, the history of ethnic identities largely remained to be written.
The essays in this volume attempt to remedy this situation by placing the
study of ethnicity within the unfolding history of a set of societies which are
genuinely comparable. This approach is an alternative to the usual one of
attempting to analyze the phenomenon on its own, as a subject to be
considered sui generis and in a grandly conceived comparative framework.
Such abstraction risks removing ethnicity, at least partially, from concrete
historical process and blurring specific local factors contributing towards its
development and acceptance. The various studies in this volume, when
taken together, suggest a basic model that helps us to understand the
processes involved in the creation of ethnic ideologies—including those of
non-blacks—and sheds some light on why they have had genuine appeal for
ordinary people both during the colonial era and in the post-colonial period
of national independence.
The area chosen as the setting for these case studies is southern Africa, a
region extending from Cape Town to south central Zaire on a south-north
axis, and from Namibia to Mozambique on a west-east axis, but with Angola
largely excluded. Despite the cultural variety present in this extensive area,
it has constituted a coherent regional unit over the past century or so. The
event which served as the catalyst for the melding of diverse peoples into
such a unit was the discovery of gold on the Witwatersrand in 1886. This
initiated the building of Africa's single most potent economic force and
attracted capital investment to other, less important focuses of investment,
such as the copper mines of Zaire and Zambia, the farms and ranches of
Zimbabwe, and the plantations of central Mozambique and southern Malawi.
The links that were rapidly constructed to weld together the various
territories of this region—and their societies—included ties of finance, trade,
political influence, and, especially, migrant labour.
Yet the creation of such ties was necessarily differential, and great variation
is
―8―
to be found from one area to another within the region. In some places,
such as Lesotho, the Transkei, southern Mozambique, northern Malawi, and
western Zambia, links with the Rand's mines were direct and obvious: large-
scale and persistent male labour migrancy organized through the
Witwatersrand Native Labour Association demonstrated clearly the
dependence of these regions. In other places, such as the Zambian and
Zairian Copperbelts, central Mozambique, and southern Malawi, local
capitalist interests were able to dominate and the influence of the Rand was
less obvious and less direct. In still other locales, such as parts of central
Malawi, southern Zambia, and parts of Zaire and Swaziland, successful
peasant production permitted local Africans to avoid both long-distance
labour migrancy and working for local entrepreneurs. Nonetheless, the
Rand's influence was everywhere present, if only as a model of labour
relations and a distant, but powerful, economic presence. Although certainly
uneven, the Rand's influence knitted the region's territories together.
What was common for all the region's peoples—blacks and whites alike—was
―9―
that many of them were gradually losing control over their lives as control
over that most basic factor of production, the land, slipped from their grasp.
No longer were rural communities—whether black or white—able to exist
autonomously, beyond the reach of capitalism and colonial administration. At
the same time that this rural transformation was occurring, the region's
mixed-race groups, such as the 'Cape Coloureds' of South Africa and the
Luso-Africans of Mozambique, were suffering an erosion of their positions.
Earlier, through possession of language and other skills, they had enjoyed
relatively secure social and economic positions as intermediaries between
whites and blacks. After the 1890s, however, these positions were
successfully challenged by poor Afrikaners in South Africa and immigrant
Portuguese whites in Mozambique, both of which groups increasingly
benefited from the support of racist state institutions. Thus they, like blacks
and some white Afrikaners, were also caught in a process of declining control
over their lives and destinies.
People of all these groups fought against the erosion of their positions. For
many involved in this struggle land, and access to land, came to stand at the
very centre of their consciousness, being fixed there not only at the
beginning of the process of the undermining of rural autonomy, but also in
succeeding decades. For white Afrikaners, land ownership was also
important, kept alive as the ideal Afrikaner way of life even among the poor
whites of the cities and towns.
For Africans, however, access to land remained a central issue for a more
pressing reason. This was because, from the very start of the
industrialization process, employers and government officials alike were
determined to create a system in which unskilled workers would oscillate
from the rural villages to work sites and then back to the villages and in
which skilled positions would be held by whites. In this way, their wives and
children would remain permanently behind in the rural areas, while the men
would dwell in bachelor dormitories at the work sites for the duration of their
contracts. Such a system had many advantages for both capitalist
entrepreneurs and European administrators. For the employers it helped
keep the working class fragmented and unorganized, and it allowed them to
pay wages that were less than what would have had to be paid if the whole
of a worker's family migrated and settled permanently as fully
proletarianized people. For the officials it assured that there would be at
least some money brought into the rural areas to help sustain village life
there. In some cases, moreover, the migrant labour system also enabled
governments to collect capitation fees for each worker recruited.
Migrant labour had less appeal for the workers themselves, but they had
little choice in the matter. The need for money and the official pressures
upon the men to work as migrants on contract, coupled with the
establishment of effective recruiting agencies, resulted in the rapid
institutionalization of the system of oscillating migrant labour as the
standard mode of labour mobilization. But because the system was one in
which workers were to move back and forth, even rural areas that were little
more than unproductive rural slums necessarily remained of central concern
for the migrants. On the one hand, they could not remain at home to
supervise life in the village and oversee their wives and children. On the
other hand, they could not abandon their rural homes. Laws prevented the
relocation of families to work sites and strictly regulated the length of
contracts a worker could assume. Thus, it was in the rural areas that the
workers' long-term interests necessarily lay, for they would eventually return
there when their working life was over. Even while absent for decades from
the rural areas, then, the workers' concerns typically remained sharply
focused on what was occurring at home. This situation could not but produce
profound
― 10 ―
apprehensions in the migrants, and the capitalist era for them was—and still
is—truly an age of anxiety.
Such rapid social and economic change eroded earlier political relationships
based on clientage both within and outside of lineages, social patterns, and
religious beliefs, all of which had characterized societies during the
nineteenth century. This erosion in turn opened the way for new forms of
consciousness throughout the region. Worker consciousness amongst both
whites and blacks appeared spasmodically in situations of localized stress on
the work site. Evidence of such class solidarity was shown at times of rapid
socio-economic change, appearing in such events as the Rand Rebellion of
1922, the strike of copper miners on the Zambian Copperbelt in 1935, and
the African mineworkers' strike of 1946 on the Witwatersrand gold mines.
But class consciousness remained exceptional for as long as the working
class was weak and fragmented and difficult to infuse with a sense of
community.
New types of popular religious consciousness also appeared in the form of
mainline Christian churches as well as separatist churches such as Watch
Tower and a myriad of Zionist sects, and these shaped their adherents'
evolving new self-identities. And among the educated clerks, teachers,
clerics, and businessmen who emerged in the black, 'coloured' and mixed
race communities a petty bourgeois consciousness, with an acceptance of
Victorian notions of respectability, progress and individual uplift through
hard work, gained prominence.
It is crucial to the argument of this book that one of the most far-reaching
and important of these new forms of consciousness was a new ethnic—or
tribal—consciousness that could and did encapsulate other forms of
consciousness. Ethnicity could coexist with other types of consciousness
without apparent unease because it was cultural and hence based on
involuntary ascription, not on personal choice. People were members of a
particular ethnic group whether they liked it or not. It was simply a fact of
existence. As such, ethnic identity could inhere in both petty bourgeois and
worker, in both peasant farmer and striving politician.
A Model
The case studies in this volume suggest a model for the development of
ethnic consciousness, or tribalism, in the southern African region. This model
stresses the historical creation of such ideologies over time. It is also
flexible, in that it can
― 11 ―
What emerges perhaps most clearly from these studies is the fact that
intellectuals carefully crafted their ethnic ideologies in order to define the
cultural characteristics of members of various ethnic groups. These
intellectuals could be European missionaries, as the studies by Harries,
Ranger, Vail and White, and Roberts make clear. Or, as Harries, Vail and
White, Jewsiewicki and Papstein show, they could be European
anthropologists and historians. And, in all cases in this volume, local
intellectuals—whether Afrikaner, 'coloured' or African—were intimately
involved in the process and, where it was possible, they were ready to work
hand in hand with their European counterparts.
― 12 ―
Third, and finally, missionaries educated local Africans who then themselves
served as the most important force in shaping the new ethnic ideologies.
These people—usually men—were keenly aware of the forces that were
pulling apart their societies and, with the examples of nationalism in Europe
derived from their own mission education before them, they sought to craft
similar local movements as a means of countering these problems. Despite
their own western-style education, they realized that such a construct would
best be understood and accepted if it were put in a cultural idiom easily
accessible to the people. Thus, in formulating their new ideologies, they
looked to the local area's past for possible raw material for their new
intellectual bricolage.[10] Like their European predecessors during the initial
stages of nineteenth century nationalism, they 'rediscovered' the 'true
values' of their people and so defined the 'ethnic soul'. Their cultural
strongbox was the 'customs' and 'traditions' of the people, identification with
which they saw as giving an automatic, ascriptive cultural unity to 'their'
people as they confronted the challenge of colonialism and the impact of
industrialization. Virtually every study in this volume demonstrates the role
of educated people as key actors in the creation of such ideology.
In those societies where missionaries did not work, or where they did work
but did not introduce education along western lines, or where African
intellectuals emerged only at a late period or not at all, the development of
ethnic ideologies was either stalled or never occurred. The unevenness of
education in southern Africa largely determined the unevenness of the
development of ethnic consciousness, as is brought out in the essays by Vail
and White, Macmillan, Siegel, and Papstein. In many locales it is only today,
after the post-independence expansion of education and the emergence of
local intellectuals, that the process of creating such ethnic ideologies and
'forging traditions' has emulated what happened earlier in other societies.
― 13 ―
the white administration and the ruled. Thus, if language in the form of
written discourse was central in specifying the forms of culture, indirect rule
provided the institutional framework for articulating these forms.
Communication between the European administrators and subordinate
Africans was distinctly tribal in its tone and content. Africans were talked to
in terms deemed suitable, and these terms were ethnic. In the cases of the
'Cape Coloureds' and the Luso-Africans of Mozambique, and, to some extent,
the Afrikaners, for whom the conventions of indirect rule were not suitable,
they were simply denied representation, as the studies by Goldin, Penvenne,
Giliomee and Butler indicate.
There were several reasons for the European policy of indirect rule. First,
there was the realization that the use of so-called 'traditional' African leaders
could be markedly less expensive than the employment of expensive
European officials. Second, administrators assumed that Africans were
naturally 'tribal' people. If the natural ethnic units could be strengthened, it
would help ensure their continuation as discrete 'tribal' groups and prevent
the emergence of 'detribalized' Africans of whom whites were deeply
suspicious. This, in turn, would slow the emergence of any potentially
dangerous territory-wide political consciousness that might develop. The
remarks of a British War Office official in 1917 reflect these divide-and-rule
tactics:
Third, by the end of World War I it was becoming increasingly evident that
the chronic absence of men from rural societies was producing great social
stresses. The administrators became convinced that the rural disintegration
occurring before their eyes could be slowed, if not stopped, by the
encouragement of 'traditional authorities' to use 'traditional sanctions' in
exercising control over the rural areas to counter the forces of social decay.
― 14 ―
subordinate peoples did not have a free hand in their work as they had to
operate within the severe constraints imposed by racist administrators who
were ever alert to check initiatives deemed either unseemly or dangerous,
something brought out clearly in the chapters by Marks, Macmillan,
Jewsiewicki and Siegel, among others.
Yet when one looks closely at the situation in southern Africa, one comes to
realize that the ethnic message's backward-looking aspects and its forward-
looking concerns have been in no way contradictory. The emphases on past
values, 'rediscovered' traditions, and chiefly authority were truly
conservative—that is, they were calculated to conserve a way of life that was
in the process of being rapidly undermined by the forces of capitalism and
colonialism. Forward-looking members of the petty bourgeoisie and migrant
workers alike attempted to shore up their societies and their own positions in
them by embracing ethnicity and accepting tribal identities.
As the chapters by Vail and White, Marks, and Jewsiewicki show, ethnicity
appealed to the petty bourgeoisie because its forward-looking aspects
ensured them a leadership role in the newly defined 'tribe' as the well-
informed interpreters of 'tribal tradition'. Their position as allies of chiefs
further legitimized their role, blunting consciousness of the class divisions
that were then appearing in local societies. In this situation, it was generally
accepted that they also had a duty to improve their own social and economic
positions 'for the good of the tribe'.
The place of women was also a central issue dealt with in ethnic ideologies.
In the early decades of the century bridewealth steadily inflated in value,
and women thus represented a greater 'investment' by men in cattle or
money. With most men absent as migrant labourers, women were also
becoming more important to the day-to-day survival of the family through
their work on the land. Yet such
― 15 ―
It was for very real reasons of exercising at least a measure of control over
land and women, thereby bringing at least a measure of peace to their
minds, that African men welcomed the new ethnic ideologies which involved
augmenting powers of chiefs in a situation of rapid social decay. Ethnicity,
insofar as it was a mechanism of such control, may be interpreted, then, as
a form of popular male resistance to the forces that were reshaping African
lives throughout southern Africa. It was for this reason also that the appeal
of ethnic ideologies was strongest amongst those who were migrant
labourers. The ethnic identity that was rooted in the realities of the
countryside was, rather incidentally, strengthened in the workplace, where
migrants found themselves in the company of, and often in competition with,
workers from other cultural groups, a situation which generated sets of
largely negative ethnic stereotypes and is explored in the chapters by
Jewsiewicki, Siegel and Papstein.
― 16 ―
In those situations in which labour migrancy was not a pressing reality (the
Afrikaners, the 'Cape Coloureds', the Luso-Africans of Mozambique and, to a
lesser extent, contemporary Swaziland and Ciskei—see Giliomee, Butler,
Goldin, Penvenne, Macmillan and Anonymous, respectively) or in areas from
which men did not emigrate in large numbers, such as southern Zambia and
central Malawi, the ethnic message has clearly had less popular appeal,
reaching no further than the petty bourgeoisie in most cases. In the case of
the Afrikaners effective class alliances between the bourgeois elements of
society and the 'poor whites' were brought into being only in the 1940s and
afterwards. In the case of the 'Cape Coloureds' and the Mozambican Luso-
Africans—and possibly Swaziland and the Ciskei—the gaps between well-off
and poor were too great to be easily overcome by appeals to ethnicity, as is
suggested in the chapters by Goldin, Penvenne, Macmillan and Anonymous.
In these situations, class identity—or at least class tension—has tended to
overshadow ethnicity.
For large areas of southern Africa, independence came in the 1960s and
1970s. But the condition which stretches basic economic, familial and
welfare concerns between rural residence and work site endures down to the
present. Migrant labour is still a dominant form of labour mobilization
throughout the region, and the mental attitudes intrinsic to it continue. Even
in situations where men have been permanently resident in the urban areas
with their families for decades, these attitudes are widely found. This is so
not because Africans are inherently rural people or are in close harmony with
Nature, but because housing and living expenses are far lower in the rural
areas than they are in urban areas. This lower cost of living serves as a
constant reason for those dwelling in urban locales to keep the rural areas
always in mind and to view their urban sojourn as only temporary.[14]
Thus, because at the end of one's period of employment retirement benefits
are usually given in the form of a single lump sum of money rather than in
monthly payments, if they are given at all, a person—whether unskilled
migrant or educated white collar worker—has little, choice but to return
'home' to live out the rest of his days, spending as little money as possible.
The preoccupation with one's connection to the land has been overwhelming,
with virtually everyone either possessing a piece of land in actuality or
desiring it in his or her fantasies. This continuing fixation on land, I suggest,
has resulted from decades of the existence of an oscillating workforce that
has only partially proletarianized workers and from the failure to establish
the sort of welfare measures that would support a fully urbanized population
after retirement. The concern for land as an ultimate fall-back means of
survival is clearly an economic concern, then, and, in the circumstances, it is
quite understandable. Even in South Africa, the most industrialized of all the
countries of the region and one in which complete proletarianization on a
substantial scale in secondary and tertiary industry has existed at least since
the 1940s, lack of adequate welfare and retirement measures keeps alive
deep concern about access to land. Thus the African National Congress still
finds that to contend publicly that one of the fundamental roots of the
political conflict between black and white in South Africa is the Native Land
Act of 1913, and to talk about a land reform that would give dispossessed
blacks renewed access to land, have great appeal to their constituency.
Added to this economic concern is the fact that the nation states that have
appeared since the 1960s have suffered profoundly from economic
weakness, a
― 17 ―
weakness which has grown more serious with each passing year. Quite
naturally, this has had a negative effect on the possibility of the creation of
broad loyalty to the nation state itself. The nationalist message before and
immediately after the end of colonialism was that the new dispensation
would result in economic improvements and much increased welfare
benefits. Unfortunately, this progress has not occurred, and instead the
nation state's administrative structures have faltered and shrivelled.
There are thus further economic reasons why sentiments which would be
described as 'nationalist' do not converge with citizenship in a new nation
state, as it has come to be identified as at least the occasion, and sometimes
as the cause, of a declining standard of living for the majority of people.
People perhaps accept that they are citizens of the country in which they
live, but this acceptance of civil status does not produce the same loyalty as
does their ethnic identity. There has therefore been an increased concern
with ethnic identities over the past two decades, and with it has come a
great acceleration in the 'rediscovery' of culture for more and more ethnic
groups, as the essay by Papstein explores in detail.
Furthermore, the potential culture brokers are far more numerous now than
sixty years ago, and they have been exposed to a far wider variety of
thought, usually not associated with missions. This means that while the
backward-looking aspects of future ethnic phenomena—concern for the
glories of past history, culture heroes, the central importance of language,
and the like—will remain pretty much the same as for examples in the past,
the forward-looking aspect of the Janus of ethnicity has the potential of wide
variation across the political spectrum. In contemporary Zambia, for
example, a main focus of ethnic identity for the Bemba-speaking people who
see themselves cut off from state power is the predominantly Bemba miners'
union.
The unevenness of development that has marked southern Africa since 1886
shows no sign of ceasing now. Therefore it is likely that the content of the
ethnic message itself will continue to vary from people to people, as the
culture brokers craft messages that will resonate with their own clienteles.
For the serious student of political history in the region, then, it will not be
adequate to approach ethnicity, or 'tribalism', as if all examples were
essentially the same. Concern with the content of the message will be of
ever greater importance if we are to understand it.
― 18 ―
1—
The Beginnings of Afrikaner Ethnic
Consciousness, 1850–1915
Hermann Giliomee
Introduction[1]
This study will avoid both the 'awakening' and the 'origin' approaches in
explaining the growth of Afrikaner nationalism up to 1915. As Ernest Gellner
points out, the use of a concept such as 'awakening' comes close to
accepting 'the nationalist ideologue's most misguided claim, namely that the
"nations" are there, in the very nature of things, only waiting to be
"awakened" (a favourite nationalist expression and image) from their
regrettable slumber by the nationalist "awakener"'.[4] There is also a
problem with the concept of 'origin'. In a different context, Marc Bloch
remarked that in popular usage an origin tends to be regarded as a complete
explanation.[5] In fact, there can never be a complete explanation as to
why Afrikaner ethnic consciousness originated. At best, we can only begin to
give a broad explanation of its slow and tortuous beginnings.
Both Van Jaarsveld and Rodney Davenport have stressed the cultural and
political aspects of early manifestations of Afrikaner ethnic
consciousness.[6] This essay will attempt to further the analysis, situating
the development of nineteenth century Afrikaner ethnic consciousness within
a socio-economic context as well as within a political and cultural framework.
It should be emphasized, however, that this discussion of the development
of Afrikaner ethnic consciousness does not assume that it was the organic
antecedent of the 'secondary' phase of
― 22 ―
The group that ultimately became known as the 'Afrikaners' was drawn from
disparate elements, particularly people from Dutch, German and French
background in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. Genealogists also
calculate a six to seven per cent contribution from 'non-Europeans'. By 1870
it was possible to identify a distinct group of people all of whom spoke
Dutch, or a variant of it, had a common religion and maintained a fair
degree of racial endogamy. Yet the development of a distinct Afrikaner
ethnic consciousness which could be mobilized readily for political purposes
was slow. In fact, the gradual and often tentative growth of Afrikaner
cultural and political ethnic awareness was rooted firmly in historical changes
that occurred after 1870. To understand the absence of an ethnic
consciousness before 1870, one must explore the nature of the economy,
the form of politics, and the kind of class and political cleavages in society.
Among the Dutch-Afrikaner[9] colonists who did not trek we also find little
evidence of an ethnic consciousness being articulated or of ethnic strategies
being pursued. During the 1830s a small group of Cape Town professionals
tried to stimulate a sense of cultural identity based upon recognition of a
shared language and history. They supported a periodical, Het Nederduitsch-
Zuid-Afrikaansch Tijdschrift, a college for advanced education, the Zuid-
Afrikaansche Athenaeum, and a society for the extension of arts and letters.
These efforts did not succeed. The periodical folded in 1843, the society soon
ceased to function, and the college became anglicized. The group of
professionals was too small and the neighbouring farming population too
apathetic to secure success.[10]
Even the name of the group remained highly ambiguous until the twentieth
century. The term 'Afrikaner' was employed in different ways by various
groups. In the early eighteenth century it was used for slaves or ex-slaves of
African descent. From the late eighteenth century onwards the literature also
records whites using the term. But this usage had a colonial (or regional)
rather than an ethnic connotation. The Zuid-Afrikaan, the most widely read
Dutch publication in 1830, defined Afrikaners as those 'whether English or
Dutch who inhabited the land and were bound by duty and interest to further
the well-being of their country'.[11] In subsequent decades the Zuid-
Afrikaan proposed this identity as one which encompassed both Dutch and
English-speakers and which would in the course of time replace the discrete
Dutch and English identities of the settlers. This term and definition was
found acceptable by non-jingoist English-speakers
― 23 ―
Apart from the ambiguous term 'Afrikaner' or 'Afrikander', there also existed
the notion of a 'Boer' people. Dutch-Afrikaners generally acknowledged that
they were of Boer descent, but it was usually the pastoral farmers in the
interior who applied the term to themselves. Finally, there was the term
'Cape Dutch', but this was an English description rather than a self-concept.
English-speakers tended to distinguish between the better educated and
more 'civilized' Cape Dutch of the Western Cape or interior towns and the
Boer people whom they considered ignorant, illiterate and almost beyond the
pale.[14]
During the second half of the nineteenth century two interlinked forces
impeded the development of such ethnic consciousness. First, there was the
accelerated integration of the entire South African region into Western, and
particularly British, capitalism. Second, the informal empire operated by
Britain in the region constrained development of Afrikaner ethnic
consciousness.[15] In South Africa, unlike Australia or Canada, Britain could
not count on the weight of racial kinship to keep the colonists closely tied to
the metropole. When the Cape Colony received Representative Government
in 1853 fewer than a quarter of the white inhabitants were British. In the
Transvaal and Orange Free State, which became independent republics in
1852 and 1854 respectively, there was only a small scattering of British
merchants, professionals and prospectors. Consequently Britain used the
stratagems of informal empire and economic control to prevent these states
from moving out of the imperial orbit. From the Voortrekkers a promise was
exacted to support free trade and accept British control over the coastal
ports upon which they depended for essential supplies. Britain could thus
relax formal political control over the two Voortrekker states secure in the
anticipation that their economic dependence would achieve the same
purpose.
The British cultural imperialism that went hand in hand with informal empire
― 24 ―
― 25 ―
of the Transvaal and Free State. The field-cornets often displayed great
contempt for Pretoria and its representative in the district, the landdrost
(magistrate). Landdrost A.F. du Toit once remarked that the field-cornets
acted as if they were 'Emperors of the state'.[21] They identified primarily
with their division, then with their region, and only in a nominal sense with
the state or the ethnic group. Regionalism was a powerful force in the years
1850–1880.[22] During the late 1850s and early 1860s three regional
factions—based on Lydenburg, Zoutpansberg and Potchefstroom—tried to
establish their own separate sovereignties and on occasion clashed in
military skirmishes.
By the end of the 1860s regional strife had subsided, but the state remained
weak and religious schisms compounded the political divisions.[23] The
Dutch Reformed (Hervormde ) Church (NHK), established in 1853, was the
state church with a privileged position. Disputes over the singing of hymns
led to the establishment in 1859 of the fundamentalist Reformed
(Gereformeerde ) Church (colloquially known as the Dopper Church). By the
1870s the Doppers, among them Paul Kruger, had become known as a
group imbued with an acute ethnic consciousness, strongly anti-British, and
keen to develop a distinct political, economic and social life along their own
lines.[24] Third, there was the Dutch Reformed (Nederduits
Gereformeerde ) Church (DRC) which was initially small but had grown to
ten congregations by 1870. It was doctrinally more orthodox in its doctrine
than the Hervormdes, but it was politically in favour of close ties with the
Cape Colony and some of its ministers promoted English cultural influence
by establishing English-language seminaries.[25] The armed civil strife of
the late 1850s and early 1860s had a definite religious dimension in that the
feuding factions were largely divided along religious lines and exploited
religious differences for political gain.[26]
In the Orange Free State the prospects for state building and fostering a
community consciousness were not appreciably better than in the Transvaal.
The state was even more dependent on British merchant capital. The Free
State's leaders in its first decades often despaired of saving the state and its
people. In 1858, for example, President Boshof said that it was doubtful that
it could sustain itself because 'patriotic feelings' were still not general or
strong enough, and he was instructed by the Volksraad to negotiate with the
Cape Colony to form a federation.[27] Militarily weak, it faced a formidable
enemy on its eastern flank, where the Sotho resisted white expansion. The
Free State's war against Moshoeshoe plunged it still deeper into crisis, and
its very survival was thrown into doubt.
Ultimately, however, this war was crucial in forging a stronger sense of
national identity. War, as Anthony Smith remarks, stimulates a sense of
community and territory and also helps to concentrate the facilities of
physical coercion at the centre by undermining the status and power of
regional leaders.[28] Moreover, war propaganda strengthens a sense of
national identity. Yet as the Free State did not have an intellectual elite of its
own, foreigners acted as the articulators of nationalist feelings.[29] As
editor of one of the first journals, De Tijd, a Dutch immigrant, H.A.L.
Hamelberg, set himself the task of 'cultivating a true citizenship atmosphere'
by composing a folk song which soon became the republic's national anthem,
sung by the burghers on commando. After the war the Volksraad thanked
him for his efforts 'to cultivate a spirit of nationalism in our midst'.[30]
Although British rule in the Cape Colony had eliminated earlier frontier
anarchy, the patriarchs in general and the field-cornets specifically still
wielded considerable local power in large parts of the Colony as well as in
the republics.
― 26 ―
Yet, apart from some localized tensions between British and Dutch-
Afrikaners centring on Grahamstown and Graaff-Reinet, there was little
ethnic rivalry in the Cape Colony. The Dutch-Afrikaners did not covet the
British commercial predominance while the English-speakers, except in the
Eastern Cape, left farming to the Dutch-Afrikaners. The so-called Boers on
their isolated farms impassively resented British rule and cultural
imperialism, but the Cape Dutch in the interior's towns, acting as political
and economic brokers, performed an important cushioning function. Neither
the Boers nor the Cape Dutch resisted the dominant English role in politics.
Although Dutch-Afrikaners accounted for roughly 70 per cent of the Cape's
white population, the proportion of Dutch-Afrikaner representatives in
parliament ranged from only 32 to 36 per cent between 1850 and 1870. On
the constituency level great apathy reigned. In 1869 a canvasser found that
nine-tenths of the young farmers under the age of 26 in his area had not
troubled to register as voters. Jan Hofmeyr, who founded the first political
interest group, remarked about this period that 'the Dutch were very
apathetic as to their political privileges. Even if they registered and voted,
they simply did so for their English shopkeeper or agent, or for someone
recommended by them.'[32]
The reason for this lack of political interest of the Dutch-Afrikaner farmers is
simple: the colony's parliament hardly touched their daily lives. It had a
limited ability to tax, and its greatest topic of discussion was the budget
deficit and the need for retrenchment. There was indeed little room for
ethnic politics in the colonial state during the 1850s, 1860s and early 1870s.
The wealthier class of
― 27 ―
Dutch-Afrikaner farmers in the Western Cape had no serious quarrel with the
British connection or with the English-speaking political domination of the
Cape. They unquestioningly accepted the need for British military protection
of the colony. They hoped against hope that Britain would again grant
preferential tariffs on Cape exports, eagerly enlisting English allies in their
campaign for protective tariffs against imported wine and other products.
Their chief mouthpiece, the Zuid-Afrikaan, wrote in 1857 that the colony was
witnessing 'the gradual amalgamation of the Dutch and the English
nationality which will, however, take many years'. In the meantime the
colonists should promote the many interests they had in common, and 'the
less we speak of nationality the better'.[34]
Early Stimulants of Afrikaner Ethnic Consciousness
― 28 ―
the 'Mother Church' in Cape Town, yielded to the demand for English
services to be held in the Groote Kerk on some evenings. The Mother Church
was preceded or followed in its example by several rural congregations. In
effect, this legitimized the Anglo-Afrikaners' position.[37]
No one watched these developments with more concern than the Reverend
G.W.A. van der Lingen of Paarl. Van der Lingen realized that what was
happening at the Cape was a vital ideological battle between, on the one
hand, the state and the liberal tendency, both of which emphasized
rationalism and secularism, and, on the other, the authority of religion and
the clergy. If they lost the battle, the church and its ministers would steadily
find themselves losing control over their members and be confronted with
dwindling support and status. Anthony Smith has acutely observed that in
situations such as these neo-traditionalists not only strongly defend
traditional values and dogma but also try to use political means to revive
religious heritage, faith and authority. What they do, in short, is to turn their
religious congregations into ethnic communities, as happened with the
Jews.[38]
After his studies in the Netherlands, Van der Lingen became the leading
force among those who rejected the call for freedom, civilization,
enlightenment and progress. He was also in the forefront of the fight against
liberal theology in the DRC. Deeply concerned by the rapid advance of
English culture and the alien influences of the state schools, Van der Lingen
established schools under the auspices of the church council which gave a
prominent place to the teaching of Dutch and religious instruction. But he
seemed to be waging a losing struggle and his influence did not extend
much beyond Paarl and Stellenbosch where he served as chairman of the
Theological Seminary council. Even in the seminary there was a distinct
trend towards anglicization.[39]
The context in which such a mobilization around the state and consequent
local nationalism occurred in the Orange Free State was supplied, first, by
the response to the British annexation of Basutoland (1868) and me
Diamond Fields (1871), to which the young republic had expressed strong
claims, and, second, by accelerated economic development which made
much increased resources available to the state. The annexation of the
Diamond Fields made the burghers feel that they had been wronged as an
ethnic group by Britain and by English-speakers, who were seen as 'the
other'. But as important was the growing prosperity brought by the
discovery of diamonds and the rise of a market in Kimberley, a town which
already by 1871 had a population of more than 40,000
― 29 ―
whites and 20,000 Africans. This prosperity, which spilled over to the Free
State, enabled the struggling republic to develop its institutions and
infrastructure. It was able to set aside funds for commissioning a Dutchman,
H.J. Hofstede, to write a history of the Free State. This book aimed to stir
and 'uplift national feelings', by telling of the 'trials and tribulations' of the
forefathers and the numerous grievances of the Afrikaners.[40] This was
not so much 'the product of an awakening of a national feeling' as a
deliberate attempt by the government to cultivate such a feeling for the sake
of state building.[41] Yet, these efforts encountered considerable stumbling
blocks. In the Volksraad merchants and professionals closely tied to British
merchant capital were well represented. While Brand was President (1864–
1888), they could promote a bi-cultural consciousness in which English was
predominant as the language of commerce and intellectual discourse.
Ironically, it was under T.F. Burgers, president from 1872 to 1877, that the
greatest factionalism and disintegration occurred. More than any Dutch-
Afrikaner leader of the time he advocated the unity of all 'Afrikaners whether
by birth or adoption' across the political boundaries of South Africa, the
teaching of a national history to counteract English cultural hegemony, and
the development of a railway line to Delagoa Bay to lessen their dependence
upon the Cape Colony.[44] Yet while Burgers propagandized on behalf of
these ideas, his state was heavily indebted to foreign banks, particularly the
Cape Commercial Bank, which granted low interest rates to obtain a political
grip on the state. The parochial Transvaal burghers had little enthusiasm for
allowing Cape Dutch-Afrikaners open competition for jobs in the Transvaal
and refused to pay increased taxes for constructing a railway and waging a
war against Africans. By the time the British agent, Theophilus Shepstone,
arrived in the Transvaal in 1877 to annex the state, it was utterly bankrupt
and politically paralysed by the divisions between the Kruger and the
Burgers factions.[45]
― 30 ―
The economic boost which the Diamond Fields gave to the colony did not
immediately destroy the isolation of subsistence farming. It did, however,
make farmers in particular and Dutch-Afrikaners in general much more
aware of new opportunities, existing constraints, and the uneven nature of
economic growth. The two most important branches of agriculture in which
Dutch-Afrikaners were engaged benefited little from the diamond boom.
Wine production, the most important economic activity in the region and one
dominated almost exclusively by Dutch-Afrikaners, faced exceedingly difficult
times. A period of growth and prosperity had ended in 1861 when the British
preferential tariff on Cape wines was abolished. Total wine exports
plummeted from 319,146 gallons in 1863 to but 57,942 in 1875.[46] Wine
surpluses increased annually, prices dropped, and by 1878 the economic
position of the wine growers caused deep pessimism.[47] The wool farmers
also gained little from the opening of the Diamond Fields. The value of wool
exports had peaked at more than £3,000,000 in the early 1870s, but by
1885 it had dropped to less than half that in value.
― 31 ―
― 32 ―
This economic crisis was accompanied by a grave cultural crisis. At its apex,
Dutch-Afrikaner society was losing some of its brightest minds through the
steady process of anglicization. At its bottom there was the even greater
threat of large numbers of the poor becoming proletarianized. The cultural
crisis sprang from the economic crisis facing poor farmers. In the Eastern
Cape many Afrikaner farmers could not afford to send their children to
school because of the need for their labour. Some Boer farmers in 1875
even demanded a bonus for each child they sent to school to compensate for
the loss of labour power that schooling meant.[55] The result was child
illiteracy of alarming proportions. In the 1875 census it was estimated that
only 43 per cent of children between the ages of five and fifteen in the Cape
Colony could read and write, and for Dutch-Afrikaners it must have been
considerably lower, assuming that English-speakers probably attained the
level of their counterparts in Victoria and New Zealand, where it was about
60 per cent. It was true that almost everyone after the age of fifteen learned
to read and write, but the level of these skills was in most cases extremely
rudimentary. It was generally known that a large section of the Boers never
read any books apart from the Bible.
― 33 ―
It was in the Paarl-Wellington area that the first conscious attempts were
made to develop a specific ethnic ideology for the Dutch-Afrikaners. The
leading role was taken by two Dutch school teachers, A. Pannevis and C.P.
Hoogenhout, who had settled in the area in the 1860s, and a Dutch
Reformed Church minister, S.J. du Toit, the son of a Paarl wine grower. A
complex set of concerns drove these men. In the first place, they were
deeply disturbed by the way in which industrialization and the secularization
of education were affecting Dutch-Afrikaner society. They wished to
encapsulate Dutch-Afrikaners in their own institutions and culture so as to
deflect alien influences. Second, they were motivated by a concern with the
more general cultural crisis.
Before Pannevis's plea, Afrikaans had been used in religious pamphlets and
magazines directed at coloured Malays and Christians. Some 300 letters,
mostly written by whites, had appeared in newspapers. However, whites
used it as a dialect—or the 'lowest vernacular'—to amuse or to poke fun at
the lower classes. 'Afrikaans' was a collective term denoting all the corrupted
usages of Dutch in the colony. Pannevis, however, realized that Afrikaans
was an excellent medium for making the Bible accessible and for providing
education to poor and uneducated people. This proposal to render the Bible
in Afrikaans for the coloureds was soon
― 34 ―
Building on the work of the two Dutchmen, Du Toit declared war against
British cultural hegemony, the secularization of education which undermined
the traditional authorities, and the corrupting influence of industrialization.
He devoted all his efforts towards making Afrikaans the cardinal ethnic
symbol which encapsulated the history and the singularity of the Afrikaner
people. In three newspaper articles published under the pseudonym 'A true
Afrikaner', he argued that language expressed the character of a people
(volk ) and that no nationality could be formed without its own language.
Second, he argued that Afrikaans should be accepted as a language in its
own right by the Afrikaners. Third, he criticized the process of anglicization
taking place in parliament, courts, schools and churches, being particularly
scathing about the DRC clergy who delivered sermons in English and who
founded English-language educational institutions in the principal
towns.[58]
In 1875 Du Toit, Hoogenhout and six others founded the Genootskap van
Regte Afrikaners (Fellowship of True Afrikaners) (GRA) in Paarl. By the mid-
1870s a strong section within the dominant class considered Dutch-
Afrikaners and colonial English-speakers as all being joined into a nascent
Afrikaner nation. The Volksblad, for instance, remarked in 1875: 'When we
speak of "Afrikanders" we do not mean Dutch-speaking or English-speaking
South Africans, but the people who have been and still are being moulded
into that distinct nation.'[59] In contrast, the GRA employed the concept of
the Afrikaner people to denote a distinct ethnic group within the population.
It divided the Afrikaner people into three groups—those with English hearts,
those with Dutch hearts and those with Afrikaner hearts, and only the latter
were considered to be true Afrikaners. The GRA declared itself in favour of
Afrikaans and resolved not to rest before it was recognized as the national
(ethnic) language. To further this, it published a newspaper, The Patriot, a
nationalist history, a grammar, and some school texts in Afrikaans. Their use
of Afrikaans had several dimensions: it was a political language which
embodied Afrikaner ethnic self-awareness and expressed opposition to
imperial rule; it was an educational instrument which would uplift large
numbers of backward children; and it was a vehicle for the dissemination of
the Bible among large numbers of poor and ignorant brown and white
people.
― 36 ―
The BBV scored a remarkable success in the 1878–79 elections, winning nine
of the twenty-one upper house seats and a third of those of the lower house.
Soon after the elections, however, enthusiasm dwindled. The BBV failed to
attract more than a thousand members and barely extended outside the
Western Cape. Efforts to link up with the eastern farmers' associations were
not successful, and those associations themselves failed to form their own
coordinating body. In 1880 Du Toit seized the initiative by founding the
Afrikaner Bond, which aimed at coordinating the activities of the GRA, BBV
and eastern boeren vereengingen and linking them with Dutch-Afrikaners in
the Boer republics. The Bond's principles represented a compromise between
Du Toit's exclusive and Hofmeyr's inclusive strategies. On the one hand,
there was Du Toit's attack on speculators, foreign banks and traitors in
parliament, criticism of the education of the Dutch-Afrikaners while 'millions
of pounds' were spent on the education of the English, and complaints about
the sacrifice of 'Africa's interests to England, or those of the Farmer to the
Merchant'. On the other hand, the Bond's definition of the 'Afrikaner' was the
one favoured by Hofmeyr: all those who recognized Africa as their fatherland
and wanted to work together for the good of a united South Africa.[61]
After the war, the generals, using their new status as 'national leaders',
appealed to the burghers to end the political and religious divisions. In Paul
Kruger the Transvaal had a president who succeeded far better than Burgers
had in becoming the focus of a Transvaal loyalty and in developing a sense
of community. In his speeches and in several history books that appeared
after the war a new basis for historical consciousness was propounded. This
history was, as Van Jaarsveld notes, 'a tabulation of grievances and a story
of clashes between Boer and Briton'. Its spirit was 'that of "wrong",
"injustice" and "oppression"'. The Great Trek was interpreted as a 'sacred
passion for freedom' and the Battle of Blood River, where the Voortrekkers in
1838 had won a major victory over the Zulu, began to occupy a central place
in the historical mythology.[64] After the war the commemoration of this
battle became a truly national festive occasion for the first time. The five-
yearly festivals at Paardekraal were great events. In 1881 a crowd estimated
at between 12,000 and 15,000 listened with rapt attention to the patriotic
speeches of Kruger and others.
These three developments—the founding of the GRA and the so-called First
Afrikaans Language Movement, the establishment of the BBV and Bond, and
the Transvaal revolt—are often considered by historians as constituting the
'awakening' of Afrikaner nationalism, and there is indeed some evidence to
support this view. The writings of The Patriot encouraged the Transvaal
burghers to resist actively, and their successful revolt in turn boosted ethnic
initiatives in
― 37 ―
the Western Cape and elsewhere. The Patriot had struggled to survive with a
circulation of only 500 in 1877, but after the war of 1880–81 it jumped to
3000. Du Toit himself thought that the glorious Boer victory at Majuba gave
birth to the Afrikaner nation. In 1881 a pan-Afrikaner ethnic movement
really seemed to have taken off. In many places in the Cape Colony and Free
State Dutch-Afrikaners expressed their solidarity with the Transvaal
burghers. They saw the revolt as a struggle which affected everyone of
Dutch and French descent with 'a true Afrikaans' spirit. In Hofmeyr's words it
filled the 'Afrikanders, otherwise grovelling in the mud of materialism, with a
national glow of sympathy for the brothers across the Transvaal'.[65]
The Afrikaner Bond greatly benefited from this upsurge of ethnic emotions.
At the end of 1880 it had only three branches, but after the revolt branches
were founded in numerous places, particularly in the Eastern Cape, but also
in the Orange Free State and Transvaal. In 1883 the BBV and Bond were
merged after Hofmeyr outmanoeuvred the Du Toit faction, and the Bond
emerged as the strongest bloc in the Cape Parliament, increasing the
proportion of Dutch-Afrikaner representatives from approximately one-third
in the years between 1854 and 1885 to just under one-half in the last
sixteen years of the century. It easily secured formal approval for Dutch to
be used in parliament, in the courts, and as medium of instruction in
schools.
The Faltering of Ethnic Consciousness in the 1880s
The inhibiting force of British political hegemony was evident in the Cape
Colony even at the time of the Transvaal protests and revolt. Despite their
strong feelings of solidarity with the Transvaal burghers and resentment at
British imperial arrogance, the Dutch-Afrikaners—particularly the Cape Dutch
—were reluctant to engage in any kind of politics that challenged the
dominant consensus. This consensus demanded an almost unqualified
political loyalty to Britain and to the ideal of common nationhood for the two
white population groups. While Hofmeyr and several branches of the BBV in
1880 protested against the annexation, only one branch received a
Transvaal deputation seeking to rally the support of the Cape. The BBV in
general acted in an uncoordinated and unconvincing way.[66]
― 38 ―
English cultural hegemony reinforced British political rule. Despite the formal
recognition of Dutch, the English language maintained its dominant position
in the Cape's schools, courts and parliament. In growing numbers, better
educated Dutch-Afrikaners spoke English in public debates and used English
for correspondence and even in their personal diaries. The situation was little
different in the Free State. Its rural schools were usually started by wealthier
farmers who set a premium on English as the language of commerce and
intellectual discourse and who deliberately sought out English teachers. In
the early 1880s a school inspector found that only a third of the schools he
visited used Dutch as the sole medium of instruction. A cleric reported: 'I
cannot neglect mentioning how much talking and writing in English has
become prominent in the Free State, especially in the towns. Nowhere else
did I have to speak so much English as there.'[69] Before the end of the
nineteenth century public and social life in Bloemfontein was almost
exclusively English.
While the BBV members spoke what passed as High Dutch or simplified
Dutch, the GRA and Du Toit's Bond deliberately chose Afrikaans, regarded as
the language of both coloured workers and the poor and ignorant class of
Dutch-Afrikaner society. The BBV's mouthpiece, the Zuid-Afrikaan, haughtily
commented that 'brandy and The Patriot have this in common: that they are
enemies of civilization'.[71] It was a matter of surprise when it was
discovered that The Patriot was read not only by bywoners but by 'civilized
people' as well.[72] While the GRA busily tried to invent a national culture,
the BBV's membership did not care much for culture and worried rather
about their class interests. In 1878 a speaker at a Paarl dinner for
parliamentarians expressed the hope that the
― 39 ―
After Hofmeyr took over the Bond he toned down the nationalist strains. The
Bond accorded a prominent rhetorical place in speeches to the lowly Boer
farmer, but its true base was the town-based businessmen, rich landholders
and commercial farmers. The leadership of Hofmeyr's movement was
derived from such groups, and they increasingly looked to the state to
further their interests, not least through the provision of public works. In
towns they organized petitions for the building of courts, magistracies and
local railways. The large flow of credit from London cemented the Bond's
collaborating relationship with British imperialism.[74] The less affluent
whites on the farms and in the towns shared little of this enthusiasm for
development and modernization. In a town like Graaff-Reinet the poor,
known as the 'backstreet people', at one stage refused to pay municipal
rates. But over the longer run there was little the poor could do against the
dominant position of the Bond and the commercial stranglehold of English-
speakers. Du Toit's proposals for a national bank, boerewinkels (farmers'
cooperative stores), and consumer boycotts all came to nothing.
The final reason why Afrikaner ethnic consciousness did not develop as a
political force transcending parochial territorial boundaries lay in the
interstate rivalries of the 1880s. The root of the problem was the Cape's
desperate search for revenue to meet its rapidly growing liabilities,
attempting constantly to extend its trade and railway network beyond its
northern boundaries. Despite the fact that the Bond was the strongest party
in Parliament, it did little or nothing to ease the financial distress of the
republics and more than once rejected requests that the inland states be
allocated a share of the customs duties collected at the Cape ports. A recent
study thus describes the Bond as blinkered, selfish and parochial in this
respect.[75]
The discovery of gold confronted the Cape with the sudden prospect of
becoming the 'poor relation' in South Africa. Kruger blocked the extension of
the Cape railway system into the Rand, the new powerhouse of the South
African economy, threw obstacles in the way of trade in agricultural products
and made it as difficult for Cape Dutch-Afrikaners in the Transvaal to obtain
citizenship as it was for other Uitlanders . At the same time, Hofmeyr and his
Bond were increasingly acting as British imperial agents by supporting
British-backed expansion which aimed at the encirclement and isolation of
the Transvaal. In 1887, amid growing tensions over railway and trade
policies, four Cape Town Bondsmen, including Hofmeyr, wrote to Kruger:
― 40 ―
But division did grow. By 1890 Hofmeyr was so much under Rhodes's
influence that he was willing to travel to Pretoria to tell Kruger that he could
not unconditionally claim Swaziland.[77] Kruger thundered at him: 'You are
a traitor, a traitor to the Africander cause.'[78] Yet, despite his objections to
the Transvaal's stringent franchise qualifications for Uitlanders —particularly
Cape-Afrikaner Uitlanders —Hofmeyr continued to profess his sympathy and
affection for the Transvaal with the words 'blood is thicker than water'.[79]
These and even Kruger's words certainly suggests an awareness of
Afrikaners as members of a common ethnic community. However, for Kruger
and Hofmeyr the basis of political action and the definition of the concept
Afrikaner were quite different.
Indeed during the last quarter of the nineteenth century the very concept of
'Afrikaner' remained highly ambiguous. At the one end of the spectrum there
was the GRA and The Patriot who defined the term in the ethnic sense of a
people with a common descent and history. For Hofmeyr and the Zuid-
Afrikaan, Afrikaners were a volk or a nation-in-being comprised of both
Dutch-Afrikaners and English-speakers who were loyal to the Cape and
believed in the need to maintain white supremacy against the Africans.[80]
While James Rose Innes, a leading Cape liberal, did not consider himself an
Afrikaner, which in his view was defined as people belonging to the oldest
section of the white population and newcomers holding specific views on the
Native Question, Cecil John Rhodes embraced the inclusive concept of
Afrikanerhood.[81] Eagerly availing himself of the political base Hofmeyr's
Bond offered him, he stated in 1890 that his government would be an
'Afrikander' one, and he indeed shared the Bond's views on labour and
African policy.[82] Edmund Garrett, editor of the Cape Times, coined the
phrase 'John Bull Afrikander' in asserting that Britain by 1890 was acting
only in the interests of South Africa as a whole.[83] Finally, there was the
conception of leading Transvaal burghers, such as F.G. Wolmarans and
Schalker Burger who both served as chairman of the Volksraad. They
defined the term Afrikaner in narrow, republican terms. Propagating a
distinct Transvaal nationalism, Burger stated flatly that 'everyone from
beyond the borders of the republic must be viewed as a stranger, no matter
if he came from the Free State, the Colony, England or Holland, etc'.[84]
― 41 ―
Free State the state preceded the nation, and political expressions of ethnic
consciousness could accordingly feed on the idea of national self-
determination in addition to responding to class needs. In the Cape Colony,
however, it had to grow from a shared culture and common economic
concerns.
In the 1870s and 1880s Hofmeyr had argued that Dutch was merely of
instrumental value in educating the Dutch-Afrikaners to enable them to
claim equal rights with English-speakers. Always sensitive to any movement
in his constituency that might outflank him, Hofmeyr from the 1890s began
to emphasize the close links between language and ethnic identity and
argued that they were mutually dependent on one another. But Hofmeyr's
bland ethnic formulations were already overtaken by a more radical ideology
espoused by a new generation of relatively well-educated ministers of
religion and teachers who were eager to invent and elaborate an ethnic
culture. By the turn of the century they were taking a leading role all over
South Africa in commemorations of the Battle of Blood River and the
founding of debating societies. Both served to heighten ethnic consciousness
on a grassroots level among the rural population.[85] In the Cape Colony
the new movement would find its leader in Daniel François Malan, a DRC
clergyman who returned to South Africa in 1905 after studying theology in
the Netherlands and who was to become leader of the Nationalist Party in
the 1930s. In the Netherlands Malan had watched Abraham Kuyper
implementing the verzuiling (segmentation) of Dutch society along religious
and class lines. Once back in South Africa, Malan spread the new gospel that
religious, cultural and political separatism could be the only basis for
cooperation between the Afrikaners and the English.
In isolation these clergymen and teachers could not achieve much. For their
ethnic movement to acquire momentum it was necessary to link up with
farmers, in particular men of some wealth, who also found ethnic
identification both
― 42 ―
Second, the farmers' financial situation prompted them to turn to local banks
and trust companies. From the 1890s these local institutions began to
attract a growing flow of funds from both the rich and the poor, the farmers
and the professionals. As local sentiment turned into ethnic sentiment, these
institutions facilitated the encapsulation of classes within the ethnic group
and the accumulation of resources that was necessary before major ethnic
projects could be launched. By the turn of the century an ethnic
establishment comprised of some affluent farmers who were also
shareholders or directors of local financial institutions, professional men, and
leading figures in the DRC and the university college in Stellenbosch had
emerged.
― 43 ―
All this worked to the disadvantage of the Standard Bank. On top of all this
came the Jameson Raid of 1895–96 and the Anglo-Boer War which were not
only major blows to Hofmeyr's political collaboration with imperial policies
but also greatly strengthened financial anti-imperialism. The District Bank,
which had weathered a serious crisis in the late 1880s, capitalized on this
and on the economic boom which the colony enjoyed from 1895 to 1904. It
was patronized by both large and small farmers, professionals, the university
college and the town council. In 1904 the Standard Bank inspection report
noted that the District Bank had the best of all the advance business and all
farm mortgages. It described the directors of the bank as local magnates. In
the 1880s, the Standard Bank had expected the imminent collapse of its
local rival. By 1908, however, its own branch was running at a loss and
District Bank showed a profit of £2400 for the first six months after writing
off £4000 for bad debts. An inspection report blamed it on the bitter feelings
towards the British and 'the few loyalists of their own nationality'. The report
of 1909 was more explicit:
At the present time we can hardly hope to do much here, our rivals
the Stellenbosch District Bank receiving a large measure of support
from the local populace and institutions. The causes of this support
appear to be largely in sentiment and the clannishness of the
Afrikander under the lead of a few influential men. No doubt they
often accept risks also which we ourselves would never care to
take.[89]
In founding the South African Academy for Arts and Sciences in 1909, the
Dutch-Afrikaner leaders still compromised by promoting both Dutch and
Afrikaans. But among students from Stellenbosch Afrikaans had already won
the day and they would enthusiastically carry it forward as the ethnic
language of a new people, 'the Afrikaners'. This new concept had still many
bastions to
― 44 ―
conquer, but the merger of culture and economic concerns had created a
formidable force. A key figure in the new ethnic establishment was J.H.
(Jannie) Marais. He had made a fortune on the Kimberley mines before
returning to Stellenbosch in 1891 to take up farming just outside the town.
After the war he became the largest shareholder of the Stellenbosch District
Bank. Marais's financial backing provided a vital breakthrough for institutions
that were to play an indispensable role in the development of Afrikaner
ethnic consciousness in the Cape's political arena. One such institution was
the University of Stellenbosch. After the establishment of the Union of South
Africa in 1910, there was a strong move to establish a single, overarching
teaching university in Cape Town. This would have posed a severe threat to
both Stellenbosch's Victoria College, which was in danger of becoming
merely a high school, and to Afrikaner ethnic aspirations. It would also have
entailed a devastating blow to the town of Stellenbosch generally and to the
District Bank in particular, as it was estimated that by 1915 £130,000 was
spent in Stellenbosch by the various educational institutions as compared to
the £60,000-£ 100,000 brought in by wine and brandy production. Local
businessmen and leading figures in the Dutch Reformed Church and the
University of Stellenbosch strongly protested against downgrading Victoria
College. But the move to establish 'an authentic Dutch-Afrikaans university'
in Stellenbosch only acquired real momentum after Marais (who died in
1915) bequeathed £100,000 to Victoria College.
There was no immediate swing in the Western Cape to the new National
Party of James Barry Hertzog, founded in 1913. Farmers in this region had
consolidated behind Hofmeyr's Afrikaner Bond which at Unification in 1910
was absorbed into the South African Party of Generals Smuts and Botha. As
both this party and Hertzog's breakaway party based their programme of
principles on that adopted by the Afrikaner Bond in 1889, the National Party
initially failed to make headway in the Cape Province. But the rebellion in
1914–15 of dissident Afrikaner generals who objected to South Africa's
participation in World War I and its suppression by the government
prompted Marais to take a stand against the pro-Empire policy of the
government and to support a newspaper which would give priority to the
rights of 'eigen land en volk ', as he put it, and not to demands and wishes
emanating from Johannesburg and elsewhere.[91]
The growing support for the National Party between 1915 and 1929, when it
captured the Stellenbosch and Paarl seats, was complementary to the
channelling of Afrikaner farming capital into Afrikaner institutions such as the
Paarl Board of Executors and the Stellenbosch District Bank. They had been
turned into vigorous enterprises by the 1920s. Political anti-imperialism thus
had its parallel in financial anti-imperialism. At the same time the difficulties
wine farmers experienced in marketing their wine made them increasingly
inclined to support parties and schemes which favoured intervention on
behalf of the farmers. In
― 45 ―
1918, two years after the wine price had slumped to an average of £2 per
leaguer, the Kooperatiewe Winjwbouwers Vereeniging van Zuid-Afrika
(KWV), an overarching wine cooperative, was founded.[92] However, the
KWV had only limited success until the promulgation of the Wine and Spirit
Control Act of 1924 which prohibited the purchase of wine for distilling
purposes without the permission of the KWV or below a price fixed by it. The
fact that the tasks of marketing and distilling were now taken out of their
hands freed the wine farmers from the necessity of incurring large capital
expenses. On a far larger scale than before they could now invest their
savings. A considerable share of this capital found its way to the District
Bank and institutions like Sanlam and Santam which unambiguously
projected themselves as specifically Afrikaner enterprises.[93]
These developments point to the socio-economic base of the 1929
Nationalist electoral victory in the 'wine seats' of Paarl and Stellenbosch. The
active involvement of Stellenbosch and Paarl farmers in local financial
institutions and ethnic projects laid the groundwork for the Cape Afrikaner
economic and cultural advance during the 1920s and 1930s. This was the
main support base of the 'purified' Afrikaner nationalist movement that was
launched in 1933 under the leadership of D.F. Malan and other Cape
Afrikaner nationalists and for the southern wing of that party.
In the Free State the sway of patriarchal leaders began to break down in the
1880s. The land had filled up much more evenly than in the Transvaal. There
were few notables who could flaunt the authority of the central government
as could occur north of the Vaal. A relatively modern state, free from
anarchy and graft, was in place by 1890. With the opening of the gold fields
in 1886 South Africa's economic point of gravity shifted towards the
Transvaal. The Free State now began to move out of the Cape's economic
orbit and directed itself politically and economically towards the Transvaal.
The British imperial aggression against the Transvaal was seen by the Free
State as an attack on its own autonomy, for which it was prepared to go to
war in 1899.
However, even before the war there were signs of a more vigorous ethnic
self-awareness being cultivated by an alliance of intellectuals and
commercializing farmers. During the 1890s ethnic entrepreneurs saw the
Free State as being under attack economically as well as politically. Unable
to adapt to the market created by the gold fields, many subsistence farmers
in the northern and eastern Free State sold out to English-speaking farmers
who produced commercially for the market. M.T. Steyn, who became
president in 1895, warned the Free State burghers that if this continued
their sons would in due course become tenants on their fathers' land.[94]
After the languid 1880s, during which the British had been generally
conciliatory to the republics, politics seemed to come alive in the 1890s, as
tension with the British increased. Debating societies and farmers'
associations sprang up in many towns. In 1896 the OVS Boeren Beschermen
(Orange Free State Farmers' Protection Society) presented itself to Steyn as
the 'national party' and requested lower taxes and improved labour
legislation. One of its offshoots was the Vrystaatse Jongelingsvereeniging
(Free State Youth Society), which expressed the need for a journal that
would expound an 'Afrikaner nationality . . . and would use no other
language than Afrikaans or Dutch'. They wanted this nationality to be like a
wall around them to protect them
― 46 ―
against foreign intrusion.[95] In the build-up to war, Steyn, who had
married an English-speaking woman and easily moved in the bi-cultural
society of Bloemfontein, also began to fear the demise of his state and his
people. He stressed the vital importance of language: "The language is the
people and if we neglect our language we would have to expect the gradual
atrophy of our national existence.'[96]
After the Anglo-Boer War, Hertzog would make ethnic politics the
cornerstone of his Orangia Unie movement. In a colony where the great
majority of the white population was Dutch/Afrikaans-speaking there was
little need for a party devoted to reconciliation with the English on the model
of the Cape's Afrikaner Bond. Reconciliation was in any case made extremely
difficult by the devastation of the war and an aggressive post-war British
administration which closed down Dutch private schools and compensated
for this only by minimal concessions towards Dutch-medium education in the
state schools. The sentiment expressed by many Free State English-
speakers that they were Afrikaners—but not Boers—began to fade away. A
politically active ethnic consciousness, with Hertzog as its champion, was
thus intensified by the experiences of the war and the British assault on
language and culture. Yet Hertzog did not develop a coherent ethnic
ideology. Even after his breakaway from the South African Party in 1912 he
used the term 'Afrikaner' both in its exclusive sense and in Hofmeyr's
inclusive sense.[97] When and from whom he adopted his policy of the
segregation of whites and blacks and of Afrikaner cultural separatism has not
yet been properly investigated. But both in Stellenbosch and Potchefstroom
intellectuals had been attracted to these ideas before Hertzog thought of
breaking away. Hertzog himself remained an ambiguous leader, uniting
people behind him on a basis of personal loyalty rather than through deeply
shared convictions. This was true in 1913 when Hertzog led the Free State
out of the South African Party and in 1933 when he merged his National
Party with the pro-Empire South African Party of Smuts.
To some extent, this division was once again between an exclusive and
inclusive conception of nation and state building. Kruger and his followers
put a low premium upon education and bitterly resented the use of English
in schools as something which undermined the national culture. As a
Transvaal nationalist, he was reluctant to enter any alliances that might
possibly compromise the state. Even when, after the Jameson Raid, the Free
State proposed closer unity between the two republics Kruger waited eight
months to respond. The 'progressives', on the other hand, were more
inclined than Kruger to regard 'patriotic' Uitlanders as potential burghers and
Afrikaners. They were modernizers who attacked the nepotism, corruption,
incompetence and maladministration under Kruger's patriarchal state and
proposed thorough-going reforms. But they could be equally exclusivist, and
this was especially evident in their attacks on the Dutchmen appointed by
Kruger to senior positions in the civil service. It is notable that in their
opposition to Kruger, the 'progressives' took care to distance themselves
from the Uitlanders and presented themselves as acting in the best interests
of local Afrikaner society.[98]
― 47 ―
The Jameson Raid and the impending war produced a closing of political
ranks and ended any chance of the 'progressives' toppling Kruger as
president. Yet during the war the Transvaal leadership changed drastically.
The older generation of patriarchs and incompetents yielded to a new class
of leaders, much more efficient and successful agriculturally, professionally,
and militarily than their predecessors. Identified with the pre-war opposition,
they were recruited from wealthy landowners, such as Louis Botha, Schalk
Burger and Koos de la Rey, and professional men, such as Jan Smuts,
Christiaan Beyers and Louis Esselen. It was this new leadership who took
charge of the politics of reconstruction after the war's end in 1902. Against
the background of a devastated countryside and acute poverty, they saw
their first task as building an ethnic political base in a situation where Dutch-
Afrikaners formed half of the white population but only a third of the
potential voters. The development of a politically articulated ethnic
consciousness was greatly facilitated by the post-war policies of the British
administration under Lord Milner. Instead of reconciliation, Milner
deliberately used education to shape imperial citizens. Yet, despite this, he
made no attempt to exploit in Britain's interest the class and ideological
divisions among Dutch-Afrikaners by diverting government resources to the
patronage of the bywoner class who had supported Britain in the war. The
political expression of ethnic awareness was also fostered by the
constitutions which Britain granted first to the self-governing Transvaal
colony and then to the Union of South Africa. White manhood suffrage
meant that it was in the interest of the Dutch-Afrikaner leaders to mobilize
the bywoners behind them. And the exclusion of Africans from the franchise
effectively ended the white landlord-African tenant and other cross-racial
linkages that had grown up in the decade or so before the war.[99]
It was in such circumstances that the leaders, with the help of the various
Dutch Reformed Churches, addressed the acute divisions between the
bittereinders (generally the men who fought until the 'bitter end' of the war)
on the one hand and the 'joiners' and 'hands-uppers' on the other. These
divisions were sufficiently healed for Het Volk, a mass Dutch Afrikaner party,
to be formed. It won the 1907 election handsomely, as well as the first
election under Union before being absorbed by the South African Party in
1911. Selborne and Milner, the British administrators on the spot, clearly
realized that this was not the manifestation of an organic ethnic unity but
the work of cultural brokers who had constructed a set of alliances with an
ethnic framework. In a report of 1905 Milner distinguished between the bulk
of the Boer people and the 'political Boers, the Afrikander party' whose ideal
was the doctrine of 'a separate Afrikander nation and State'. He concluded:
― 48 ―
But Botha and Smuts as leaders of the Het Volk failed, in the end, to harness
the support of this separatist political ethnic consciousness. Once in power,
these leaders increasingly were drawn into the developing state-capital
symbiosis. This symbiosis depended on industry providing an environment
which ensured profits and attracted an expanding supply of finance capital
from abroad. Locked into the international capitalist system, Botha and
Smuts embarked on policies of reconciliation calculated to attract investors
and political support from beyond their ethnic base. This meant dropping the
popular anti-(British) capitalism plank of Het Volk and shelving the idea that
the mines should solve the acute white unemployment problem by using
unskilled whites in the place of blacks. It also entailed giving only lukewarm
support to Dutch-Afrikaner cultural aspirations about which neither Botha
nor Smuts cared very much.[102]
The period between 1905 and 1915 witnessed the emergence of the
constituent parts of the subsequent nationalist alliance in the Transvaal. In
the vanguard was the Afrikaner educated stratum, particularly ministers of
religion, teachers and journalists. This stratum saw the danger of one large
section of the volk lapsing into what Gustav Preller, one of their spokesmen,
called 'an ignorant, uncaring proletariat while another part was leaning to
English'.[103] Like their counterparts in the Western Cape, Preller and other
intellectuals in the North believed English could be countered only by
Afrikaans. But Afrikaans should be promoted as a professional, 'civilized',
white man's language, with a proper body of literature. Occupationally these
men were often insecure. As teachers, they faced a distinct trend towards
anglicization in the schools; as clergy they were painfully aware of the loss
of members of their congregations as a result of poverty and
proletarianization; and as writers they saw the market being flooded by
English newspapers and cheap English novels. This educated stratum had an
overriding interest in creating Afrikaners who would refill Afrikaner churches,
attend Afrikaner schools and buy Afrikaans books.[104]
This was a massive task. A prominent part was played by the Doppers of
Potchefstroom. Deriving their theories from the Dutch neo-Calvinists, they
built 'Christian National' schools and disseminated the message that the
Afrikaners were a unique people whose strength lay in isolation with freedom
to practise apartheid with respect to both the English and the Africans.[105]
The Doppers, however, represented only one strand. The principal cultural
entrepreneurs were the journalists and writers who, in newspapers and
journals such as Die Brandwag and Die Huisgenoot, presented Afrikaner
history as a heroic epic and tried to redefine almost every aspect of
everyday life in Afrikaner terms. This message found a particular resonance
among women and in the family context.[106]
When the National Party was founded in 1913, the educated stratum was the
first of the disaffected groups that flocked to the banner of Hertzog. The
intellectuals sought allies amongst the Dutch-Afrikaner workers but found
that they were a difficult class to mobilize by ethnic appeals, which failed to
meet their material demands for employment and relief. A recent study
concludes that the workers were unwilling to try on 'the yoke of a nationalist
dominated labour movement'.[107] The Dutch-Afrikaner workers only
turned away from the English-dominated Labour Party after they had been
shunned persistently by the formal trade union movement.
The poor farmers were another group that proved hard to mobilize. Botha
and Smuts represented the gentry classes of farmers who just before and
just after the war bought out large numbers of the poorer farmers and
pushed many bywoners
― 49 ―
off the land. Many small farmers became alienated from the rich landholders.
One spoke in 1905 of 'these selfish, self-righteous blood-suckers. . . . Even
our great generals who make such grand speeches, oppress the poor in
private and enrich themselves from the impoverished'.[108] After the
National Party was formed the rural poor gradually rallied behind its banner,
particularly after the Rebellion of 1914–1915. The National Party's open
identification with the rebels persuaded the poor that the party might
challenge not only imperialism but also the entire capitalist order. The rural
poor were equally attracted to the explicit racism of the National Party,
believing that only a tough policy towards blacks would solve their acute
labour problems. After a tour of the Transvaal rural districts in 1921, Smuts
noted that 'the landless "by-woner " is very definitely attaching himself to
the Nationalist cause'.[109] Accused by the exclusive nationalists of being
traitors because of their pro-British stance during World War I, Botha and
Smuts bitterly responded that those who accused them were 'hendsoppers'
and 'joiners' in the Anglo-Boer War.
It was also in the aftermath of the Rebellion that the most powerful of the
churches, the DRC, really began to rally behind the ethnic movement and
ideology. At a special conference of DRC clergy in 1915 the church did not
censure the rebels (as the government would have wanted). Instead it
accepted Malan's view that the church had a distinct calling with respect to
the 'Dutch-speaking' population group and consequently had the duty to be
'national' and maintain 'national interests'. 1[110] Andrew Murray,
champion of the once-dominant church tradition of Evangelism with its
universalistic message, was deeply troubled, but he sensed that it was
impossible to stem the nationalist tide.[111] In the general election held at
the end of 1915 Hertzog's National Party made a net gain of 15 seats
country-wide. The astute politician John X. Merriman noted gloomily that
only the richer and older Afrikaners still supported Botha and Smuts.[112]
An exclusively defined ethnic consciousness was passing them by as a
political force.
Conclusion
In the Transvaal and the Orange Free State the Anglo-Boer War shattered
the political institutions on which local Afrikaner political ethnicity had been
built. Ethnic entrepreneurs now had to assume the task of what a recent
analysis has called 'building a nation from words'. The architects came from
a fairly isolated educated stratum and had to invest hard ideological labour
to persuade the lower class—workers and poor farmers—and also those of
more affluent classes to see their political destiny in common Afrikaner
terms. It was a task not yet completed by World War II, and perhaps only in
the early 1960s when a republican form of government was in place and
apartheid imposed on almost all levels of society was it achieved. Twenty
years later, in the early 1980s, Afrikaner political unity was shattered. As
happened a century ago, one group emphasizes Afrikaner political and
cultural exclusivity while, perhaps, the majority is beginning to move
hesitantly towards a self-concept in which ethnic claims are becoming
subordinate to class identifications.
2—
Afrikaner Women and the Creation of
Ethnicity in a Small South African Town,
1902–1950
Jeffrey Butler
But from the time that these Dutch [i.e. Afrikaner] women
accompanied their husbands on the Great Trek and stood loading
the old flint locks in the laager [wagon circle] to withstand the Zulu
rush; down to the time that they lashed the men out with their
tongues to the almost hopeless struggle for their independence in
1881—and now that they have willingly made every sacrifice for
their independence in this war, the Dutch woman has been a very
real factor in influencing events.
John X. Merriman, 1900[1]
Introduction
This chapter is entitled 'Afrikaner women and the creation of ethnicity . . . .'
By ethnicity we do not mean only the existence of a community with a
distinctive language and institutions, and, therefore, a history of its own.
Afrikanerdom in that sense is almost as old as the settlement of Dutchmen
in South Africa. We mean in addition a community conscious of its
institutions and language, developing an historical record, aware of the
existence of other communities in conflict with it and of the necessity of
mobilizing itself in defence of its interests. Ethnicity in this sense is
analogous to E.P. Thompson's notion of class—'when men . . . as a result of
common experiences . . . feel and articulate the identity of their
interests . . . as against other men whose interests are different from (and
usually opposed to) theirs'.[2] That consciousness, as Thompson
emphasized, is itself an historical product; it will, therefore, vary in intensity
over time, and is by no means a necessary consequence of cultural
difference, but the result of action by individuals and organizations that
create and sustain it.
Most studies of ethnicity in South Africa have stressed the role of long-term
political conflict between English and Afrikaners and, most especially, the
impact of the Anglo-Boer War of 1899–1902. Granted the importance of this
conflict, however, the construction of Afrikaner ethnic identity cannot be
understood in terms of that conflict alone. John X. Merriman, a noted
politician in the Cape Colony who frequently showed an acute sense of social
process and a capacity to
― 56 ―
― 57 ―
so. The evidence of genuine class conflict dividing Afrikaners from each other
so that local organizations were linked to class specific divisions is sparse
indeed. There is strong evidence that it was the work of Afrikaner women in
particular which brought about this situation of blunted class antagonisms.
The war was not a process but a cataclysmic event, one of those phenomena
which, in their impact, cut across divisions of class, region and sex, much
like defeat in the Franco-Prussian War of 1870–71 and the loss of Alsace-
Lorraine left lasting bitterness at all levels of French society, something no
politician could ignore.[11] In South Africa the war was even more
significant because it united Afrikaners in the colonies—the Cape and Natal—
with their brethren in the republics in a way that they had not been before
1899. In particular, one of the war's spectacular impacts was on the women
of the republics, and the death of 26,000 women and children in
concentration camps came to be seen by many Afrikaners as a literal Murder
of the Innocents.[12]
The story of how Afrikaner leaders and followers, rich and poor, urban and
rural, throughout South Africa reacted to the situation they found
themselves in after 1902, to the fact of conquest, has not yet been told. The
conquest of the republics affected all Afrikaners, including those in the Cape,
and all were affected by the British attempt to follow the military victory by a
cultural one, an attempt at cultural genocide. Lord Milner's attempt at
wholesale anglicization was directed at Afrikaners in the OFS and Transvaal,
but it affected Afrikaners throughout South Africa. The years 1902 to 1910
were crucial ones in which Afrikaner resentments began to be articulated,
mitigating but not abolishing social divisions and leading, as we shall see, to
the development of new institutions, new leaders, and an expanded role for
women. Some of the developments in this period have recently been
described in the context of the industrial Witwatersrand.[13] But for
Afrikaners the important changes took place in small communities: the
urbanization of Afrikaners in the large cities was only beginning in
1902.[14]
― 58 ―
The South African War provoked a debate among Afrikaners as to how they
should manage their relations with the other groups in South Africa. In
particular, how was the recent past of only a section of the volk to be made
that of the whole and to be used politically? Soon after the Union of the four
colonies in 1910, there was a major political split and an organized Afrikaner
ethnic movement was born, based on historic anti-British resentment,
recently inflamed; a desire for the protection of language and church; the
destruction of an English cultural ascendancy in South Africa; and an end to
the patronage abroad of the imperial conqueror—a genuine Sinn Fein, 'our
own', movement. In parliament the struggle was conducted in terms of
language, symbolic constitutional issues such as the flag, anthem, and the
British Commonwealth, and of more concrete issues like the handling of the
problem of poor whiteism, the latter raising the possibility of articulated
class division among Afrikaners. Locally, the raising of ethnic awareness was
frequently indirect in such institutions as the church and local government,
in both of which national political alignments were muted, and indeed
explicitly abjured. But the muting of politics did not mean that the activity
had no political effects. An important part of the political history of
Afrikaners will be found in ethnic bodies such as the church, in which issues
relating to cultural survival, welfare, and segregation—all sensitive politically
—were constantly addressed.
― 59 ―
had urban links, by marriage or involvement in local business, and the town
was run by an oligarchy of English family firms and professional men. As
most civil servants and railway artisans were still English-speaking in 1920,
the town had a decidedly English cast and flavour, when measured by
advertising, the proceedings and personnel of local government bodies, and
the staffs of the two high schools and one training college. The one daily
newspaper, The Midland News (1891), was in English, whereas the Dutch—
later Afrikaans—De Middelandsche Afrikaander (1899) was only a weekly,
which on the death of its editor in 1933 was taken over by its English
competitor.[19]
This English ascendancy was not the result of the English being a majority of
the population. According to the Voters' Roll of 1925, 320 out of 703 white
male voters in town had English names (45 per cent), and the 1926 census
on religious denominations for town and district put 72 per cent of the white
population as belonging to the three Dutch Reformed churches.[20] In the
nineteenth century, Cradock and its district had had its substantial Afrikaner
families, some of them headed by notables who had served in the Cape
parliament or played their part in the affairs of the Afrikaner Bond party
before Union in 1910.[21] Members of such families frequently had a
dorpshuis, a town house, to be used during shopping expeditions, for the
education of children, but particularly for the long weekend which
accompanied nachtmaal (holy communion) four times a year. These houses
had another function: they could be taken over as retirement homes when
fathers decided to give their sons their heads on the farm. But more
important for the town, they gave these farmers a say in the affairs of town
and district, creating a conservative, parsimonious constituency—the so-
called 'nachtmaal vote'—when it came to expenditure on urban facilities. And
retired farmers were an important source of members of local government
bodies.
Not all Afrikaners in town and district were comfortable farmers or former
farmers. There was a great deal of white poverty in the district but it is
extremely difficult to devise a precise measure of it. In 1916, at the first
conference on poor whites sponsored by the Dutch Reformed Church, held in
Cradock, the Minister of Agriculture, H.C. van Heerden, Cradock's M.P., had
made one of the early estimates of the scale of the problem nationally,
arriving at a figure of 106,000 'abjectly poor' and 'less poor'.[22] The
Carnegie Commission on the Poor White Problem in South Africa in 1932
regarded this figure as a serious underestimate, calculating that about 21
per cent of Afrikaners in 1931, about 220,000, could be regarded as poor
white.[23] If we apply that proportion to the Afrikaans population of
Cradock and its district we would have a poor white population of 927, or
approximately 244 income earners.[24] Using the 1931 Voters' List, and
looking for what the Carnegie Commission called 'lowliest occupations', we
find in town and district that 112 Afrikaners registered themselves as
labourers (93 of them living in town), 53 as foreman or opsigter
(watchman); 5 as transport riders; 3 as gardeners and one each as general
help, milkman and bywoner (sharecropper), a total of 176, 57 of them in the
countryside.[25] Such a figure is extremely conservative, leaving out of
account those who claimed to be farmers and no longer were—479
Afrikaners claimed to be farmers on the 277 farms held by Afrikaners.[26]
Cradock appears to have had a poor white population in town and district of
about 650, with roughly only 210 living in the countryside. The major rural
exodus was already over in the Cradock district by 1931: the first leap to
urban status, the shift to the nearest dorp, had already been made.
There were many reasons for poverty in the Cradock district. It is a Karoo
area, a thirstland suitable for ranching only, especially if there is no
irrigation. It lies between the 10" and 12" annual rainfall contours, one of a
group of Midland
― 60 ―
The population of town and district did not change steadily in one direction
and at equal rates. Between 1921 and 1926 the white population of the town
increased by 3.88 per cent, and the district by 7.61 per cent.[32] These
figures can be compared with a 12.44 per cent increase in urban population
and 7.51 per cent in the rural population of the Union. The low rate of urban
growth suggests that many were using the town as a way station between
country and urban living, staying in Cradock only briefly. Perhaps partly
because of the construction of large irrigation works in the district from 1921
to 1926, partly because the bulk of bywoners had already left the land,
Cradock was not listed as a heavy contributor to the Afrikaner population of
Port Elizabeth, 182 miles to the south, as were the neighbouring districts
identified by Grosskopf in 1932.[33]
It seems, therefore, that Cradock acquired most of its poor white population
before the 1920s. As we shall see, white poverty had exercised the town's
fathers for some time. The poor were dispersed throughout the town, most
of them living in an area of mixed occupation and ownership on the borders
of the 'location' where Africans and coloureds could rent but not own sites. It
was into the mixed area that many poor whites moved, before they began to
be rehoused in new subsidized and segregated public housing from 1939
onwards.
Local white poverty had been serious enough for long enough to lead to a
distinction between fee-paying schools and poor schools. In 1864, a church
school was established under one G.W.D. Wilson. It appears that the school
was open to all whites, but soon 'a stigma became attached to [it] because it
attracted chiefly the poorer element'.[34] In 1870, a group of farmers and
local businessmen opened a secular school for boys, with Wilson as a
teacher, and in 1875 a similar one for girls. Both schools were fee-paying
and, therefore, excluded indigent children. But Wilson made the education of
poor white children his life's work and later left the boys' school and opened
one for indigent children.[35] In 1894 it gained a municipal subsidy on the
condition that parents had 'both' to be 'entirely European.' In 1898 and
1902, coloured parents, and in 1903 one Asian parent, applied for entry for
their children, but all were refused.[36] The school, named 'The Wilson
School', continued as a school for poor whites paying no fees until 1938
when it was the scene of a dramatic 'sit in' organized by a faction of local
Afrikaner nationalists.[37] In addition, a few Afrikaner notables took up the
issue of
― 61 ―
For Afrikaners the period after 1899 had been politically traumatic. Cradock
was part of the Midlands, a zone that the British Army tried and failed to
keep clear of commandos from 1900 on. Already in July, 1901, a rebel had
been sentenced to death in the market square with all adult males required
to be present.[39] In October, two (perhaps four) more rebels were
sentenced in the square.[40] Next morning, these rebels were executed
within earshot of the town. These issues were revived in 1907 when a
memorial was erected in the local cemetery to those Afrikaners who had died
'in this district' during the war, including Cape rebels and men from the OFS
and Transvaal.[41] In its attempt to keep a potentially rebellious district in
order, the army had resorted to less drastic methods as well. In mid-1901,
some 40 men and 41 women, most of them from Cradock and its district and
described as 'undesirables', were sent to Port Alfred to live at their own
expense until the war was over. The 'undesirables' were certainly
unrepentant, had themselves photographed while in Port Alfred, men and
women separately, and some of them returned to Cradock to play a vigorous
role in the new institutions and debates of the future.[42]
The significance of the Anglo-Boer War for Afrikaner politics has usually been
written about in terms of the subsequent loyalties of men and their relations
with their leaders in that war.[43] We have long known, however, that at
particular moments, Afrikaner women have had a major role in politics, as
when they rejected their menfolk's acceptance of the British annexation of
Natal in 1843.[44] Both John X. Merriman and Olive Schreiner believed that
women had played a major role in the 'first war of independence' in
1881.[45] In the Anglo-Boer War itself many women in the Transvaal and
Orange Free State were active—at least one served with a commando—but
most took on the considerable responsibility of running farms in the absence
of the men. There is little evidence that they were ever a force for surrender
or accommodation, and much that they were a force for militancy.[46]
British soldiers and policy-makers frequently commented on the behaviour of
the women, and evoked the image of a 'Boer woman in [a] refugee camp
who slaps her protruding belly and shouts "When all our men are gone,
these little Khakis will fight you." '[47]
― 62 ―
― 63 ―
with war orphans and sending clothing to the Orange Free State and the
Transvaal. The first president, Mrs Reyneke, wife of the dominee, died in
July 1902, shortly after the execution of her brother. This local sadness,
however, did not sustain the movement: with the end of the war,
enthusiasm apparently began to wane.[56]
The Cradock committee decided to publish this letter, and after meetings in
Mrs de Wet's house in Cape Town, the rules of the Cradock AVV were
adopted with few amendments for a colony-wide organization. In September
1904, the Zuid Afrikaansche Christelike Vrouwen Vereeniging (South African
Christian Women's Association) was established, and in 1906 the annual
congress was held in Cradock, after which the 'Zuid' was dropped and the
modern form ACVV adopted.[58] There was a political issue here: 'South
African' and 'Afrikaans' are hardly synonymous except to an ardent Afrikaner
nationalist. Furthermore, Mrs de Wet objected to the conversion of a
women's movement into an ethnic one: she wanted it open to all Christian
women, including Roman Catholics, and withdrew when she failed to carry
the point. There was also a religious issue because some members objected
to adding 'Christelike,' preferring the earlier secular form.[59] Mrs de Wet's
more inclusive, more strictly feminist, position parallels that taken earlier by
J.H. Hofmeyr in his differences with such contemporaries as Paul Kruger in
the Transvaal; for Hofmeyr it was not necessary to be an Afrikaner to be a
South African.[60]
In Cradock, the ACVV seems to have followed closely the spirit of Mrs de
Wet's letter, concentrating heavily on religious, moral and cultural issues: in
1905 it sent £30 to support a teacher in Rhodesia; it offered prizes for
'Hollands' in
― 64 ―
The ability to straddle the political fence can be seen in the personnel of the
executive. There must be few organizations where there has been such
continuity. The formidable Elizabeth Jordaan (1859–1950), who played such
a role in founding the organization, was president from 1904–6, and then
after terms by others of three and two years, she became president in 1911
and remained so for 33
― 65 ―
years. She was much feared; even today, she is a woman one has to talk of
with care. She joined Miss Minnie van Rensburg (1883–1955) who had been
elected secretary in 1908 and remained in the post to 1950. Then in 1912
they were joined by Mrs J. J. van Rensburg, (1874–1947) a young widow
who became vice-chairwoman and held that position to 1944, when she
became chairwoman until 1947. As if this were not enough, the treasurer,
Minnie van Deventer (1884–1974), joined the organization in 1911, gained
office in 1920 and remained there until 1957. There was, therefore, effective
continuity of personnel in the executive from 1911 to 1948.
There is evidence that the executive was non-partisan as well as long-
serving. Mrs van Rensburg was a loyal Smuts supporter, i.e. not an Afrikaner
nationalist but a believer in Anglo-Afrikaner 'conciliation', an important
person locally, a town councillor, mayor from 1936 to 1938, and for long
president of the Vroue Sendingsbond (Women's Missionary Association). And
the ACVV's evenhandedness on social welfare issues can be seen in the
admission from the early days of white English-speakers to its old people's
home.[71]
The connections between the ACVV and the growing Afrikaner nationalist
movement were nevertheless close, even if informal. In 1914, the rebellion
produced yet another set of events about which Afrikaners could differ on
the basis of their attitudes to the 'British connection', a polarizing agent
which was a boon to the newly-created National Party. One of the immediate
consequences nationally was the founding of Helpmekaar (Help together), an
organization to pay the fines of those found guilty of rebellion, another
example of Afrikaners in the Cape, few of whom rebelled, sympathizing with
and aiding those to the north who had. Helpmekaar put out a lavishly
illustrated book, giving the executives, with photographs, of each district. In
the section on Cradock, we find some familiar faces: Mrs E. Venter and her
husband, both 'undesirables' in 1901, Elizabeth Jordaan, A.J. de Kock
(chairman), manager of the local Afrikaner multi-purpose shop, De Cradock
Handels-Maatskapy, Mrs J.C. Reyneke, second wife of Cradock's dominee,
and several other notables—all, except Mrs Reyneke, already active
Nationalists.[72] After the fines were paid, Helpmekaar found it had money
to spare and became in the 1920s an important source of funds for
scholarships for Afrikaner children. But, however close the connection of
individuals to organized Afrikaner nationalism, the ACW remained an
organization devoted to Afrikaners generally: its motto became ' Vir Kerk,
Volk en Taal ('For Church, People and Language'), and it worked steadily for
maximum coordination with the activities of the state, especially after the
establishment of the Department of Social Welfare in 1937.[73]
Fortunately the minutes of the ACVV's bestuur from 1903 on have survived.
A reading of them gives one an impression of an organization run with an
iron hand—Elizabeth Jordaan's—and based on an extremely effective use of
ad hoc committees. Little time seems to have been spent on gesellige
(conversational) activities—discussing recipes, sewing, and domestic matters
generally. The business of each meeting was some aspect of the cultural and
material affairs of the volk .[76] If information was lacking, an ad hoc
committee was appointed at once, to report back by the next meeting. The
meetings themselves were arranged frequently on an ad hoc basis: in 1925,
for example, there were four quarterly regular general meetings, three
special general meetings, four regular bestuur meetings, and three special
bestuur meetings. Attendance at these meetings was always small, but the
important people were always there, and so the distinction between general
and executive meetings was not of much significance. The practice of
holding meetings on Saturdays had obvious advantages. The town had its
own bestuur of eight members, the dorpsbestuur (town executive), and each
of five wyke (church wards) in the district had a representative on the
district bestuur . It was not difficult for town members to be in touch with
each other, and by meeting on a Saturday, it was possible for the town
members to communicate, even to hold brief meetings, with those wyk
members who came into church on Sunday, a convenience especially
valuable at nachtmaal, four times a year.
The ACVV did not believe in undertaking its errands of mercy unaided by the
state. Throughout its proceedings there is an awareness of government
subsidies, and continuous pressure on local authorities to act—its old ladies'
home, hostels for indigent children, and commercial school were all
subsidized. And because of its effective committee and reporting system, its
executive members had a detailed knowledge of its beneficiaries such as is
possible in small urban communities, an important resource when dealing
with officials with Gladstonian ideas of economy. It was also efficient in
raising money for its activities and for the church generally. It made itself
responsible for the annual dankfees (thanksgiving) bazaar, a device for local
money raising used by all white churches in Cradock. In addition, they
became unofficial public caterers, taking on luncheons, teas, and dinners for
the municipality, the divisional council, or for congresses, at times driving a
hard bargain with the mayor, and generally realizing considerable profit,
because frequently members would donate ingredients.[77] In doing this
work for a fee, they seem to have had little competition from their
Englishspeaking Methodist and Anglican counterparts who lacked the
numerical and economic resources to do more than run their own annual
bazaars and one picnic for their respective Sunday schools.[78]
― 67 ―
differed with the men and by no means regularly deferred to them. In the
old people's home which they opened in 1928, the treasurer was Elizabeth
Jordaan's husband, and for years the books were audited by an Anglican
English-speaker of impeccable Smutsite credentials, J.A. Cull, who had,
however, married into the Nationalist branch of the Michau family.[79]
Similarly in the girls' hostel, Cypressenhof (Cypress Court), run by the ACVV,
the treasurer was Max de Kock, managing director of the Cradock Handels
Maatskappy.[80] These men certainly did not control the organizations they
assisted, however deferentially women appeared to behave; within this
small-town bourgeois world, the free technical assistance by qualified men
was always readily available.
Some sense of the flavour and content of proceedings can be gained from
these two abbreviated entries in 1926:
The quotations from the minutes show the organization's preoccupation with
the problems of the Afrikaner poor, especially in the town, but not only
there. It is well known that a great deal of the debate on poverty among
South African whites was couched in terms of 'back to the land' policies, and
much of the debate on education was determined by a belief that education
would somehow be able to make opportunities in the countryside for
landless whites.[82] The ACVV in Cradock, however, seems to have come
early to the view that the Karoo countryside was no place for the children of
the Afrikaner poor, particularly for its girls, and that Afrikaners faced an
increasingly urban future, views which placed them in interesting opposition
to their menfolk.
The history of 'back to the land' policies and their demise is a subject in
itself. Afrikaners, men and women, were divided on the issue, though the
debate was seldom clear, and it tended to cross party lines. Important
English-speakers in mining, such as Percy Fitzpatrick and the influential
Lionel Philips, became ardent proponents of agricultural development
schemes for British settlers, partly because they saw a limited future for
white labour in the mines and wished to
― 68 ―
replace it with cheaper black labour, but partly also to increase the English-
speaking population.[83] Among Afrikaners there were fanners, including
Cradock's MP from 1924 to 1929, G.C. van Heerden, a Smutsite, who
attacked the sheltered employment of poor whites on the railways, referring
to the benefits of working on farms and using the familiar argument of the
'perks' available to the farm worker.[84] Presumably such men were also
ambivalent about government subsidized irrigation settlements for poor
whites such as those at Hartebeestpoort in the Transvaal and on the Orange
River at Upington and elsewhere.
'Back to the land' was more a cry of anguish than the basis of a coherent set
of policies. Nationalist politicians did not have a rurally based strategy: as
early as 1916, Dr Malan spoke of the necessity of urbanization.[85] When
the Nationalists came to power in 1924, they took the incipient protectionism
and related industrialization of the Smuts government much further, and by
expanding the use of 'civilized labour' in government departments and local
bodies, created jobs off the land.[86] The Afrikaner farmers who opposed
such policies locally do not seem to have faced the fact that they, as large
farmers, were probably part of the problem. Eastern Cape agriculture had
long been commercialized—it is virtually impossible to have a small
subsistence holding in the Karoo. But it was the Cape wool farmers
particularly who were contributing to the urban drift by fencing, by
dispensing with the services of the bywoner, and by ending tenancies.[87]
Their position, therefore, seems to have been based on a fear for future
labour supply and, perhaps, on a traditional Afrikaner antipathy to cities as
corrupting and alien places, rather than on a clearly thought out programme
to support a larger white population in the countryside.
Such a policy would have had educational implications. From before Union
there had been attempts in the Cape to enforce the attendance of white
children at school, and immediately after Union in 1910, a committee of the
Cape Provincial Council inquired into the problem of attendance in the
poverty-ridden northwest Cape where the population was highly
dispersed.[88] In the Cape there were two approaches: one was to set up
single-teacher day schools to meet the needs of a few farms, which had the
advantage of limiting the demands on daily transport; the other was to
develop 'central' schools outside of town, a device to keep children in the
countryside, but to achieve some concentration of pupils—50 to 100—by
building hostels where children were to receive some agricultural training
and to work on the school farm in the afternoon, hopefully to supply the
hostel with its vegetables and dairy products. Two such schools were
established in the Cradock district, one twelve miles to the west at
Kaalplaats founded in 1916, the other thirty miles to the east at Elandsdrif
and founded in 1927. In addition, in 1930, at Marlow, six miles north of
Cradock, an agricultural school for boys was founded, presumably to train
the skilled labour, and particularly the foremen, for South Africa's white
owned and managed farms. In all three cases, the cause had been advanced
by Izak B. van Heerden, the owner of Kaalplaats, a farm of 3084 morgen
(8000 acres), and member of a genuinely notable family which had been
granted farms when two of their holdings at Cradock had been expropriated
in 1812 to provide for the new town.[89]
A further device had been used—the urban hostel—to give children access to
the even larger schools in the town. In Cradock were two Goeie Hoop (Good
Hope) hostels, one, Toekoms (Future), for boys; another, at Cypressenhof,
for
― 69 ―
girls. These two hostels, extremely spartan institutions, made possible the
attendance of boys and girls at the Wilson School where no fees were
charged but education stopped at Standard 6 for boys, the end of primary
school, and Standard 8 for girls. The boys' hostel was run by a committee of
men from the Kerkraad (the all-male church council), and the girls' hostel by
the ACVV, both of them subsidized by the Cape Education Department. In
1926 an inspector commented with some asperity on the contrast between
the girls' hostel—excellently run—and the boys'. The crestfallen Kerkraad
invited the ACVV to take the boys' hostel over, which they agreed to do.[90]
But when the Elandsdrif central school opened in 1927, the Kerkraad, with
the support of the School Board and the Cape Provincial Administration,
appealed to the ACVV to close the boys' hostel down because they feared
that there would not be enough boys. The ACVV bestuur refused: there
were, they said rather tartly, enough poor whites to go round.[91]
Behind this debate was not only a difference about the nature of the future
facing Afrikaners, i.e. an urban or a rural one. There was another, related to
the preservation of jobs for whites. At first, Afrikaner men and women in this
debate in Cradock looked to place whites in jobs already being done by
blacks and coloureds. In the early 1920s, the ACVV had planned to open a
school of domestic science for girls and later received some land from the
Town Council for it.[92] Thus in 1926, Elizabeth Jordaan appealed to white
employers to use Afrikaner girls as domestic servants, especially as nannies,
in a straightforwardly racist appeal not to leave the raising of white children
to blacks.[93] The whole 'civilized labour' policy carried within it an implied
recognition that Africans were competitive with whites and involved the
actual displacement of blacks in jobs they already held. In agriculture, this
meant that the employment of whites on farms would at least be stabilized,
perhaps even expanded, at the expense of blacks.
The women of the Cradock ACVV seem to have seen earlier than the men
that education for an urban future in fields then largely held by English-
speaking whites was the more realistic and sensible policy. Specifically, they
realized that there was no future in South Africa for the white nanny, in town
or country, except in the homes of the very wealthy. Whatever jobs were
available in the countryside for young white males who were not in line to
inherit a farm, there was virtually nothing available for young white
women.[94] Young white men on farms were seldom placed in the
ambiguous position which faced the white nanny in the farm kitchen. As one
speaker protested at the ACVV Congress in Cradock, in April, 1926: '[white
domestic servants] are treated on the same footing of equality and during
the lunch hour are forced to have their lunch in the same room [as non-
Europeans] or go into the street'.[95]
This muted conflict over education policy did not take place in a vacuum. The
women of Cradock were members of a Cape-wide organization which was
linked with the Afrikaner women's organizations in other provinces, and of
the Vroue Nasionale Party (Women's National Party).[96] The Carnegie
Commission in 1932 drew attention to the far greater mobility of young
women than young men out of the rural areas, especially from the 1920s
onwards; frequently it was daughters who preceded the males in the shift of
a family to town.[97] Furthermore, the Commission noted the strong
preference of young women for factory work over domestic service because
of the shorter working week, and the greater freedom in leisure time.[98]
From the mid-1920s, these married women in small towns showed an
interest in, indeed anxiety over, the fate of young women in the cities, and
became aware of the difficulty of finding work for the young women of rural
― 70 ―
origin, who were not well qualified for nursing or for teaching, and who even
lacked the skills for adequate housekeeping. By 1924 the ACVV had
appointed its first full-time social worker and a leading member, M.E.
Rothmann, was a member of the Carnegie Commission on the poor whites
which reported in 1932.[99]
Coincidentally or not, in 1927 the Cradock ACVV turned its attention to the
founding of a handelskool, a commercial school, initially offering evening
classes to give those already in clerical work a chance to improve their
qualifications in shorthand, typing and bookkeeping.[102] There is some
evidence that some of the impetus for this school came from the fact that
the only commercial education available in Cradock was at the Dominican
convent for white girls: in December, 1928 the Cradock ACVV passed a
resolution for its coming Congress drawing attention to the ' Roomse gevaar'
('the Roman danger').[103] The school opened in mid-1929 and by August
it had 30 pupils, and 'full time day' as well as evening classes.[104]
In general then, the ACVV devoted its major energies to the future of poor
Afrikaner youth, helping them to get to school in town, providing for
commercial education and for some feeding of children at school.
Presumably, in school feeding the ACVV had its eye particularly on the poor
children at the Wilson School who were not in the ACVV hostels but who
lived in Cradock, and were poorly fed.[105] The activities in relation to the
children went further: the ACVV pressed for state medical assistance to the
poor; arranged with Dr Stewart, a specialist in Port Elizabeth, for free eye
testing; persuaded Gert Jordaan, Elizabeth's husband, to provide transport;
and paid for the spectacles.[106] It is important to emphasize that all this
work on behalf of the children was not done with an explicit and public
ethnic objective. The fact that schools and school feeding were subsidized
would have precluded that. But because of the structure of white poverty in
Cradock and its district, the beneficiaries were almost entirely Afrikaans-
speaking.
This is, then, the story of a group of bourgeois women, urban and rural,
taking on some of the problems of poverty within their own ethnic group,
reaching across the gulf separating the poor from the well-to-do, and
adopting policies which in retrospect appear to have been appropriate to the
ends they had in view. Those ends were not only the mitigation of the
consequences of landlessness and poverty: the ACVV was concerned with
the preservation of 'people, church and language', and their activities
contributed to the heightened sense of ethnic awareness that at all levels of
Afrikaner society was so crucial in the election of 1948. It was a maternalism
that concentrated on their 'own', a concentration which necessarily implied
attitudes to the 'others' in South Africa; it is to that broader context that we
now turn.
― 71 ―
There were areas in the activity of Cradock women in which ethnic and racial
issues were explicitly raised. In a society like South Africa, the definition and
maintenance of racial and ethnic boundaries is a central activity; in South
Africa it is a major preoccupation of the state. Unlike much of the recent
revival of ethnicity in the United States and in Europe, it has not had its
origins in subordinate groups;[107] South African boundary maintenance is
undertaken by a racially and ethnically defined minority which since 1948
has attacked an earlier British ascendancy, gained control of the state, and
further enshrined racial divisions in the law.
The use this dominant minority has made of its power has provoked
sustained criticism and hostility, and, understandably, a tendency by
outsiders to exaggerate the monolithic character of the dominant
group.[108] This tendency takes the form of either underestimating the
amount of debate and conflict within that group, even only among its men,
and of assuming that women and men think alike on all questions, or that, if
women think differently from men, they are invariably overruled. These are,
however, not positions that can be assumed. Women and men play different
roles in any society, particularly in the raising of children and consequently
in the choice of marriage partners: 'Any ethnic confrontation touches
family . . .', as William Foltz has written.[109] Even if the society is
effectively dominated by men on most issues most of the time, women are
likely to have their own views on many issues and to support agreed
positions with greater, or with less, intensity than the men.[110] And, of
course, agreement cannot be taken necessarily to imply subordination.
There are several areas where these differences can appear in South Africa.
There are ethnic distinctions from groups like the English, Jews and
Lebanese ('Syrians'), all defined in South Africa as 'white', and therefore
sub-groups of the white 'race'. Many Afrikaner men, having fought in the
Anglo-Boer War, returned with a veteran's often grudging but real respect
for his enemy and were, therefore, prepared to listen to Afrikaner
proponents of conciliation like Generals Botha and Smuts.[111] Many
Afrikaner women came out of the war with a consuming bitterness and a
suspicion that their men were possibly unreliable on ethnic issues. Thus we
saw that Mrs Koopmans de Wet regarded men as not to be trusted to insist
on using the language.[112] She probably feared that the men, respecting
power after a military defeat, might become English-speakers through self-
interest and the daily activity of a market place dominated by English-
speakers.
― 72 ―
fact that Jews, prominent especially in small town commerce, were English-
speaking in South Africa probably reinforced a growing anti-Semitism in the
1930s.
It has already been stressed that the ACVV was careful to keep itself out of
party politics. In the 1920s that distinction was probably easier to sustain
than after 1948. In Cradock one of the major patrons of the school feeding
scheme was Alfred Metcalf, the local grandee, a lawyer and supporter of
good causes—the Afrikaaner poor, public health for Africans, support of the
Anglican church, and university scholarships for girls as well as boys. Thus
the ACVV was prepared to fight for language rights, but was careful to
acknowledge handsomely the help it received from English-speakers in
relation to white poverty.[117] But in one area, they showed that they
believed that some whites were more equal than others, and in 1926 they
adopted an explicitly anti-Jewish position, the more remarkable because it
was in a religious, not an economic or political context, and because it seems
to have caught Afrikaner men by surprise.
With relation to blacks and coloureds, there are few allusions in ACVV
minutes to race attitudes: the preoccupation with poor whites excluded the
black and
― 73 ―
coloured poor, and no cases, such as a 'doubtful' application for entry to the
Wilson School, appear. There is, however, abundant evidence that
nationalist Afrikaner women in the 1920s were taking a militant line on
segregation. Both major political parties had separate parties for their
women, and the Vroue Nasionale Party met annually and debated resolutions
on a wide range of subjects. In 1928 the Party called for the training of
'native' nurses and doctors to be segregated at any hospital; at their 1929
congress they took a hard line against the employment of white nurses to
nurse African and coloured patients, especially males.[122] This sexual and
racial issue involved a piece of irrationality on the part of an organization
that was prepared to use the state to protect access to particular jobs in
favour of its own ethnic group.
We are dealing here with a society in which women were playing the role of
culture brokers, incidentally creating an ethnic self-consciousness and
policing a social boundary. One consequence of the intimate knowledge that
these middle class members of the ACVV executive had of the Afrikaner poor
was an ability to define the boundary between white and brown Afrikaners.
Membership of the white church, regular attendance, and acceptance as
behoeftig (needy) by the ACVV would have been sufficient to put any doubts
as to racial status to rest. There is no way of knowing whether any
judgments by the executive as to lack of need were really ones of racial
categorization, but it is highly unlikely that the ACVV would have helped a
multiracial household. It would be interesting, moreover, to find out if there
was any correlation between aid from the ACVV and church attendance.
What is clear is that there was no appeal against the
― 74 ―
Without a major public split, the WCA gradually became a body representing
English-speaking middle class women. At first, the ACVV was sympathetic to
the health project, but cooperation was never really achieved because the
ACVV kept its attention on the Afrikaner poor.[129] The location nurse, who
was originally to have served white, black, and coloured poor, became by
1927 one to serve blacks and coloureds only. At a meeting of the ACVV on 6
September 1930, a delegation from the WCA asked for help with the nurse's
salary, but in December, the wife of the Nationalist mayor, Mrs Hattingh,
reported that she had persuaded the WCA to withdraw the request.[130]
The ACVV remained an ethnic organization preoccupied with the white poor,
which in Cradock meant Afrikaner poor, moving the Town Council to
establish a clinic for whites and later, in 1949, appointing a social worker of
its own, an operation which continues to this day. According to a black
informant, in about 1950 a deputation from the location appealed to the
ACVV to take up some of the activities of the long defunct WCA and its
successor, the Joint Council. The reply, he said, was: Africans should
organize themselves and mobilize their resources as Afrikaners had
done.[131]
Conclusion
The second threat was an ethnic one, a threat on the white side of the racial
divide, which persisted even if Africans, coloureds, and Asians were all kept
in their place. Looking to the future, they seem to have said that the poor
Afrikaner youth would have a future only if they were educated to take
advantage of the opportunities in an urban economy, thereby competing
effectively with English-speakers; and that they would remain Afrikaners
culturally only if the battle for bilingualism—which came to mean a victory
for Afrikaans—was fought and won. This applied particularly to young
women for whom there was even less work than
― 75 ―
for men in the countryside, then or now. In taking this view, the ACVV
showed an acute strategic sense and an impressive degree of public spirit
within an ethnic context which led them to put in a great deal of work for
which they received no material reward.
The rewards which these women received were political and cultural. But the
link to politics was indirect. They made Afrikaners their special care, and by
playing such a public and such an important role in cultural affairs and in
social welfare, they ensured that the poor were helped, and were seen to be
helped, by an organization most of whose leading members were also highly
visible and active Nationalists. There was no need for the ACVV as a body to
take explicit public stances on political issues: the members could do that
equally well in political parties. Their position was comparable to that of the
Dutch Reformed Churches in the period after the Anglo-Boer War: domiaees
gained great influence because of their activities on behalf of the poor.[133]
In these social welfare activities, the ACVV had no competition from their
political opponents in the South African (later the United) Party. English-
speakers had no large body of poor in their own communities: new English-
speakers were relatively wealthy and had little interest in the Afrikaner poor,
or even in local politics generally. English-speaking women were indeed
interested in social welfare: there was the problem of policing drunkenness—
drunkenness by coloureds and Africans in the streets—on which whites could
easily agree. It was also a licensing matter as to whether a local authority
should have the right to declare its area 'dry'. This was a burning issue for
white Methodists and Baptists, most of whose women were active in the
Women's Christian Temperance Union (WCTU), and to some Dutch Reformed
Church members, but not to most Anglicans. There was, however, little
political capital to be made from it among the white poor, urban and rural,
English and Afrikaner.
What then was the role of the ACVV in politics? As an organization it had no
role. But, as we have seen, the gaining of the franchise by white women in
1931 certainly did not initiate an active role by Afrikaner women in politics,
as John X. Merriman's statement recognized.[134] Busy though they were
in church matters, in the ACVV, and in the education of Afrikaner children,
they were important in political organizations as well. They were always
ready to put on suitably sober receptions to celebrate political victories, and
National Party parliamentary candidates thanked them for their aid.[135]
That aid was certainly more than simply providing tea; by the 1920s it was
already clear that the local National Party was far more efficient in its
attention to the voters' roll than its South African Party opponents. Much of
the tedious clerical work required was probably done by women, leaving to
the men the filing of applications for the vote with the magistrate and the
challenging of names already on the roll in the registration court, public
activity where male status would clearly be of value.[136] In addition,
Cradock had its branch of the Vroue Nasionale Party, an active body which
passed resolutions for annual congresses and raised local issues.[137] After
they had been given the vote, the Vroue party disappeared, but the role of
women was by no means diminished. One informant told me that when in
1938 the Malanite Gesuiwerde (purified) National Party candidate was
defeated by a United Party man, a livid Elizabeth Jordaan castigated one
unnamed male member of the party over the telephone, assuring him that
'We shall begin tomorrow at my house organizing for the next
election.'[138] The National Party did win the seat in 1943, whether from
Elizabeth's house or not is unclear, but the anecdote is wholly plausible.
― 76 ―
commented on the mobilization of Afrikaners in the 1920s and 1930s,
particularly through the exploitation of such historic events as the
celebration of the Great Trek in 1938.[139] The idea of Afrikanerdom, as a
touchstone by which to judge all sorts of public activity, became in a sense
'hegemonic' among Afrikaners, an overall means of judging whether a
person was a ware Afrikaner, a 'true Afrikaner', or not.[140] Before the
1930s it was possible to be a good Afrikaner by being a good churchman and
guarding the equal rights accorded to Afrikaans in the South Africa Act. As
the mobilization of Afrikaners proceeded, the notion was extended in two
directions: the patronage of Afrikaner business—with only moderate
success[141] —and the support of the National Party where it was crucial in
providing the narrow margin of victory in 1948.[142]
This use of 'hegemonic' differs from that of Gramsci, who coined it in relation
to dominance by the state: modern states, he argued, had within them
'dominant groups' who elicited ' "spontaneous consent" caused by the
prestige which the dominant group enjoys because of its position and
function in the world of production'.[143] In South Africa the hegemony by
'spontaneous consent' was achieved only within the ethnos ; outside, its
various forms of direct domination were used to achieve compliance from
other whites as well as non-whites. Thus Afrikaner mobilization did not, as
Greenberg writes, simply involve the inclusion of a wider range of class
actors.[144] That inclusion took place only within Afrikanerdom and the
'spontaneous consent' was achieved with the object of cutting across class
alignments which divided Afrikaners from each other. To what extent the
successful creation of what can be called an 'ethnic envelope' was due to
prestige derived by a set of actors from their 'position' in 'production', is
another question altogether.
― 77 ―
3—
Exclusion, Classification and Internal
Colonialism: The Emergence of Ethnicity
Among the Tsonga-Speakers of South Africa
Patrick Harries
Introduction
This chapter deals with the formation of ethnicity amongst the Tsonga-
speaking people of the northern and eastern Transvaal. It argues that the
notion of a 'Tsonga' ethnic group as defined by anthropologists at the turn of
the century is of little objective value for it was more a product of their social
and intellectual environment than an objective reality. While Tsonga-
speakers were often excluded, as foreign immigrants, from local society,
ethnicity as an expression of group consciousness emerged only with the
development of a local petty bourgeoisie. This class was literate in a
missionary-constructed lingua franca, later to evolve into the Tsonga
language, and was equipped with a social and economic vision that extended
well beyond the boundaries of the scattered precapitalist political unit of the
chiefdom. A Tsonga ethnic consciousness initially arose out of the conflict
between the petty bourgeoisie as the representatives of a new form of
production and the traditional chiefs, as well as from the new identity forged
by Tsonga-speaking industrial workers. This consciousness grew on the base
of a modern economic infrastructure, and it should not be seen as a residual
or transitional political identity that will eventually be transformed, by the
same process of modernization, into a broader national identity. The roots of
Tsonga ethnicity are not to be found in the primordial values associated with
the precapitalist political systems and forms of production that early
anthropologists categorized and classified by 'tribe.'
― 83 ―
During the 1820s a number of Nguni refugee groups fleeing from the
disturbances in Natal associated with the growth of the Zulu state passed
through southern Mozambique. In the late 1830s one of these groups, led by
Soshangane, took advantage of a decline in Zulu power following the battle
of Blood River and reoccupied the fertile lower Limpopo. According to
missionary historians who gathered evidence a half-century after the event,
Soshangane's return to the south initiated a 'general exodus' of people living
between the Nkomati and Limpopo rivers.[4] The refugees travelled along
the trade routes flanking two rivers, the Olifants and Limpopo-Levubu, that
passed through the thinly populated lowveld and gave access to the
healthier, well-watered areas to the west.[5] The second major wave of
immigrants entered the Transvaal as a result of the Gaza civil war and
ecological upsets of 1858–62. Raids into the coastal and northern Delagoa
Bay hinterland by the defeated heir to the Gaza throne and his Swazi allies
continued into the 1870s, causing the movement of people into the
Transvaal to continue unabated.[6] The flow of war refugees was continually
augmented by people fleeing from natural upheavals such as drought,
famine and smallpox.
― 84 ―
headmen, were scattered throughout the veld, colonizing those areas where
human and animal diseases, poor soils or lack of water had previously
restricted settlement. Coming from a different ecological area, East Coast
immigrants introduced new types of food such as fowls, cassava, certain
kinds of groundnuts, various grain and potato strains and, especially, maize.
These new foodstuffs, together with their techniques of preparation and
cooking, served as cultural markers that defined these displaced people, in
the eyes of the autochthonous population, as outsiders. Chiefs competed
with each other to attract these East Coast immigrants by offering them
security and access to a means of production.
Probably the best known of these chiefs was João Albasini who at one time
controlled a following of more than 5000 refugees in the Spelonken hills at
the foot of the Zoutpansberg. Albasini, in contrast to many chiefs, allowed
his followers to retain their clan-names, material culture and leaders without
discriminating against them as foreigners. They were also offered the
possibility of rapid advancement in his service as hunters, traders and
raiders-cum-tax-collectors. His followers were a cultural and political
conglomeration of people from various coastal chiefdoms. They had few links
with other refugees drawn from the same region and were often embroiled
in conflicts with these people, as well as with local chiefs who had given
them refuge. Albasini presided over a shifting population the size of which
depended upon his fluctuating fortunes. At the height of his power in the
early 1860s he attracted large numbers of Venda-speaking refugees from
north of the Levubu as well as Tsonga-speakers drawn both from the coast
and from other local chiefdoms.[7] As Albasini's power was destroyed by the
decline of elephant hunting and slavery many of his followers deserted him
for wealthier masters. Albasini, however, was merely one of many chiefs
living in the Transvaal who gave asylum to large numbers of people
uprooted from their homes east of the Lebombo mountains.
― 85 ―
subject themselves to the most wealthy, who assumes the leadership under
the title of induna or headman'.[10] It is ironic that the geographically
diffuse and politically amorphous form of settlement practised by these
nineteenth century immigrants was also recognized by N.J. van Warmelo,
the government ethnologist who was later to play a leading role in their
definition and delimitation as a 'population group' with its own 'homeland'. In
1937 he wrote that
had evolved into a synonym for 'easterner'.[17] On the diamond and gold
fields, 'East Coasters' were also called 'Shangaans', a term that, correctly
used, should be applied to those people who adopted the material culture of
the Gaza Nguni chief Soshangane. Thus, in present-day South Africa, only
the descendants of the Gaza Nguni immigrants who entered the eastern
Transvaal after the second Luso-Gaza war of 1897, are officially classified
'Shangaan' or Tshangana' and in this way distinguished from the
descendants of earlier immigrants, the Tsonga, who were in most cases
never under Gaza rule. Yet the word 'Shangaan' has become an all-
embracing term used to refer to the Tsonga-speaking peoples of southeast
Africa and, in a more general way, to all Mozambicans employed on the
South African mines. It is obvious that during the nineteenth century these
terms were used in a generic and popular way to embrace diverse peoples
and chiefdoms with no common name and, as ethnographic terms, they are
of very little value.
Henri Berthoud, who was the mission's leading expert in 'Gwamba' and who,
as a major explorer, was familiar with many of the language variations of
southeast Africa, argued from a pragmatic perspective that a single language
with a common grammar and orthography would reduce the mission's
printing costs. He also opposed the adoption of a further grammar and
orthography as he feared, with good reason, that the creation of two written
languages would divide the followers of the mission. Berthoud hoped that
the written Gwamba language would unify, in much the same way as
Jacobine French, High German, or Castilian had in Europe linked large
numbers of people who shared, however distantly, a linguistic relationship.
He argued that Junod's classification of the Ronga and other peoples was as
arbitrary as the mission's earlier categorization of
― 87 ―
Junod and the other missionaries interpreted the African world through the
prism of a specific intellectual system or structure of knowledge. This
demanded a classification of the myriad of new details emerging as much
from the invention of the microscope and telescope as from the discoveries
of explorers. Without the orderly structuring of detail there could be no
clarity and no understanding, a factor that was reflected as much in Junod's
entomological studies as in his desire for social classification. Junod was
particularly influenced by nineteenth century concepts of nationalism and the
central role of language in the classification of national groups and
characteristics. This is evident in his strong criticism of Dudley Kidd's The
Essential Kaffir (London, 1904), which grouped all Africans together, failing
to distinguish between them on linguistic or any other grounds. To Junod,
Kidd's extreme generalizations, made on the basis of race alone, were both
confusing and unscientific. Junod believed that to give a scientific basis to
ethnographic observation required the creation of a taxonomy of languages
and related social customs. This idea was derived from the work of
contemporary European classicists who sought the roots of nationalism in
their continent in the languages and social customs of the early European
tribes.
― 88 ―
As a rule a large tribe has not as such, any proper and general
name. But the tribe being divided into a certain number of clans,
each one of those smaller communities goes by its proper name;
wherefore it is incumbent on the foreigners, either black or white,
to apply a generic name to all the people and clans which belong to
the same tribe. The propriety then, of such a generic name, lies in
its being related to the social character of the tribe, and in its being
taken from the tribe's own language.[26]
― 89 ―
East Coast traders, hunters and later waves of refugees who entered the
Transvaal at different times and from different areas brought with them
elements of various material cultures which were, because of their foreign
origin, distinguishable from local cultures. But here again, these were factors
of exclusion rather than cohesion and the line became blurred as Tsonga-
speaking immigrants adapted themselves to their new surroundings. Long
distance migrations demanded that fish- or beef-eaters who moved
westwards into dry, riverless or tsetse-ridden areas of the Lowveld were
obliged to adapt their diet and production strategies to the new
environment. In an attempt to assimilate to local norms, some Tsonga-
speaking immigrants attended initiation lodges run by host chiefdoms while
others adopted local totems. Some continued to practise circumcision which
on the East Coast had largely been abandoned by those chiefdoms
dominated by Nguni-speakers. Their music was influenced to differing
degrees by the Pedi and by people today classified as Venda, Lovedu, Chopi
and Ndau, many of whose instruments they have adopted. Many Tsonga-
speakers were incorporated, through the ideology of kinship, into host clans
in the Transvaal, alongside whose members they constituted a single
production unit. This process of individual assimilation was so advanced that
it led one anthropologist to speculate that an entire Venda-speaking clan had
its roots east of the Lebombos, while another believed that the Tsonga-
speaking Baloyi clan had once spoken a Shona-based dialect. An ecologically
symbiotic relationship also existed between Tsonga-speaking agriculturalists
who colonized malarial and tsetse infested river valleys and plains and the
cattle-keepers living above the valley.[30]
― 90 ―
What lies at the base of this willingness to accept such classifications is the
attempt by Europeans in the nineteenth century to order the African world in
their own image. Because they were unable to break from their ideological
heritage, Europeans implicitly believed their concept of ethnicity to be the
natural order and not merely one convention amongst others used to make
sense of the world. Caught within this mental structure, Europeans applied
to Africans their own system of ethnic classification and accepted without
question that Africans should use the same distinctions and concepts. Thus
to Henri Berthoud, 'the Gwamba is to other tribes the same as the Jew is to
European nations'.[33] In this way Berthoud rightly indicated the exclusion
of the 'Gwamba' because of their foreign rites and customs but then imbued
an extremely diverse and fragmented conglomeration of refugees with all
the political and social rites and customs of Jewry. The missionaries used
their European conceptual framework to classify the two groups in terms of
extreme opposites; the difference between the Venda and Tsonga was
synonymous with that between Germans and French or Spartans and
Athenians. Consequently, when disputes arose between Tsonga and North
Sotho or Venda-speaking chiefdoms, these were interpreted not as clashes
between chiefdoms in the way that intra-Tsonga disputes were, but as 'race
conflicts'.[34]
― 91 ―
There were a number of popular controls over the succession to office of the
chief. These consisted of various legal precedents which provided for the
exclusion from the chieftainship of the eldest son of the chief's first wife.
Thus the councillors could declare that for moral reasons he was unfit to
rule; a son born of a junior wife, but still of royal blood, could be chosen; or
the chieftainship could pass to the line of the regent, who was generally the
eldest brother of the deceased chief. Consequently, the inheritance of the
chieftainship was not automatic and ascribed; it was processual and was
dependent upon the support of the councillors and army whose backing was,
in turn, influenced by the power and popularity of the individual competitors
for office. An unpopular chief was continually threatened by the
segmentation of a part of his following.[36]
More importantly, the missions had divided the population of the northern
Transvaal along linguistic and geographical lines. Tsonga and Venda
speakers were ministered to by, respectively, Swiss Presbyterian and
German Lutheran
― 92 ―
Although locations were first envisioned in 1853, legislated for in 1876 and
entrenched in the Pretoria Convention of 1881, it was only in 1892 that a
'Knobnose location' was delineated in recognition of services rendered to the
state by Albasini's government auxiliaries. Despite its name, this reserve
was settled by a conglomeration of Venda and Tsonga-speaking chiefs and
commoners living in the Spelonken and, as the location was unhealthy and
deficient in water, most people preferred to squat as tenants on surrounding
white-owned farms. To the south, many Tsonga-speakers were included in
Modjadji's location and in only one instance was a Tsonga-speaking chief,
Muhlaba of the Nkuna, assigned his own location. This was a malarial stretch
of land considered by the local native commissioner to be 'quite unsuitable
for white people', and the Nkuna refused to give up their tenancy of the
neighbouring Harmony Proprietary Company's farms.
― 93 ―
Most Tsonga-speakers lived on land that had not been inspected or surveyed
for private farms and hence was termed 'state land'. However, by the end of
the nineteenth century, Africans were steadily drifting on to white-owned
farms. This movement was encouraged by a discriminatory tax system which
penalized Africans living in rural locations or on government land with heavy
taxes relative to those living as tenants on white-owned land, while those in
active service on white-occupied farms paid least.[46] The sale of state land
also caused many Africans to settle on white-owned land. Many were drawn
by the fertility and better access to markets of European-owned farms. This
movement was facilitated by the large scale sale of occupation farms to land
companies and local speculators. The undercapitalized, if not impoverished,
occupation farmers were unable to raise capital because the terms of their
tenancies precluded the mortgaging of their farms, and they typically lived in
'mud cabins that would disgrace a Connemara squatter or a Skye
crofter'.[47] They were broken by the almost continual commando service
demanded by a decade of wars mounted by Pretoria against the northern
Transvaal chiefdoms. With their capital invested in livestock and without
government aid, they were unable to withstand the effects of the extended
drought and the rinderpest epizoötic of the mid-1890s. Many abandoned
their lands and turned to transport-riding, hunting, woodcutting and salt-
extraction, although even these traditional resorts of the poor had been
made increasingly difficult by government concessions and regulations. In
1896 it was estimated that 29 out of the 30 white families in the Lowveld
were starving and had been reduced to living off locusts and honey.[48] The
slide of the white community of the northern Transvaal into impoverishment
was to continue well into the twentieth century.
The Republican anti-squatter laws of 1887 and 1895 were legislated in order
to force African tenants off 'private reserves' so as to spread the labour more
equitably and control competition between white farmers. But these laws
had the opposite effect for they caused large numbers of Africans in the
northeastern Transvaal to move into the Zoutpansberg mountains, which
remained largely independent of white rule until 1898, or on to the malarial
lands of the Lowveld. Until southern Mozambique was finally conquered by
the Portuguese in 1897, Tsonga-speakers also showed a tendency to drift
back to their kinsmen east of the Lebombos. All these areas were free of the
anti-squatter laws, but, even more importantly, they were relatively
inaccessible to tax collectors. The emigration of these loyal Africans deprived
government officials of taxes and military allies,
― 94 ―
The Natives Land Act of that year was a compromise between mining and
landed capitalist interests. It promised on the one hand to extend the rural
locations as labour reserves for the mines, while on the other hand it
promised, first, to provide farmers with labour, by acting against rent
tenancies and, second, to prohibit Africans from owning land outside areas
'scheduled' for their occupation. Land bought by a combination of more than
six Africans had to be purchased on a tribal basis and held by the Minister of
Native Affairs for the tribe concerned. In later years, the term 'tribe' became
a synonym for African purchasers of land in scheduled areas; as one
northern Transvaal attorney stated in 1930, 'a Tribe is a syndicate of ten to
fifteen families which buys land and elects a chief and petty chief.[54] The
Land Act also encouraged labour tenancy by proposing a graduated tax, in
effect an annually increasing fine, on those landowners who accepted rents
from Africans in cash or kind. But this section of the act could not be
implemented until sufficient land had been released to cater for those rent
paying 'squatters' who refused to become labour tenants. For two decades
after the Land Act Africans were to retain a precarious hold on their land
through the rent tenancy or 'Kaffir farming' system.
― 95 ―
As early as the turn of the century, it was noted that African producers in the
northern Transvaal annually supplied Pietersburg and Pretoria with
'thousands of bags' of grain and that African maize production in the
Zoutpansberg exceeded production in other areas of the Transvaal where
Africans dominated the cereals market. The local newspapers frequently
reported in the following vein:
African production of cereals for the market was encouraged by both traders
and the mines. Nor was the state willing to act against Africans who provided
an important source of government revenue; in the years immediately
following the
― 96 ―
Anglo-Boer War the direct taxes paid by northern Transvaal Africans to the
government more than quintupled to £140,000[61] It is clear that a
relatively prosperous, if small, class of African farmers was emerging at the
expense of their peers. Evidence for this lies in the purchase of land by
individuals who themselves took on rent paying tenants. In 1911 there were
2000 'Shangaans' living on an African-owned farm in the eastern Transvaal
and, five years later, there were some 10,500 Africans living on land held in
freehold by Africans in the northern Transvaal.[62] Some of these farmers
commanded an annual income of £500 and virtually all had adopted the
plough which, together with draught oxen and wagons used for marketing
purposes, required a considerable capital investment. Some market-
orientated cattle farmers had herds of up to 300 head. Thus by 1930 a
number of African farmers had emerged who were able to rent out land and
annually market several hundred bags of grain as well as fairly substantial
numbers of cattle.[63] In evidence given to the Natives Economic
Commission of that year, it was stated that in the northern Transvaal over
the previous forty years, ' . . . [African] marketed produce has increased.
This increase is considerably greater than the increase in population.'[64]
According to another witness, 'You will find to-day that [the Africans] have
raised tens of thousands of bags of Kaffir corn purely for market purposes
and the greater portion of that money which they get for their corn is to pay
for land and to buy land.'[65] But the growth of this African petty
bourgeoisie was abruptly truncated in the 1930s as the government
intervened in the northern Transvaal to halt the growing poor white problem.
The destruction of northern Transvaal farms by the British during the Anglo-
Boer War had pushed increasing numbers of already poor Afrikaans farmers
into a marginal existence. In many instances landowners found it more
profitable to enter into tenancy relationships with Africans rather than
politically more powerful Afrikaner peasants or bywoners .[66] Although
large numbers of whites lived in conditions of extreme poverty in the
northern Transvaal, they received little sympathy from the government and,
considered 'indolent, lazy and indigent', were treated as a social rather than
an economic problem.[67] The government did however make available a
large number of small farms on long lease and with the option of easy
purchase in the poorly watered northern districts. But this merely
compounded the problem, for by the early 1930s these uneconomic cattle
farms had become desperately overgrazed and were occupied by large
numbers of settlers subsisting largely on game and maize meal.[68] It was
only in the 1930s, as Afrikaner nationalist politicians under the leadership of
D.F. Malan sought to mobilize political support along ethnic lines through the
building of new class alliances, that the central government took steps to
solve the poor white problem in the rural northern Transvaal.
― 97 ―
price of land rose, white farmers decreased the amount of land available to
tenants and limited their rights to graze livestock. Grass burning was
restricted and fencing reduced a tenant's rights to commonage. Threatened
by a re-emergence of anti-squatter legislation and by the effects of the
Depression, speculators started to sell farms that, in many cases, were
occupied by over 1000 African tenants. As the the number of 'private
reserves' declined and farmers increasingly directly exploited their lands, the
amount of labour they demanded increased, and by the the 1930s it was
expected that a worker's wives and children would be included in any labour
tenancy agreement. The transformation in the 1930s of a large part of the
African peasantry into a landless proletariat was movingly captured by a
mission-supported African newspaper published in the Spelonken whose
editors remarked in 1932:
Things are rapidly changing and many landowners [have come to]
live on their farms where they earn their livelihood through
farming. As a result many natives are now turned out from such
land to give room to cattle crops, mealie lands and tree
plantations.[72]
The crisis of the 1930s showed that the chiefs had little power to protect
their followers living outside the reserves, while within the reserves farming
was becoming less viable because of the influx of people from the
surrounding white farms. Chieftaincy as an institution had been eroded and
people were looking for leadership to other political institutions, particularly
those led by the rising petty bourgeoisie.
The Waning of Chiefly Power
In frontier areas like the Zoutpansberg, where the ratio of blacks to whites in
the first decade of the twentieth century was estimated at 100:1 and where
a police force of fifty had to cope with a population of over 300,000, chiefs
had of necessity performed the role of paid civil servants.[73] They were
obliged to help
― 98 ―
collect taxes and supply labour for public works and farms and prevent what
the government declared to be poaching, the destruction of state forests and
the consumption of illicit liquor. Native Commissioners were unanimously
opposed to the detribalization process as the chiefs 'were of great assistance
in maintaining law and order'.[74] The War Office was particularly mindful
that if the authority of the chiefs were to collapse it would be replaced by a
wider and more unified political consciousness. As early as 1905 it warned
that the breakdown of the chieftaincy system:
At the ideological level the Native Affairs Department was strongly influenced
by this strain of anthropology. Members of the Department established
compilations of 'traditional laws' by drawing borders that were ethnically
conceived around regularities of rite and custom. At the economic level they
became increasingly aware of the need to conserve within the reserves the
elements of non-capitalist society that bore a large part of the costs of the
reproduction of the urban labour force. For, as capitalist development
undermined and transformed 'squatting' and the old forms of production in
the reserves, it also disintegrated the system of exploitation feeding the
growth of industrial capitalism. To check this process, various laws were
passed in the 1920s in an attempt to bolster the powers of the chiefs and
preserve 'the tribes'.[78] In many cases, this amounted to creating
chiefdoms where none had previously existed.
The 1936 Natives Trust and Land Act 'released' large areas of land in the
northern Transvaal for African settlement. All 'scheduled' and 'released' land
was henceforth to be purchased on a tribal basis and a Trust fund was
established 'to acquire land for and on behalf of specific tribes in order to
provide necessary extensions to the tribal locations'. People forced off white
farms by the anti-squatter section of the act would be settled under chiefs in
these areas. Chiefs
― 99 ―
were also given the power to levy special taxes on their followers for the
purchase of tribal land. They remained a central element in Native
Administration: in 1938 the Native Affairs Commission recognized that
But attempts to bolster the power of the chiefs were not merely aimed at
strengthening the Native Affairs system; they were also, perhaps primarily,
aimed at supporting the chiefs whose political power was increasingly
threatened by the rising African petty bourgeoisie. As early as 1920, the
year of the Witwatersrand mineworkers' strike, the Native Recruiting
Corporation of the Chamber of Mines had expressed the fear that unless
conditions on the mines were ameliorated,
the different tribes will become more and more in sympathy with
one another, with a growing disregard of loyalty to their respective
tribal chiefs and a fusion of common interests under the guidance
of the educated classes of natives irrespective of tribe or place of
origin will result.[80]
Land alienation, together with tenant and freehold forms of African land
tenure had undermined the chiefs' major source of political power: their
ability to control the distribution of land. Opposition from white farmers to
the sale of land released by the 1936 act continued to deprive the chiefs of
any real power. As the Native Affairs Commission complained in 1938, 'the
authority of the chiefs and respect for tribal institutions is under continual
attack owing to the landless condition of the head of the tribe. This . . .
militates against the maintenance of that necessary tribal unity and control
which it is the policy of the state to foster.' The popularity of the chiefs had
also declined: much of the democratic element in chieftaincy as an
institution had disappeared when the size of the chiefdom was petrified and
chiefs became civil servants appointed by and responsible to the Native
Affairs Department rather than to their own followers.
Liberals like Brookes and Schapera soon came to realize that the reserves
only catered for a minority of the African population and that they were
unable to perform their protective function; that chieftaincy as an institution
had been transformed; and that the chiefs were no longer the sole political
representatives of the African population. It was with Junod in mind that
Brookes, having broken from his earlier segregationist thinking, wrote in
1934:
The influence of the old school which regarded the tribal Native as
the only phenomenon of study, has been great. To those
responsible for legislation and administration, it appears as the
orthodox school, with the right to monopolize the term 'scientific.
The glorification of tribalism and of all the customs that stand
behind many of the provisions of the Native Administration Act of
1927 by which the chief has been made an important part of the
administrative machinery . . . tends to assimilate all Natives to the
position of tribal Natives in the Reserves. Others may be the
majority but they are an embarrassing phenomenon . . . they do
not live as the social anthropologists think they ought to live . . . do
not think on the lines which the Native Affairs Department
considers suitable for Natives. They obstinately refuse to develop
on their own lines.[81]
― 100 ―
As the chiefs lost their power of protection and patronage, the chiefdom and
clan declined as a focus of political consciousness. Within the clan new
political institutions emerged that paralleled those of the chief. These
included firmly hierarchical women's organizations associated with epidemic
forms of spirit possession and politically structured competitive dance
groups.[83] It was the rising petty bourgeoisie that benefited most from the
undermining by capitalism of the old mode of production, from the tenancy
and freehold land tenure systems, and from the breakdown of the powers of
the backward-looking chiefs. As the chiefdom deteriorated as the centre of
economic life and political identification, a new ethnic culture, engendered
and encouraged by the petty bourgeoisie, started to play an increasingly
integrative role in rural society.
At the centre of this movement was the Swiss Mission which controlled
Lemana college, the only senior educational institution for Africans in the
northeastern Transvaal. The annual synod of the Swiss mission was also the
only institution linking literate Tsonga-speakers throughout the Transvaal.
The political ideology of the mission was strongly influenced by Henri Junod's
concept of Tsonga-speakers as a 'tribe' and by the self-help schemes of
Booker T. Washington, which had so many parallels with the successful
Afrikaner nationalist movement.
― 101 ―
We want to arise . . . nearly all our brothers have risen. The Zulus
have their national paper, the Xosas have their own National
paper . . . the different Bantu tribes are getting up. Our second aim
is to create what we call the 'Shangaans National Pride'. Too often
we hear of people, Shangaans included who, when amongst nations
or tribes other than theirs, are afraid of calling themselves after
their own tribe. Some even go to the length of changing their
names for fear they will be laughed at. A third aim is to present
Shangaan idioms and the language of today.[85]
The following year the editor urged 'The Shangaan nation . . . [to] learn to
respect one of its own, otherwise we shall be no people. The world will laugh
at us and everyone will do as he pleases with us.' In another editorial they
significantly stressed that 'the increase of land-buyers among us means the
increase of investment of wealth for our race'. It also meant an increasing
independence of the chiefs and a bolstering of the economic power of the
petty bourgeoisie.
― 102 ―
From the late 1850s 'amaTonga' and 'Shangaan' workers were recruited and
travelled in batches, consisting of men from the same home areas, along
recognized routes to areas of employment scattered throughout South
Africa. By the late 1870s a form of nascent worker consciousness linked
these Tsonga-speaking communities in much the same way as the 'tramping
systems' of England or the tour de campagnonnage of France.[86] It was in
the schools on and around the mines that many 'Shangaan' men first
acquired a basic literacy in the Tsonga lingua franca of the Swiss mission. On
the mines, 'Shangaans', because of the distance and the impoverished
nature of the area from which they came, were prepared to do dangerous
and heavy manual work and consequently took on the occupational
stereotype of underground labour.[87] Working in ethnic teams at the rock
face bred solidarity. Miners were housed in ethnically segregated rooms and
barracks in the mine compounds and their representatives and policemen
were appointed on an ethnic basis.[88] In a harsh and often hostile world,
ethnicity took on some of the functions of the extended family. From the
mining capitalists' perspective, the tribal structuring of the compounds
cushioned the impact of industrialization by retaining the 'moral restraints
and standards of tribal life'.[89] This allowed the mines to argue that tribal
(migrant) workers were too unsophisticated to appreciate trade unions and,
more importantly, caused working class consciousness to be divided along
ethnic lines. As early as 1913, a government report considered that 'inter-
tribal jealousies have always rendered it possible, in the last resort, to
protect Europeans by utilizing one tribe against another', a view that is still
today held by many mine employers.[90]
These divisions were compounded by the traditional desire of men from the
same home area to work and be housed together. Thus Tsonga-speakers
tended to gather on certain mines and the home friend network, with its
sense of continuity for the migrant, has always been a centre of social
activity.[91] Ethnic competition has been encouraged by the organization of
recreational activities on the mines. From the initiation of tribal dancing,
dance teams and their supporters were defined and separated along ethnic
lines.[92] As many dance movements were brought from the home area,
they were easily distinguishable from 'foreign' dance styles and further
entrenched these differences by parodying and stereotyping their
competitors. In this way, an ethnic identity has been concretized and, as a
Chamber of Mines pamphlet stated in 1947, 'competition between the tribes
is encouraged.'[93]
Ethnic competition was also fostered in various other ways, such as the
installation of noticeboards which urge workers to vie with each other along
ethnic lines over such issues as room and barrack cleanliness and
absenteeism. Promotion has often been dependent on ethnic patronage. The
competition between groups of workers on the mines was commonly
expressed in songs such as:
― 103 ―
In 1948 the Afrikaner National Party came to power with a policy aimed at
transforming the reserves into African homelands. In numerous speeches,
the new government's ministers stressed the central role of the chief and
tribe in the implementation of apartheid in the rural areas. In a speech,
typical of the period, the Minister of Native Affairs expressed his
determination in 1950 to:
The first step was the passage of the Bantu Authorities Act of 1951 which
bolstered the power of the chiefs by modernizing and expanding their tax
basis to include all the members of the tribal authority. This gave the chiefs
a new element of patronage through their control of the tribal account and
through their participation in the decisions of the Regional Authority. It was
estimated at the time that the northern Transvaal reserves were carrying
sixteen times too many cattle and five times too many people.[97] To
provide the chiefs with the ability to distribute land and in an attempt to
retain the productive base of the reserves, the government started to
purchase released land. In concert with the extension of the reserves and
the devolution of powers to the Bantu Authorities, a renewed assault was
made on African tenants living on white farms, beyond the control of the
chiefs in the 'homelands'.
― 104 ―
The Bantu Authorities Act of 1951 did not affect the ethnically
heterogeneous nature of the population living in the northern Transvaal
reserves. A Tsonga homeland was not envisaged and Tsonga-speaking Tribal
Authorities were grouped administratively in Regional Authorities, dominated
by Venda and North Sotho-speakers in, respectively, the northern and
eastern Transvaal. The first move towards an ethnic segregation of the area
came from a number of northern Tsonga-speaking chiefs who felt their
Regional Authority was dominated by Venda-speaking chiefs. Their calls for a
separate Tsonga-dominated Regional Authority and a separate
commissioner-general were made at roughly the same time that the report
of the Tomlinson Commission indicated a move towards segregation on
ethnic rather than merely spatial lines.[100] But it was only in 1959 with
the promulgation of the Bantu Self-government Act that Pretoria asserted
that "The Bantu people of South Africa do not constitute a homogeneous
people, but form separate national units on the basis of language and
culture.' This act formally declared the 'Shangane/Tsonga' to constitute a
'national unit' and allowed the government to accede to the Tsonga chiefs'
wishes
― 105 ―
The government's new divide-and-rule policy, partly stemming from its own
experience of the growth of Afrikaner ethnic consciousness, generated bitter
ethnic conflicts over local resources, for in the early 1960s the northern
Transvaal reserves remained crushingly overpopulated and
overgrazed.[101] Starting with the break-up and distribution of the funds
and powers of the old multi-ethnic Regional Authorities, ethnic bitterness
reached a peak as politically arbitrary borders such as roads, railways and
farm boundaries were defined in order to separate the different 'homelands.'
This immediately created disadvantaged ethnic minorities on both sides of
the border. It is the competition for resources that has compelled many
people to adopt an ethnic consciousness. This competition takes place
between ethnically differentiated people living under the same chief,
between ethnic minorities and a Bantustan government or between the
members of different Bantustans. These pressures, together with the use by
the government of physical force, have obliged large numbers of people to
join the flow of labour tenants and 'squatters' into resettlement camps or
closer settlement villages in the homelands.
― 106 ―
from distant farms and 'black spots'. In these ethnically consolidated Venda
areas, Tsonga teachers and principals were replaced and Venda became the
medium of instruction. Resistance to this resettlement scheme was
widespread and resulted in increased hardship when large numbers of
people were imprisoned for cutting thatching grass and for continuing to
plough their fields. The position of the disadvantaged ethnic minorities was
concisely expressed in a letter from one of the affected communities to the
Minister of Bantu Affairs:
In 1968 the government allocated land south of the Klein Letaba river to
Vendaland, a move which 16 years later, according to a Gazankulu
Bantustan government memo, continued to 'cause friction and poor
relationship between the Shangaan and Venda . . . the situation is tense and
violence may break out at any time'.[104] Despite this hostility the
government continued to enforce ethnic identities on the African population
through the passage in 1970 of the Bantu Homeland Citizenship Act.
According to the Minister of Bantu Administration and Development, the
object of this bill was to:
In 1973, the year that the Territorial Authority became the 'self-governing'
Bantustan of Gazankulu, the delineation of one of its southern borders led to
threats of war being made in the Giyani legislature against the Northern
Sotho of the Lebowa Bantustan.[106] Further ethnic hostility arose over the
allocation of the eastern Transvaal Shiluvane mission hospital to Gazankulu
in mid-1981. This caused the chief minister of Lebowa to remove all
Northern Sotho patients, nurses and hospital staff to nearby 'Sotho hospitals'
and to ban the Tsonga Presbyterian Church (ex Swiss Mission), which he
held responsible for the government action, from at least one area of
Lebowa. Because of the ethnic bitterness generated by this affair, southern
Tsonga-speakers in 1984 would rather spend the money and time involved
in travelling an extra 60 kilometres to a Tsonga hospital' than face possible
ill-treatment at the nearby 'Sotho hospital'.[107] In an area of the eastern
Transvaal where the Tsonga-speaking Nkuna and Sotho-speaking Maake
chiefdoms had lived in harmony for almost 150 years, ethnic antagonism
was fanned by the forced removal of several thousand Sotho from land
incorporated into Gazankulu. Those who refused to accept the rule of an
imposed Tsonga chief or who used grazing or arable land or cut wood or
grass in areas from which they had been removed were arrested by the
Bantustan
― 107 ―
One of the few legal ways in which Africans may oppose their regional
exploitation is through political mobilization along ethnic lines. This was
certainly a major reason behind Ntsanwisi's formation in 1981 of a political
party named Ximoko which, modelled on Chief Gatsha Buthelezi's Zulu
Inkatha organization in Natal, promotes 'worthy indigenous customs and
traditions' and attempts to unite all Tsonga/Shangane against the land
claims and imposition of 'independence' by Pretoria. The allied Gazankulu
Women's Association wishes 'to revive what our ancestors were doing' and
promotes games, cooking, dress,
― 108 ―
The chiefs are the other major local beneficiary of the Bantustan system and
because of this they tend to stress factors, such as ethnicity, that link rather
than divide the different chiefdoms. When Gazankulu became self-governing
in 1973 the electoral system was structured so that of the 68 members of
the legislative assembly, 42 were delegated by the Bantu authorities and
hence, ultimately, by the chiefs. Of a five man cabinet, it was prescribed that
not more than three and no fewer than two had to be chiefs.[114] The
chiefs monthly income, paid directly by the Gazankulu government, is
partially dependent on the number of his followers, from whom he draws a
plethora of taxes. If he has sufficient subjects, a chief earning R2,400 a year
will be appointed to a seat in the Giyani legislature at the annual salary (in
1985) of R12,400 which makes him eligible for ministerial positions
remunerated at over R50,000 annually.[115] These salaries, in a poverty-
stricken rural backwater, provide a strong encouragement for chiefs to
accept resettled Tsonga-speaking people with whom the dominant clan and
the tribal authority have no relationship other than that of a shared
ethnicity. As the local organizers of Ximoko, the chiefs use ethnicity to bind
their heterogeneous tribal authorities. Although they have lost to the petty
bourgeoisie the final say in matters concerning labour bureaux, court cases
and land allocation, the chiefs dispose of a good deal of patronage through
their access to the tribal fund, which is the pool for the majority of local
taxes. This gives them a firm control over virtually all local development
projects from the siting of boreholes and water taps to the establishment of
clinics and schools. Through their appeals to a common ethnic consciousness
the chiefs and petty bourgeoisie are able to mask the sharp class and
regional inequalities that have grown up within Gazankulu. At the same time
ethnicity provides the petty bourgeoisie with indigenous 'traditions' and a
degree of local authenticity that obfuscate its origins in, and total
dependence upon, the system of exploitation controlled by the white
minority government in Pretoria. As a form of social exclusivism dividing the
African population, ethnicity creates an external enemy that, unlike Pretoria,
which in 1985/6 provided well over 65 per cent of the Bantustan's budget, is
not responsible for the monthly salaries of the Gazankulu bureaucracy.[116]
The debates of the Gazankulu legislative assembly are full of rhetoric aimed
at the 'Tsonga nation' and the 'Tsonga people'; they rejoice when Tsonga-
speakers 'come back home' and decry 'the loss' of Tsonga-speakers who
refuse to move to Gazankulu. Conflicts that are in reality between
Bantustans over access to resources are often portrayed as attacks on 'the
Tsonga-Shangaan people'.[117] The creation of an historical basis for this
ethnic consciousness has required some myth making. According to
Ntsanwisi:
― 109 ―
Ntsanwisi has tried to foster ethnic unity in various ways. The myth of origin
of an important local clan has been adopted as a 'traditional' symbol, linking
all Tsonga-speakers in the Transvaal in the belief that they are descended
from a pair of founding ancestors.[119] An ethnically-based nationalism is
fostered by the Gazankulu radio service and newspaper, by symbols such as
a national flag and administrative buildings, the continual codification of
Tsonga-Shangaan law and particularly the education system. In the towns,
an ethnicity has been encouraged by associations such as the Mashangana
Urban Movement and the Tsonga Cultural Academy which have deep roots in
the Bantustan.[120]
Conclusion
This chapter has stressed that ethnicity has not grown out of the old values
and symbols associated with the chiefdom or out of an inadequate
modernization. The façade of traditionalism that is presented by the chiefs is
interpreted by modernization theorists as an index of the degree to which
primordial ethnicity has withstood the pressures of capitalist development.
Ethnicity is viewed in residual or at best transitional terms: as a
phenomenon that will disappear as the development of a modern economic
infrastructure allows the dominant culture associated with capitalism to
penetrate and transform provincial cultures. The Afrikaner National Party
holds a more static pluralist view of South Africa as a land inhabited by
different peoples, each with its own ethnos . These views of
― 110 ―
4—
Missionaries, Migrants and the Manyika: The
Invention of Ethnicity in Zimbabwe
Terence Ranger
Over the last twenty years there have been all too many conflicts in
Zimbabwean African politics—conflicts between and within African parties
and guerrilla movements, divisions between voters, strains within the
cabinet and government of Zimbabwe. There have also arisen a number of
schools of interpretation of such divisions. Some see them in terms of class
conflict; others, however, see them in terms of ethnicity. They invoke not
only the allegedly 'traditional' hostility between the 'Ndebele' and the
'Shona', but also an asserted conflict between Shona sub-ethnicities, the so-
called 'Korekore', 'Zezuru', 'Karanga', 'Kalanga', and 'Manyika'.
Thus in March 1976 an international commission of inquiry, appointed by the
Zambian government and composed of representatives from a dozen or so
African states, reported on the murder of Herbert Chitepo, then National
Chairman of the Zimbabwe African National Union (ZANU), in March 1975.
The report found that Chitepo had not been killed by a Rhodesian agent. He
had instead been a victim of the 'mutual hatred and suspicion among the
tribal groups' within ZANU. The commission found 'abundant evidence of
tribal and regional manifestations in ZANU'. In particular, it found that
Chitepo's death was the climax of a struggle for power between the Manyika
and the Karanga. The victorious Karanga, now supreme in the party's
command, had eliminated the Manyika Chitepo.[1]
In May 1976 Ndabaningi Sithole, who was then struggling to regain the
leadership of ZANU, endorsed these findings. In an open letter, calling on all
Zimbabweans 'to do away with tribalism and regionalism', he analyzed the
successive elections to ZANU's central committee in terms of tribal rivalry:
― 119 ―
In March 1977, by which time Sithole had set up his own splinter ZANU
group, he sought to carry this analysis into practice:
After 1971, however, 'the Zezuru group pulled out', and 'bi-polarity
sharpened tribal/regional competition in the party'. A deadly struggle
between the Manyika and Karanga developed.[4]
The British press and others began to reproduce and refer to maps produced
by the Southern Rhodesian government which purported to show the exact
boundaries of these sub-ethnicities and the exact proportion of the country's
African population which each contained. Such maps often carried beneath a
note to the effect that 'the above divisions are based on historical fact'. Even
the Minority Rights Group, a body highly critical of the Rhodesian
government and
― 120 ―
Analyses such as these raise two main questions in a historian's mind. The
first question, to which I shall return briefly at the end of this essay, is
whether they provide an accurate explanation for recent conflicts. The
second question, to which most space will be devoted, is from where the
idea of such entities as the 'Manyika', the 'Zezuru', and the rest has come.
These entities certainly do not represent pre-colonial 'historical fact', nor can
they in the present be properly described as 'tribes' or 'clans', no matter that
both African and European commentators employ these terms. Yet they
evidently have come to possess a subjective reality in the minds not only of
commentators but of participants. How has this come to pass?
Carolyn Hamilton and John Wright have recently urged that we seek the
roots of twentieth century ethnic divisions in the pre-colonial past:
However convincing this proposition may be for the Zulu state, it does not
apply in the case of Zimbabwe.
Beach does show, however, that the terms Korekore, Zezuru, Manyika and
the rest did have a pre-colonial currency. Each arose in a different way and
had different connotations and each was available to be pressed into
distorting service by the classifiers of the twentieth century. Two of the
terms had long significance,
― 121 ―
The terms which had a long recorded history were 'Karanga/Kalanga' and
'Manyika'. When the Portuguese came into contact with the Shona-speaking
peoples in the sixteenth century, they recorded that the chiefly lineages
which ruled over the commoners were known as 'Karanga'. They also
reported the existence of a chiefly territory which was called 'Manyika'.
European usage came to transform the significance of these terms. As we
shall see, the Portuguese called a large region around the Manyika
chieftaincy by the name of Manicaland, and the name was picked up by the
British in the late nineteenth century. Most of the peoples of this region,
however, did not think of themselves as related in any way to the Manyika
chieftaincy. As for the term 'Karanga', it suffered a shift both of location and
of meaning. The Portuguese had used it to refer to the ruling lineages of the
northern and eastern Shona-speakers. The incoming British at the end of the
nineteenth century picked up this 'historic' term to describe the first Shona-
speakers they encountered, naming the total populations of the southwest
area 'Kalanga' and those of the southern plateau 'Karanga'.
In this way terms which certainly did not mean to convey the idea of ethnic
homogeneity in pre-colonial times were picked up in the colonial period
precisely to convey that idea. Even then they did not convey the idea very
successfully to rigorous observers. Thus the anthropologist Hans Holleman,
writing of a number of Shona chiefships, remarked:
The terms have no 'traditional' validity, then, nor did they correspond to any
clearly perceived twentieth century 'tribal' realities. The administrative units
created by the colonial government were territorially defined districts which
bore no intended nor actual relationship to 'tribal' or 'ethnic' identities. Later,
when the Rhodesian government began to take the idea of 'tribal politics'
more seriously, it demarcated and recognized literally hundreds of 'tribes',
each under its own chief. Thus, there was no incentive for Africans to invent
regional ethnicities in the hope of tapping the flow of administrative
patronage.
And yet, despite all this, the terms have come to possess at least that
degree of reality illustrated by this chapter's opening quotations. I believe
that this has happened as a result of the agency of both 'unofficial'
Europeans and of
― 122 ―
Before I can turn to the task of tracing the growth of an extended Manyika
identity in the twentieth century, however, I must deal with at least three
other uses of the concept 'Manyika'. The first three of these I derive from Dr
H.H.K. Bhila's Trade and Politics in a Shona Kingdom: The Manyika and their
Portuguese and African Neighbours, 1575–1902 .[10] For Bhila the essential
historical meaning of 'Manyika' is the territory and people of chief, or king,
Mutasa. 'My research was focused on the area where the Mutasa dynasty
has settled since the late seventeenth century', Bhila writes, and he shows
this area on a map as a relatively small zone, north and northwest of
modern Mutare, comparable in size to one of the later Rhodesian
administrative districts and bounded by other African 'kingdoms' which were
not in any sense parts of 'Manyika' so defined. Bordering Mutasa's kingdom
to the west lay the kingdom of Maungwe under Makoni, which in the
nineteenth century was Mutasa's main enemy and competitor for land,
cattle, women and slaves. As Bhila explains, 'the boundaries of these
kingdoms were often shifted following the vicissitudes of wars'; hence the
best definition of traditional Manyika was political, rather than geographical.
Manyika comprehended all those who at any one time ackowledged the
authority of Mutasa—and nobody else.
This greatly inflated Portuguese Manyika did include, among much else, the
territory of Maungwe but, as a merely notional and paper definition, it did
nothing to affect sense of identity. In other moments, moreover, the
Portuguese treated the Makoni chiefs of Maungwe as independent sovereigns
and made treaties with them.
― 123 ―
A third use of the concept 'Manyika' was that made by the British as a
counter to these Portuguese claims. In their attempt to gain control of 'the
Pungwe River route, which was the main water way to and from Beira', the
British South Africa Company imposed 'a treaty on Mutasa on 14 September
1890'. This treaty 'provided that no one could possess land in Manyika
except with the consent of the BSA Company', and once it was signed, the
Company invented its own 'Greater Manyika', the western boundaries of
which lay deep inside Portuguese territory, though areas like Mazoe and
Maungwe, to which the Company made quite differently based claims, were
excluded.[12]
Once the Company's frontiers had been fixed by means of war and
arbitration, there was no longer any need to inflate the power and territory
of Mutasa; rather the reverse. The old kingdom of Manyika was broken up
between the two administrative districts of Umtali and Inyanga; much of its
land was alienated to white farmers; and the administration was very
concerned to advance a minimalist definition of Manyika-hood. 'Umtassa's
country and people are called Manyika', wrote the Native Commissioner,
Umtali, in January 1904. "They do not speak the same dialect as the other
Mashonas.'[13] The same desire to separate Mutasa off from neighbouring
peoples can be seen in the early district reports from Umtali in which Native
Commissioner Hulley spelt out that the three chiefs in the district, Mutasa,
Maranke and Zimunya, were of quite distinct origins, even if there was a
popular tendency to refer to his district as 'Manicaland'.
The matter was so decided and the Chief Native Commissioner determined
that 'the N.C., Inyanga deal with all Manyika natives and the N.C., Rusapi
with all the Makoni'.[15]
It is clear from this that the Native Department firmly separated the Ungwe
of Makoni from the Manyika in a political sense. The separation was also
insisted upon in the cultural sphere. Thus, in 1915 a debate arose within the
Native Department about the significance of the term mayiaini in relation to
Manyika marriage customs. Llewellyn Meredith, who had been Native
Commissioner in both Melsetter and Makoni districts which today are held to
fall within 'Manicaland' and whose inhabitants are included in the percentage
of the population allocated to the 'Manyika', ventured to advance his opinion
about 'Manica customs and language'. He was crushed by the scorn of the
Manyika specialists. The Superintendent of Natives, Umtali, mocked
Meredith's ' 18 years experience of Manyika customs gathered in other
districts', and invoked the authority of Archdeacon Etheridge, the leading
missionary expert on Mutasa's chiefdom. 'I do not of course know,' wrote
Etheridge, 'what word may be used in Chindau, or Chirungwe, the dialects
spoken in Melsetter and Rusape [Makoni] districts, but as regards
Chimanyika there is no question at all.'[16]
― 124 ―
― 125 ―
and Makoni lost their most important warriors. The two Nyashanu
brothers who fought in the battle were both wounded but they
survived.[18]
There has recently been a good deal of attention given to the importance of
language in defining ethnicity—what Isabel Hofmeyr has called 'Building a
nation from words'.[21] Increasing attention has also been given to the key
role played by missionaries in specifying African languages.[22] Three
mission churches dominated the Christian history of Makoni and Umtali
districts—the Anglicans, the Trappist/Mariannhill Catholic fathers, and the
American Methodist Episcopal Church (AMEC). All three developed a
particular vested interest in these eastern territories. The Anglicans
developed their main Southern Rhodesian intellectual and educational centre
at St Augustine's near Umtali, and they had by far their greatest early
evangelical successes in Umtali and Makoni districts. The American
Methodists radiated out from their main station at Old Umtali: unlike the
Anglicans they did not have missionary bases in any other parts of the
country. Their first and deepest penetrations were in Umtali and Makoni
districts where they, too, scored considerable evangelical success. Although
Catholicism aspired to and increasingly achieved a territory-wide presence,
the Trappist/Mariannhill mission represented an odd enclave in an otherwise
Jesuit domain. The Mariannhill fathers operated out of their main mission at
Triashill on the borders of Inyanga and Makoni, and, from there, they spread
into Inyanga, Makoni and Umtali districts. Beyond these they could not go
without invading the Jesuits' sphere of influence. It was not surprising, then,
that all three of these churches came to develop a strong doctrine regarding
alleged special qualities of the people of these eastern districts—of what they
all came to regard as 'Manyikaland'.
This doctrine was founded intellectually on the language work of the three
churches. Missionary language work was of central interest and importance,
both to the missionaries and to the Africans among whom they worked. Oral
communication and rhetorical skills generated amongst many Africans a
great
― 126 ―
These ideas attained their most impassioned expression in 1918 with two
articles in the AMEC journal, African Advance . Under the heading 'And He
Said Unto Me Write', one of these described the linguistic and printing work
at Old Umtali. 'What would the World be today without . . . books?' it asked,
'Without a written language?' In Africa,
Between them, these converts and the missionaries had created something
new—a literary instrument which in various ways differed from speech; an
instrument to which the mission-educated had unique and privileged access;
an instrument
― 127 ―
which African teachers and clergy went on to use to write the histories,
moral fables and collections of literature which justified their claim to be the
leaders of their people. Machiwanyika, for example, produced 'hundreds of
pages of history and folklore . . . a volume of material concerning the kings
and their wars, and the native customs and a number of hymns of merit. . . .
No native I know', wrote Greeley on Machiwanyika's death in 1924, 'spent
more of his spare time for the good of his people.'[30]
Moreover, this written language in which the mission elite came to have such
a vested interest was innovative in another significant way. It created rather
than merely reflected one specific dialect of Shona—Manyika. In pre-colonial
Zimbabwe there did not exist bounded dialect zones within the overall
Shona-speaking territory. Each village spoke the 'same' language as its
neighbour, across the whole territory, but there was nevertheless gradual
lexical and idiomatic change so that, by the time a man from the extreme
western edge of the Shona-speaking area reached the extreme eastern
edge, he encountered significant differences. Missionary linguists created
discrete dialect zones by developing written languages centred upon a
number of widely scattered bases. The American Methodists at Old Umtali,
the Anglicans at St Augustine's and the Mariannhill fathers at Triashill
together produced Manyika; the Jesuits at Chishawasha, near Salisbury,
produced Zezuru; the Dutch Reformed Church at Morgenster produced
Karanga. Differences were exaggerated, obscuring the actual gradualism and
homogeneity of the real situation. And once these new forms had been
codified, they then expanded out from these missionary centres by means of
the mission out-school networks until specific dialect zones had been
defined. As Clement Martyn Doke, missionary and noted linguist, put it in
1931 in his report on Shona language and dialect:
― 128 ―
Greeley was hoping to indigenize and localize the gospel among a people
who were quite distinct from the Manyika of Mutasa. 'A hundred boys and
girls are reading the Gospels in their own tongue', he exulted, 'and going out
to talk it and sing it and live it.' But the African teacher with whom he
worked in Mount Makomwe and who helped 'in translation work' was Mark
Kanogoiwa from Umtali.[32] In 1910 Greeley remarked that four out of the
seven school boys who were going on to higher training at Old Umtali from
his school in Maranke were themselves 'from Mutasa's kingdom . . . part of
the fruit of our labours there'.[33] Indeed, the great majority of the 'Native
Pastor Teachers. The Apostles to the Manyika People. The output of our
Training School', whose group photograph was published in 1916, had been
born in Mutasa's chiefdom. Hence, in its formative stages, the 'language of
the American Methodists' was profoundly shaped by the experience and
contribution of a particular group of converts.
Fairly soon the AMEC missionaries came to accept that what they had
produced was 'chiManyika', the language of the 'Manyika nation'. Greeley,
who had begun his work by finding 'the language so limited as to vocabulary
and especially so in words expressing religious truth', ended by admiring and
loving its richness:
The Lord has helped me to say some things in the native language
which I have never said in English. . . . There are greater depths in
Chimanyika than you dream and while in some ways it is inferior to
our world conquering English there are wonderful possibilities in
using a vernacular. . . . Even Paul Mariyanga, who has been doing
little else for years than translating, is constantly discovering new
words and new meanings for old ones.[34]
Armed with this new literary language and with instructional and devotional
materials in Manyika, teachers and evangelists poured out into all the area
of the American Methodist outreach. The AMEC paid no attention to colonial
administrative boundaries. So far as they were concerned, their thriving
stations in the Gandanzara, Chiduku and Headlands circuits, situated in the
Makoni Reserve, the Chiduku Reserve and the white farmland areas of
Makoni district respectively, were an integral part of their core territory and
hence 'Manyika'. Converts in Makoni were offered the full American
Methodist progressive package—plough production for the market and
literacy in Manyika going hand in hand. A scene recorded in Gandanzara,
which rapidly became the nucleus of American Methodist entrepreneurial
endeavour in Makoni district, vividly illustrates the interconnections:
― 129 ―
The influence of the American Methodists alone would certainly not have
sufficed to make most people in Makoni district come to think of themselves
as 'Manyika'. The AMEC influence was most marked in those areas of Makoni
district in which relatively large-scale production of maize for the market was
possible—in the Gandanzara area of the Makoni Reserve, which had
unimpeded access to the Umtali urban and mining market, or in those areas
of the Chiduku Reserve which were close to the district centre at Rusape or
to the railway line. It was much less felt among the peasant families who
produced a small surplus for sale or among those who lived so far from
markets or communications that they had virtually no opportunity to sell
produce: families who between them were, of course, in the large
majority.[38] I have argued elsewhere, however, that missionary influence
did reach these other two groups; that Anglican influence was especially
strong amongst the smaller surplus producers and Catholic influence
especially effective in the subsistence production areas in the east of the
Makoni district.[39]
― 130 ―
hands'.[40] Douglas Pelly told his parents in July 1892 that he was 'learning
the language rather quickly or rather 4 tongues, i.e. all the languages
between Beira and Matabele, i.e. Shangaan, Mashuna, Makone and
Matabele'; which suggests that at that time he was thinking of the eastern
dialects in terms of Makoni's rather than of Mutasa's people.[41] But even
as they speculated, and long before they had mastered the language, the
Anglicans began linguistic work.
From the beginning Bishop Knight Bruce thought of the eastern districts as
the natural site for the main base of Anglican missionary work amongst
Rhodesian Africans. This was partly because they were the part of Southern
Rhodesia closest to the sea and to international communications; partly
because he had been impressed with the evangelical potential of the region.
During the early 1890s the bishop pondered where best to establish this
eastern headquarters. The two possibilities were Mutasa's country or
Makoni's country. In May 1893 Pelly told his parents that he had been
chosen 'to start the work at Umtasa's kraal' and to build a station 'which in
time the Bishop wishes to be the big station of the diocese. I shall have lots
of boys, cart, oxen, etc and everything I want and am to build dwelling
houses, church, native hospital, etc and also to begin teaching there. . . .
Fancy being chosen to build . . . the first church and station for natives in
Manica.'[42] In January 1894 the bishop himself wrote from the Mission
House, Umtali, that:
Language work thus began for the Anglicans where it had begun for the
American Methodists—in Umtali district. But Mutasa's kraal turned out to be
hotly contested territory; rival parties formed there, one backing the
Methodists, another the Anglicans, and a third under the chief himself
seeking to repudiate both of them. Knight Bruce's successor began to think
of Makoni's territory as a more attractive base. After Pelly's ordination he
was posted to:
― 131 ―
also could sing well some hymn tunes which Bernard has taught them. . . . I
am going to translate for the singing at once.' A letter in December 1895
gives a vivid glimpse of the linguistic complexity of this little station, where
Pelly, the Englishman, Frank, the Zulu, Bernard, the Mozambican, and
Kapuya, the local convert, worked daily:
Frank comes to my hut and I give his Bible lesson. . . . Then I read
and work and copy translation. . . . Frank meanwhile gardens and
helps Kapuia to read S. Mark in Zulu. . . . At half past six Evensong
with Kapuia present. The hymns, creed and Lord's Prayer and
Advent Collect being in Chino [Pelly's name for Shona]. Then tea
followed by school, the first half taught by Frank, while I taught
Kapuia English and he taught me Chino.[45]
The cumbrous machinery of Anglican linguistics was now focused once more
on Mutasa. In August 1896 the Zulu priest, H.M. M'tobi, wrote an account of
his visit to Mutasa's kraal in which he revealed both his ignorance of the
vernacular and of long-established chiefly linguistic ceremony:
But Mutasa and his people were to have the last linguistic laugh, as their
speech became the model for the Anglican Manyika 'language'.
In March 1897 the decision was taken to set up the Anglican educational and
missionary base at St Augustine's College, near Mutasa, whose prestige and
the antiquity of whose line began to be built up in missionary reports. Bishop
Gaul described him as 'His Majesty occupying the throne of the Monomotopo
dynasty, dating certainly from King Solomon's time, 3000 years ago, and
who knows how much longer'.[48]
― 132 ―
Gradually Anglican language work intensified and hardened into what was no
longer called 'chiNo', but 'chiManyika'. Gradually, too, teachers from Makoni
and Umtali came to play the same role as their peers were playing in
American Methodist work. In 1914, for example, a committee appointed by
the bishop at the Native Conference was hard at work at St Augustine's; it
consisted of Etheridge and Buck of St Augustine's and Christelow from St
Faith's:
The mission press at St Augustine's had 'three great works on hand . . . the
Provincial Catechism, which was originally translated at Rusape and
published by them, and now has been entrusted to the St Augustine's
Mission Press'; a shorter catechism; and a reader compiled by Buck. 'Rusape
have a "Lives of the Saints" in hand.'[56]
― 133 ―
other parts of the country, so they came to think of the Manyika language as
one aspect of a superior Manyika ethnic culture.
Anglicanism in the east was buoyed up in the late 1900s and 1910s by a
grass-roots demand for learning in the new language. In Makoni district
schools and churches sprang up, often under the leadership of young men
who themselves took the founding initiative, setting up their own Christian
villages and only later being appointed as agents of the Anglican church. The
area around Umtali clamoured for teachers 'due to the general desire for the
New Learning'.[58] 'Here in Manicaland', wrote Canon Etheridge in 1909, 'it
is no longer a question of the conversion of individuals—it is a question of
the conversion of a district—practically of a people—the Manyika.'[59] But it
was very different in other parts of Southern Rhodesia, and disillusioned
missionaries contrasted these with 'Manicaland' in terms which assumed an
identity between language, ethnicity and culture.
In the same year another missionary made the same contrast: 'The
Wakaranya, as the people here are called, are not nearly so keen or
enthusiastic as the Manica.'[61] 'It is clear', wrote Etheridge from Selukwe
in 1916, 'that we must not expect quick results amongst these Makaranga
folk; they differ in many ways from those with whom we have to deal in our
larger stations. . . . Much more intent upon ploughing than learning, they
need different treatment from our Manica people.'[62] Nor had the situation
changed by 1920. 'The Wakaranga', wrote a missionary in that year, 'are
very slowly turning to God and his Church; there is no enthusiasm as there
is among the Manyika people.'[63]
In this way the Anglicans gave more and more reality to notional entities
such as the 'Karanga' and the 'Manyika'. And wherever else they went in the
territory, they longed for the network of mission stations which gave
Anglicanism in 'Manyikaland' its almost 'national' character:
― 134 ―
The third main missionary influence in Makoni, Inyanga and Umtali was the
Trappist/Mariannhill mission. This established itself at Triashill a good ten
years after the introduction of American Methodism and Anglicanism and at
a time when the main outlines of missionary Manyika had already been laid
down. Nevertheless, it made its own peculiar contribution to the spread of
Manyika identity, and this for three main reasons.
The first was that Triashill and its associated station of St Barbara's was not
near Umtali, like St Augustine's and Old Umtali, but rather on the border
between Makoni and Inyanga districts. As its out-stations spread out
eastwards into Inyanga and westwards into Makoni, Triashill served to bring
together its converts across what had been a military frontier between chiefs
Makoni and Mutasa. Secondly, Triashill and St Barbara's were cut off from
good communications and markets by a great range of hills. The people who
lived on the mission farm and the areas around it were subsistence
producers and labour exporters, very different from either the entrepreneurs
of the American Methodist Gandanzara or the surplus-producing peasantry of
Anglican Chiduku. The Mariannhill fathers and brothers had a good deal to
do with the Manyika identity in Makoni becoming more than merely an elite
self-identification. Thirdly, the Mariannhill missionaries were perhaps more
self-consciously concerned to stress the past glories of the 'Manyika' and to
foster a sense of local pride than were either the American Methodists or the
Anglicans, perhaps
― 135 ―
because they felt themselves constantly under the scrutiny of the disdainful
and Zezuru-propagating Jesuits.
The main Triashill linguist was Fr. Mayr—a man 'so simple, so thoroughly
earnest about all the work he undertook, so modest and unsparing of
himself . . . a highly talented linguist, a thorough master of Zulu and
Chimanyika languages'.[66] According to a later note prepared for the
Jesuits by Fr. Withnell:
Father Mayr was given the work of preparing books in Shona for
the new Mission. Fr. Mayr . . . said he wished to visit St Augustine's
and asked me to accompany him. I was present with an attentive
ear at the discussion which Fr. Mayr had; Canon Etheridge was the
chief spokesman. Fr. Mayr seemed very keen on forming his native
language on the prevailing St Augustine's language. What he
seemed to insist upon was that the language of his projected books
should not slavishly follow Chishawasha [i.e. the Zezuru literature
of the main Jesuit centre], that in fact it should be different, as far
as was seemly, from Chishawasha. With a smile between them the
two learned linguists were at one on this point. . . . I know that
prayers, as arranged by Fr. Mayr, differed much from those of
Chishawasha. . . . So far as I have heard, these versions appeared
without any approval. . . . The books were rushed through the
press to supply a pressing need. . . . What struck me in their books
was a determination of the Trappists to differ from Chishawasha
language.[67]
Once Mayr's Manyika material was ready, the Triashill fathers wished to use
it throughout Makoni district. They also ran a station at Monte Cassino in
western Makoni, as far from Mutasa's Manyika as anywhere in the district. In
August 1911 Fr. Fleischer wrote from Triashill to the Jesuit Apostolic Prefect
asking permission to 'introduce the Chimanyika language spoken by the
natives in and around Triashill at our mission of Monte Cassino. At present
we make use of different catechisms on our two stations there, i. e., a
Chiswina one at Monte Cassino and Chimanyika one at Triashill but in the
future time we think that the catechism which Fr. Mayr compiled in
Chimanyika for Triashill to take also for Monte Cassino . . . [to] make
uniform our work for the black people.'[68]
This proposal to bring all Makoni district into the Manyika language zone
triggered off a great language controversy between the Jesuits and the
Mariannhill fathers and among the Jesuits themselves. Many Jesuits reacted
with hostility to the Triashill proposals:
― 136 ―
preserved', wrote Withnell again. 'I think it would be very unsafe to follow
Chimanyika . . . with its wretchedly poor vocabulary.'[70]
Four of us said that 'in olden times the word Mwari was never used,
it only came to us by the first missionaries of the Church of
England. The old people always used the word 'Nyadenga' . . . the
rest of the teachers said the word Mwari was always used in some
districts and Nyadenga in others. . . . Then all of them agreed that
the word Nyadenga mean only the owner of heaven, then Mwari
should be the really name of God.[71]
You are perfectly right in coining the word 'anoprofeta' [he wrote to
the Jesuit Fr. Johanny]. . . . You are simply applying the principle
which has guided us all along in rendering ideas of the religious or
supernatural order, for which Chizezuru could not possibly have an
exact equivalent. The Trappists went on a different tack, and tried
to pour the new wine of Christian ideas in the old, rotten skins of
pagan words, creating confusion where there should have been
unity.[73]
There were no obstacles to the spread of Old Umtali Manyika out into Mrewa
and Mtoko or to the spread of St Augustine's Manyika into almost the whole
territory. Triashill's case was very different. Jesuit opposition prevented
them from extending Manyika even to Monte Cassino and threw them very
much on the defensive. Soon Jesuit opponents followed up this negative
success. They persuaded the Jesuit Apostolic Prefect, Msgr. Brown, that the
use of 'Mwari' was intolerable. In August 1923 Brown ordered that the word
must be replaced everywhere by 'Jave' forthwith.[74] When the Triashill
congregations continued to
― 137 ―
Although our Jesuit Fathers had been in the territory for forty years
and knew the native language well and had finally decided on the
word to be used for God, the Mariannhill fathers without
consultation with us began to use a word which although used by
Protestantism had a very evil connotation. . . . I gave a formal
order that Jave was to be used. In my next visit to Triashill, six
months after my order had been given, I found no notice had been
taken of my decision and that the objectionable word was still
used. I then gave an order on the subject which had to be obeyed
under pains of censure. This was obeyed.[76]
This prohibition was deeply resented by both the missionaries and the
Triashill Christians and was seen as auguring a more general attack on
Manyika. Together with disagreements over other questions of evangelical
policy, the question led the Mariannhill fathers to approach Rome with a
request that Manicaland be made a separate prefecture so that they could
create their own Manicaland Christianity. When this failed, the Mariannhill
superiors began negotiations with the Jesuits for an exchange of territory
which would give the Manyika stations over to Jesuit control and give the
Mariannhill fathers complete control over a mission area elsewhere. But the
priests and brothers actually on the Manyika stations profoundly disliked
abandoning them to the Jesuits, so that when Jesuit priests moved in to take
over Triashill, St Barbara's, Monte Cassino and the rest of the Mariannhill
stations in September 1929, they found the Mariannhill fathers still in
definite possession and refusing to move.[77] In the end they did move out,
leaving behind them an apprehensive and disgruntled 'Manyika' church to
confront its new missionary masters.
No love was lost on either side. In March 1930 the Jesuit Jerome O'Hea
wrote to Brown bewailing 'the dearth of teachers who are fit for the
work. . . . The Manyikas want and seem to expect incessant propulsion a
terga . They are an awfully slack crowd and they find good medicine in Fr.
Schmitz who won't stand any nonsense and tells them often and clearly what
he thinks.'[78]
Manyika Identity and the Migrant Labour Factor
I have argued above that the expansion of missionary Manyika into other
areas, carried as it was by teachers and evangelists from Makoni and Umtali
districts who enjoyed privileged access to it, went a long way to build a
common sense of Manyika identity among them. But it was the Jesuit
takeover of Triashill in 1929, with the accompanying introduction of the
Chishawasha church and school books in the Zezuru dialect, that provoked
by far the most articulate expression of a Christian sense of Manyika self-
identity.
― 138 ―
But the most active pan of the protest was taken by migrant labourers from
the Triashill zone of influence. Very many men had taken their mission
education with them to the towns of Southern Rhodesia and South Africa.
Now they intervened in the crisis at home. "The boys of Jo-burg', wrote
O'Hea, 'have sent unsigned letters to boys about here to stir up protests at
the church on Sunday and to get the teachers on their side against the use
of Chizezuru books in Manyikaland. "You are taking away our language . . .
our King Mtasa . . . the religion of our forefathers" . . . all this high-sounding
rot is being pumped out at various kraals.'[80] Triashill, wrote the
Johannesburg migrants, 'belongs to us black people, not to the whites'. The
Jesuits had come 'to spread divisions, because they have come like intruders
to despise us, as we have made no agreement with them. . . . See how
these Jesuits are stepping into our possessions and snatching them from us!
We, the owners of these things, how are we being treated by them? We are
being looked upon as nobodies.' The teachers were urged to write 'many and
countless letters' to Fleischer, now bishop in Natal, 'for he knows
Chimanyika', and through him their case would reach 'the Holy Father'.
'Announce this to all the people, assemble together at all times.'[81] Patrick
Kwesha, the leader of the Johannesburg migrants, wrote to Brown himself to
complain that people at Triashill 'are forbidden their own tongue and forced
to use a tongue which we never knew nor our fathers'; that the Jesuits were
closing down schools and were 'not the means of teaching us or serving us
or raising us, but the means of destroying us and killing us.'[82]
Meanwhile, the economic depression was forcing many of the migrants back
home. These men joined in the protest against the Jesuits:
Nothing but a rod of iron is any use for these people. . . . They are
utterly blinded by the most foolish vanity. It is a poison that has its
roots in history—they the most despised of the despised Mashona
are given a chance at last, owing to the coming of the white man,
and they now openly declare that they are the cream of the black
race!!! Trouble that has its roots deep down in history is big
trouble. As far as I can gather Bro. Aegidius fostered this idea, if he
did not hold it himself, among them. . . . We had a great discussion
the other day in the Makoni Reserve and there were a number of
pagans present. . . . One fellow envisaged the rising of the
kingdom of Mtasa, claiming independence.[84]
All this was the most spectacular manifestation of migrant 'Manyika' identity:
after all, in addition to the Jesuit intervention, the Triashill missionaries had
made
― 139 ―
more contact with the zones of subsistence production and labour migration
than had the Anglicans or the Methodists. Still, both these missions had also
prepared young people to carry their skills of literacy into labour migration.
Because of these skills, Anglican and Methodist migrants had access to much
desired jobs in domestic service and in hotels. The churches kept in touch
with them in ways which heightened their sense of Manyika identity. 'The
little intercession paper printed here in their own tongue every quarter',
wrote Buck from St Augustine's in September 1914, 'has reached a
circulation of 2000 and goes to Manyika boys and girls as far away as
Johannesburg and Kimberley.'[85] The American Methodists found in the
mid-1930s that they were 'every year drawing from the Reserves hundreds
of the best of the boys and girls, training them, and seeing most of them
return not to their homes to enrich the life there, but to the town', going into
'cooking, waiting table, carrying messages or wheeling babies in the
park'.[86]
So many Old Umtali pupils were to be found in Salisbury that the AMEC sent
one of their ministers there to preach to them in Manyika. Rather than
having to join 'Zezuru' Wesleyan Methodist congregations, 'to conduct our
own evangelistic services, to sing our own hymns, to be free to develop in
our own way, would make our preacher and our people rejoice'.[87]
An engaging and unusual insight into the network of the American Methodist
Manyika migration is given in Katie Hendrick's little-known The Bend in the
Road . Katie was a coloured woman, daughter of a Manyika labour migrant
to Cape Town, Mandisodza. Mandisodza and his elder brother, John, both
attended Old Umtali school. But:
In the dry dusty reserve near Umtali . . . the people went naked
and struggled with the land to yield a mealie crop . . . Necessity
forced on father and his people the first lesson in economics; to
buy food . . . they had to have money. To get money they must go
to work for the white man.
By no means all migrants from the eastern region were mission Christians,
of course. But it was to the advantage of such migrants to attach themselves
to the growing 'myth of the Manyika' in the towns of southern Africa, with
their
― 140 ―
All this meant that the realities of the migrant labour market made an
impact even on the most stubborn 'traditionalist' groups in Makoni district.
Thus the Rozvi chief, Tandi, and his people were very reluctant to accept
even a Makoni identity, let alone a Manyika one. They were concerned to
argue that they had always been autonomous of Makoni, and they were
regularly involved in schemes to re-establish the Rozvi paramountcy. But as
chief Tandi and his councillors told me in 1981, they ceased to speak Rozvi
and came to speak what they now call Manyika 'because we had to marry
foreign women. And when our young men went to town they had to accept
that they were Manyika.'[92]
Similarly, at one level of politics within Makoni district the old distinctions
between 'Waungwe' and 'Wamanyika' retained their importance in the
1930s. Thus in 1936 there erupted a great controversy between chief Makoni
and chiefs Mandeya and Mutasa. Makoni claimed that Chikumbu, a headman
in Inyanga district, was his nephew and should be recognized as subordinate
to him:
There are three of Manica girls here and they have no thing to do.
They are not working. Their work is to commit all sorts of evil going
from one man to another. We wish you could report it to Native
Commissioner in Salisbury and have them sent back to Umtali; or
sir if it please you send us a letter that we may carry it over to
Native Commissioner in Salisbury. Also we wish if there is a law
that shall never allow a Manica girl to come here and not let one of
them ride the train from Umtali, or from any of the stations and
sidings, such Odzi, Rusapi and etc save she that has her
husband.[94]
― 141 ―
Bulawayo and Salisbury known as the Young Ethiopian Manica Society. The
objects are political and many of the younger Natives of the district belong
to one or other of the branches in the towns.'[96]
It is also clear that for some men this 'Manyika' identity was not just a
convenient reference group, but an ideal which sustained them during their
migration. There was, for example, Patrick Kwesha, spokesman of the
Manyika workers of Johannesburg in their protest against the Jesuits.
Kwesha used 'to convert people in Johannesburg. . . . Many, many were
baptized. These people were nearly all labour migrants from Manyikaland.
There may have been some South Africans too but what he was really
interested in was the Manyika.'[100] Kwesha's 'only wish which led my
whole life', was to go back to Manyikaland and to set up an all-African
missionary order there:
It seems plain, then, that by the 1930s the Manyika identity was a reality in
Makoni, Umtali, and Inyanga districts and in the migrant diaspora. It had
arisen as a result of the operation of the main forces which transformed
Makoni district under colonialism—participation in peasant agriculture, labour
migration and
― 142 ―
It is plain, too, that by the 1930s there was hardly any sense of a wider
Shona identity. Commenting on the visit of the Prince of Wales in 1925, the
Chief Native Commissioner contrasted the impact of his appearance before
Ndebele and Shona chiefs respectively. To the Ndebele the event was 'a
natural outcome of their unforgotten traditions of personal fealty', but 'to the
disunited Mashona tribes a message of different import seemed to be
conveyed. To them the occasion was charged with unity under one head as a
fact which they have been slow to realize.'[102] But during the 1930s a
number of forces, some African and some European, combined to work for
the creation of a single Shona language and hence the sense of a single
Shona identity.
On the African side, the main impulses came from men who found
employment in government service and could be posted anywhere in the
territory, and from young teachers and trainees for the ministry, who
wanted to contest the prestige of the older generation of teachers and
evangelists by mastering and controlling a new language of their own. On
the European side the chief impulse arose out of the need to communicate
effectively beyond the limits of one of the dialect provinces.
― 143 ―
Yet, of course, the mission churches themselves were also parties to this
movement. As the Anglican and Catholic churches became more truly
'national', so they pressed for a language more generally useful. Take, for
instance, the change that had come over the school at St Augustine's. As we
have seen, this had begun with pupils drawn only from the 'Manyika' zone.
By the 1930s the situation was very different. St Augustine's had become an
elite school for boys from all over Southern Rhodesia:
The solution for St Augustine's was to use English in teaching rather than to
employ a 'Standard Shona'—and one must recognize that command of
English had a great deal to do with the emergence of a nationalist elite. But
it was also significant that Anglicanism had ceased to see its role as
propagating Manyika. And many Anglican missionaries took a leading part in
the movement towards unifying Shona that commenced in the 1930s. These
developments coincided with the generalization of ethnic identification in the
towns, and particularly in Bulawayo, where 'Ndebele/Shona' rivalries became
established.
― 144 ―
Jeffrey Peires, in his account of the Lovedale Press, has shown the
devastating impact upon the first generation of mission converts of the
'great orthographic upheaval which struck Africa in the 1930s' as a 'result of
the work of the International Institute of African Languages and Cultures
founded in 1926 . . . [which] sparked off a new quest for language
standardization throughout the continent':
In March 1934, for example, a visitor from Triashill—even under its Jesuit
dispensation—came to talk with Edgar Lloyd at St Faith's. Both men were
'dead keen to stop the objectionable "new language" stunt. . . . It is silly to
force it, by printing all sorts of special papers in it, which the natives don't
understand and want to read. The Diocesan Intercession forms, the Mothers'
Union prayers, etc besides school things.'[106] American Methodists, whose
influence remained focused in the eastern districts, not surprisingly,
especially resisted language standardization. In 1940 their Commission of
Worship and Music under Amos Kapenzi demanded that 'Choirs should make
it their practice to sing Chimanyika.' And in 1947 one of the Old Umtali
missionaries wrote to the Scripture Gift Mission, thanking them for sending
illustrated lessons in standard 'Chi-Shona':
I find that our educated people can use them, but the common
people, common because there are so many of them, cannot
understand these lessons as written. The vocabulary is often
beyond their understanding, beside the foreign spelling of words
they might know. All our people consulted are as puzzled as I
about what dialect they may be. They feel that it is highly seasoned
with Sindebele, and must come from the extreme South or West
border of Rhodesia. . . . Unfortunately, it is so far removed from
the whole Eastern section in its composition that it is not
understood by the peoples of this section. It is supposed to be
Unified Shona, worked out by a committee from the different
sections, but some were not called in for the committee meetings,
and so these sections were not represented.
The missionary sent a text in Manyika, confident that it 'will meet the needs
of a large section, not only of Southern Rhodesia but also of Portuguese East
Africa.'[107] Thus the sense of loyalty to Manyika and to a Manyika identity
continued underneath the rise of Shona cultural ethnic awareness and
Zimbabwean political nationalism.
― 145 ―
Conclusion
I have taken my discussion up to the late 1940s but I cannot leave this
chapter without some attempt to connect up my story with the questions
raised at the beginning. What were the connections between the
development of the sense of a wider Manyika ethnicity and the assassination
of Chitepo, the faction fights within ZANU, or the support given to Muzorewa
in the 1979 elections? Did the surviving loyalty to a Manyika identity surface
destructively in these ways?
There are various possible answers to this. One, which is certainly true, is
that the ethnic component in nationalist disputes and in the voting support
for Muzorewa has been greatly exaggerated. But other answers speak to
what ethnic component does exist. Just as migrant labourers in the past
found a principle of mutual assistance in dialect ethnicities, so exiled
nationalists in the 1970s did begin to group together on the same basis. The
regional politics of development and patronage of today's Zimbabwe also
make these identities pertinent—no one doubts that Edgar Tekere, as
Chairman of the Manicaland regional committee of ZANU/PF, speaks for
'Manyika' interests. But there is another dimension.
In February 1980 James MacManus of The Guardian brought out clearly the
distinct strands in the 'Manyika vote':
5—
Tribalism in the Political History of Malawi[1]
I am a Chewa.
President Kamuzu Banda[3]
Introduction
Between 1964, when the government of newly independent Malawi was torn
apart in the so-called Cabinet Crisis, and 1975, when the Secretary General
of the Malawi Congress Party, Albert Nqumayo Muwalo, and the head of the
police's Special Branch, Focus Gwede, were arrested for plotting to
assassinate President H. Kamuzu Banda, a traumatic rearrangement of the
Malawian political order occurred. The language in which the politics of this
period was discussed increasingly drew upon a store of ethnic symbols and
stereotypes. The restructuring of relationships of power that occurred was
seen explicitly as a campaign against the Yao-speaking peoples of the
southern part of the country and all the peoples of the Northern Region.
These attacks were coupled with an affirmation of the special authenticity of
the culture of the country's Chewa-speaking people. These events,
accompanied by repeated purges of the Party's leadership and a steadily
declining real income for Malawi's workers and peasants, were responsible
for the destruction of sentiments of national unity which the campaign
against the Federation of Rhodesia and Nyasaland had inspired during the
late 1950s and early 1960s and encouraged the fragmentation of the
country along ethnically defined fault lines.[4]
Why political discourse should have been carried out in this way requires
explanation, the more so as the thrust of Malawian anti-colonialism was seen
in virtually all the substantial literature it generated as having tended
teleologically towards ultimate independence and national unity.[5] From
the earliest written 'tribal histories' and 'tribal associations', which were
judged to have been manifestations of pride in African culture and hence as
'resistance' to colonial control, the jump to a fully nationalist perspective was
assumed to be merely a matter of greater education and modernization, a
process finally consummated by independence in 1964.
― 152 ―
Yet in many ways earlier forms of parochial consciousness have proved more
enduring. Tensions expressed in terms of ethnicity exist in Malawi, as they
do elsewhere in the region, and they have assumed a potent reality,
focusing attitudes and specifying actions. To understand why they possess
such power, one must go beyond the older historiography, with its emphasis
upon the nationalist dimension of resistance against colonialism and its
stress on ultimate national unity. One must instead seek the varied origins of
current ethnic and regional consciousness in the uneven nature of the
country's colonial experience. Malawi is a particularly apt country for such an
approach. Since 1921 it has been divided into Northern, Central and
Southern Regions. These divisions have reflected not merely administrative
convenience, but also different economic, social, and intellectual experiences
dating from before the turn of this century. They thus provide a useful
framework for a study of the manner in which ethnic politics has varied from
area to area and from period to period.
These Ngoni derived from refugees who had fled from the wars sparked off
by the creation of the Zulu empire in Natal during the 1820s. Their first
leader was Zwangendaba.[6] Around 1855, under Zwangendaba's
successor, Mbelwa, the group arrived amongst the Tumbuka, whom they
conquered easily. The most prominent of the Tumbuka chiefs,
Chikulamayembe VIII, was slain and his people captured.[7] The Ngoni
invaders then settled, established large villages, and devastated the
surrounding areas so as to create a defensive buffer zone of wilderness that
only wild animals inhabited.[8] Large numbers of defeated Lakeside Tonga
and Tumbuka were incorporated in the new villages, and the Ngoni made
concerted attempts to suppress the captives' own culture. The old Tumbuka
religious cult of the spirit Chikang'ombe died out, and earlobes were
perforated in Ngoni fashion to serve as 'a sign of baptism from the
Ngoni. . . . We could not
― 153 ―
For reasons of strategy and logistics, the first mission station was situated
amongst the Lakeside Tonga, but, after a short time, it became apparent
that Tonga, the local language of the first converts, was not feasible as a
medium for further expansion of the Mission. The missionaries then decided
to employ two languages: English, the language of 'high culture', and
Nyanja, the language spoken on the southwest shore of Lake Malawi.[12]
Nyanja was chosen for both preaching and teaching, partly because it was a
lingua franca throughout large areas of East Central Africa and partly
because there was already a substantial body of religious publications in
Nyanja.[13] Nyanja was also the sole local language in the Protectorate's
civil service examinations, and the missionaries hoped that it would become
the lingua franca throughout the entire area of their work.[14] The very
success of the Mission, however, soon made the use of Nyanja impossible.
The reasons behind these successes lay in the Mission's profound attractions
for different Tumbuka groups.[15] The Ngonde people at the northern end
of Lake Malawi had suffered little from Ngoni incursions and had been saved
by British intervention from serious disruption by late nineteenth-century
slave raiders. They were thus able to maintain a coherent culture and
economy, and visitors frequently described them as content to live their
'idyllic lives' uninterested in any change.[16] The Tumbuka-speaking Henga
who lived in Ngonde territory were, however, despised and resented by the
Ngonde both as refugees and as former allies of Swahili slavers. Their formal
religion was largely dead, and they were both ready to experiment with a
new one and eager for the sort of mission education that would enable them
to become successful traders, clerks and teachers.[17] The Henga
responded enthusiastically to the new educational opportunities, and in 1911
a Mission report distinguished clearly between the two local African groups:
The Henga are a keen, vigorous, progressive people, the great
majority of the church members are from among them; their
schools are well attended, the pupils alert, and the boys and girls in
about equal numbers.
― 154 ―
For the Tumbuka under Ngoni domination the situation was somewhat more
complex. In the 1880s and 1890s, the Ngoni leadership invited missionaries
to live amongst them out of economic and political considerations.[19] At
the same time, however, the Ngoni feared the corrosive impact of Christian
teachings upon their military ethic. Rather than educate their own children,
therefore, the Ngoni permitted the children of their Tumbuka slaves and
serfs to attend the Mission's schools.[20] The subordinate Tumbuka were
thus the earliest converts to Christianity in large numbers. For the Tumbuka,
an added attraction of the Mission was that, from 1894 on, its main station
at Kondowe was situated between the Ngonde to the north and the Ngoni to
the south, in the very heart of empty territory then gradually being
reoccupied by returning Tumbuka refugees. They thus saw the Mission as
politically neutral.
The Mission's educational work was remarkable. In 1893 there were ten
schools with 630 pupils. By 1901 there were 55 schools which had an
average attendance of 2800 pupils. By 1904 one station alone maintained
some 134 schools with over 9000 students.[21] As evidence of the Mission's
educational impact, when Nyasaland's governor visited it in 1911, he was
told that in 1910 the area's people had purchased 1200 lbs of writing paper
and 30,000 envelopes from its shops.[22]
― 155 ―
Two groups of local Africans were eager to influence the British in this
process. First, in Nkhamanga, the area of the long defunct Chikulamayembe
chiefdom, there was a broad desire to resuscitate that chieftainship.
According to custom the revived office should have gone to a member of the
lineage of the last of the chiefs, Majuma Gondwe. Village leaders, however,
felt that they needed an educated chief to voice their complaints and wishes,
for, as one put it, 'For an uneducated man to speak with Europeans was an
impossible dream.' When the revival of the chieftainship was raised,
therefore, they did not seek it for the heir of the Majuma line, but for
Chilongozi Gondwe, an offspring of a collateral lineage.[25] This was an apt
choice. Chilongozi Gondwe came from among the Henga people dwelling
among the Ngonde and had attended the Livingstonia Mission's school. He
had entered the colonial civil service as a policeman at Deep Bay, near the
Mission headquarters at Kondowe.[26] Although Chilongozi was neither a
'common man' nor from the area of the chieftaincy itself, the people
supported him because, as he was educated, 'they felt that he would
understand Europeans better'.[27]
― 156 ―
Perhaps the best organized force working towards specifying the terms of
the new Tumbuka identity and expanding it into a living consciousness was
the Livingstonia Mission itself. Two of its missionaries had special
significance in the process. The first was Thomas Cullen Young, a Scot who
worked in the area between 1904 and 1931. The second was Edward Bote
Manda, a Lakeside Tonga who was both a teacher and an ordained minister
at the Mission headquarters. These two men, supported by the Mission's
prestige and working amongst people whose respect for the printed word
was immense, took up Saulos Nyirenda's earlier work and, as active culture
brokers, propagated a myth based upon the alleged historical glories of the
Chikulamayembe chieftainship.
Soon after his arrival, Young began studying the customs of the local people.
He was in an area free from Ngonde and Ngoni political interference, and he
was witness to the beginnings of the new formulation of Tumbuka history.
For his historical research he depended largely on Nyirenda's history and on
oral evidence gathered in Chief Chikulamayembe's area. His data was thus
substantially biased towards the new chief's 'official' version of the past.[32]
His principal thesis was the same as Nyirenda's: that in the pre-Ngoni period
there had existed a large Tumbuka empire, founded by the first
Chikulamayembe, Mlowoka, and sustained by his successors.[33] This
empire, it was argued, included not only all speakers of the Tumbuka
language, but also the Lakeside Tonga and the Ngonde peoples as well as
some Chewa-speakers, extending from the Dwangwa river in the south to
the Songwe river in the north, from the Luangwa valley in the west to the
Lakeshore in the east, an area of some 20,000 square miles. The actual
historical reality was, however, quite different. The original Chikulamayembe
chieftainship had been territoriall' small, and there had been no such thing
before the coming of the Ngoni as a unified empire, state, or 'tribe'
encompassing the Tumbuka.[34]
Edward Manda was at work at the same time. Manda was not of Tumbuka
origin, having been born a Lakeside Tonga in an area under Ngoni
hegemony, his father a captive of the Ngoni. He began his studies at the
Mission in 1885. In 1905 he became a teacher, and in 1918 was ordained to
the ministry, afterwards remaining at the Mission headquarters.[36] In
theory, Manda might have become a kind of Saulos Nyirenda for the
Lakeside Tonga, the culture broker for a distinctly Tonga ethnic
consciousness. The parallels were striking. Like the Tumbuka, the Tonga
were divided into a host of small chieftaincies. Like the Tumbuka, they had
― 157 ―
known defeat and humiliation at the hands of the Ngoni. As with the
Tumbuka, some of them had rebelled and migrated to form autonomous
communities, and, like the Tumbuka, they had in Chief Mankhambira, who
defeated an Ngoni attack in 1880, a figure around whom myths of past
greatness could have accumulated. Finally, again like the Tumbuka, they had
been among the Mission's earliest converts and possessed a substantial well-
educated petty bourgeoisie who could serve as culture brokers.
Edward Manda held similar views regarding colonial injustice. While living
amongst the Tumbuka he had joined the first African political association in
Nyasaland. This was the North Nyasa Native Association, formed in 1912 by
Tumbuka men educated at the Livingstonia Mission with the encouragement
of Robert Laws, the Mission's head.[38] By 1925 Manda had become the
Association's chairman. He had also become exceedingly unpopular with the
British because of his unending protests. Although a firm believer in the
Victorian virtues of Improvement and Uplift, he also felt that British cultural
imperialism required the development of a rival 'traditional' mythology that
would at the same time incorporate the values of the educated African petty
bourgeoisie.[39] For him, the Chikulamayembe chieftainship was an obvious
point of departure and, with all the ardour of a convert, he set about to
bolster its status and power.
In this work, he enjoyed two real advantages. First, he was geographically
well situated. As one official noted, the chiefs court was far from district
headquarters at Karonga and
there is a tendency for things to fall into the hands of the Mission
natives, particularly the Rev. Edward Manda at Livingstonia, who is
of necessity a liaison between Chikulamayembe and the D.C. as he
is in telegraphic and postal communication with Karonga.[40]
From the turn of the century onwards, Nyasaland and Northern Rhodesia, as
the new British colonies came to be known, were linked to the emergent
capitalist
― 158 ―
economy of southern Africa and were especially oriented towards the gold
mines of the Witwatersrand.[41] The transformation of the rural areas of
Central Africa into satellites of South Africa was gradual, but it was real,
eradicating distances and dissolving territorial boundaries. The solvent in this
process was money. The British administration imposed an annual hut tax
both to finance its operations and to press Africans into wage labour. The
missionaries who operated the local school system required the payment of
substantial school fees, and local people were ardent for education.
Bridewealth, which eventually came to be payable in either money or cattle,
constituted a third use for money. Finally, people needed money for their
discretionary wants, such as clothing, salt, tools and similar items.
Between 1912 and 1923, however, a succession of blows were dealt to such
attempts to come to terms creatively with the necessity of labour migrancy.
An outbreak of bovine pleuro-pneumonia in 1912 ended the trade in cattle
which had become important in supplementing earnings from labour
migrancy.[43] During World War I men were drafted to serve as porters in
the British army for periods of up to three years and the resulting shortage
of male labour adversely affected food production in the village gardens. The
army also commandeered large amounts of food and many cattle from the
people, and great burdens were placed upon the women remaining in the
villages as they tried to produce enough food for their families and
themselves. The war was followed by the great worldwide Spanish influenza
pandemic of 1919 which killed thousands of Tumbuka and Ngoni. This in turn
was followed by a heavy round of inflation, an outbreak of Bubonic plague, a
doubling of the tax rate in 1920, and a severe famine in 1923.[44]
The impact of all these events resulted in an abrupt emigration of the male
population from northern Nyasaland, with as many as 70 per cent of the
men absent from home at any one time. This absence placed great strains
upon village life in general and upon relations between men and women in
particular. A crisis within the family resulted, with women whose husbands
were absent bearing children conceived in adultery or deciding to seek
divorce so as to remarry.[45] As a consequence, men sought to assert
control over women through recourse to institutions of African 'customary'
law. They undertook this strategy at an opportune moment.
During the 1920s, the British were especially eager to implement a system
of formal Indirect Rule. Chiefs and headmen in all districts of Nyasaland
already played a considerable part in the collection of taxes and in general
administration: in 1912, the passage of the District Administration (Native)
Ordinance (DANO) had provided for the appointment of Principal Headmen
and subordinate village headmen to whom would be delegated minor
responsibilities for the general conduct and welfare of village life and for
keeping the district officer informed of births, deaths, crimes, disputes and
disturbances, and immigration. The village headmen had the additional
important duty of 'allocating village gardens and pasturage' under the
officer's direction.[46]
― 159 ―
From the British point of view the advantages of Indirect Rule in cutting
costs, saving work and dividing the Africans into competing communities
were obvious. But there were advantages for certain Africans as well, and
not only the chiefs, the 'Native Authorities', who were to assume the new
powers. One group who benefited were migrant labourers. The British used
local chiefs and headmen as adjudicators in marital disputes, and
consequently 'traditional' chiefs came to be central in the concerns and
calculations of ordinary men who were eager to preserve their interests at
home while working outside Nyasaland.[48] In the context of the new
political economy of migrant labour, then, chiefs had an enlarged role to play
and men were willing—even eager—to accept chiefly authority and the
historical mythology that legitimized it. Another group who could benefit
were educated Africans, for they could count on being advisers of the chiefs.
Given the powers ceded, however, the question of who actually secured the
post of Native Authority was crucial, and, in the case of the Tumbuka,
Edward Manda's intervention proved decisive.
― 160 ―
Hora Mountain, where Tumbuka rebels had fought the Ngoni in 1879,
seeking, as the District Commissioner explained, 'to make this a centre from
which Tumbuka influence would spread and eliminate Angoni rule'.[56] The
Tumbuka would then be able to live 'without the stigma of subservience to
Angoni rule'.[57] These efforts failed, but they revived bitter anti-Ngoni
feelings, especially amongst the partisans of Tumbuka lineages whose
authority the Ngoni invasion of the mid-nineteenth century had
extinguished.[58]
By the early 1930s, then, largely because of the Mission's educational work
and Tumbuka men's willingness to accept increased chiefly authority,
Tumbuka ethnic consciousness had become a reality, focusing attitudes,
instilling pride, and helping to shape actions. The census of 1931 noted that
there was a marked decline in the number of people identifying themselves
as 'Ngoni', caused by
For the Tumbuka building their ethnic self-awareness, the opposing 'they'
were primarily the Ngoni. Tumbuka attitudes to the British as liberators and
educators, oppressors and exploiters were necessarily ambiguous, and the
specifically anti-colonial ingredient was a comparatively late addition to
Tumbuka ethnic consciousness. For the Ngoni, however, the problems of
ethnic awareness were at once far simpler, yet also more complex. On the
one hand, the Ngoni enjoyed a reputation throughout southern Africa as
effective soldiers and administrators. Like the British, they had come to
Nyasaland as conquerors, and they had been able to maintain their
independence until 1904, long after their neighbours had conceded
sovereignty. In short, the Ngoni knew that they were a people with whom
one had to reckon.
On the other hand, the final quarter century of Ngoni independence had
been plagued with problems. Their heartland had been severely damaged by
overgrazing, the destruction of forest cover, a declining water table, and
falling soil fertility.[61] This damage was aggravated, first, by the extension
of the pax Britannica which ended the annual raiding by which the Ngoni had
supplemented their food supplies, restricting them to their exhausted
heartland, and, second, by the devastation of their cattle herds by the
rinderpest epizoötic of the
― 161 ―
This testimony is revealing in two ways. First, it shows well over half a
century after the event the intensity of Ngoni anger over the tax issue. For
the Tumbuka, accustomed to paying tribute to the Ngoni or Ngonde chiefs,
British taxation involved primarily—although by no means only—a shift of
allegiance. For the Ngoni, by contrast, it meant the surrender of their
sovereignty to a new conqueror, a humiliating sign of tributary status for a
people who had migrated all over southern and central Africa to avoid just
such a fate.
Second, the testimony records that although tax had to be paid in money,
there was 'no money in this country'. Where the soil was exhausted, as in
Ngoni country, and where there were no markets for food or cash crops, as
was the situation everywhere in northern Nyasaland, and when an outbreak
of bovine pleuro-pneumonia soon made it impossible for the people to sell
cattle to raise money, the imposition of the tax brought to the Ngoni the
demands of a political economy based on a general labour migrancy that had
already affected the Tumbuka north of them.
On the material level the results of labour migrancy for the Ngoni were the
same as for the Tumbuka, but for the Ngoni, accustomed to being rulers,
they were more galling. The British found the discontented Ngoni difficult to
control, unlike the Tumbuka, and, reflecting their administrative
exasperation, the acting governor sourly observed in 1913 that nothing
would 'benefit them or the country more than to shoot a few down, burn
their villages, deport the so-called chiefs and confiscate their cattle'.[65] In
July 1914, when the governor met with the Ngoni leaders, mutual
recriminations filled the air. The governor asserted that the chiefs were
encouraging 'their people to evade payment of hut tax, deceived the
Resident when he applied to them for information and assistance', and did
not merit their governmental subsidies. The Ngoni chiefs complained of the
lack of markets in northern Nyasaland and the oppressive weight of
taxation.[66]
Shortly afterwards the Ngoni hierarchy was dealt a traumatic blow. In 1915,
― 162 ―
when a British official tried to raise men to serve in the much-feared Carrier
Corps in the East African campaign of World War I, Paramount Chief
Chimtunga forbade it.[67] For this, he was removed from office and
banished to the Southern Province, and DANO was applied to Ngoni country
for the first time, reducing the chiefs to little more than assistants to the
District Commissioner for mobilizing labour and collecting taxes. In the
1970s people still recalled this shattering event in an ingoma song:
This blow to Ngoni self-respect was followed by the deaths of a great many
of the Province's people in the war, in which they were forced to serve as
porters.[69] The severe reverses of the post-war years followed.[70] The
imposition of colonial control thus coincided with a rapid and general
deterioration of conditions of living in the area, generating profound
resentment. For the Ngoni, the 'they' in opposition were clearly the agents of
the new colonial political economy.
The country is now in a new era with a new life, new knowledge,
new resolutions, new laws, new customs which can be learned
through education: it would be foolish and ridiculous if people of
the country dislike the civilization. The old life differs greatly from
the present life, and it would be wise for the people of this country
to aspire to have education, which alone leads to civilization.[72]
Significantly, however, the path to this progressive future was seen as
passing through a celebration of the Past.[73] The Ngoni past was vivid
and, when compared with the grim realities of ecological decay, labour
migrancy, and the undermined authority of chiefs, it seemed indeed
glorious. The migration from Natal, the deeds of Zwangendaba, the victories
of Ngoni armies, Ngoni skill in state-building, their high level of culture—all
these were celebrated and publicized by Yesaya Chibambo in his role as
historian in the book Midauko: Makani gha waNgoai (History: The Deeds of
the Ngoni ) (Livingstonia, n.d.), which was prepared specifically for use in
the local Mission schools.[74] To talk of the Ngoni past was, then, to speak
of real and continuing structures of power.
In dealing with the British Administration, however, the Ngoni chiefs found it
useful to use a less traditional face. As the District Commissioner minuted in
1930:
― 163 ―
the Native Associations in the hope that the latter, being more
educated, would bring greater pressure to bear upon the
Government.[75]
In practice, the Mombera Native Association had from its inception been
fulfilling this role. Among its first campaigns, the Association took up the
cause of the banished Chief, Chimtunga Jere, persuading the colonial
authorities to permit his return home, even though he was allowed no
political role. After Chimtunga's death, it championed the claims of his son,
Lazaro Jere, a Mission-educated clerk employed in the Northern Rhodesian
administration, to return to Nyasaland as 'Paramount', a title still
outlawed.[76] Once Lazaro returned in 1924, a well orchestrated campaign
to revive the Paramountcy itself began, resulting in popular excitement so
great that the District Commissioner contemplated calling in troops to
suppress the movement.[77]
The adoption of Indirect Rule, however, was approaching, and in 1928 the
government recognized Lazaro Jere as Principal Headman. He immediately
confirmed the Association's role in promoting his advancement by becoming
its chairman.[78] Not surprisingly, the Association continued its campaign in
terms appropriate to a specifically ethnic consciousness, fighting off an
attempt in 1929 to transfer the northern fringe of Ngoni territory to
Chikulamayembe, and in 1930 arguing once again that the 'desire to have a
paramount chief in Mombera still rings in the hearts of the people, for the
present policy of equalizing all the Principal Headmen is contrary to the law
of the country'.[79] In 1933 the government yielded and recognized Lazaro
Jere as the new Paramount, Mbelwa II. Like the Chikulamayembe, he
immediately became expansionist. Within a year he succeeded in annexing
part of the area of the neighbouring Chewa chief Kaluluma and
unsuccessfully attempted to acquire the adjacent Northern Rhodesian Ngoni
chiefdoms of Magodi and Pikamalaza.[80] In 1938, he petitioned the state
that the entire area of Northern Rhodesia between the Nyasaland border and
the Luangwa river be placed under his administration, but this manoeuvre
also failed.[81]
In sum, then, by the early 1930s two strong ethnic ideologies had been
created in northern Nyasaland. In the Tumbuka case, the strongest creative
influence was the intellectual input of graduates of the Scottish Mission's
schools; in the Ngoni case, the strongest influences were the still-living
memories of past independence and prosperity. For both groups, however, it
was the demands of the colonial political economy and, most especially, the
fact of widespread labour migrancy that provided a firm underpinning to
these culturally defined revivals. While men were in Southern Rhodesia or
South Africa earning money as labour migrants, they thought it essential
that their local interests in land, cattle, and, particularly, control over women
and children should be protected. Indeed, in recognition of the roles of the
chiefs in preserving social order in the villages, migrants customarily
presented the chiefs with gifts on their return home. Financial
considerations, therefore, reinforced the chiefs' natural desires to maintain
social order in their areas.[82]
In essence, Tumbuka and Ngoni ethnic ideologies during the inter-war period
were products of a dialogue between labour migrants who wanted social
controls enforced and African intellectuals who sought to shape these
controls so as to encourage what they saw as Progress for their people.
Ethnic consciousness in the Northern Province was, then, a form of
resistance to colonialism that asserted the validity of the African way of life
and the African past through a stress on 'tradition' while still looking forward
to a future of 'Progress' through western education and training.
― 164 ―
During the 1930s the Northern Province's two major ethnic movements, with
their ideological core of history and chiefly authority, partially coalesced into
a regional movement that was defined by common interests and specified by
a new concern, language. The issue that precipitated this change was the
government's language policy. In 1918 one of the administration's junior
officers resurrected the old idea that Nyanja should be made the official
language of the country and taught in all its schools. As a proposal it made
good sense, for Nyanja, or its dialectal variants, Mang'anja and Chewa, were
spoken by a majority of the country's people. The governor, Sir George
Smith, rejected the suggestion totally, however, pointing out that:
Divide-and-rule was to be British policy. In the north, the language that was
granted official status was Tumbuka. Throughout the 1920s the Mission's
presses confirmed the status of Tumbuka by pouring forth school texts in the
Tumbuka language in editions of between 7000 and 10,000 copies.[84] For
the Tumbuka themselves, it was a symbol of their reviving respectability and
self-esteem. For the Ngoni, it was their adopted language within the context
of a larger society of potentially competing languages.
In the late 1920s, the government's language policy shifted. Governor Sir
Shenton Thomas was not haunted by visions of uprisings nor preoccupied
with strategies of divide-and-rule. He was eager to streamline the colony's
administration, and he argued that the adoption of a single official lingua
franca would both help unite the country and save money.[85] Following
Thomas's suggestion, the Advisory Committee on Education adopted a
proposal that Nyanja 'be introduced as the medium of instruction not later
than Class 4 in all Government and Assisted schools'.[86] To obtain state
aid missions would be obliged to follow this policy.[87]
The governor was stubborn, however, and drawing support from the Roman
Catholic and Dutch Reformed Churches, both of which used Nyanja as their
medium of instruction in the Central Province, he appealed to Whitehall for
support. In the far north of the country Ngonde-speakers, resenting their
long social subordination to Mission-educated Henga, joined in attacking
Tumbuka, asserting that 'We Bangonde would like our children to learn
Nyanja in schools and not Tumbuka.'[93] The Colonial Office initially agreed
with the governor, commenting that the Livingstonia Mission must face facts
and accept Nyanja. If they did not, their students' careers would be blighted
because of their ignorance of the official language of the country and their
consequent ineligibility for positions in the civil service.[94] Therefore, in
1935 Young's successor, Sir Harold Kittermaster, ordered the immediate
implementation of the new language policy.
The Mission, however, refused to give up, carrying the fight for their
educated graduates over the heads of Nyasaland's officials to London and
succeeding in gaining the sympathy of key Whitehall officials.[95] As one
noted:
― 166 ―
two official languages of the country, a position it held until 1968 despite the
fact that it was spoken by only a very small fraction of the population.[99]
The alliance of educated Africans and well-connected Scottish missionaries
was a potent one, and it ensured that the bulk of African positions in the
colonial civil service would be taken by Tumbuka-speaking northerners as
rapidly as such positions opened up.
The political economy of the Southern Province was crucial in shaping its
history in the twentieth century, and pivotal in shaping that political
economy was the fact that land alienation to Europeans occurred in the
nineteenth century, before the establishment of a British administration.
Vast estates comprising almost one million acres were obtained by a handful
of settlers and companies during the 1880s as part of their strategy to
induce the British government to annex the Shire Highlands and adjacent
riverine areas before the Portuguese could do so. One reason such land
alienation was possible was that the bulk of the land 'purchased' from the
chiefs was relatively unoccupied. In 1861, missionaries had found the Shire
Highlands thickly populated with Mang'anja villages. Disruptions from Yao
invasions, the expansion of the slave trade, and a disastrous famine in 1862
soon resulted, however, in an entirely different pattern of
― 167 ―
settlement wherein the major chiefs ruled from heavily fortified stockades on
mountain tops. The plains reverted to secondary forest and were by the
1880s thick with game. With minor exceptions, it was this largely unoccupied
and uncultivated land which was alienated to Europeans in the 1880s. The
planters were thus in a strong position to defend their interests against both
government and missions after the British annexed the area in 1890,
successfully insisting upon the de facto right to run their estates pretty much
as they wanted, without governmental interference and without an
unwanted mission presence. Most planters barred mission work on their
estates, and, therefore, in the south no networks of mission schools located
in the villages developed as they did in the north. In the Southern Province
education remained a relatively rare phenomenon.
From the 1890s onwards, the issue that dominated the politics of southern
Nyasaland centred on the nature of the terms on which Africans would be
permitted access to the mostly empty lands held by the European planters
or the Crown Land that still remained under Yao chiefs.[100] That this could
become a central issue was because of the entry into Nyasaland from
Mozambique of groups of 'Nguru' peoples seeking land. This immigration
began in 1895 and continued for several decades. Some were slaves freed
from the chiefs' stockades, while others were fleeing Portuguese tax and
labour policies. They spoke various languages, including Lomwe, Mpotola,
and Mihavani, but nothing called 'Nguru'.
When these migrations began, the area's European planters were struggling
to find a suitable product for export, and their main problem was finding an
adequate labour supply. Though a hut tax had been devised to solve this
problem, it had proved inefficient. Even when local people could be induced
to pay their tax in labour rather than in cash or kind, it generated only one
month's work per man per year, allowing no time for the development of
skills and producing a labour surplus in the dry season but virtually none
during the rains, when the bulk of the agricultural work had to be done.
Moreover, when people needed to earn money, they found it more
advantageous to leave the country altogether to seek the higher pay
available elsewhere in southern Africa. In the planters' view, Nyasaland's
people had too many alternatives.
What made the new Nguru immigrants so valuable was their vulnerability.
As immigrants, they lacked land. By accepting land in return for their labour,
they could be turned into a captive workforce. Two groups took advantage of
their vulnerability: the European planters and the established Yao chiefs and
headmen dwelling on Crown Land. As the Nguru migrants crossed the
border, the planters had vast tracts of empty land available for settlement
which they offered to the newcomers under terms by which they exchanged
land for labour—a system known as thangata . According to the legislation of
1904 which defined thangata, workers were to be provided with eight acres
of land for settlement and cultivation, the 'rent' on this land being one
month's labour per year in lieu of hut tax, plus one month's thangata labour
paid at the current rate of tax. The real attractions of the system for the
planters lay in its hidden advantages. A month's hut tax labour could be
stretched to six or eight weeks simply by withholding a signature from the
tax certificate. Thangata agreements were informal and verbal and not
subject to government review. Most planters had little difficulty in extending
the actual labour service to four or five months. And unlike hut tax or tax
certificate labour, it could be demanded in the rainy season.[101] The
Nguru were in no position to bargain. If they refused to work or if they
attempted, as others did, to find work in South Africa or Southern Rhodesia,
they lost their right to land in Nyasaland. The planters therefore encouraged
the Nguru to settle. As
― 168 ―
the governor commented a few years later, Nguru immigration had come
'most opportunely. It populated vacant spaces, it enhanced the
Protectorate's revenue and most important of all it has provided a ready and
permanent labour supply for the extension of European enterprise.'[102]
This situation continued well into the 1920s.
The planters were not the sole beneficiaries of the migrations. Some Nguru
also settled under the protection of chiefs and headmen on Crown Land.
These chiefs and headmen were Yao-speakers established in the area since
the 1860s. Once the British established an administration, people began to
move down from Zomba, Chiradzulu and Mulanje mountains and reoccupied
the abandoned plains, growing crops. Over the next fifteen years the whole
of the Shire Highlands was repopulated.[103] To clear the land required
labour, and it was the Nguru immigrants who supplied it. The chiefs and
headmen gave them food in exchange for their clearing fresh land and
growing cotton, the area's major cash crop. Their labour was also used to
produce maize and vegetables for sale. On the whole, the British approved.
Although there were accusations of slave-holding and slave-trading, the
chiefs were successful in getting cotton and food production under way and
were useful in supplying public works labour to the administration. The
consensus was that although the Nguru were 'kept in a certain degree of
mild subjection and occasionally perform a little menial labour for the
protection of the chiefs under whom they serve, there is no serious
interference with their rights and duties'. The chiefs who were to come into
prominence in the colonial period were precisely those who attracted the
largest numbers of settlers.[104]
The result of the welcoming of the Nguru by planters and chiefs so as to gain
access to their labour was the establishment in the Southern Province of a
population of great ethnic complexity, a mélange of diverse peoples and
cultures. The Mang'anja and Nyanja peoples had been overlain with—and
ultimately outnumbered by—Muslim Yao people in the mid-ninteenth century
and by the Nguru immigrants from Mozambique in the early twentieth
century. All these groups retained their own cultural practices, and the
pattern of scattered settlement throughout the area undermined all
possibility of defining geographically discrete ethnic areas.
The Chilembwe Rising was crucial in shaping later British attitudes towards
Africans in two ways. First, it reinforced an already well developed colonial
distrust of educated Africans in particular and of Protestant mission
education in general.[106] Planters and administrators alike henceforth did
all they could to
― 169 ―
Second, and related directly to this distrust, the Rising encouraged the
British to impose Indirect Rule on the confusing tangle of African people in
southern Nyasaland in an effort to check any possible disturbances by
dissatisfied Africans through bolstering chiefly control. Indirect Rule was
essentially conservative, employing its own concept of tradition and drawing
its personnel from chiefs and headmen. For the British the more 'traditional'
Africans were, the better, and they warmly embraced the most obviously
conservative Africans in the area, Muslim Yao chiefs. In the Southern
Province, then, a 'tribal order' was to be largely imposed from above rather
than being shaped from below, as occurred in the Northern Province.[107]
With this opportunity presented to them, the Yao chiefs and headmen
speedily acted to protect and, if possible, improve their positions. In the
week after the rising, the Yao chiefs and headmen of Chiradzulu presented
themselves at the British administrator's office, assuring him that they did
not support Chilembwe. They ingratiated themselves with him through gifts
of flour and eggs and chickens, and he responded, finding that he enjoyed
talking to them. He liked their Islamic robes, so different from the disturbing
mimicry of the European suits worn by Chilembwe and many of his followers.
Reassured and grateful, he wrote categorically that the Yao chiefs were all
completely loyal. Two months later, his successor in Chiradzulu reported that
the chiefs were being cooperative in providing road repair labour.
The British decided to seize the opportunity of the Yao chiefs' goodwill and to
proceed, years in advance of anywhere else in the Southern Province, with
the implementation of the DANO (1912) and with the appointment of
Principal Headmen and village headmen to assume the duties laid down by
the ordinance.[111] In their embrace of the Yao chiefs what the British
were searching for some analogue to the English class system. The Principal
Headmen were, after all, being incorporated into the colonial bureaucracy,
some way down the ladder from the district commissioners, but nonetheless
needing to display some of the same natural ability to govern.
The problem, given the masses of Africans all remarkably alike in their
material poverty, was how to distinguish which ones were the natural
gentlemen. With Christianity and mission education threatening to produce
an African bourgeoisie hostile to colonialism, and yet with an official embrace
of Islam a political
― 170 ―
― 171 ―
figures are available until the mid-1920s, but descriptions of the crop make
it clear that this was a development of great importance to the country's
economy. By 1930 tobacco grown and cured by Africans represented almost
75 per cent of Nyasaland's tobacco exports. It was the ethnically specified
redistribution of power on the Shire Highlands which provided much of the
opportunity for this expansion in production as chiefs could use Nguru labour
to produce the crop in exchange for permission to settle.[114]
The fallout from the Chilembwe Rising, the demands of the war, and the
desire for bureaucratic convenience had all made the Yao chiefs seem
indispensable to the British. DANO proved its worth during World War I in
suppressing opposition to colonialism, in keeping the supplies of labour
flowing, in getting cash crops grown and taxes collected, and in reducing
officialdom's bureaucratic burden. In the years after the war, therefore,
official support for the political and economic authority of the Yao ruling elite
continued to grow. And, as the alliance between the British administrators
and the Yao elite deepened, the British came to see the Yao, their chosen
instruments in Indirect Rule, as a people with a real history, in marked
contrast to other local Africans, who had only customs and folklore. In 1919
Yohanna B. Abdallah's The Yaos was published in Zomba by the Government
Printing Office in both Yao and English versions. Abdallah's aim was to 'write
a book all about the customs of we Yaos, so that we remind ourselves
whence we sprang and of our beginnings as a nation'.[115] It is significant
that Abdallah was a priest of the Anglican Universities Mission to Central
Africa, the first African to be so ordained in Nyasaland. Thus his book
effectively made the point that some Yao were not Muslims: they were loyal
members of the Church of England.
During the 1930s the contrasts between the Yao and Nguru 'tribes' were
made in ever starker terms. In 1936, for example, a district officer produced
an evolutionary account of Yao history that was even more useful to the
British administration than Abdallah's had been. According to him, the Yao
had their origins in Mozambique as family units, small matrilineal
communities often living many miles apart. Because of threats from the
Portuguese and Arabs of the East Coast, they coalesced into larger
communities, living under chiefs who were responsible for organizing their
security. The chief who led in war came from the largest of the various units
that had amalgamated. Then there were coalitions of the larger groupings,
the family units having thus evolved into the 'tribe' or the sub-sections of
the 'tribe' under powerful chiefs. At this stage of development, which
coincided with the migrations into Nyasaland, there were thus three levels of
power among the Yao: the paramount chiefs, the subordinate chiefs, and the
village lineage head. Although the paramount was basically a military figure,
his position 'rested largely on his reputation for fairness'. No Yao paramount
had the power of a Zulu or Ngoni chief: if the Zulu chief was like Caesar, the
Yao paramount was more like an English prime minister! The Yao, then,
were a tribe with a true history: they had evolved through the proper stages
into something like a nation.
The Nguru, according to the official's investigations, had evolved in just the
opposite direction. Originally united under the chieftaincy of Mwatunga, the
tribe had disintegrated into family groups taking their names from their
relationship to Mwatunga's respective wives. Thus the Nguru were no longer
a 'tribal unit'. Even the name 'Anguru' as a term of unification was only a
fiction, this discovery by a twist of colonial thinking being adduced as fresh
proof of their intrinsic inferiority.[116]
This vision of the Nguru as inherently inferior beings was both a reflection of,
― 172 ―
and rationalization for, their subordinate social position in the area's political
economy. As such, it was reinforced as a result of changes in Nyasaland's
economy in the Depression years. European planters and Yao chiefs alike
had encouraged Nguru settlement for decades, and as a result of these
policies there was a severe overpopulation of the Shire Highlands and a
serious threat of soil erosion. In response to this situation, then, certain
planters tried to evict what they now viewed as 'surplus' Nguru. While
concerned about the ecological problem, the government opposed this plan
because of the congestion that existed already on Crown Land and because
the Nguru were living in such abiding poverty and insecurity that there was a
likelihood that they might stage a bloody revolt if subjected to any further
pressures.[117]
To many it was already clear that the only solution lay in the purchase by
the government of the largely unused European-held estates, the abolition of
the thangata system, and the general relief of congestion in the Shire
Highlands by land settlement schemes. The public debate about the role of
the Nguru became extraordinarily virulent. Spokesmen for planters who had
begun to fear that they might be displaced by the very Nguru whom they
had themselves settled on their land lashed out in letters to the Nyasaland
Times . Why should Britons die, raged one, 'to make Nyasaland a safe
boozing den for alien Nguru?' There was insufficient space in the newspaper,
clamoured another, to show 'from the history of these people the steps by
which they became in turn slave-trading gangsters, irregular soldiers,
cringing-starving-unclothed refugees, and finally under a safe benign
government: drunken, slothful and vicious'. The older colonial historiography
had been turned on its head: all along it had been the Nguru who were the
slave traders; they were 'candid bandits, their prey human flesh and blood,
and having gorged like hyenas, they then returned to Manguru for the most
part replete'.[118] The wheel of European opinion had come full circle: the
former 'raw Anguru' who had been welcomed for decades as cheap workers
were now cannibals!
With his long experience of both Nyasaland and Mozambique, Bandawe was
ideally placed to become a spokesman for the despised Nguru peoples. He
understood the goals of Indirect Rule and the room for manoeuvre they
offered. He began to speak of 'a vast country' east of Lake Chirwa,
extending from Yao country to the north to Sena territory to the south, from
the Nyasaland border east to the Indian Ocean. It was a country populated
by 'the mighty Lomwe tribe' and its 'sub-tribes', all of whom looked to the
Namuli hills, the heartland of the Lomwe people, as their ancestral home.
These were arguments the administration understood.
― 173 ―
Unlike the Northern and Southern Provinces, it" was also remarkably
homogeneous culturally, with the Chewa language spoken throughout. The
― 174 ―
Yet despite the continued stability of the Chewa culture and way of life, a
mounting resentment against colonialism developed in the inter-war years.
This resentment centred on economic issues. In 1920 two planters seeking
to expand tobacco production leased 2000 acres near Lilongwe. It was the
start of a new industry which grew rapidly. The tobacco grown was the fire-
cured dark leaf type which had been first grown in 1916 in the Southern
Province, and it quickly attracted African peasant growers. Even in the mid-
1930s, when the first tobacco rush was over, only some 30,000 acres had
passed into European hands compared to the million acres held by planters
in the south. There was no thangata system and, though labour could be
tied to planters or buyers through a variety of devices, all labour was paid.
Finally, there were no Nguru immigrants from Mozambique to be used by
planters or by chiefs and headmen as captive tobacco growers. Principal
Headmen who wished to have their tobacco grown cheaply had to resort to
using tax defaulters. The tobacco boom in the Central Province was thus a
very different affair from that of the south. There was plenty of fertile land
available together with large supplies of firewood for curing the leaves, and
there was a population experienced in the production of indigenous tobacco
and eager to exploit the new opportunities. In 1924 an official observed that
there was little likelihood of Africans turning to migrant labour as they now
had 'a method of earning money without having to work for somebody else,
which is just what the natives were longing for'.[125] As the Central
Province was opened to road traffic, the number of African growers
increased from 900 to over 33,000.
The very success of African peasant tobacco production, however, soon led
to state intervention. The arrival in tobacco areas of buyers eager to
purchase African grown tobacco shattered earlier monopsonistic marketing
arrangements and resulted in a quick rise in producer prices. This annoyed
government officials, who deeply distrusted African initiative. Listening to
the complaints of the local white oligarchy, they determined that European
interests should have first priority and that Africans should be 'encouraged'
to work for whites: 'The education value to Natives who engage in this sort
of work is great and for some time to come better results will on the whole
be obtained from this work than by production by Natives working for
themselves.'[126]
Starting from this clear racial and class bias against African endeavour, the
officials began controlling what they had had no part in establishing.
Asserting that open competition for tobacco was bad for the African growers,
they explained state intervention by declaring that they were seeking a
'rationalized'
― 175 ―
one cannot help feeling that as a primary producer he has been the
plaything of the rapacious middleman, and that the Native Tobacco
Board has done remarkably little—beyond collecting an enormous
revenue for itself—in the way of protecting him from these powerful
interests.[132]
― 176 ―
During the 1940s and 1950s, African discontent in the Northern Province
over labour migrancy, in the Southern Province over the thangata system
and Yao chiefly dominance, and in the Central Province over economic
policies all came to be subsumed in a country-wide hostility to the state's
agricultural policies. By the end of the 1930s, Nyasaland's agricultural
experts had become convinced that there was an ecological crisis in the
making. Problems of deforestation, soil erosion, and soil exhaustion loomed
ever more prominent in official reports, holding out the prospect that
Nyasaland might soon be unable to feed itself. There were various reasons
for this problem, some national and some regional. The first was simply that
population had increased to a point where in many parts of the country the
carrying capacity of the soil had been exceeded.[136] The country was, in
the context of east central Africa, a relatively hospitable territory, and at the
beginning of the British occupation the population was already fairly dense.
With increased security and improved medical facilities, especially in the
form of anti-smallpox vaccine, the population grew. To it were added tens of
thousands of immigrants from Mozambique. In 1945, the census reported an
average population density of 56 persons per square mile, with as many as
310 persons in the most densely populated areas.[137]
The second reason was linked to the first and lay in the nature of the
country's agricultural systems. Throughout the country, but especially in its
northern half, with its dry Brachystegia woodland and relatively lower
rainfall, successful subsistence cultivation depended on giving the land long
periods of rest, often extending to twenty or thirty years. Without such
respite, the humus quickly vanished under strong sun and leaching rains.
Such systems were appropriate to the country's ecological demands, but
they depended on the abundance of two things: land and labour. In the
overpopulated areas, in particular in the Shire Highlands and the lower Shire
Valley, there was no longer land available for such fallowing. As a
consequence, the soils of most of the heavily populated districts began to
decline in fertility. By contrast, in the north of the country, where land
remained relatively plentiful, it was labour that was lacking. Labour migrancy
had drained the region of its men since the 1890s, and the labour necessary
to open fallow land for cultivation, thus ensuring that the land already under
cultivation could return to fallow, was simply not available. Again, the soils
of the region suffered from excessive use.[138]
A third reason for the crisis lay in the effects of the tobacco boom itself. Soil
erosion and soil exhaustion were occurring both on African land and on the
European estates, where, for example, tobacco was planted on ridges
descending
― 177 ―
To the aggregation of these problems the government offered one major and
several minor solutions. The minor solutions included the gradual purchase
of unused estate land for resettlement and a legal requirement that the big
tea and tobacco estates grow their own food for their workers. A 'yeoman
farmers' programme was also created that involved special allocation of
land, distribution of free seed, fertilizer and advice, and the payment of cash
bonuses for work well done to a select few, a plan that was generally
unpopular because of its perceived unfairness. And in the Central Province,
where policies of the Native Tobacco Board had already alienated thousands,
the government took yet another step against African producers. By the late
1940s many producers had begun to produce large quantities of maize for
the market to earn the money they needed. The state reacted to this
initiative as it had towards tobacco growing in the 1930s, especially after a
severe famine in 1949 had underscored the fragility of the country's
agricultural systems.[145] Because agricultural experts asserted that mono-
cropping maize was injurious both to soil fertility and soil structure, the state
intervened in the 1950s, reducing prices paid for maize, abolishing many
marketing facilities for it, and even uprooting growing maize, all in the hope
of forcing a reduction in maize production.[146] This further fuelled African
discontent.
― 178 ―
Third, and most important of all, it was over the issue of contour ridging that
truly national politics finally came to Nyasaland. To the Africans, the fact that
ridging was compulsory was another example of colonial brutality. To the
administrators and agricultural experts, African resistance to ridging was
another example of peasant conservatism and irrationality which had to be
overcome with force if necessary. No other issue—not even the political
question of the creation of the Federation of the Rhodesias and Nyasaland
itself—generated such united mass protest at the village level as it became
mixed with the political turmoil that surrounded the creation of the new
Federation. This protest provided ample grounds for the Malawi Congress
Party to mobilize an anti-colonial nationalism throughout the entire country,
regardless of the presence or absence of local ethnic ideologies.[148]
In the 1950s the twin issues of the Federation of Rhodesia and Nyasaland
and the colonial government's agricultural and soil conservation policies
galvanized opposition to the state at all levels of Nyasaland's society and
throughout the country. The result was the creation of a coalition of interests
that revivified the moribund Nyasaland African Congress. After the return of
Kamuzu Banda to the country in 1958 after a long absence overseas,
organizational work aimed at exploiting village-level discontent was
accelerated and marshalled widespread popular support—notably in the
Central Province, hitherto outside the currents of African politics in
Nyasaland. In 1960 the Congress changed its name to the Malawi Congress
Party (MCP).
The coalition that comprised the MCP proved strong enough to undermine
the Federation and win self-government in 1964. These were the aims of all
its members and the extent of their vision. Yet Congress was nonetheless a
coalition of widely differing interests. Although these interests were
essentially economic in nature, through the limitations of Congress's own
analyses they came to be expressed largely in terms of ethnicity and
regionalism. For the Livingstonia-educated Tumbuka-speakers of the north,
politics was still fundamentally about the possibilities of African
advancement. The language campaigns of the 1930s had been fought to
protect the interests of those Tumbuka-speakers educated in
― 179 ―
Politics in the Central Province, where mission education had had far less
impact and Chewa cultural institutions had largely endured, were, by further
contrast, essentially about agricultural policy. From the days of the tobacco
boom of the 1920s and the confrontations with the state about pricing and
buying policies for tobacco and maize in subsequent decades, spokesmen for
the local Chewa-speakers had sought to secure for Africans all the
opportunities of the European planter and the Asian trader. One of the most
consistent claims of the new President of Malawi, Kamuzu Banda, himself a
Chewa from the Central Province, was that Africans should be allowed to
grow anything and to engage freely in business.
Part of the reason why this pattern appeared lay in the history of the
Congress Party itself and the way its political coalition was built up. Tensions
within it, dating from as early as the 1940s and springing from the different
regional perceptions of the main goals of the struggle against Federation,
had acquired a
― 180 ―
And I am happy that because of my harping on the fact that all the
people here are, in fact, Chewa, not Mang'anja, the people
themselves have realised and admitted the truth, this pleases me.
The reasons why the Cabinet Crisis took on an anti-northern aspect were
rather different, for northern leaders had long been at the very heart of the
nationalist struggle and had supplied many of the movement's foremost
intellectuals. The difficulty with the northerners lay in the conflict between
their education and President Banda's vision of the nature of the future
Malawi. As the planters' spokesman, R.S. Hynde, had expressed it to the
commissioners enquiring into the Chilembwe Rising in 1915, 'This country is
agricultural and there is no room for the highly educated native.'[158] If it
seems excessive to suggest that President Banda, so far from being a
reincarnated John Chilembwe, is closer to being a reincarnated Governor Sir
George Smith, the fact nonetheless remains that the philosophy and the
practice of government evolved by the British in response to the Chilembwe
Rising show marked similarities to those espoused by President Banda
himself.
― 181 ―
Both the colonial rulers and the post-colonial ruler have assumed that
paternalism—the landowner dealing with his peasants, the chief with his
subjects, the master with his servants, the President with his people—
constitutes the form of government best suited both to the economy and the
general temperament of Malawians. President Banda, in the process of
acquiring a plethora of plantations for himself, appropriated the planters'
ideology as well.[159] Bizarrely, but entirely logically, President Banda
made speeches boasting that the clinics and schools on his own estates were
superior to those available from the state. In this situation, the aspirations of
northern and southern intellectuals for African advancement on the basis of
education and merit posed a double threat in 1964: the threat of a
bureaucracy dominated by those who were not members of President
Banda's own broadly defined 'Chewa' political base, and the threat of the
evolution and entrenchment of an educated middle class that might
challenge the personalized patron-client relationship of the President with
'his' people.
President Banda turned to patronage to cement ties with his loyal political
base. The most profitable segment of the agricultural economy at
independence was the European tea and tobacco estate sector. After
independence, the state began acquiring European tobacco estates and
reselling them to members of the petty bourgeoisie who had remained loyal
to Banda. Necessary loans came from the state's agricultural marketing
board, which in effect transferred capital obtained from the peasantry to the
new bourgeoisie through its control of prices paid for peasant-produced
commodities.[160] Furthermore, the Malawi Land Act of 1965 gave the
President the power to grant private estates on leasehold over huge areas of
the country, including even areas developed for peasant agriculture under
the aegis of international agencies.[161] Through these two means,
President Banda was able to consolidate his ties of patronage with his
chosen political allies and, by retaining the power to revoke leases, could at
the same time ensure that no independent bourgeoisie would emerge to
challenge him.[162]
As culture broker for the Chewa, Banda had a broader vision, however, than
formulating an ideological statement for his ethnic group alone. He has
instead
― 182 ―
The transformation of the nyau from the sign of backwardness to the symbol
of authenticity was achieved with the aid of expatriate Africanist scholars,
analogues of the Tumbuka's Cullen Young and the Ngoni's Margaret Read.
Matthew Schoffeleers and Ian Linden, in their work, found great favour
among Chewa-speaking intellectuals.[170] Schoffeleers was especially
important because of his depiction of nyau as not only being at the very
centre of Chewa art and culture, but, even more importantly, at the very
root of Chewa resistance to colonialism and western cultural imperialism.
With his timely writings, Schoffeleers became the source of a usable past for
the developing ideology of the present.
By the same token, work at the University of Malawi on the history of the
Yao has been highly revisionistic, concerned with demolishing the myths of
Yao nationhood established in the inter-war period and with providing a
history in terms of which the Yao are shown to have been defeated,
scattered and politically disunited peoples with but limited territorial claims.
This work has also stressed that many 'Yao' and 'Lomwe' people really
belong to the Chewa group.[171] The message from the late 1960s into the
1980s was clear: the Chewa people and Chewa culture was the core of
modern Malawi by right of being most ancient and least compromised by
colonialism, and Malawi culture would be considered synonymous with
Chewa culture.
― 183 ―
population, held over 50 per cent of the places, while southerners comprised
most of the rest.[173] The established influence of educated northerners
and southerners had to be lessened directly.
The first, appropriately symbolic signal of this attack upon northern influence
occurred in mid-1968, when Tumbuka, the symbol of northern regionalism
since the early 1930s, was abolished as an official language and Chewa was
made the sole national language. No longer could Tumbuka be used in the
press or on the radio, a situation which resulted in bitter resentment
throughout the Northern Region, a resentment made worse by Chewa-
speakers' triumphal assertions that other peoples of the country were
cultureless because 'they had no language'. Soon afterwards, the
Parliamentary Secretary for Education announced that all school-children
who failed their required examination in the now-required courses in Chewa
would have to re-sit all their examinations.[174] Soon afterwards, the
establishment of the Malawi Examinations Board to replace the Cambridge
Overseas Examination was followed by a change in examination grading
policy which required both northerners and southerners to obtain
considerably higher grades in their school-leaving examinations than those
in the Central Region if they were to qualify for places in the secondary
schools. While economic opportunities were channelled to the people of the
Central Region, then, school fees throughout the country were raised
considerably, making access to education in the north and the south
comparatively more difficult. The University of Malawi, the source of future
bureaucrats and teachers, was systematically purged of its non-Chewa
administrators and faculty in the early 1970s as part of an attempt to make
it a secure seat for the elaboration of a Chewa ethos by loyal Chewa-
speakers. Finally, to remove non-Chewa officers from the civil service, a
mandatory retirement age of fifty was imposed and large numbers of
northerners and southerners thereby retired. Non-Chewa-speaking
northerners and southerners were also removed from other positions of
authority through widespread and arbitrary detentions, especially between
1973 and 1976.[175]
The plain fact is that, however inappropriate their dream of solving Malawi's
problems through control by an educated bureaucracy might have been, the
general clamp-down on non-Chewa intellectuals in independent Malawi has
been profoundly damaging. There has been no serious public discussion in
President Banda's Malawi of the problems the country has encountered since
independence:
― 184 ―
the impact of the oil crisis; South Africa's policy of regional destabilization;
the collapse of the country's economy in the late 1970s and its takeover by
the International Monetary Fund; or the exceedingly high rate of population
growth in a country of limited resources. The Cabinet Crisis, despite its
central significance to Malawi's history and despite the fact that it occurred
well over twenty years ago, remains a wholly embargoed topic. The names
of those who contributed to the rise of Malawian nationalism in the 1950s
can be mentioned only in secret. During the show trial of Orton and Vera
Chirwa in 1984, when Vera Chirwa began her testimony with the statement,
'When I founded the Malawi Women's League . . .', a tremor of excitement
ran through the spectators. The simplest historical fact has become
subversive.
In this closed atmosphere, rumours of ethnic conspiracies abound. Such
rumours serve as explanations for people who lack explanations: they arise
when an intellectually closed society turns in on itself in search of
scapegoats. The language of this discourse in rumour largely takes the form
of crude ethnic stereotypes that derive from the colonial period's experience
of uneven development. With meaningful analysis by Malawians of the
problems that face Malawi remaining proscribed, there is the real danger
that the ethnic explanations that are now current will be the only ones
available for future discussion, a legacy of the past that will increase the
likelihood of communal violence in the country at times of political transition.
6—
History, Ethnicity and Change in the 'Christian
Kingdom' of Southeastern Zaire
Allen F. Roberts
― 194 ―
If these are the ways identity is determined, such people must have a
different sense of history from that of Westerners. In the 1950s, Ian
Cunnison wrote a book and several papers on the 'Luapula people',
describing how they have come from lands and tribes around the southern
end of Lake Mweru to settle in the Luapula River valley.[12] His use of the
term 'people' is meant to reflect a common lifestyle and purpose of
immigrants from a range of diverse backgrounds. Indeed, a new 'tribe' called
'Shila'—also a group drawn from many ethnic origins who settled along the
shores of Lake Mweru to engage in fishing—has come into being in recent
years, as export of fish to Copperbelt markets has become a lucrative
pursuit. Among these 'Luapula people', or 'Shila', are many from northeast
of Lake Mweru, who may call themselves 'Tabwa', as do those I have
studied. Cunnison's ilyashi, which 'implies the affairs and cases of the past
which make the present affairs what they are', will be detailed as the
background for 'mulandu, which is a present affair or case'.[13] For these
people, then, 'histories . . . are particular' and 'known well only to the groups
which partook in the events enumerated. More accurately, a history is
always and only the history of a group. . . . There is no coherent wider
history.' As Cunnison notes, 'the facts for a universal history are there, but
they are concentrated in the histories of the various groups, and only a few
of these facts will have become diffused into current circulation; and of
these, some people will pick up some, others will learn a different set'[14]
—or, perhaps more appropriately, factions will compose and use a different
set, according to goals of the moment.
Conflict which surfaces as a dispute was often begun long before, and will
just as often continue long after resolution of current difficulty. Milandu, too,
are open-ended, although there may be discrete stories in a longer account;
further incidents are added as they happen or become necessary in a given
situation. In this they are like syntagmatic chains, with paradigms of stories
within which there
― 195 ―
are further paradigmatic sets allowing for the change of characters or other
secondary elements to suit the needs of particular narrators in particular
situations. Metaphors are important to this last process, since references to,
say, animals or celestial phenomena in turn bring to mind a cosmology in
which corresponding values, hence attitudes, are implied. Each character
fitted into these slots may be more or less elaborated depending upon the
point to be made in the particular narration.
Once such a basic structure is recognized, then, when the researcher obtains
a given version, told on a particular occasion by a particular narrator to a
particular audience, that has characters different from those of another
version of the same basic story, one must determine why each version was
told in order to understand the change in dramatis personae . In other
words, such differences are a product of history, as an outside observer
would see it, even as they are history to the narrator and his audience.[17]
Tabwa history, then, like that Cunnison found among the Luapula peoples, is
particular, 'always and only the history of a group'.[18] It is worth noting
that in other contexts Tabwa culture provides other opportunities for debate,
and that ambiguity is part and parcel of Tabwa existence. Divination, for
instance, is a principal process by which misfortune—the breach of
expectation, a threat to order and existence—is assigned cause. Tabwa have
a number of different sorts of divination, but the principle of each of them is
the same: the diviner provides a parable (a dream, often elaborated while
using an oracular device) and the supplicants must then imagine what
content can and must fill such a 'pronominal structure', as Christopher
Davis-Roberts calls it. 'To the family would fall the task of determining . . .
how this pronominal structure, when inserted into their past might so alter it
(or their sense of it) that present action could, in its turn, transform their
future into what they would wish'. As she adds,
Stefano Kaoze (c. 1885–1951) of the Marungu Massif was, in 1917, the first
Congolese ordained a Catholic priest. He was also an ardent proponent of
black consciousness and a patriot of his Sanga clan and a 'Tabwa' tribe; his
ministry, writings and participation in a number of colonial councils made
Kaoze, more than any other individual, 'father' of a growing Tabwa ethnic
awareness. A recent hagiography, Stefano Kaoze: prêtre d'hier et
d'aujourd'hui, has been prepared by
― 196 ―
Kaoze was born during the turbulent 1880s when the disruption from slaving
southwest of Lake Tanganyika by Nyamwezi settlers, Zanzibari and other
coastal people and their recruits from the Tanzanian interior, and ambitious
Tabwa chiefs anxious to share in the plunder, was at its greatest. Nature
seemed in revolt: people were beset by smallpox epidemics, epizoötics,
plagues of locusts, famine; brilliant Sungrazer comets appeared 'importing
change of Times and States'; and the landscape changed radically as the
level of Lake Tanganyika suddenly plunged several metres when the Lukuga
River burst through barriers to empty into the Congo/Zaire watershed.[21]
Not the least of these great changes was occasioned by the arrival of Emile
Storms of the International African Association (IAA) at Mpala in 1883.
While the stated aims of the IAA were to gain scientific knowledge of the
Central African interior, to assist missionary and commercial travellers, and
to join in the suppression of slavery, Storms had a second, secret directive
from the IAA's patron, Leopold II, King of the Belgians. He was to establish a
strong presence in the area and thus lend legitimacy to the king's eventual
claim to the Congo Basin.[22] 'A clever diplomatist', Storms made blood
pacts and signed treaties with local chiefs.[23] While he considered such
accords 'the height of ridiculousness' unless tribute were paid to
demonstrate that the chief had become his 'vassal',[24] the treaties were
thereafter defined as 'concessions' used to divest local leaders of their
sovereignty upon the creation of the Congo Free State in 1885.[25]
Furthermore, Storms, feeling that 'all authority which is not based upon
force is null and illusory',[26] pursued a 'game of wars and allegiances'
which included the armed conquest of several important chiefs around
Lubanda.[27]
Father Isaac Moinet by 1885 had already founded and overseen three
Catholic mission stations along the western shore of Lake Tanganyika. His
'taste for authority' and knowledge of how and when to impose himself were
capacities necessary to the task of occupying the void left by the 'chief of
chiefs', Emile Storms. Moinet twitted the lieutenant, asking what name he
should assume as successor to the 'throne' of 'His Majesty Emile the First,
King of Tanganyika', and signing a letter to Storms, 'I. Moinet, Acting King of
Mpala'.[31] Joking aside, however, Moinet and his associate, Father Auguste
Moncet, had adopted with fervour the dream of Cardinal Lavigerie, founder
of the White Fathers, to create a Christian Kingdom in the heart of
Africa;[32] and they saw Storms's 'territory' as 'the nucleus of a power, of a
Christian Kingdom' so desired.[33]
Catholics in Europe at that time were humiliated by their losses in the Papal
Wars in Italy, pressed by aggressive Freemasonry and Liberal politics, and in
France, reduced to 'émigrés de I'intérieur' of their own homeland. Lavigerie
rallied their enthusiasm. 'Was it not possible that ground lost in Europe
might be made good in Africa?'[34] In planning the evangelization of lands
along Lake Tanganyika, the Cardinal posited three goals which reflected the
'very grave perils' menacing, indeed besieging, his world: to introduce
Catholicism and thus block Protestant expansion into the Congo basin from
outposts such as that of the London Missionary Society, on Lake Tanganyika
since 1879;[35] to defy the 'Liberal Materialism' of the Freemasons,
Socialists and Protestants 'conniving' within the ranks of the IAA; and to
prevent the spread of Islam in the wake of slaving by Muslims from the East
Coast or those in their employ.[36] The prelate developed these ideas in the
late 1870s as he advocated the founding of new—and independent—
Apostolic Vicariates with 'their own special resources', men, and 'especially
their chiefs, whose presence alone will suffice to contain within appropriate
limits the representatives' of the IAA.[37]
Lavigerie felt that proselytism was most effective when a strong central
authority—a 'king' or 'paramount chief—could be converted to Christianity.
Given the anarchy the Cardinal believed to reign in Central Africa, such a
person, if trained and aided by European Christians in 'means of action,
attack and defence unknown to other Blacks', could then 'rapidly dominate a
considerable part of the African interior, and that day, Christianity will be
established.'[38] For some time, Mutesa, Kabaka of Buganda, was
considered a likely candidate, and Lavigerie's man, Leopold-Louis Joubert,
prepared himself to become 'Minister of War to His Black Majesty,
Mutesa'.[39] The Lunda Empire of the Mwata Yamvo was considered for a
Third African Vicariate, but both projects were scrapped because of shifts in
local politics.[40] Lavigerie had foreseen the difficulty of finding an apt
choice among existing African leaders: 'it would not be impossible . . . for a
brave and Christian European to fill this [responsibility].'[41] Two years
after Storms's 'empire' was ceded to Lavigerie's White Fathers, the cardinal
announced, with reference to the feisty ex-Papal Zouave he had proposed as
Mutesa's 'war minister', that 'if Joubert wishes the title of King, we shall give
it to him', and that Joubert's would be 'the crown of Marungu'.[42] 'Le saint
Joubert', as Lavigerie also called him, soon became a hero of mythical
proportions along the southwestern shore of Lake Tanganyika, and a fit
successor to 'Emile the First, Emperor of Tanganyika'.[43]
― 198 ―
The criteria of sovereignty for a modern state vary,[49] but usually include
defined borders which will be defended, often with a standing army; a
monopoly on the use of force, a penal code and a system of courts for those
seeking redress; a monetary system, markets and organized export/import;
a system for indoctrination through an avowed ideology and state religion.
'Mpala Territory' had all these 'official' attributes, their underlying political
structures, and more. Most importantly, the 'government' could and did
intervene in every sphere of local activity, thus continually reaffirming the
identity of the Territory as opposed to the rest of the Free State surrounding
it. In terms of 'state cosmology', the confines of the Territory were inhabited
by 'our people', while those outside dwelt in 'the Empire of the Demon'.[50]
Entry to the closed system of the Fathers was only by a long and difficult
process. 'Finding themselves excluded from . . . the most sacred of our
mysteries, the catechumens better feel their state of inferiority vis-à-vis the
Christians, and their desire to receive baptism becomes more vivid for
this.'[51]
The limit of Joubert's direct authority appears to have been a radius of about
three days' hiking from the mission at the mouth of the Lufuko. Beyond this,
many others gave him their allegiance, from the Lake Mweru region in the
southwest to beyond the Lukuga River in the north. To these he sent armed
support in time of need, and to some even farther afield, powder and an
invitation to move closer to him.[52] The Christian Kingdom could exist as a
de facto colony or state because the missionaries constituted the only
effective European presence along the western shores of the lake.[53]
Whereas Joubert's powers were unrivalled by the Congo Free State for some
time, they were severely tested on a number of occasions by slavers, local
insurgents, and later, by mutinous Congolese soldiers. The Captain raised a
force of loyalists and threatened counter-attack if tribute were not brought
manifesting subservience to him. Some deferred, others resisted. Those
most loyal to Joubert (like Storms before him) were typically of one clan,
those rebellious, of another. Allies were rewarded, and tended to continue in
the good graces of the various administrators through the following
decades.[54] The Sanga, or 'Bushpig' clan of Stefano Kaoze was the one
most often rebellious in the early years; this disallowed the favour of
government recognition later on.
― 199 ―
the missionary sphere could be excessively brutal. The White Fathers took
full advantage of this as they retrenched, proving to loyalists that the
Christian Kingdom was yet a vital haven.
Our Christians prefer to bring their little affairs before their Father,
than before this stranger who appears every two or three years.
Better for them is a paternal punishment at the mission than the
obligation to travel three or four weeks from the mission to court,
to return, still without judgment.[59]
Second, the matter of money and taxes was another in which the White
Fathers demonstrated their insularity. In July of 1911, the old pesas of the
first phase of the Christian Kingdom were recalled, and new ones bearing a
distinctive anchor and wording were struck at Baudouinville Mission.
Labourers could choose payment in either colonial francs or mission pesas,
although only the latter would be accepted at the mission store. In 1908, a
government agent came to collect taxes. The priests' feeling was that the
people were being sought only in the
― 200 ―
― 201 ―
which would belong solely to the church.[65] Months later, Roelens would
found just such a mission at what would be called Baudouinville (now
Kirungu, adjacent to Moba); a year after his arrival in Central Africa, he was
promoted to Apostolic Administrator for the Vicariate of Upper Congo, and in
1895, Roelens was nominated as Apostolic Vicar.[66]
The latest version is that Kaoze's great uncle (MoMoBr), who was of 'dour
and jealous character', resented the popularity of his niece, Kaoze's mother;
rather than endure his 'intrigues', the woman moved to the village of her
brother, very near where the Kirungu mission would be founded shortly
thereafter. When the priests opened a primary school in the area, Kaoze was
an early student. This plausible account is appropriate today when
stereotypes and ancient conflicts are to be forgotten, not exacerbated.
Appended to it is an assertion by Kaoze's surviving kinsmen (men sufficiently
young that they could not know what sort of character Kaoze's great uncle
may have had) and by the authors that the dramatic events of earlier
versions are incorrect; and a request that 'to be true to observed facts, we
hope that these rectifications will be taken into consideration in future
publications, especially at the beginning of this second century of our
Evangelization'.[71] This is an honourable position, to be sure, but one
based upon a Eurocentric perception of absolute history which overlooks the
allegorical nature of even this last version (MoMoBr as 'bad guy'). The
authors cite a once-removed statement by Kaoze himself to the effect that
he knew nothing of these early years. The objectification of Kaoze in these
accounts—the latest included—must be
― 202 ―
However one reconstructs this past, the underlying message is that Kaoze's
transition from village to mission was not easy for him or for his family;
other stories of the resistance of his mother's brother to his continued
schooling underscore the same point.[72] From passages cited by Kimpinde,
it would seem that Kaoze himself sought separation and was attracted to the
classroom as a context for an enquiring mind beyond that of other boys his
age. His quickness with languages (Latin and Flemish, as well as Swahili and
French), his capacity to grasp the abstractions of an alien philosophy taught
at the seminary, and his growing sense—evidenced in his letters and
manuscripts—of how to use such forms of thought for political goals, indicate
his exceptional intellect.
The White Fathers' schools at Mpala and other missions southwest of Lake
Tanganyika began as orphanages to accommodate purchased slaves and
other youngsters like Kaoze, who were attracted in a variety of ways,
including coercion. Their organization in early years 'resembled . . . more an
agricultural colony than a school', although the orphanages soon became
'places for religious instruction and Christian education from which fervent
and exemplary Catholics should emerge'.[73] 3 Shortly after his arrival,
Victor Roelens proposed the founding of a school for catechists at Mpala,
which opened in 1893. Because of his peculiarly negative view of Africans,
Roelens, 'more than other vicars apostolic, felt that only a radical
transformation [and separation] of the African from his milieu could lead him
to become fully Christian'. Candidate catechists were selected among
orphans, and after four to six years' instruction, the missionaries chose
wives for them and sent them to settle in outlying villages.
Kaoze was among the earliest students and first catechists. His brilliance
noticed, Kaoze was admitted when a Lower Seminary was begun at Mpala in
1899. By 1905 he was one of two continuing the course in Latin, and began
studying theology and philosophy in an Upper Seminary. He was transferred
to Moba/Kirungu when a sleeping-sickness epidemic struck Mpala, killing,
among hundreds of others, Kaoze's only fellow student. Kaoze was the joy of
his tutors, as he mastered even the most difficult subjects with ease.[76]
― 203 ―
equality existing among all human beings'. Kaoze's 'La psychologie des
Bantu ' resulted.[77] To seek to demonstrate that Africans were the equals
of Europeans implies that many thought they were not, and Kaoze
painstakingly demonstrated the existence of imagination, memory,
intelligence and other faculties among Africans, for his European readers. He
wrote in French, a language to which only seminarians in their last years of
training had access, which 'created a sensation in Europe at the time. It was
the first time that one read a text entirely in French written by an
African.'[78]
While Kaoze was developing his thesis proving the equality of Africans to
Europeans, Victor Roelens, his bishop and mentor, was working on his own
'Psychology of our Blacks.'[79] Roelens's 'Psychology' was the very
antithesis of Kaoze's, a racist diatribe in which he portrayed the African as
'an impulsive [being] who obeys, without great reflection, the dominant
impression of the moment'; for whom 'intelligence and will intervene rarely
in the habitual circumstances of his life'; whose intelligence 'atrophies under
the influence of the press of passions'; and whose 'capital defect' is 'egotism
—dominant sentiments: fear, self-interest'. While Roelens admitted that 'the
mentality of Blacks is an enigma for us', he explained that this is because of
the blacks' impulsiveness and other shortcomings.[80] Such profound
ambivalence (to use the kindest word possible) must have marked Kaoze:
even as the young man separated from his peers in personal and intellectual
development, he as a black was denied basic humanity by the very authority
figure who gave him shelter.
― 204 ―
Kaoze's own sense of ethnic identity, enhanced by racism in the Congo that
made it painfully obvious that blacks were not equal to whites, was given a
new dimension by a first-hand view of a Belgium riven by ethnic difference.
Most importantly, Kaoze, by being in Brussels at the end of 1920, was on the
periphery of the National Colonial Congress (to which it seems he was not
invited); in that context he met Panda Farnana, president of the Union
Congolaise, first Congolese to study agronomy in Belgium, and an outspoken
defender of the rights of colonized blacks. Panda addressed the sessions and
mentioned Kaoze as sharing his opinions on the oppression of Congolese.
Kimpinde correctly notes that Kaoze's encounter with Panda and his trip to
Europe more generally had the effect of 'opening his eyes', and it was soon
thereafter that Kaoze began his political writings with the first universal
history of the Tabwa.[86]
The first published works which delimited a distinct Tabwa ethnic identity
were a grammar and a Tabwa-French dictionary; a lexicon with a few
folktales in Tabwa was also prepared with the assistance of Kaoze, for use by
missionaries.[89] These documents undoubtedly served as 'literary
instruments' in a colonial context in which White Fathers wished to define
their sphere of politico-economic interests vis-à-vis claims of missionaries of
different denominations, or others who would infringe upon their
'sovereignty'.[90] Kaoze soon began a different task, by writing of Tabwa
history and culture in French, a language only a handful of Tabwa could
read. Kaoze's intended audience was not the Tabwa people, then: he would
engage the colonizers in a debate vital to him, concerning Tabwa and,
ultimately, his own identity.
The context for Kaoze's first historical writing is the following: White Fathers
at Kirungu had brought with them a man from north of Lake Tanganyika who
had been 'burgomaster' of the Christian village around their mission at
Kibanga near the Ubwari Peninsula until the mission was closed and moved
to Kirungu in 1893,
― 205 ―
Roelens and the White Fathers felt the implementation of this policy to be an
assault upon their prerogatives, a fragmentation of the Christian Kingdom
they still maintained, albeit in a less overt form than that of the late
nineteenth century. The Monsignor responded with a letter of his own to the
District Commissioner, to which he attached a document prepared for him by
Kaoze.[93] Roelens stated that he was astonished that administrators did
not seek information about local Africans from the missionaries among them,
and then reiterated some of the disparaging remarks current in the Belgian
press as penned by Liberals and Freemasons. In this particular case, he
admitted that one might assume him to be against Manda, since Bulani, the
mission chief, had been given lands once Manda's; but local people wanted
'nothing to do with Manda, who in their eyes is an intruder who has no right
to be chief. Kaoze's account affirmed this position.
― 206 ―
accepted as true, then once and for all Tabwa would have a universal history
proving the seniority of Kaoze's own clan.
Near the end of his life, Kaoze's involvement in local and colonial politics
intensified. His writings included general discussions of Tabwa culture,
including a version of the 'Table d'enquête' sent out from Maison Carrée to
White Fathers' posts, to gain a survey of ethnographic data on the peoples
they served. He had become so involved in such subjects that he asked his
bishop to relieve him of his duties as Superior of the Kala mission so that he
could dedicate his time and energy to his ethnographic researches. This was
in part as a preparation for his participation in colonial politics, for he was to
be a member of the Commission for the Protection of Natives. He would also
assist the Council of Government chaired by the Governor General, in
1946.[95] Here he represented Congolese in general, but Tabwa more
particularly. Kaoze continued in another arena as dear to him: he pursued
his contention that Manda of the Zimba clan was not the legitimate 'Grand
Chef of lands, including those of the Marungu Massif, which he believed
belonged to his own clan. One of his protégés in this was Kyando Polycarpe,
who just after Independence would become a firebrand leader of opposition
to Manda during days when all past authority was being questioned. Kyando
and several of his henchmen would be murdered then, apparently by Manda,
an event lost in the swirl of political strife and confusion of the moment, and
never officially investigated.[96]
Kaoze was not without his detractors, especially late in life as he rose to
local and colonial prominence. His political views were at variance with the
official colonial position, and he was virulently attacked by one administrator
in particular. Kaoze's madness during the last months of his life (1950–1)
has been attributed to this by a contemporary, and one violent argument
with the administrator seems to have sent Kaoze into a fit of depression
accompanied by crushing headaches.[97] 1 would suggest that this tragedy
was rooted more deeply.
Kaoze was rudely separated from his family and his peers, and learned a
Western philosophy at the seminary which assisted him in stepping outside
his culture to describe it as an ethnographer. A true intellectual, Kaoze would
synthesize the ideas of his people and write them as general history and
ethnography. In an important sense, he created the Tabwa as he did so.
Kaoze was also objectified from infancy, set apart, made an avatar of
change, a symbol to be taken in tow and shown about. In the process, he
became a spokesman for Tabwa and Congolese more generally. Tabwa
began calling him 'Mulopwe ', the Luba title for 'chief of the sacred fire, of
the sacred blood'; he was as influential as such a chief, and yet at the same
time he was separated from his people.[98] Through ordination, Kaoze was
taken into the priesthood and could eat with whites, ride a bicycle and
otherwise share in the trappings of power; but he was not white, and was
not an equal to his white colleagues. This other Tabwa saw.
A psychohistorian might find it relevant that in the course of Kaoze's
madness, after an initial incident late in 1949, he experienced a major
schizophrenic episode on Easter Day, 1950, and died exactly one year later,
on Easter Day,
― 207 ―
1951.[99] It might be argued that his was a 'created demise', and that
Kaoze internalized the intense irony, chastisement, and wrenching wounds
of an iniquitous colonial existence, to use some Biblical terms, suffered by all
Congolese. A parable told to me by the late Kizumina Kabulo captures
Kaoze's dilemma, even in death.
Upon dying, Kaoze went upwards to heaven (biaguni ), and stood in line to
pass through the Gates. To go to heaven, one must be called and possess a
letter to gain entry.[100] The other priests with Kaoze, all Europeans, were
admitted, leaving Kaoze to stand alone.
'No, they all have letters. You go down from here. You'll see a guardian
down below there, and perhaps that is your path.'
Kaoze returned downward, to Kibawa's, the place of the Tabwa dead. Kibawa
asked if Kaoze had not walked by the entrance to his cavern on his way to
heaven. Kaoze admitted that he had, but he had then lacked the letter
necessary to enter heaven. Kibawa shouted, 'Aha! Seize him! Tie him up!'
Kaoze was taken into Kibawa's and bound in his own rosary, as if in
chains.[101]
In the 1970s, people from Kalemie south into Zambia called themselves
'Tabwa' sometimes. Sanga clan members said Kaoze's history, written 'as a
book', was 'true, as books are'. Manda and his Zimba said Kaoze's history
was a lie, and the chief gave me a copy of his own written version of a
Tabwa universal history, as 'proof. In it, the same archetypal father,
Kyomba, appears as in Kaoze's history; yet for Manda, Kyomba's first wife
(and not his third, as Kaoze would have it) is his clan's genetrix, Kabamba
Mwenya, while Kaoze's Sanga ancestress, Bulanda, is Kyomba's third wife
and not his first.[102] Accordingly, the Zimba and not the Sanga are senior,
superior and legitimate rulers. The argument is not settled,[103] nor,
according to Tabwa logic evidenced in history through the mulandu story
form, can it be.
Conclusion
Finally, then, who are the Tabwa? In the 1880s and 1890s, people in
southeastern Zaire were made aware of an identity separate from others
surrounding them, as Storms of the IAA and Joubert and the White Fathers
after him, using superior arms and tactics, created an enclave of order in
trying times of slave-taking and pillage. During later colonial years the
difference was underscored by missionary proselytism, usurpation of local
economic and political prerogatives, early linguistic work, schools and
training programmes, the active efforts of an energetic bishop to retain
independence from the damning influences of Masonic administrators and
the corruption of urban life, and the growing pride of association with Kaoze,
the first Congolese priest. To be Tabwa could be profitable, when literate
workers and skilled craftsmen were few. Tabwa rose in local commerce and
ranks of government open to Africans, and during the independence and
subsequent secession of Katanga, they assumed important leadership
positions (e. g. Minister of Education in Tshombe's regime).
The feeling of separation from the rest of Zaire continues, but in significant
ways has been inverted from one of superiority to stigmatization. President
Mobutu, according to my informants, questions the loyalty of the Tabwa, as
theirpast enthusiasm for the Katanga state makes them untrustworthy.
Some Tabwa have changed their names from ones that make their ethnic
identity obvious, to others that sound like those of more favoured groups, so
as to find employment in
― 208 ―
7—
Patriotism, Patriarchy and Purity: Natal and
the Politics of Zulu Ethnic Consciousness[1]
Shula Marks
Introduction
In 1985 at least half the dead were shot by the police, and it would be
foolish to see the disturbance in simple racial terms. Political differences
between the newly formed United Democratic Front (UDF) and the Zulu
cultural movement, Inkatha, and sheer economic deprivation which led to
the looting of African as well as Indian traders, warn against any simple
equation of the violence with racially motivated anti-Indian sentiment per se
. Thus, according to the Weekly Mail :
Two weeks later there were further reports of people being killed in
Lamontville, allegedly by members of Inkatha impis, while its leader, Chief
Gatsha Buthelezi, denounced the African National Congress (ANC) for
wanting 'a bloodbath' in South Africa and was hailed in the media as a
peacemaker.[3] Three months later the unrest had still not subsided
completely, for there was an even more disturbing attack on Mpondo
workers in southern Natal, an attack promptly labelled 'faction fighting' by a
press ever ready to identify any conflict amongst Africans as 'tribalism'.
The attacks on the Indians, the members of the UDF, and the Mpondo were
widely believed to have been instigated by 'a few well-organized, tribal
"impis"', some of them deliberately brought in from rural Natal as vigilante
groups, allegedly to put an end to violence in the townships. They were
widely associated with Chief Buthelezi's Inkatha, although some of Inkatha's
own members have themselves suffered at their hands and its Central
Committee appears unable to control them. There is also some evidence of
collusion
― 216 ―
between the vigilante groups and the security forces.[4] As Sutcliffe and
Wellings point out,
Whether or not Inkatha has been directly implicated, these tragic events
reveal starkly the reactionary and conservative repercussions of 'cultural'
organizations which serve to glorify ethnic identity and heighten ethnic
consciousness. While the violence has to be understood in the context of the
gross overcrowding, high unemployment and intense poverty of Durban's
urban 'locations' and shanty towns, the attacks on both political dissidents
and minority groups also raise urgent questions about the apartheid state's
manipulation of ethnic politics in South Africa, questions which can in part be
addressed through an analysis of the role and nature of earlier cultural
ethnicity in Natal in the years prior to the riots of 1949.
About six million strong, the Zulu are the single largest ethnic group in
South Africa today, with relative linguistic and cultural homogeneity and a
proud military past centring around the monarchy.[8] It would nonetheless
be wrong to relate the pervasive cultural nationalism of Natal simply to the
historical existence of the Zulu kingdom, the most powerful and cohesive
state in southern Africa in the nineteenth century. Twentieth century ethnic
consciousness is not an
― 217 ―
Using the building blocks of past history, language and 'custom', twentieth
century ethnic consciousness has been the product of intense ideological
labour by the black intelligentsia of Natal and the white ideologues of South
Africa, designed to confront new and dangerous social conditions. The
paradoxes in this situation are apparent when it is appreciated that it was
the Christian African community—the amakholwa ('the converted')—many of
whose forebears had fled the Zulu kingdom in the nineteenth century, who
forged the cultural ethnic organizations in the twentieth. Thus, the first
Inkatha movement was founded by Solomon kaDinizulu, the son and heir of
the last Zulu king, in alliance with the Natal intelligentsia, so as to gain state
recognition for the Zulu monarchy and to pay off its not inconsiderable
debts. Despite the undisputed popular support which the Zulu royal house
enjoyed in the 1920s, the origin of Inkatha in 1922–4 owed as much to the
deliberate reconstruction by the Zulu royal family and the Natal intelligentsia
of 'traditional' institutions as to any spontaneous reaction of the Zulu
people.[10]
With the sharpening of class conflict and political militancy in Natal and
Zululand in the 1920s, the Zulu royal family and the traditionalism that it
represented constituted a bulwark against radical change—a bulwark as
much for the African intelligentsia as for the white ideologues of
segregation.[11] The heightened political militancy of Africans in the later
1920s, particularly in Durban and in rural Natal, led architects of segregation
such as G. N. Heaton Nicholls to perceive clearly the utility of ethnic-based
organizations in defusing class-based organizations and class
consciousness.[12] As Nicholls put it, 'If we do not get back to
communalism we will most certainly arrive very soon at communism.'[13]
For Nicholls, as for many others, there was a direct connection between
politics and 'racial purity'. Through 'Bantu communalism' and the bolstering
of the position of the Zulu monarchy, Nicholls also hoped to foster 'Bantu
race pride' and thus prevent that bogey of the white racist imagination,
miscegenation.[14]
In 1937 the Zulu Cultural Society was founded by Albert Luthuli, later to
become President of the ANC and a winner of the Nobel Prize.[15] In its
origins, it shared Inkatha's objective of fighting for state recognition of the
scion of the Zulu royal house as Paramount, and added to it a concern for
the preservation of Zulu tradition and custom at a time when these seemed
to be disintegrating in the face of the pressures of proletarianization and
urbanization. With the Zulu Regent, Mshiyeni kaDinizulu, and the South
African Minister of Native Affairs as patrons, the society was, par excellence,
an instrument of the Zulu Christian intelligentsia. It is not accidental that it
was Heaton Nicholls who persuaded the Native Affairs Department in
Pretoria to finance the Zulu Society to the tune of £250 per annum. The
funding was to last ten years. For his efforts, Charles Mpanza, the
indefatigable first secretary of the Society, whose salary was paid by
― 218 ―
a staunch friend of the Zulu Society—and why not keep him so!—
between you and me, Sir, the gentleman is going up the ladder and
may find his way to State Ministry koaamaaje —so it is not without
reward to play 'good' with him . . . [16]
From the first, the Zulu Society also had strong links with the Native Affairs
Department in Natal, and it received the warm support of H.C. Lugg, Natal's
Commissioner for Native Affairs, a man who was also keenly aware of the
glories of the Zulu past.
There were a variety of reasons for this apparent quiescence. The world
Depression, drought between 1931 and 1936, and a malaria epidemic which
raged in the early 1930s imposed their own constraints on political action.
Many of the unemployed who had fuelled the working class militancy of the
late 1920s in Durban were removed from the city as the Depression began
to bite. In the rural areas, in 1933 sporadic violent protest against tax
collectors and dipping schemes failed to lead to a revival of the rural political
activism of the late 1920s. In part because of the urgency of the agrarian
issue, and in part because of the role
― 219 ―
The co-optive strategies of both the local state and the central state as
embodied both in the Durban municipality and the Chief Native
Commissioner also had some success in diverting African energies into
different channels. Thus the creation first of the Urban Native Advisory Board
in Durban and then of forms of electoral politics through the establishment
of the 'Native senators' and elections for the Native Representative Council
under the Hertzog legislation seems to have absorbed a great deal of the
political energies of the leading political figures.[23] In addition, a more
sophisticated native administration attempted to set up its own collaborative
machinery through meetings of chiefs and "prominent natives' in a bid to
oust more radical leaders.[24] It is in this context and in the relative
vacuum left by the disintegration of formal political activities that the
formation of the Zulu Society as a cultural organization by the Natal Bantu
Teachers' Association should be understood. It also opened up a new
opportunity for the state and diverted energies away from more radical
answers to the very real problems posed by increasing proletarianization and
urbanization.
That these problems had attained a degree of urgency in the 1930s and that
the social dislocation was considerable there can be little doubt. In Natal,
from the beginning of the twentieth century, white missionaries and
administrators had deplored the disintegration of 'tribal discipline' as Africans
were increasingly proletarianized and in contact with whites in town. As early
as 1904, James Stuart, then Assistant Magistrate in Durban, and to become
one of the foremost recorders of African oral tradition, outlined what he saw
as a 'crisis' resulting from the 'multifarious commercial tendencies' which
were acting to transform African 'ancient habits and customs, their beliefs
and modes of being'.[25] As David Hemson puts it, 'Stuart projected the
most radical pessimism.' He saw a direct relationship between
insubordination in the towns and disruption in traditional social life and the
rapid spread of venereal disease.[26] His response to the growth of
individualism and lawlessness was simple: 'moderate corporal punishment'
for the youth and a return to traditional mores in relation to women, whose
'universal immorality' was regarded as largely responsible for the current
wave of lawlessness.[27]
― 220 ―
our young people are getting out of hand, instead of recognizing
and obeying their fathers and guardians they disobey and
sometimes disown them. Sons, who should be working for the
house [homestead], appropriate all their earnings to themselves,
daughters flaunt their elders to their face, and, duty disowned,
claim a right to go to towns or mission stations.[28]
Probably even more distressing for African men was the extent to which
black women were a prey to the lusts of white men. Behind the racist
terminology of the Commissioners lurks the intense pain of a people whose
ruthless exploitation was not only economic, but also sexual.[29]
By the mid-1930s, the increase in the African urban population was an even
greater cause for alarm, especially as the rate of increase for African women
was even faster than that for men, particularly in Durban. Between 1931 and
1936 the ferocious drought which ravaged Zululand and Natal pushed an
increasing number of people from the land, while the recovery of South
Africa's economy from the Depression and the rapid expansion of
manufacturing industry in the second half of the 1930s brought an open-
ended demand for additional labour. Thus, whereas in 1921 there were
46,000 men and just over 8400 African women in urban areas in Natal, by
1936 this had risen to 90,400 men and 37,600 women.[31] While the size
of the increase was affected by the redrawing of Durban's municipal
boundaries to take in the peri-urban areas in 1930, this was itself a
reflection of the rapid growth in the population around the town and the
social problems which were arising. The increase over the next decade was
also as sharp: in 1946 there were 139,000 African men and 69,700 women
in Natal's towns.[32] In addition, many Natal Africans had by this time
settled permanently or temporarily on the Witwatersrand. In the face of the
rapid social change and
― 221 ―
what was there; and the point of the dilemma was that there was
nothing—none of the economic and political institutions of
modernity now so needed.
All that there was was the people and peculiarities of the region: its
inherited ethnos, speech, folklore, skin-colour and so on. . . .
People are what [nationalism] has to go on: in the archetypal
situation of the really poor or underdeveloped' territory, it may be
more or less all that nationalists have going for them. For kindred
reasons it has to function through highly rhetorical forms, through
a sentimental culture sufficiently accessible to the lower strata now
being called into battle. This is why a romantic culture quite remote
from Enlightenment rationalism always went hand in hand with the
spread of nationalism. The new middle-class intelligentsia of
nationalism had to invite the masses into history; and the invitation
card had to be written in a language they understood.[33]
This dilemma was well expressed by the Rev. John Dube before the Native
Economic Commission in 1930. On being pressed by one of the
Commissioners on whether he could 'reconcile the tribal system with
progress', he replied:
Well, it is the only thing we have and I think that if it were properly
regulated, it would be the best. The tribal system has many
advantages and I cannot get away from it. It is under the tribal
system that the land is hel[d] by our Natives and, if I want land, I
cannot get away from it. If I want land, I must associate the
occupation of the land with the tribal system.[34]
Yet his was no unconditional support for 'tradition' either, despite Dube's
― 222 ―
adherence to the Zulu monarchy and his key role in the Zulu Society. As late
as 1925 he categorically denounced the practice of lobola (bridewealth),
which was by this time gaining acceptance by white missionaries and
administrators as a protection for women:
The same ambiguities can be seen in the position of almost all the Zulu-
speaking intelligentsia of this period. Thus, for all their preoccupation with
the 'traditional', a call to the past was intended to bolster more mundane
preoccupations. As small landowners and petty entrepreneurs, leading
members of both Inkatha and the Zulu Society had a concern with rural
'development'. According to Nicholas Cope, the initial impulse behind the
formation of Inkatha by the Northern Natal petty bourgeoisie was to enable
them to cooperate with rural chiefs in the purchase and development of
land: 'Inkatha was seen as a means through which commercial agriculture
could be set underway on land purchased ostensibly by a "tribe"—non-tribal
land-buying syndicates had been practically outlawed following the 1913
(Natives Land) Act.'[37] Albert Luthuli himself revived the Groutville Cane
Growers' Association and founded the Natal and Zululand Bantu Cane
Growers' Association, which were designed to foster the interests of the
small-scale African sugar growers and negotiate on their behalf with millers.
In 1942, when he stood for election to the Native Representative Council
with Zulu Society support, his platform included a request to the government
for 'more help . . . to the rural community in their farming operations'; the
establishment of 'a Land Bank for Bantus'; improvements in the general
status of chiefs and chiefs' courts; the acquisition of land by the government
for Africans; local government or councils in 'advanced communities' such as
Edendale; the extension of education in rural areas; and 'more civilized
salaries for black teachers'.[38]
― 223 ―
The Chairman of the Zulu Society, A.H. Ngidi, had far more ambitious
economic schemes which he hoped the Zulu Society would promote. Perhaps
influenced by the successes of the 1939 Afrikaner Volkskongres in mobilizing
Afrikaner resources for the promotion of Afrikaner capital, by 1945 Ngidi was
writing to the Secretary of the Society about vast commercial ventures and
the rehabilitation of the reserves 'agriculturally, industrially, commercially,
educationally and socially'. He argued that the Zulu should be persuaded to
sell their cattle in order to accumulate capital to start stores 'and displace
Indians and Europeans as exploiters of the people'—the irony was doubtless
unintended![39] The language of economic ethnic mobilization is very
explicit:
The feeling that we should extricate and help ourselves out of the
present predicament of exclusive exploitation by cosmopolitan non-
African South Africans and overseas white markets ought by now to
instil us with a very strong sense of racial solidarity, loyalty and
mutual confidence. . . . Our organisations must be principally
NATIONAL. Basic Nationalism or Africanism. This is the dominant
note in the National Orchestra of National Life. Other issues,
religious, political, professional, vocational, agricultural, industrial,
commercial, educational, economic and social must be dealt with
under clear cut AFRICAN NATIONALISM.[40]
This self-conscious Africanism did not lead to any disengagement from the
state, however. Ngidi had grandiose schemes for the reserves, premised on
the reduction of African livestock, which should be preceded by the
regulation and definition of all occupied land, and on the closer settlement of
all reserves in Natal and Zululand, which he thought should include special
zones for townships and be divided into a third for cultivation and two-thirds
for commonage and houses.[41] As Mpanza remarked, apparently without
sarcasm, Ngidi's ideas about cattle-culling were 'a wonderful means of our
indirect cooperation with the present aims of the NAD'.[42] Mpanza himself
saw no contradiction in his collaboration with the Native Affairs Department
(NAD): as he saw it, it was important to cooperate with the 'Department of
our Affairs (i.e. building up necessarily the relations with a department that
stands between the Nation and the present-day recognised
Government). . . . It is necessary to "Ride on a tamed elephant to hunt
elephants."'[43]
The preparedness of Mpanza and the President to play along with the Native
Affairs Department, especially during the war years, when Mpanza broadcast
government propaganda in Zulu on the South African Broadcasting
Corporation and, together with the Regent, Mshiyeni, encouraged African
recruitment, led many of the more prominent African political figures in Natal
to dissociate themselves from the organization.[44] There were differences,
too, over the Society's readiness to accept the education of African children
in the vernacular, although it was its support for the 'betterment of the
reserves' which was the most sensitive issue for those with a finger on the
popular political pulse. By 1946, Selby Msimang, Selby Ngcobo, A.W.G.
Champion, and ultimately even Dube and Luthuli had all left the
organization.[45] In that year Mpanza himself left to take up a position
organizing railway workers on behalf of the Department of Harbours and
Railways.[46]
At the same time, the 1940s saw the development of a far more powerful
pan-South African nationalist feeling which was channelled into the
revitalized ANC. Once the conservative Dube had been ousted from the
presidency of the Natal branch, this became the natural focus for African
political aspirations. The inter-war flirtation by the Natal elite with ethnic
nationalism nonetheless left its
― 224 ―
That this should have been the case was deeply rooted in the history, culture
and ideology of Natal's intelligentsia. It was a history, culture and ideology
full of contradictions as the African petty bourgeoisie tussled with the
attractions of assimilation to the hegemonic European life-style and the
impossibility of its achievement in South Africa's racially defined society.
There were tensions between what was seen as valuable in African culture,
recently discovered by the new science of anthropology, and their own self-
definition as a respectable, Christian bourgeoisie. Nor was this a new
phenomenon amongst the African Christian intelligentsia in the 1920s and
1930s.[47]
For all the tensions, however, it is clear that there were always more ties
between the amakholwa in Natal and wider African society than the
nineteenth century missionaries who were anxious to establish totally self-
contained Christian communities would have liked. Tim Couzens, for
example, shows the shift in the ideas of the Dhlomo brothers, H.I.E and
R.R.R, both of them prominent writers and intellectuals who were educated
in the traditions of mission Christianity at Edendale, Amanzimtoti and, in the
case of Rolfes Dhlomo, at John Dube's Christian Ohlange. Rolfes Dhlomo was
initially imbued with 'an earnest didactic' Christianity which condemned
traditional culture and led to his writing An African Tragedy, the first novel in
English by an African to be published. In typically anti-modernist fashion,
and following much missionary preaching, it dealt with the evils of city life.
His anti-modernism came, however, to be paralleled by an interest in the
Zulu past.[48] 'Respectability' came to be joined with ethnic
consciousness.[49] In 1928 Rolfes Dhlomo was writing in Ilanga lase Natal
(28 December): 'Our folklore and historical records must be preserved from
dying out, anything of racial pride, by means of a literature, otherwise these
will be lost forever and our connection with the past forgotten."[50] He
went on to write a series of historical novels about the heroes of the Zulu
past—Shaka, Dingane, Mpande, and Cetshwayo.
― 225 ―
These were not, however, the only objectives of the Zulu Society. Perhaps
influenced by Rolfes Dhlomo's plea and practice of nearly a decade earlier, a
major task of the Society was the collecting of Zulu folklore and traditions
for publication, that archetypal activity of the ethnically aware intelligentsia,
and in this too, they appear to have received the support of the Chief Native
Commissioner for Natal, H.C. Lugg, and his clerk, Carl Faye. Clearly,
collecting folklore was far more acceptable an activity than political agitation.
The patronage of Mshiyeni and the Zulu Society's support for him were seen
as crucial to the Society's activities. By the second half of the 1930s the
Regent had established himself as the key political figure in both Zululand
and Natal, capable apparently of quelling 'faction fights', which the
government had been unable to suppress for years, the 'kingmaker' both in
relation to the elections of the white Senators, like Edgar Brookes, who
represented African interests in Parliament, and in relation to elections to the
Native Representative Council. No official occasion was complete without his
attendance. He and fellow members of the Zulu royal family played a key
role in settling the standards of Zulu 'custom' and 'etiquette' and were
crucial to the state's policies of co-option and social control.[56]
Behind the talk of etiquette and tradition, however, was a very real concern
with the disintegration of the fabric of Zulu life under the impact of
proletarianization and urbanization during the 1930s. In particular, as the
Charter of the Zulu Society makes clear, there was the fear that the
'departure from wholesome Zulu traditions' meant a lack of discipline in the
home. Particularly 'alarming' was the loss of control over women, as
'mothers' of 'our leading men, chiefs and counsellors', and over the young,
who 'by force of circumstances, leave their homes at an early age to work in
towns and to attend schools'.[57] Only the monarchy, it was thought, could
serve as a protection against these forces.
It was in the position of African women that the forces of conservatism found
a natural focus. For the Natal state and 'traditional authorities' a common
concern
― 226 ―
From the time that a woman enters her in-laws' home she may not
pronounce words which have any syllable which is part of the
names that occur among her husband's relatives. The hlonipa
custom applies to the names of her father-in-law, mother-in-law,
father-in-law's brothers and sisters and their wives and husbands
and extending back as far as the great-grandfather. . . . The
woman is expected to hlonipa throughout her life. She is not
allowed to treat this custom lightly and is subjected to severe
public shame should she ignore the rules laid down for her.[59]
For James Stuart, even the provisions of the Natal Code were inadequate to
control the growing 'immorality' amongst African women 'thanks to the
introduction of European principles of civilization'. Like many an African
patriarch, he deplored the fact that women now had some choice over their
marriage partner and African males could no longer simply chastise their
wives as they saw fit. 'Raising the lot of the African woman' had led in his
view to the general disintegration of African society, the 'delinquency and
insolence of the young', and to 'disrespect and lawlessness' in general.[61]
From the point of view of the state and capital in the first three decades of
the century, there was an economic interest in keeping African women on
the land and subject to the control of the homestead head, at least before
manufacturing industry expanded on an unprecedented scale in the second
half of the 1930s. In the first decades of the century, a double purpose was
to be served by keeping African women on the land and out of the cities and
towns: not only would the reproduction costs of the urban workforce be
subsidized through the agricultural production in the rural reserves, a matter
of much moment to the mining industry with its demand for vast supplies of
cheap migrant labour, but through their continued control over women,
chiefs and headmen would also control the return of the young men to the
reserves and white farms which still needed their seasonal
― 227 ―
Under the 1923 Urban Areas Act, amended in 1930, the Governor General or
any local authority had the power to prevent any African woman from
entering an urban area unless she had a certificate from an authorized
officer. However, no such certificate was to be issued 'to any female Native
who is a minor in law without the consent of her guardian'; as all African
women who were not specifically exempted from African law were regarded
as legal minors, this gave considerable leverage to patriarchal authority.
Only those women who could produce satisfactory proof that their husbands
or fathers had been resident and continuously employed in an urban area for
a period of not less than two years were entitled to be in town.[64] The
tightening up of the legislation governing the influx of women into town in
1930, in the midst of the Depression, was no coincidence, even though
under the impact of the economic revival in the second half of the 1930s the
law became far more sporadically enforced, a matter of considerable
complaint at all meetings between African chiefs and the administration.
Yet in the face of rural poverty and increasing opportunities in the towns, the
patriarchal controls became ever more fragile. In 1937, at a meeting of
chiefs and 'other representative Natives' held at Eshowe, John Dube
expressed the views of the assembled chiefs that the magistrates were 'too
lenient in dealing with their womenfolk'. They asked 'that punishments might
be more severe, as leniency leads to their demoralisation'. They appealed to
the government to take even more 'drastic steps to prevent the migration of
women to the towns'.[65] In 1939, on accepting a medal from the newly
appointed Minister of Native Affairs, who was visiting Pietermaritzburg for
the first time, Mshiyeni complained that the Zulu customs and traditions
alluded to by the Minister were now being 'ignored in regard to the control of
wives and daughters—fathers and husbands are helpless'.[66]
Sibusisiwe Violet Makhanya, the first Zulu woman to train as a social worker
in the United States on a scholarship in the 1920s, remarked on the change
in the position of women even in rural areas while giving evidence to the
1930–32 Native Economic Commission:
And today the girls would resist that kind of thing?—Yes, they
would and when thinking of these things, one can say that the men
are becoming powerless in that respect.
Now would you say that the change in the attitude of women is
becoming general, it is becoming widespread?—Yes, it is becoming
more and more so . . . .[67]
― 228 ―
Sibusisiwe's work both in the Bantu Purity League and in running a night
school from her home in Umbumbulu led to her being awarded a scholarship
to the United States of America, from whence she returned in 1930 as
Natal's first black female social worker. In the United States she encountered
the 'seeds of race consciousness' and was influenced by the sense of 'race
pride' so much in evidence amongst black Americans in the inter-war period.
It is clear from Sibusisiwe's somewhat 'turbulent' career in America that she
was no mere accepter of white middle class values. Her concern with 'purity'
arose out of her own and her class's deeply felt experience. Her race
consciousness was equally part of that deep experience, transmuted in the
1930s into a Zulu ethnic cultural consciousness.[70]
Sibusisiwe's concern with the 'purity' of the 'Zulu race' was shared by many
other anxious observers in the 1930s, and there were very material
foundations for their fears. By the beginning of the twentieth century,
changed patterns of child-rearing threw the burden of sex education on
mothers rather than on grandmothers and the peer group as in the past: the
result of mission abhorrence of female initiation ceremonies and the
development of the nuclear family, especially among Christian Africans.[71]
The migrant labour system which deprived villages of young men and put
great pressures on the girls on their return exacerbated these problems at a
time when safe forms of external sexual intercourse were either forgotten or
frowned on by the church. At the same time, town, mission stations and
colonial employment opened up opportunities to women who wished to
escape unwelcome marriage partners and the constraints of a gerontocratic
and patriarchal order. Both their potential independence and their
vulnerability aroused a passionate response. In both town and countryside
the rate of premarital pregnancy was high and the concern with adolescent
purity intense. White colonial fears of miscegenation further fanned by the
eugenicist ideas of the time articulated with the concerns of African men that
their women were prey to men of other races and that they were losing
control over 'their' women and youth.
These fears were heightened in the late 1930s when medical experts began
once more to reveal the ravages of venereal disease in both town and
countryside. Apparently unknown in African society before the mineral
revolution, syphilis was revealingly known amongst the Zulu as isifo
sabelungu ('the white man's
― 229 ―
In 1939, concerned by the extent of the disease in his own Nongoma district,
the Regent Mshiyeni headed his list of issues to be raised at the meeting of
the Native Representative Council, to be held in Pretoria in November 1939,
with a request to the government for hospitals and compulsory examinations
for all families, 'for the sole purpose of protecting this country . . . from a
dreadful town disease [the Zulu term for syphilis] which is threatening to
destroy the whole country'.[74] Kark had no such belief in the utility of
hospitals and the control over women as a treatment for the scourge. As he
pointed out in 1949, syphilis was socially produced by the nature of South
Africa's industrial revolution which had
Not only had migrant labour led to 'instability and pathology in family
relationships', it had also led to promiscuity in the countryside, which in turn
led to 'an easy reception for the disease in the rural areas from the town'.
He concluded that 'Without an understanding of the economic factors
involved and [its] historical development . . . no treatment will save the
spread of syphilis in South Africa . . . successful therapy requires the
establishment of African and rural communities based on a stable family
life . . . .'[75]
For all these concerns, given her independence of spirit (and the glamorous
pictures of her, dressed as a 'Zulu princess' in New York!), it is nonetheless
somewhat surprising to find Sibusisiwe Makhanya acting as the woman
adviser to the Zulu Society, which asked three rhetorical question in its
founding manifesto or Charter:
― 230 ―
this, our elders and thinking people shed tears of woe—as they
behold what in their judgment of decency is an abomination and a
disgrace to the Zulus. One wonders what the Great Shaga [sic]
would say were he to arise from his grave and see the degradation
of descendants of his people engaging in obscene dancing.
Both the language and the lament are familiar. The disruptive experience of
modernity has since the beginning of the nineteenth century elicited similar
responses from the intellectuals and ruling classes of Europe. There, too,
'nationalism and respectability jointly provided a reference point in an
unsettling world, a piece of eternity which could be appropriated by those
caught up in the vibrations of modernity'.[77] Yet for the African
intelligentsia born of this very modernity, these processes of class formation
and urbanization, the anguished cries against it and the lament for the past
implied in the Charter of the Zulu Society and its diatribe against ballroom
dancing were never unambiguous.
The same ambiguities which we have already noted in their reaction more
widely to the contact between 'western' and African culture can be seen in
the response of the African intelligentsia to the introduction by the Natal
Department of Education of 'Bantu Dancing' into the syllabus for teacher
training in 1948. The matter aroused immediate and passionate debate in
the pages of the Natal Native Teachers' Journal . Its inclusion in the syllabus
reflected the continued tradition in Natal of encouraging 'ethnic identification'
as a mode of social control, and perhaps also the recognition of the growing
popularity of ballroom dancing amongst Africans, an aspect of social life
which was frowned on by the more puritanical, black and white alike. As
S.T.J. Dladla remarked, 'Zulu dancing was loved by the people and should be
improved and purified by educated Africans.' Echoing the Charter of the Zulu
Society, he continued that it was European ballroom dancing that was 'really
objectionable . . . for reasons well known to all'.[78]
His was very much a minority voice in the columns of the Journal however.
While the editor clearly supported the departmental initiative, as did the
Principal of Nuttal Training School at Indaleni, Mr Gibben, who actually
implemented the new syllabus, the reaction of the majority of those Africans
who wrote to the Journal on the matter was hostile.[79] The issue brought
together concern over the sexuality of the young, the dangers of
miscegenation, and above all fears of loss of respectability. As in nineteenth
century Europe, 'respectability, particularly in sexual matters . . . played a
fundamental role in defining the bourgeoisie as a class'.[80] It was not for
nothing that Christian Africans were referred to by their non-Christian
neighbours as Amarespectables . The majority condemned the idea of
teaching Zulu dancing in school outright, even if they were more ambivalent
about its role in Zulu society. As one Elliot E. Ntombela put it:
― 231 ―
are The Zulu Cultural Society (Ibandla lika Zulu) . . . even to the
supporter of ladlamu himself Mr Gibbins, 'Indlamu or The Primitive
Zulu Dance in its naked form is almost immoral' and as such it is
quite contrary to the fast growing Cristian [sic] Education in our
schools. . . . In other places where the Government has appointed
Educated Chiefs, such Primitive Dancing has been exterminated,
owing to the numerous immoral absurdities which cannot be
tolerated . . . by the majority of true Christians. . . . Personally I do
not see any spectacular aspect in Indlamu . . . that would be an
educational, physical, moral or musical incentive sufficient to out-
class or equal the present drill taught in our schools or that would
warrant the unnecessary task of trying to modernise the
unchristian gestures and words of Iudlamu [sic] .[81]
The joy that a civilised man gets when watching Zulus dance, is the
same kind of joy he gets when looking at monkeys playing on the
trees. He does not look at them to uplift their standards but to
press them further down and merely to amuse himself. Just as he
never thinks of improving the monkeys, so it is with the poor
African dancing before him.[82]
The fear that they would be regarded as primitive, the desire to appear
'respectable', and sensitivity to racist stereotypes of African culture were
dominant also in the words of K.G. Msimang:
Despite his own social distance and patronizing attitude, Percy Ndhlovu put
his finger on an aspect of the psychological colonization involved:
That there are those among educated and civilized Africans who
have such an inferiority complex that they imagine their own
fellow-men are looked upon as monkeys or baboons when they
indulge in primitive dancing, is lamentable. The civilized and
educated African should see no shame or disgrace in trying to
― 232 ―
Any civilized nation or race has its culture and art, including music.
It has its own composers, expressing thoughts, feelings and
traditions of that particular race or nation. In this no two nations or
races can be exactly alike. . . . Unlike the European 'civilized' dance
(jitter-bug etc.), the Ingoma Dance is wholesome and quite fitting
to African customs and habits in that the Dancers perform, singly
and never this 'clutching' of partners, which is quite foreign to the
African way of living.[85]
Apart from their sensitivity to European taunts, however, and their need to
distance themselves from the popular culture, the opponents of Indhlamu
had a deeper and more legitimate objection. They recognized the danger
that the encouragement of ethnic identity could have unfortunate and
divisive consequences. Sidney Ngcongo maintained that the encouragement
of 'warrior tunes' led to a 'fighting spirit' and the eruption of 'faction fights'
amongst the youth. This was no figment of the middle-class imagination.
'Tribal wars', as he called them, were an ever-present reality in Natal and
not dysfunctional to continued white domination. The deliberate
manipulation of ethnic boundaries and chiefly authority by Natal
administrators since the mid-nineteenth century had meant that from the
end of that century onwards, tensions over land shortage in particular had
been expressed in recurrent 'faction fights' both between different so-called
tribes and within them between supporters of rival chiefly contenders. The
Zulu 'warrior tradition', which glorified violence and battle was, moreover,
particularly interwoven with ngoma dancing, based on the war dances
(izigiyo ) performed by the regiments as a prelude to combat. Provisions of
the Natal Code limiting attendance at gatherings arose from the frequency of
the faction fights which followed ngoma dancing which accompanied
them.[86]
In Durban, too, by the late 1920s, as Paul la Hausse has shown, ngoma
dancing as a form of popular culture and entertainment was closely linked to
warlike criminal gangs and to faction fighting, in this case perhaps sparked
by competition over jobs. In 1929, C.F. Layman, the Manager of Durban's
Native Affairs department, opposed ngoma dancing because the
'congregation of Natives armed with sticks, etc. in towns has almost
invariably resulted in serious friction amongst the various towns'. The newly
appointed Native Welfare Officer inaugurated a more co-optive strategy in
1933 when he allocated an open-air space for official ngoma dance
competitions which were held 'under the careful scrutiny of the NWO, Chief
Constable and Borough Police'. According to La Hausse, 'The control of this
popular form of recreation served a number of purposes. It provided cheap
popular recreation for workers and supplied an alternative to the patronage
of shebeens [illicit drinking dens] over weekends, an activity which always
carried with it the threat of labour disruption.' Furthermore, the holding of
ngoma dance competitions encouraged divisions within Durban's popular
classes. Although ngoma dancing in the 1930s continued to be accompanied
by sporadic violence, by the late 1940s it had been sufficiently tamed to be
contemplated for introduction into schools. At another level, however, the
spirit of ethnic hostility which it encouraged was neither controlled nor
controllable.[87]
While for much of the twentieth century much popular violence in Zululand/
Natal was expressed in inter-Zulu faction fights, as the intelligentsia forged a
― 233 ―
pan-Zulu identity, the same spirit of 'tribalism' with its undercurrents of
violence also came to be expressed against the non-Zulu in their midst.
Thus, in Down Second Avenue, Zeke Mphahlele records:
Indeed, in the year after this debate flourished in the Natal Native Teachers'
Journal, the Principal of Adams College was to ban a dance to commemorate
a 'Tshaka Day' ceremony being celebrated by the Zulu Society on campus,
for fear that it would inflame 'inter-tribal rivalry'. In the ensuing upheaval,
he was forced to suspend some 175 of the male students—out of a total
student body of less than 500. The principal was sensitive to the issue, for in
June of that year he had expelled two Zulu students who had 'waylaid' and
assaulted a Xhosa student, an incident he attributed to 'a little flare-up of
intertribal tension'.[89]
A form of Zulu ethnic nationalism which was in part the legacy of the Zulu
Society continued to plague even the activities of the ANC in Natal in the
early 1950s: at the time, for example, of the Passive Resistance Campaign,
it was difficult for the Natal leaders to achieve unanimity on the Natal
contribution, because of, as Selby Msimang phrased it, 'the strong anti-
Indian feeling in this province', while well into the 1950s African antagonism
to Indian men who 'took' their women was intense.[90]
The riots of 1949, like those of more recent date, to which the term 'tribal'
has also been affixed, were the outcome of complex forces of which intense
poverty and social dislocation were intrinsic. Nevertheless, the 'respectable'
debate over the validity of traditional mores resonated with somewhat
different pre-occupations at a popular level and legitimated actions which
the petty bourgeoisie would be quick to condemn. The fact that the response
to these problems has taken an 'ethnic' form is the result not simply of some
kind of unchanging and archetypal 'tribalism'. That the responses to poverty
and privilege tend to take a 'racial' or 'tribal' form has as much to do with
the deliberate manipulation of ethnic rather than other forms of identity by
the state and the particular road that the African intelligentsia and political
leadership have travelled in Natal.
A comparison between the Natal Bantu Teachers' Association and the Zulu
Society with the Cape African Teachers' Association (CATA) in the Eastern
Cape is instructive: from being an essentially 'respectable and moderate
body' in
― 234 ―
the 1930s, by 1949 CATA was the leading element of the by now militant
left-wing All Africa Convention. In the Transkei, according to Colin Bundy,
teachers played a crucial role as a rural intelligentsia, providing a radical
interpretation of the world and integrating peasant struggles against land
rehabilitation and cattle-culling with resistance to the state's imposition of
chiefs and 'Bantu Education'. The fusion of the more coherent ideology of the
intelligentsia with the groundswell of popular discontent intensified
Transkeian resistance to the state during the 1940s and 1950s and gave it a
very different form to that experienced in Natal.[92] In Natal, to a very
considerable extent—although there were, of course, exceptions and a
certain radicalization there too—the construction of an ethnic 'answer' to the
problems of urbanization and modernity—whether by the Zulu Society or
Inkatha—hampered the growth of the kind of radical vision which could have
combatted the chauvinism encouraged by the state and the anti-Indian
polemic of Natal whites in 1949—or indeed contemporary 'tribal' violence.
8—
Coloured Identity and Coloured Politics in the
Western Cape Region of South Africa
Ian Goldin
Introduction
Attempts by the state and ruling class in South Africa to sponsor the
development of a client Coloured class are not a recent phenomenon. They
have their origin in the endeavours of the colonial administrations to deflect
opposition based on mass resistance by the colonized people.
― 242 ―
Khoi resistance had been deflected but the constant fear of further uprisings,
Trapido has suggested, 'meant that the sense of unease among European
settlers was sustained in the first half of the nineteenth century'.[10] In
1851 these fears were increased when 'Hottentots' in the Theopolis and Kat
River districts allied themselves with the Tembu in a direct attack on the
colony. The rebellion was defeated. Nevertheless, the clear extent of
alienation strengthened the hand of those colonial administrators who
favoured giving propertied 'Hottentots' a greater stake in the political
system.[11] Prominent amongst those calling for the enfranchisement of
such people was the Cape Attorney-General, William Porter. He noted:
I would rather meet the Hottentot at the hustings voting for his
representative than meet the Hottentot in the wilds with a gun on
his shoulder. . . . If these people have much physical force,—are
armed, and—as you say—disaffected—is it not better to disarm
them by letting them participate in the privileges of the constitution
than by refusing them those long expected privileges to drive them
into laager.[12]
Until the turn of the century the term 'Coloured' commonly included all non-
European people.[17] The official census of 1875 included in the category
'Coloured' all 'non-European' people, including 'Fingoes' and 'Kafir
proper'.[18] The 1892 census maintained the same distinctions declaring
that the Cape
― 243 ―
population 'falls naturally into the two main classes, the European or White
and Coloured'.[19] Private employers tended to perceive similar
distinctions. So, for example, in 1890 A.R. McKenzie, the principal labour
contractor in the Cape Town docks, referred to the fact that he employed
'principally Kaffirs; all our labourers are Coloured, and are of different
nationalities and tribes'.[20] Clearly, in the latter half of the nineteenth
century the term Coloured chiefly referred, in the discourse of the ruling
class, to 'all non-European people'.
Yet, by 1904, this wide definition was no longer accepted. In the space of
fifteen years the notion of Coloured was reconstituted. Increasingly the term
came to denote an intermediate class of people distinct from the Bantu-
speaking population. In marked contrast to the census of 1890, the Cape
census of 1904 broke from previous practice and distinguished three 'clearly
defined race groups in this colony: White, Bantu and Coloured'.[21]
Included in the last category were 'all intermediate shades between the first
two'.[22] A decisive shift in colonial discourse appears to have taken place
in the years surrounding the Anglo-Boer War. In this period the
reconstitution and identification of a distinct Coloured category was not
reflected in state discourse only, nor associated only with changes within the
colonial administration and ruling class. In a dialectical process, the
crystallization of a Coloured identity reflected a shifting of ground within the
subordinated society itself. This was reflected in the growth of separate
Coloured political organizations and the creation of a distinct Coloured
consciousness.
It was no accident that the period which saw the evolution of a distinct
Coloured identity was also one of capitalist crisis and a dramatic
transformation of productive relations. The depression which had begun in
the mid-1860s, precipitated by an international banking crisis, tore the fabric
of Cape society and, as Bundy has noted, led to a 'marked increase in rural
poverty' and high levels of unemployment in Cape Town and Port
Elizabeth.[23] The position of many unskilled work-seekers and labour
tenants was further undermined by the recession of 1877–79. These cyclical
recessions had a particularly marked impact on tenant farmers, many of
whom by the 1880s had been forced to migrate to the towns in search of
jobs.[24] There they joined the growing army of unemployed workers and
refugees. By the turn of century it was recognized by a Cape Town
clergyman that 'this is the city of the unemployed'.[25] According to
another source, writing in 1899, The question of unemployed with us here at
the Cape is well-nigh chronic.'[26] But any optimism about a new dawn
would quickly have vanished at the beginning of the twentieth century: from
1905 to 1909 a depression, which according to the economic historian
Schumann was 'one of the severest and undoubtedly the most prolonged
South Africa has experienced during the past one hundred' years,
devastated the Cape Colony.[27] Cape Town was hardest hit and the
standard of living of the working class was undermined.[28]
― 244 ―
The arrival in the Cape of over five thousand 'Cape Boys' who had been
deported from the South African Republic led to an increased awareness of
Coloured identity in the Cape. From October 1899 the refugees were arriving
in Cape Town 'by the hundreds'.[32] These exiles brought with them stories
of ill-treatment and of the absence of civil rights for Coloureds in the interior
republics. The refugees' concerns were shared by many Cape Coloureds who
saw in the war a chance to extend the rule of British law to these republics.
They also felt that loyalty shown by the non-European people in the Cape to
the British cause would advance their case for full enfranchisement.[33]
The British had in fact made Coloured rights a feature of their war
propaganda. Alfred Milner, the British High Commissioner in South Africa,
presented discrimination against Coloureds as a justification for intervention
in the interior.[34] Not surprisingly, Coloureds, according to Marais, 'gave
the British cause their enthusiastic support though they took no part in the
actual fighting in the field'.[35] It must have come as a bitter
disappointment to the Coloureds, therefore, to discover with the end of
hostilities that their position had not been improved and that they were in
fact likely to be made worse off. Increasingly, Coloured men and women
came to fear that with the proposed Union the practices of the interior
republics would be extended to the Cape and that Coloured rights would be
sacrificed in the process of reconciliation.[36]
Their anger was fuelled by the growing realization that Coloureds had played
an important part in the British victory and had proved to be amongst its
most loyal supporters. The case of the blacksmith, Abraham Essau, became
a rallying point amongst the indignant Coloured artisan class.[37] Essau had
been tortured to death by the Boers without revealing his clandestine
network of Coloured artisans who were acting as spies for the British forces.
Despite being drawn between two horses, Essau had refused to renounce his
loyalty to the Crown. But, the Coloured artisans observed, the loyalty of the
British administration to the Coloured artisans was less robust.[38] The end
of the war left Coloured artisans and the Coloured petty bourgeoisie cynical
towards the colonial administration and white political parties. Their
continued support of white political parties and their reluctance to mobilize
independently had failed to lead to their assimilation into the white polity.
Coloureds had seen a continuous erosion of their political and civil rights,
despite the promises and polemics of the white parties which sought the
Coloured vote.[39]
White political parties had solicited the Coloured vote since 1853 through
what Trapido has referred to as a combination of 'patronage, corruption and
intimidation'.[40] Coloured voters had lent their support to a variety of
white parties
― 245 ―
and no lasting alliance of Coloured voters and white parties had been
sustained in the latter half of the nineteenth century.[41] During this period
the Coloured voters saw the continual erosion of their vote. The increases in
the educational and franchise qualifications and other restrictions on the
non-European franchise were primarily aimed at decreasing the
representation of African voters.[42] However, Coloured voters were also
discriminated against.[43]
Between 1865 and 1894 the incorporation of British Kaffraria and the
Transkei territories as part of the Cape Colony made it increasingly difficult
for Africans in the colony to qualify for the franchise.[44] The changes in the
educational and other franchise qualifications in 1887 and 1892 were
intended to reduce further the number of Africans on the voters' roll. These
modifications, Trapido and F. Molteno have suggested, were not intended as
a frontal attack on the Coloured franchise.[45] Nevertheless, the raising of
the qualifications removed poor and illiterate Coloureds as well as 'raw
Africans' from the vote. The likely effect was to raise the issue of Coloured
identity as non-European people in the Cape attempted to avoid the system
being imposed on Africans. The disenfranchisement of Africans, occurring
synchronously with the immiseration of the African peasantry, increased the
significance of the distinction between Africans and Coloureds. At the same
time, the declining number of Africans eligible to vote in the Western Cape
was associated with a recognition within white politics of the insignificance of
the African vote and the relative importance of the Coloured vote.[46] From
1883, when the Afrikaner Bond was formed under the leadership of 'Onze'
Jan Hofmeyr, Cape political parties had begun to compete for the Coloured
vote. White parties cultivated notions of a distinct Coloured identity, offering
Coloureds preferential treatment if they lent their support to white parties.
Coloureds were led to believe that by disassociating themselves from the
African population and by supporting white parties they would be spared the
political and economic humiliation that Africans were suffering. For almost
fifty years the allure of this prospect had inhibited the formation of a distinct
Coloured political party.[47] But, as we shall note, the failure of white
parties to honour their commitments in the years following the Anglo-Boer
War culminated in the ultimate alienation of many Coloured intellectuals
from white politics and the formation of specifically Coloured political
organizations.
― 246 ―
In his study of Passing for White Watson observed, furthermore, that 'those
who rank below the artisan group seldom possess the characteristics
necessary for successful passing'.[58] The brake placed on the passing
process around about the turn of the century contributed to the development
of a distinctly Coloured intellectual leadership. Africans had long since given
up hope of assimilation with whites. Coloureds by the turn of the century
were recognizing that their case for assimilation had not been furthered by
their reluctance to assert a distinct Coloured identity or their hesitation to
establish ethnic political organizations.[59]
Amongst the factors accounting for the restrictions placed upon 'passing for
white' was the growing awareness within the colonial administration of the
'poor white problem'. Colin Bundy, in his study of 'poor Whites before poor
Whiteism', argues that there took place in the Cape in the last two decades
of the nineteenth century 'a major shift in ruling class perceptions of the
nature of poverty'.[60] Shifts in the 'social prism' in late Victorian Britain
were transmitted to South Africa.[61] In both Britain and South Africa the
reorientation of the state was associated with attempts to deflect opposition
from what Gareth Stedman-Jones has referred to as the 'dangerous
classes'.[62]
― 247 ―
ethnic solidarity replaced the older forms of ideological distance and hostility
along class lines'.[65]
The metropolitan redefinition of poverty was associated with calls for greater
state intervention to resolve the social problems of poverty. In the South
African context this was translated into increasingly successful attempts to
institute strict demarcations between whites and Coloureds. Throughout the
1890s in the principal Cape papers, the Cape Argus and the Cape Times, the
ethnic identification of Coloureds as the dangerous elements of the
impoverished class continued to fuel both the prejudices of the whites and
the apprehensions of the Coloureds.[66] By January 1895 the Cape Argus
had embarked on a crusade against Coloured crime which served as an
attack on all Coloureds. The paper declared that there was 'a need for
stringent regulations of the Coloured classes in Cape Town' as Coloureds
were 'a danger to society'.[67] A barrage of similar reports served to
increase the ethnic identification of whites and to increase the anxieties of
Coloureds. In this process, older class distinctions were broken by new
ethnic alliances. The tendency towards ethnic stereotyping was by 1890
reflected in the caricature of Coloureds as criminals and in the ethnic
response of the local authorities to what Swanson has termed the 'sanitation
syndrome'.[68]
In 1882 a smallpox epidemic had led to claims that 'the sooner the Malays
are forced to reside in a separate district the better for all concerned' whilst
an outbreak of enteric fever in 1887 had prompted the Dean of Cape Town
to call for the establishment of a separate quarter for Coloured people.[69]
In 1901 a plague epidemic was associated with similar attacks on the
Coloured community.[70] The plague epidemic had led to a massive attack
on Cape Town's poor. The full brunt of the epidemic and of the resulting
health and housing ordinances was borne by Africans.[71] Although the
plague was by no means confined to Africans, ethnic stereotyping was by
1901 reflected in the local authorities' specifically ethnic diagnosis of the
epidemic. Africans were hounded out of Cape Town and into the Uitlugt
township on the Cape Flats. Over 7000 Africans were forced to vacate
premises in the inner city and to move to the prison-like compound. The
establishment of a highly regulated African township was inspired by the
experience of controlling labour on the diamond mines. Thus, for example,
even before the plague of 1901, 'Matabele' Thompson called for an extension
to the Peninsula of the system 'so easily managed' at Kimberley.[72]
Drawing on his Kimberley experience Thompson advocated the
establishment of a location with a barbed wire fence ten feet high into which
would be forced 'all the natives within the area'. A curfew bell would sound
at eight o'clock and 'every native abroad after the bell' would be arrested
under a pass law.[73] The Cape Town Medical Officer supported Thompson's
proposal, suggesting that Africans on the Peninsula be confined to a location,
as was the practice in the Eastern and Northern Cape.[74] Such generalized
attacks led to the assertion by many non-European people of a distinct
Coloured identity. In this way many people were able to escape the brunt of
the health and housing ordinances hurriedly invoked by the Cape Town City
Council. Perhaps for the first time, non-European people came to assert a
Coloured identity as a defence against further immiseration.
― 248 ―
there was simply too much to lose through identification with Africans.
The Rear-guard
The principal concerns of the organization were the defence of the Coloured
franchise and the extension of educational opportunities for Coloured
youth.[80] It is no accident that teachers came to play a leading role in the
APO and in subsequent Coloured organizations. Collins, the APO's founding
President, saw in the extension of Coloured education the means to advance
the participation of Coloureds in the ruling polity. At the turn of the century
the education of Coloureds, like so many other matters affecting them, was
coming under
― 249 ―
increasing attack. The basic link between education and the franchise further
increased the anxiety of the incipient Coloured organizations. These rallied
around the issue of the extension of education for Coloureds to prevent the
further disenfranchisement and deskilling of their communities. In 1899 the
Superintendent General of Education, Sir Langham Dale, fuelled the fears of
the Coloureds when he confirmed that the
The government's policy had meant that the education of Coloured children
de facto was left to missionaries and other private benefactors. In 1883 the
enrolment at mission schools was 38,000, of whom fewer than 6000 were
white.[82] The restriction of Coloured children and teachers to the inferior
mission schools of the Western Cape contributed to the forging of Coloured
identity, as pupils and teachers came to recognize their common exclusion
and mobilize to increase their claim on the state system. Fearful of a further
squeezing of its main base, the relatively educated and skilled Coloured
class, the APO from the outset campaigned for the improvement in the
education and teaching of Coloured youth. The organization aimed to show
the administration that 'an educated class of Coloured people' existed in
Cape Town.[83]
The APO from the outset was engaged in a rear-guard action in which the
organization's tactics were informed by the politics of survival rather than a
long-term vision of Coloured identity. In this defensive process,
Abdurahman, the leader of the APO from 1906, attempted to extract the
maximum gain from the strategic concerns of the ruling class. In 1853 the
threat of an alliance of Coloured and African men and women had forced the
Crown partially to incorporate Coloured men. In the first half of the twentieth
century Abdurahman was able to achieve considerable leverage by the skilful
manipulation of similar fears. The manipulation of these strategic concerns
provided a shifting foundation for the APO and in part accounts for the
ambiguity of the APO and subsequent Coloured organizations. To increase its
leverage, the APO sought to emphasize to the administration its common
cause with the white polity. At the same time the identification of the APO
with African sentiment was used to demonstrate to the regime the cost of
alienating Coloured intellectuals.
― 250 ―
excluded from the vote [in the Transvaal] the Coloured should not be'.[85]
Abdurahman was consistent only in his commitment to the advance of the
Coloured franchise. The threat of an alliance with Africans and a wider
commitment to non-European unity (as reflected in the name African
Peoples' Organization) was used by Abdurahman in order to extend his
leverage in his campaign to further Coloured rights. In 1912 Abdurahman
warned the regime that if it continued to alienate Coloured people 'there will
one day arise a solid mass of Black and Coloured humanity whose demands
will be irresistible'.[86] But, at the same time, Abdurahman consistently
refused to open the membership of the APO to Africans. Abdurahman was
instrumental in maintaining the APO as a specifically ethnic Coloured
organization. Tautologically, he argued that the legitimacy of the exclusive
Coloured identity of the organization rested on its existence as a racially
exclusive organization. For, as Abdurahman told the 1910 Conference of the
APO:
Conclusion
Clearly, by 1910 a distinct Coloured identity had been established. This was
reflected in the growth of the APO, an organization exclusively for Coloureds.
In
― 251 ―
the period 1890–1910 this identity was forged through the reconstitution of
earlier notions of Coloured identity. The turn of the century was a critical
period in the Western Cape during which the parameters of the conflict over
Coloured identity were set. The increasingly intense ideological and political
struggle which today characterizes and confuses class struggle in the
Western Cape may usefully be traced to the constellation of circumstances
associated with the reconstitution of Coloured identity within the period
1890–1910.
The Labour Party, since the demise of the APO, has continued to campaign
for the advance of Coloured rights, using the tactics of discretionary
collaboration perfected by Abdurahman. These have determined that the
Labour Party has chosen the path of 'construstive engagement' with the
regime in order to bring on reforms from within. Yet from the outset the
existence of a separate Coloured identity was a source of conflict in the
Western Cape. Prominent amongst those challenging the ethnic
organizations were socialists committed to a non-racial society. And today a
range of organizations committed to ending all collaboration with the regime
have challenged the Labour Party's position. The 'left' opposition among
blacks in the country as a whole has been divided into two main camps:
those fighting for a non-racial society on a popular democratic platform and
those who emphasize a popular unity of all disenfranchised people on a
platform of black consciousness. Prominent within both these streams have
been people officially classified as 'Coloureds', showing the continuing
ambiguity that such a label entails.
9—
'We are all Portuguese!' Challenging the
Political Economy of Assimilation: Lourenco
Marques, 1870–1933
Jeanne Penvenne
This essay is concerned with one such situation. In the early decades of this
century a group of educated black males in Lourenco Marques conducted a
prolonged struggle against the realignment of their cultural frames of
reference which occurred as the Portuguese colonial state sought to
subordinate the majority black population of Mozambique to the evolving
political and economic demands of the colonial capitalist system. Jockeying
to share as 'we' and to exclude others as 'they' was an on-going process,
ebbing and flowing at all levels of society as the economy contracted,
expanded, or simply changed. What clearly emerges from an overview of
this period is that hard times caused by a myriad of economic and political
factors were paralleled by the redefinition of both individuals and groups into
sharply narrower categories. Shared cultural characteristics were
energetically deployed to reduce the sharing 'we' as
― 256 ―
That the Grêmio identified these constraints and sought to undermine their
legal promulgation or, failing that, to thwart their implementation is
revealing at two general levels. First, it demonstrates a keen awareness that
any and all forms of legal exclusion which coincided with racial distinctions
compromised all black persons, even those of privileged status. From the
outset, the thrust of the campaign was the unacceptability of race as a
criterion for distinctions among citizens. The Grêmio's refrain 'We are all
Portuguese!' asserted equality tempered with the assurance of loyalty.[3]
― 257 ―
Although the Grêmio framed its challenge in terms of common values and a
'way of life' entitling them to participate in the colonial economy on an equal
footing with any other Portuguese, the challenge was replete from the start
with contradictions based on gender, class and ethnicity. My purpose is to
demonstrate neither that the elite was capable of mounting an intellectually
impressive argument for unfettered citizenship—which it was—nor that the
elite had so internalized the meanings and identities of the hegemonic
Portuguese middle class culture and ideology that, despite its often brilliant
manipulation of meanings and identities, it could not convincingly challenge
colonial domination. Rather, I shall explore the changing economic and
political relationships in the struggle to decide who would and who would not
share and under what circumstances. Through such an investigation one
may arrive at a more general understanding of cultural relations as a
medium of domination and subordination. Why were idioms of cultural
identity projected and manipulated by both dominant and dominated groups
at different times to advance their conflicting postures? And what were the
limits of such manipulation?
― 258 ―
― 259 ―
It was this commercial vigour that set Lourenço Marques apart from other
Mozambican ports. In central Mozambique's Zambezia area, for example, the
new Portuguese tariff policies throttled a promising experiment in peasant
agriculture, bringing about a drop in the value of exports between 1891 and
1901 of some 80 per cent.[15] In Inhambane, to the north of Lourenço
Marques, where itinerant trade from the hinterland comprised the bulk of
export commodities, trade similarly languished throughout the 1890s. By
1899 Inhambane's overseas trade was 30 per cent less valuable than it had
been a decade earlier. Lourenço Marques, however, with its firm linkages to
the Witwatersrand gold fields and its exemption from the new protectionist
tariffs, enjoyed a trade boom.[16]
The movement of people also drew southern Mozambique into the wider
regional economy. From the 1860s on, but increasingly from the 1870s and
1880s, Mozambican men sold their labour in the growing capitalist economy
of South Africa and fuelled local trade with repatriated wages.[17] Clearly,
the economy of Lourenço Marques had taken an important and decisive turn
in the last three
Figure 9.1
Trade in late nineteenth century Mozambique. Total value import/export in
milreis.
― 260 ―
decades of the nineteenth century. If Portugal was to maximize its revenues
from this new situation, it would have to develop initiatives quite different
from the essentially mercantile tactics it was then applying in Angola. The
new policies were to have a far-reaching impact upon the area's local elite.
Most of the Lourenço Marques black elite of the early twentieth century
derived from this earlier trading community. Their grandparents had been
variously boatmen, caravan leaders, traders on a large or small scale, and
clan-leaders. The leading mulatto members of the Grêmio Africano came
from this background.[21] The city's wealthiest black women were similarly
related to early traders.[22] Their status was originally based on their
control and influence over people and property. According to historian
Alexandre Lobato:
The Gaza civil war (1861–1863) was the first of a number of setbacks for the
hunter-traders based in Lourenço Marques. It forced them to take sides and
thus compromised their ability to trade with everyone. The spread of famine,
smallpox and cattle disease in the war's aftermath 'shattered the economy of
the northern and central Delagoa Bay [Lourenço Marques] hinterland',
dislocating thousands of people and severely undermining the production
and marketing of trade
― 261 ―
The Luso-Gaza wars of 1894–95 and 1897 forced remaining traders to take
sides again. Traders who successfully rallied their African allies to Portugal's
cause gained stature, while those who failed to do so lost face. Protestant
missionaries, including highly esteemed local pastors, were suspected of
sympathy with the Gaza elite and several were summarily deported. Portugal
had long exploited existing inter-group hostilities in efforts to dominate the
political economy of the region south of the Sabi river, but the patterns of
loyalties struck during the hostilities of the 1890s continued to influence
social relations amongst the area's peoples well into the twentieth century,
partially because of the brutal impact of the war and the resulting socio-
economic upheaval on the population.[28]
From 1870 to 1900, then, Lourenço Marques changed from a quiet trading
port exporting the various animal and vegetable products of its hinterland
into a bustling commercial port increasingly involved in the interrelated and
complementary movement of Mozambique's human resources and the
Transvaal's mineral resources. Those people who prospered in the long
distance and itinerant trade because of their ability to amass the necessary
trade goods and porters, to negotiate safe and rapid passage, and to see to
a profitable exchange of goods and services through their knowledge of local
conditions were progressively displaced. State-sponsored modern
transportation facilities rendered
― 262 ―
their routes uncompetitive and redundant and the nature of trade goods
changed, increasingly moving from local to alien control.[32]
These changes in the area's economic patterns set the stage for a struggle
as to who would dominate the new opportunities being opened up by the
rapid transformation of Lourenço Marques. In the long run, Portuguese
metropolitan and foreign interests triumphed and the established trading
elite declined.
The growth of the white Portuguese population was directly linked with
Portugal's efforts to gain control over the revenues of the Lourenço Marques
area. Encouraged both by the MacMahon Award of 1875, which confirmed
Portugal's title to the area, and by reports of its potential as a gateway to
the interior, Portugal moved to realize that potential. Its early public works
initiatives of the late 1870s in Lourenço Marques were more significant as
indications of Portugal's enlivened interest in the area than for what they
actually accomplished. In the 1880s Portugal secured control over the
lucrative transit trade to the Witwatersrand by the seizure and ultimate
completion of the originally British-funded rail line from Lourenço Marques to
the Transvaal.[34]
The defeat of the Gaza state in the 1890s enhanced Portugal's control over
the increasingly important movement of migrant labour, thereby furthering
its political and financial interests. Finally, state-initiated modernization of
port facilities at Lourenço Marques at the turn of the century confirmed
Lisbon's intention to develop the transit trade and the related phenomenon
of labour brokerage as its principal interests in the area. Portugal's tactic
was oriented towards licensing, taxing and brokering the existing movement
of goods and persons, and it required investment of capital and labour to
develop and maintain the necessary transportation facilities and bureaucracy
to sustain such a process of accumulation.[35]
― 263 ―
To be considered truly Portuguese it was increasingly insufficient to accept
and project Portuguese hegemony. As with Cape Coloureds in South Africa,
black Mozambican elite members began to be nudged out of the privileges of
domination despite their sharing language, Christianity, nationality and way
of life with the white Portuguese. As competition grew between new
immigrants and the local black elite over jobs, land, licences and
concessions, race became an increasingly important differentiating criterion
in the struggle to share.
This process was nowhere more startling than in the case of the decline in
prestige and prosperity suffered by mulattoes from the 1860s down to the
1930s. In the 1860s and 1870s mulatto children of Portuguese were
commonly censused at
Figure 9.2
White population in Lourenço Marques
― 264 ―
birth as whites and acknowledged as sharing the whole of family privileges,
property and responsibilities. They were the so-called brancos da terra, the
local whites.[38] By the 1890s, however, that was no longer commonly the
case. Mulatto babies were censused as such, and some adults whose birth
certificates registered them as 'white' were redefined as mulatto.[39] Some
mulatto children certainly continued to enjoy protection by white parents
through formal adoption or informal patronage, but whites were increasingly
unlikely to assume full responsibility for their mulatto children and ensure
that they were fully entitled to share as family members.[40] Illegitimacy
became increasingly identified with miscegenation. Illegitimacy was not
simply a social stigma. It was an important impediment to the transfer of
wealth and property from parent to child—in short, to the reproduction of
privilege. While the mulatto elite of the early 1930s decried the stigma of
illegitimacy, asserting that to be a mulatto did not necessarily mean one was
a bastard, by 1940 if one was a bastard, one was quite likely to be a
mulatto. Indeed, 96 per cent of all babies born in circumstances deemed
illegitimate were mulattoes.[41]
There were certain sectors of the economy which the well-placed members
of the Portuguese community simply did not have the capital, skills or
business connections to develop successfully or to take over, and these
passed into foreign hands. They included such key sectors as, first, the
recruitment and processing of Mozambican migrants as labourers for South
Africa and, second, retail sales to returned miners. The South Africa-based
Witwatersrand Native Labour Association (WNLA) had been the largest, most
consistent, best managed recruiting agency operating in the area south of
the Sabi river, and in February 1906 the Portuguese granted it monopoly
recruiting privileges.[45] The following year, with the town in deep
recession, the local Portuguese community cast a covetous eye at WNLA's
profit of almost £89,000 in 1906. They aggressively, but vainly, urged the
state to transfer the WNLA monopoly to the Secretaria de Negócios
Indígenas (Native Affairs Department) so that the jobs and profits could be
made available to them.[46]
― 265 ―
With regard to the retail sales sector, British Indians were seen as the main
interlopers. They competed in trade at the port from at least the 1870s, but
by the 1890s they dominated virtually all retail sales to returning miners in
rural areas as well as dry goods sales in urban areas.[47] By 1901, for
example, 96 per cent of dry goods retail licences in Lourenço Marques were
held by Indians, 80 per cent of whom were British Indians. Licences for
urban cantinas (combination bar, grocery and dry goods stores), which
depended heavily upon sales of cheap Portuguese wines to draw customers
for their usually uncompetitive dry goods, were more broadly held:
Portuguese whites, 56 per cent; Chinese, 27 per cent; Portuguese Indians, 6
per cent; and British Indians, 3 per cent.[48] While the Portuguese proved
unable to do much more than complain about the dominance of Indians in
dry goods commerce, they lobbied increasingly successfully for cantina
licences to be granted preferentially to white Portuguese.[49]
In sum, despite their open identification with and defence of the Portuguese
state, the local black elite's power and prosperity in the regional economy
suffered almost in direct proportion to the state's growing initiatives. At
every turn they were displaced, either with or without state complicity.
White railway and port workers oversaw the movement of transit goods
instead of black caravan leaders, raftsmen, guides and porters. Portuguese
administrators and soldiers took over direction of important recruitment and
labour control functions. Some of the black elite eventually found work as
labour recruiters or overseers within new companies, but they lost their
independence as agents or middlemen and became simply employees in a
managerial capacity. Competition between local blacks and immigrant whites
was further exacerbated by the narrowing of the overall local field for
economic activity because of the monopolization and near monopolization of
key sectors of the economy by WNLA and British Indians. Political pressure
from immigrants covetous of business and civil service positions held by
blacks, a chronic shortage of cheap controlled black labour, and the ups and
downs of the regional economy all bolstered the tendency to engineer the
subordination of all black people within the rapidly changing capitalist
economy. Portugal's self-proclaimed 'civilizing mission' comprised an
important ideological aspect of this engineering process.
When A.F. Nogueira published his study, A Raça Negra, in 1881 he hoped it
would be 'useful to my country and to the poor race to which it is
dedicated'.[50] He admonished Portugal to halt the violent and arbitrary
plunder of its colonies' human and natural resources by soldiers,
missionaries, merchants and administrators and advocated a more
systematic approach toward using the colonies' critically important labour
resources to place Portugal on a more competitive footing with its colonial
neighbours in southern Africa.[51] Nogueira went on to point out that:
'Everyone knows that the whole matter of civilization in Africa comes down
to a question of labour. There are a plethora of opportunities for enrichment
and a shortage of workers to exploit those opportunities.'[52] Portugal
would have to 'civilize' its population so that African labourers could be
'freed' to sell their labour in conditions which would enable Portugal and the
Portuguese to enrich themselves:
― 266 ―
Nogueira, a colonial liberal, was so anxious to affirm that Africans were not
innately poor labourers—they should not be considered just so many
'buffalo' or 'dromedaries' necessary to grub Africa's wealth for their
European masters, but rather recognized as individuals capable of being fine
workers—that he failed to consider Africans beyond the level of 'instruments
of labour'.[54] He did not pose the important question 'What if . . . ?' What
if Africans aspired to directing rather than being directed, to getting rich
themselves rather than enriching others? What then? Such a question would
throw Nogueira's equation off its comfortable assumptions.
By the turn of the century, however, Portuguese policy makers had passed
beyond confirming that Africans could and should labour for Europeans, to
consider the ramifications of 'What if . . . ?' In his Royal Commissioner's
Report of 1893, António Enes, while admitting that the abolition of slavery in
1875 had been a good thing, maintained that the legislation had been
incomplete in that it had failed to convert the Africans into workers. To
complete this long overdue task, he felt the government should legislate to
compel people to work in the same fashion that governments in German
East Africa, South Africa and Réunion had done, making their blacks
'submissive, sober and hardworking'. Enes warned that the state should
quickly and firmly relegate Africans to the position of working for lower
wages and in inferior conditions to those enjoyed by whites, both skilled and
unskilled. Some literate Africans, he observed, were already making
dangerous suggestions such as employing Europeans under African
supervision.[55] A.A. Freire de Andrade, Governor General of Mozambique
between 1906 and 1910, echoed Enes's concerns:
― 267 ―
Local white bourgeoisies have generally been credited with initiating and
sustaining efforts to organize white interests toward the generalized
subjugation of black people. David Hemson, for example, acknowledges the
importance of competition between black and white workers in neighbouring
Durban, but locates the thrust for cooperation amongst all whites with the
bourgeoisie:
A reading of the white working class press of the early twentieth century in
Lourenço Marques, however, suggests that, for all the contradictions
involved, white workers there took early and sustained measures to mesh
their interests with those of the dominant white bourgeoisie. For all their
strident, doctrinaire anarcho-socialism, they appeared, consciously and
unconsciously, determined to benefit from pitting 'civilization' against
'barbarism' and 'enlightenment' against 'ignorance'. White labour leaders
saw themselves as united with other white workers, generally considering
them 'our labouring brothers', but in the same breath emphasizing their
distance from 'filthy' Africans and 'indolent and unproductive Asians' who
shared or aspired to share the same workplace.[59]
Here [in Lourenço Marques] any vagrant gets 500 reis per day for
which he sings and dances the entire day and does nothing. In
Portugal men earn 300 reis per day working dawn to dusk bending
over a hoe. . . . Here a crude and stupid black who does nothing
earns 500 reis per day with 11 to 1 off to eat and rest . . .
hundreds of vagrants trip around the streets drunk, nearly nude,
living by theft and eating off those who are employed. Here they
don't have the guts to make these people work. . . . Lourenço
Marques is being transformed into a kraal of filthy Negroes.[61]
This quotation reveals fundamental facts and attitudes which were basic to
the engineering of inequality, illustrating some of the attitudes which shaped
the internalized baseline from which people competed for scarce resources.
White workers perceived few alternatives to the sale of their labour and
expected that their wages would provide the minimal material basis to
reproduce their working class lifestyle—including the purchase of essentials
such as shoes and clothing. At this early date, however, most blacks clearly
perceived a range of alternatives to wage labour and could still use their
wages to provide more than what they considered the bare essentials.
― 268 ―
The black elite's members were not above manipulating a similar argument
in efforts to promote their interests in a world of shrinking opportunities.
They claimed that contacts with Europeans had engendered in them
'different needs, different ambitions', and that unlike 'bush blacks' who 'lived
in sloth', they held important jobs and aspired to even better ones.[65]
They were not always able to extricate their fate from that of the poor and
miserable, however. During the plague scare of 1907, for example, the
shabby wood and zinc houses owned by blacks and Indians and rented to
casual black labourers were summarily destroyed in the sweeping sanitation
efforts despite the fact that the acknowledged source of the disease was the
city's own public works barracks located at the opposite end of town.[66]
It was in the context of this recession that some members of the Lourenço
Marques black elite formed the Grêmio Africano, took up matters of concern
to their membership and to the black population as a whole, and issued a
journalistic challenge to the new trends. That the ensuing struggle would
encapsulate a maze of contradictions was evident from the outset: the
Grêmio, having finally managed temporarily to fund a school to teach African
children the Portuguese language as a first step toward the goal of
unfettered citizenship, named their school after António Enes!
The engineering of inequality thus involved forcing some blacks to labour for
their employer's profit so as to reap the benefits of 'civilization'. It also
involved limiting the ability of educated and skilled blacks to reap the
benefits of shared cultural characteristics by marketing their skills, products
and property as full Portuguese citizens. Whereas the myth of equality, one
of the 'civilizing mission's' stated goals, was developed to legitimize
metropolitan colonial policy at many levels, the engineering of inequality was
necessary to reproduce the relations of domination upon which colonial
control and capitalist development increasingly came to depend. The black
elite's demand for equality as Portuguese citizens struck at the heart of
those relations. To square the elite's demand for equality, which was
couched in the very terms of the state's ideology of equality, with employer
demands for cheap and well controlled black labour, white workers' demands
for privilege, and the Portuguese administration's fear that blacks with
notions of equality would soon challenge white political domination, the myth
of differential exploitability emerged piecemeal together with a body of
legislation
― 269 ―
In their study of plantation protest, Vail and White demonstrate how ideas
for reinforcing, modifying and challenging practices which characterize social
relations can be articulated in ritualized song and dance when those forms
are understood by the participants to be the appropriate vehicle for such
expressions.[68] The Lourenço Marques black elite of the turn of the
century accepted the press and petitions to colonial administrators as their
vehicles for such expressions, and they developed their press with a gift for
allegory and mockery suggestive of the most effective ritualized song.[69]
Their declamation, 'We are all Portuguese!', was often in that sense richly
charged. In one breath it dared anyone to suggest that they were not the
equal of any metropolitan middle class white and at the same time mocked
Portugal with the contrast between the posture and reality of her much
vaunted 'civilizing mission'.[70]
When the Grêmio published its first newspaper in 1908, the stage was set
for struggle. Many whites were out of work, and hard times and heightened
racism combined to make the crucial division in day-to-day relations
between people one of race. The intensified struggle had a different impact
at different levels, however, and such differences reflected the important
divisions existing among 'those persons of the black race and descendants of
the same'.
The challenge 'We are all Portuguese!' was itself situationally fluid, but it
evoked an implicit order in the minds of the Portuguese-speaking, Catholic
elite of the Grêmio, who were its principal proponents in this period. They
perceived themselves as the natural leaders of the majority population,
'civilized people who are moral, principled and know how to civilize', and
therefore deserving of recognition (and sometimes employment) as
such.[71] At one level they asserted their identity as middle class
Portuguese nationals and their conception of themselves as key figures in
the extension of capitalist relations of production. At other levels they
argued for the weight of shared cultural traits over different racial
characteristics, thus stressing their own superior position vis-à-vis both
working class, uneducated whites and educated blacks who were Muslims or
did not speak Portuguese.
The Grêmio elite pointedly described white workers in the very terms whites
frequently reserved for blacks: common, illiterate, filthy, and slothful. The
mature elite was still sufficiently confident to allow much of the crude racism
of the white press to slide off its back. They were not, after all, miserable,
poor or filthy. They did not sing and dance at work, but rather dressed and
lived for the most part like petty bourgeois Europeans. They no more
identified with Portuguese peasant culture than did their Portuguese
counterparts. They were just as appalled by the ill-clothed, frequently
unwashed Portuguese immigrants who indiscriminately cursed, spat, and
defecated in the town's streets as they were with similarly behaved Africans.
They neither doubted nor sought to confirm their social distance from poor
blacks or poor whites in this period.[72]
One must appreciate the class confidence of the black elite in these years to
understand the extent of their subsequent disillusion. By the 1920s, as it
became ever more clear that race, not class, was pivotal in colonial relations
of domination and that that process would continue to erode the economic
position of the
― 270 ―
Their refrain 'We are all Portuguese!' reflected their identification with Vasco
da Gama's idealized 'civilizing mission', and the Portuguese Republic's
heralded 'Equality, Liberty and Fraternity'.[77] They thus rejected all
notions of civilization which were rooted in white privilege and black servility.
If 'civilization' meant that Africans be the pack horses, the rickshaw pullers
and eternal slaves who were just literate enough to read the laws which
raised their hut tax, they asserted, then surely savagery was
preferable.[78] If whites alone were fit to hold colonial positions as full
citizens, then what was all this nonsense about 'Equality' and 'Fraternity':
'What colour citizens did Portugal expect to find in her African empire after
all, citizens côr de rosa ?'[79] By the 1920s, when the colonial
administration began to pressure black children out of public schools to avoid
'mixing of different psyches', the elite's self-assurance had become strained
and the Grêmio's response was angry:
Despite their attack on Portuguese racism and hypocrisy, the Grêmio elite
returned to the 'more Portuguese than thou' argument, particularly in hard
times, in their struggle to rise to the mesa de funcionalismo (bureaucratic
table)—to feed at the public trough as civil servants.[81] The Grêmio elite's
self-promotion aggravated existing tensions within the black elite. Educated
Muslim Makua, for example, competed with the local Christian elite for
much-coveted positions as office workers at the port authority. Throughout
this period both the white workers' press and the Grêmio's newspapers
joined in periodically railing against allowing Makua to hold such positions.
The Grêmio members felt those positions should be theirs as the 'most
Portuguese' of the local elite. They ridiculed the Makua as 'vassals of the
Sultan of Turkey, Abdul Hamid Khan', and alleged they 'roasted goats to
Allah' and lived from the sale of drugs and the prostitution of their
women.[82]
At each of these levels the Grêmio elite emphasized what they considered to
be their own merits. They conceived of their status in a variety of terms but,
clearly, cultural self-identification as Portuguese citizens was central to the
manner in which they framed their assertions. It is difficult to judge the
extent to which the elite's emphasis on a shared cultural and national
identity was in part encouraged
― 271 ―
by white workers tending to frame their demands for jobs and better
treatment in similar terms.[83] It is evident that there were elements of
manipulation for self-promotion and sincere internalization of sentiments
involved throughout, but the proportions differed depending upon the writer
and the period. As early as 1909, for example, Grêmio leaders realized that
not only would the best educated, most privileged blacks in Mozambique be
competing with better educated, better trained white immigrants, but that,
all qualifications aside, whites would utilize patronage and political
sympathies in seeking placement in better jobs, at higher wages, and with
more social, economic and political privileges than 'people of colour'. José
Albasini, an official forwarding agent, co-editor of O Africano, and one of the
most prestigious Africans in the town, editorialized in 1909:
Not every writer in the O Africano stable could expect similar praise, and
there were limits of official tolerance for criticism framed in assurances of
loyalty. One of the great strengths of the Grêmio press when it was strong,
however, was its ability to argue issues in terms which the Portuguese
administration would find both powerful and awkward to suppress. Brado
Africano's editorial of 14 October 1922, written during the period of the
League of Nation's hearings inspired by the critical reports submitted in
cooperation with the Anti-Slavery Society and the Human Rights League,
took that tolerance near its limit:
Slavery
Every now and then our English friends, from simple bad faith,
challenge us with being slavers and other nasty things. We must
say, in the service of truth, that slavery as such does not exist at
least in the Province of Mozambique. The police unconstitutionally
seize peaceful citizens on the pretext of not having a [labour
registration] tag, and then rent us out to anyone needing labour.
This . . . isn't slavery. We don't really know what it is, but . . . it
isn't slavery. Local administrators order citizens to be seized and
rented to white planters, and the crops of these poor blacks are
lost because while they are away working for the whites their crops
are neglected. Clearly this isn't slavery, just as it isn't slavery to
imprison women on the pretext that their husbands owe their hut
tax . . . etc, etc.
― 272 ―
Members of the black elite were not solely concerned with their own social
position, at least initially. While many blacks in Lourenço Marques may have
understood that each law of exception, each tendency to treat and perceive
black people as inferior, contributed to a pattern of domination which would
have an impact seemingly out of all proportion to the sum of its parts, their
feelings were not recorded. Contributors to the Grêmio's newspapers,
however, realized that, if such a pattern were allowed to proceed
unchallenged, racist laws would soon appear colour-blind. The elite may not
have suffered directly from increased oppression of common black labourers
in Lourenço Marques in the period prior to World War I, but they nonetheless
recognized that such practices nourished the ideological basis which could
gradually combine with the growing demand for cheap controlled labour and
efforts by Portuguese whites to stake out and protect profitable and
privileged positions, to relegate all blacks to subordinate status. Such a
process could proceed piecemeal, but crisis quickened its pace, as in the
case, in 1907, of the plague's being used to justify the disposal of a
considerable amount of black-owned property. The elite recognized that
cardinal aspects of accumulating and reproducing capital, such as acquiring
profitable and secure land tenure, access to employment, training,
investment and business opportunities were all at stake. The ideological
justification, which was argued largely in cultural concepts, and the formal
and informal engineering of the subordinate categories of indígena and
assimilado comprised a whole. The elite recognized the unity from the
outset.
― 273 ―
In 1904 the first attempt was made to mesh custom and aspirations
regarding black labour in town in a proper law. The Regulamento de
Serviçais e Trabalhadores Indígenas of 9 September 1904 was intended to
organize the registration and identification of black domestics and day
labourers in town through a pass system which would simultaneously
facilitate tighter enforcement of municipal vagrancy statutes. This law posed
the first direct legal threat to the mobility of black volunteer workers in
town. As criminals, blacks were not only to be compelled to labour—'civilized'
to their moral obligation to work as it were—but now even as volunteers
they were to be forced to work in disadvantaged circumstances.[93]
― 274 ―
implementation, the Regulamento had cost the state money, but by 1908
the police had become more interested in the law's potential for yielding
revenue than in its utility in labour control. That year the Regulamento
began to pay its own way. By 1909 it was generating a surplus.[98]O
Africano correctly saw this and later control regulations as serving largely to
finance the burgeoning state bureaucracy, referring to their implementation
as the 'caça da quinhenta', the hunt for the fifty centavo registration
fee.[99]
The new legislation brought about a subtle but important shift in emphasis, a
shift which demonstrated the progressive weakening of the elite's position.
The press continued to contest the basic premise of racist exception, but
with the spread of discrimination at many levels and the enhanced bite of
the new measures there was increasing practical concern with just who was
an indígena, and therefore legally subject to the more rigorous controls, and
who was not an indígena, and therefore legally eligible for the privileges of
citizenship. At one level this shift signalled the beginning of the end: part of
the basic premise was conceded or compromised in the shift of focus to
within the designated exceptional community. It became more difficult for
the black elite to identify with persons of like cultural orientation regardless
of race. Whites, regardless of class, nationality, or cultural orientation had
no need to concern themselves with the possibility of being incorporated into
the exceptional community. Blacks, regardless of class or nationality,
increasingly had to come to terms with discrimination in one way or another.
The change forced the elite to turn its attention from broader concerns and
thereby sabotaged their attempts to challenge changes in policy on the
grounds of principle.
João Albasini and the Challenge to 'Assimilated' Status
In the midst of this still tentative restructuring of the legal arena, legislation
creating a new and separate category of assimilado was promulgated. The
state may have intended to buttress the tighter social controls by buying off
the elite with a special privileged category similar to the former exempt
status—a category separate from that of indãgena, but still a racially
determined 'middle' category. Initially, the gambit failed.
― 275 ―
At another level, the city's poorest workers were equally ambivalent toward
Albasini's role as champion of black labour. While Albasini basically opposed
military or civilian labour conscription, he nonetheless held that able-bodied
adult males should contract their labour for so-called public works and
capitalist agriculture to build a more prosperous Mozambique for their
children. The thrust
― 276 ―
Joäo Albasini, 'Doctor of Laws graduated
from the University of Chuabe-Dembé'.
O Africano (Almanach), 1913
― 277 ―
of his position was that if workers were treated with respect, properly
housed and fed, and if upon completion of their contract they were
transported quickly and safely home and fully paid, then conscription would
be unnecessary. From 1913 until his death in 1922 Albasini, in his combined
capacity as newspaper editor and head of so-called native services at the
port and railway complex, drew attention to work conditions for railway
labour, decried alcohol abuse among workers which he felt was encouraged
by Portuguese cantinas, and advocated higher wages for port and railway
casual and salaried personnel—the majority of the black labour force in
those areas. Between 1918 and 1921 there were frequent strikes among
casual and salaried workers at the port, while chibaro labour was relatively
quiet. It remains unclear if Albasini played any role in keeping chibaro
workers outside the mainstream of port worker action. Aside from his
published support for worker demands, particularly the demands of salaried
workers of whom he was one, the extent of Albasini's involvement with
strikers is also uncertain.[111]
Albasini paid for his criticism of the system, despite his identification with it.
He suffered ridicule, rejection and material loss. When O Africano was in the
midst of a heated challenge to colonial maladministration, focusing on the
beating to death of an African police auxiliary and simultaneously printing
full coverage of strikes in the Transvaal and sympathetic coverage of the
International Commercial Workers Union in South Africa, Albasini was fired
from his post as official forwarding agent by the state and suspended from
his position at the railway.[114] He subsequently regained both posts, but
because he flatly refused to accept assimilado status, he was denied a whole
range of salary bonuses reserved for tenured civil servants.[115]
Albasini saw no contradiction in his passion for Portuguese culture and his
equally passionate rejection of the assimilation process. His insistence that
study of the Portuguese language be central to all educational endeavours in
part reflected his genuine conviction that literacy in Portuguese was a
prerequisite skill in the quest for unfettered citizenship for blacks or whites.
It was also part of an overall effort to convince the government of the
Grêmio's potential role as its link with the majority population and as a tactic
to gain government support for educational initiatives by playing upon
government hostility toward Protestant mission education which relied on
instruction in the vernacular. There was indeed an aspect of self-promotion.
― 278 ―
Every important political change in the metropole brought in its wake 'an
invasion of place-seekers' hoping to exploit metropolitan political sympathies
and connections to secure a post in the colony's patronage-ridden civil
service.[118] With the consequent decline in political patronage controlled
by local figures went the protection and relative advantage enjoyed by their
local black clients. Throughout the Republican era (1910–1926), demands
for technical qualifications and inadequate patronage links increasingly stood
between the black elite and a position or promotion in the civil service. Well
before the strident nationalism and economic crises of the early Salazar era
facilitated the implementation of explicit legal protection for white
Portuguese workers and business people in the 1930s, Republican social
programmes and the ascendance of metropolitan centred patronage
networks protected the establishment and reproduction of white Portuguese
privilege.
Immigrants from the metropole and people with family in the metropole
(with whom they could board their children for schooling) also benefited
from an increasingly important educational advantage. The anti-clericalism
of the early Republican period undermined the position of local missionaries,
many of whom had been important patrons for both the Protestant and
Catholic elite. In 1913 the Republicans abolished mission schools, thus
removing virtually all educational opportunities from the majority black
population. The limited state-sponsored alternatives to mission schools were
increasingly tailored to please the growing Portuguese population. Although
Lourenço Marques was the centre for educational opportunities in the colony,
by 1926 secondary education was still very limited. Liceu (secondary school)
5 de Outubro, opened in 1910, had matriculated only 16 mixed race
students and none listed as African by 1926. As late as the 1940s the
number of black Mozambicans with advanced degrees could be counted on
the fingers of one hand.[119]
In the late 1920s education became an issue of direct concern to the editors
of the Brado Africano . The press law of 3 September 1926 revised
qualifications for the directors of colonial newspapers—directors had to hold
a bachelor's degree and could not be public functionaries. Since no one in
the Grêmio could now qualify to direct the newspaper, a series of
sympathetic Portuguese assumed titular direction while Grêmio members
continued as de facto directors. The law, enacted shortly after the coup
which overthrew the Republic, had a dramatic impact on journalism in the
colony as a whole, cutting the number of newspapers published from 97 to
42.[120] It was an early bellwether of the tighter and more
― 279 ―
The undermining of mission education and prestige, the increasing size and
political influence of newly arrived white Portuguese settlers, and the
consequent decline of local networks of patronage in the increasingly
important civil service, all sharply curbed the advantages which members of
the black elite had enjoyed. But there was also another factor working to
change the elite's perception of their position in Mozambique. Mozambique
used two currencies: a currency linked to the British pound sterling and a
paper currency in escudos. Being paid in the currency linked to sterling was
a privilege related to one's legal civil status. The Republican decision to enter
World War I and its pattern of gross political and economic mismanagement
in later years contributed to the effective halving of the value of the escudo
against the pound between 1914 and 1917.[121] By 1924 the pound
reached twenty-four times its 1914 value in escudos, and the escudo was
still falling (see Graph 3).[122] It became crucially important, therefore, to
receive one's salary in inflation-resistant and commercially acceptable gold-
based currency rather than in rapidly depreciating escudo bank notes. In this
situation blacks who resisted being classed as 'assimilated' risked being paid
in escudos and seeing their wages swallowed up by the pace of inflation and
the escudo's declining value. It was a heavy price, and not all members of
the elite judged themselves to be in a position to carry on the challenge to
assimilation.
Figure 9.3
Pound value in escudos—Lourenço Marques, 1914–1933
― 280 ―
complying with the law. The mutual recriminations tended to highlight the
surviving advantages enjoyed by some mulattoes over most Africans. Elite
mulattoes still had some family ties in the white community among
prominent people. The great majority of applications for assimilation under
the law of 1917, and the slightly more strict successor laws dating from
1919, were filed by Africans, the not mulattoes. Assimilation records show
that African Grêmio members petitioned for assimilation in this period,
whereas the adult generation of the mulatto Grêmio members did not.[123]
Some mulattoes quietly ignored the law and went about their business much
as they had as informally exempted persons,
Significantly, the first important split among the Grêmio elite dates from this
period. J. T. Chembene, Samson Chambala, Lindstrom Matite and Benjamin
Moniz, mostly Protestants and all members of the Grêmio before this period,
withdrew and began to publish a paper, entitled Dambu dja Africa, under the
editorship of Chembene and Moniz. The paper, published largely in the
Rjonga language, ceased publication in 1922. Chembene moved to South
Africa, and Moniz and several others resumed their regular contributions to
the Ronga, Shangaan and Zulu sections of the Grêmio newspapers. The rift
did not disappear, however, and by the early 1930s many of the earlier
splinter group were associated with the foundation of the Institute Negrófilo,
later called the Centro Associativo dos Negros de Moçambique.[124]
Subsequent legislation, particularly dating from the early New State era,
made be ignoring the law increasingly costly by firmly linking mobility and
earning power to 'native' and 'non-native' civil status. Employment in certain
categories, consideration for certain apprenticeships, the right to union
membership and to family bonuses were all eventually determined by civil
status. There was increasing incentive to accept the special badge of
assimilation at the same time that qualifications for assimilation were being
tightened.
The serious and persistent cycle of inflation and the shocking dismantling of
white port and railway workers' benefits with the bitter strike of 1925–1926,
however, raised economic and social tensions within the city. The overthrow
of the Portuguese Republic in 1928 and the rapid slide from recession to
Depression between 1927 and 1933 ushered in a wave of alarming economic
measures, from the replacement of thousands of casual workers at the port
by chibaro gangs to the promulgation of racist hiring quotas to promote
white Portuguese interests in the crush of widespread unemployment. The
Grêmio continued its formal objections, increasingly in private petitions and
correspondence rather than editorials, but its leadership became
progressively fragmented and disillusioned. These were very
― 281 ―
The cumulative impact of the elite's few victories and its many compromises
and defeats was that the generation coming of age in the mid-1930s was
faced with a polar crystallization of white privilege and black subordination,
of white solidarity and black disunity, which could scarcely have been
imagined by the previous generation. The complex combination of factors,
both within and beyond the elite's control, had moulded changes which
meant that the elite, far from wedding itself to a burgeoning prosperity as
full citizens, could only hope to be the most prosperous of the colony's
increasingly oppressed and impoverished majority: 'men make their own
history, but not under conditions of their choosing'.[130]
10—
A Nation Divided? The Swazi in Swaziland and
the Transvaal, 1865–1986
Hugh Macmillan
― 290 ―
Among the South African Swazi a renewal of ethnic awareness by the chiefs
and their councillors can be traced from the early 1920s. While it has been
argued that the Native Administration Act of 1927 heralded a new policy of
'retribalization', there is little evidence that the Swazi of the eastern
Transvaal were much affected by it. Rather, efforts at retribalization were
spontaneously generated within the Swazi community and were largely
ignored by the South African state until the 1950s, when there was a shift at
the centre from simple segregation towards the encouragement of specific
ethnic formulations of political awareness. The attempt in the 1980s to
'reunite' the Swazi, who had been so long and so fundamentally separated,
was doomed to failure. Political and economic developments in South Africa
and Swaziland since World War II had acted to deepen the divide between
the two halves of the Swazi nation. In Swaziland an exclusivist cultural
nationalism has triumphed since independence in 1968, while in South Africa
those who sought to mobilize the Swazi as a political force were confronted
by formidable obstacles, in the shape not only of competing ethnicities but
also of a broader based South African nationalism.
The pre-colonial Swazi state reached its greatest extent shortly before the
death of King Mswati I in 1865. By this time, or soon thereafter, a distinct
Swazi ethnic group, composed from Nguni, Sotho and Tsonga elements, had
been created. The establishment of a tributary state under royal Dlamini
leadership broke down the self-sufficiency of the homestead through the
formation of nation-wide regiments in which young men from all the
chieftaincies were brought together. The building of national rituals such as
the ncwala, a first fruits ceremony and ritual of kingship, helped in the
process of integration, as did dynastic marriages and the widespread
establishment of royal villages under wives of the king with loyal indvunas .
At the same time the composite nature of the kingdom was perpetuated and
emphasized by the continued ranking of clans according to whether they
came with, preceded, or arrived after the dominant Dlamini clan in the
present Swazi area.[3]
A distinct Swazi language (siSwati) was first recorded in 1846 but regional
dialectal differences persist until the present day, with Sotho influence
discernible on the northern borders of the Swazi linguistic area in the
Nelspruit and Lydenburg districts and Zulu influence strong in the southern
part of Swaziland and the Piet Relief and Ermelo districts of the Transvaal.
Standard Swati is based on the dialect spoken in the north central area of
Swaziland itself, an area which includes the royal capitals of Lobamba and
Lozita.[4] Many of what are regarded as
― 291 ―
From the mid-1860s onwards the Swazi on the eastern highveld, most of
whom in fact lived in the middleveld valleys, such as the Komati, which
intersected it, rather than on the cold highveld itself, came under increasing
pressure. White settlers, many of whom were associated with the New
Scotland scheme, at first sought Swazi labour and paid for it, but then by
the mid-1870s began to demand tribute from people who lived on 'their'
land. There was some resistance, but the people were gradually transformed
into squatters paying rent in labour, kind, or cash. The population was
increased by the labour demands of farmers who brought people in from
Swaziland or elsewhere.[8] The attitude of farmers and officials on the
highveld, where most farms by the end of the nineteenth century were
occupied by the owners, was distinctly hostile to the preservation of chiefly
authority and ethnic loyalties. Speaking of the Ermelo district in 1914,
General Tobias Smuts told the Beaumont Commission with evident
satisfaction: "There are no tribes there.'[9] The Native Commissioner for
Carolina commented at the same time that the widow of Mswati at Mbhuleni
lived on a private farm 'just as another squatter'.[10]
― 292 ―
I do not know whether you know that all that ground is parcelled
off among the chiefs living in that area. A native will not go into the
area of a chief unless he gets that chief's permission to do so. The
chiefs down there have more power over the natives than the white
man does.[11]
The official distinction between the 'detribalized' highveld and the 'tribal'
middle and lowveld areas reflected as much as anything the division of the
African labour force between the farms and the mines. Crown and company
land was the major source of labour for the mines, while labour on the
highveld was immobilized in the interests of the local farming community
who continued to complain for many years about a labour shortage. Pressure
from the mining companies induced the government in 1921–22 to purchase
20,000 morgen of land in the Piet Retief district which was to be held in
communal tenure and was intended to relieve congestion on company farms
and keep up the flow of labour to the mines.[14]
The later 1880s brought a rush of concession hunters into Swaziland, and
these 'bought' the land and its minerals several times over. As a result of a
deal between Britain and the Transvaal, in 1895 the country became, much
against the wishes of the Swazi themselves, a protectorate of the Transvaal.
The convention of 1894 protected, on certain conditions, the rights of the
Swazi king over his subjects, and
― 293 ―
The discussions which preceded the land partition of the latter year provide
classic material on questions of colonial social engineering. Drawing on
evidence to the Lagden Commission and on the slightly earlier partition of
Zululand, there was lengthy debate on the amount of land required to
sustain the average family and on the advantages and disadvantages for
government and settlers of a few large or many small reserves. The Zulu
Rising of 1906 overshadowed the partition, and while this prompted the High
Commissioner, Lord Selborne, to advocate caution, the settler leader and
newspaper editor, Allister Miller, demanded the 'denationalization' of the
Swazi as the only guarantee of settler security.[18] While Miller saw
reserves as an impediment to progress, the Swazi leaders also opposed
reserves because most of the country had been alienated through medium-
term grazing leases which safeguarded rights of cultivation. These areas
would eventually revert to the nation. The eventual compromise between the
settler and official positions resulted in a three-way division of the country
between the concessionaires, the Swazi, and the Crown. The Swazi were led
to believe that the bulk of Crown Land would be available for their use, but
in fact it was almost all sold off in later years to finance recurrent
governmental expenditure.[19]
Almost half of the Swazi within colonial Swaziland were left outside the 32
scheduled reserves and were given until 1914 to decide whether to come to
terms with their landlords as labour tenants or to move into the reserves.
Care was taken in demarcating the reserves to inconvenience chiefs as little
as possible and important graves were included in Swazi Nation areas. The
partition was intended to satisfy the conflicting interests of settlers who
sought labour tenants and of Witwatersrand mining interests, which owned
concessions in Swaziland and sought labour migrants. Lord Selborne did not
envisage that the reserves would become the home of all Swaziland's Swazi
or that those who moved into them would be able to meet all their needs
through agriculture. The partition would have failed in its objects if it
had.[20]
After the death of King Mbandzeni in 1889 there appears to have been a
long period during the minorities of his son, Bhunu, and his grandson,
Sobhuza, when
― 294 ―
the Swazi ruling elite took very little public interest in the Swazi of the
Transvaal. Although there are occasional references in the speeches of
councillors to the former extent of the Swazi kingdom and to the shifting of
boundary beacons, there seems to have been an acceptance of the new
boundaries as an indisputable fact of life.[22] In all the voluminous
documentation relating to the Swazi deputations to England in 1894 and
1907, for instance, as well as in numerous other petitions, and the records
of izindaba, there is hardly a reference to the Swazi of the Transvaal.
There is ample evidence that the two other major royal villages at Mbhuleni
and Mekemeke also maintained close contact with the royal house in
Swaziland. There were also a number of other Swazi chieftaincies which kept
up their links with Swaziland. The Shongwe chief, Matamu, on the northern
border had in 1914 an induna and followers in Swaziland.[25] Mbudula, the
chief of the Mahlalela, whose territory had been split three ways between the
Transvaal, Swaziland and Mozambique, maintained homesteads in all three
countries, though his headquarters was in the Transvaal. His clan acquired a
reputation for independence, but he, when giving evidence to the Beaumont
Commission in 1914, claimed: 'I am a Swazi.'[26] Hilda Kuper summarized
the position in the mid-1930s as follows: '. . . outside the territory in the
Barberton, Carolina and Piet Relief districts are large groups of loyal subjects
who inform their king, Sobhuza, of any important events, occasionally send
him tribute, receive emissaries from him and have him ratify the
appointment of their local chiefs'.[27]
From about 1910, the Swazi Queen and council, after a lengthy period of
introspection in which their entire attention appears to have been
concentrated on the battle to avoid Swaziland's incorporation into the
Transvaal and on resistance to the land partition, began to adopt a more
extrovert position, seeing that advantages could be gained from participation
in South Africa-wide political activity. As a result of the land partition and
high taxation, the Swazi of Swaziland were becoming much more involved in
labour migration to the Witwatersrand where they were lumped together
with the South African Swazi as a single category.[28] Above all, the
Schedule to the Union of South Africa Act, providing for the incorporation of
the High Commission Territories, and the common knowledge that Swaziland
was first on the list for transfer meant that the Swazi had nothing to lose,
and possibly something to gain, from adopting a less parochial stance. They
now saw threats to the interests of South African 'Natives' as equally a
threat to themselves.
Queen Labotsibeni put the position very frankly in 1914 when she was
reported as saying:
Queen Labotsibeni had earlier made contact with Pixley kalsaka Seme, who
had recently returned as a lawyer from the United States and Britain. He
drafted a petition for the Swazi council in 1912, and in the same year Queen
Labotsibeni provided almost all the capital for Seme's paper, Abantu-Batho,
which the Swazi royal family continued to support until its collapse in the
late 1920s. It was founded in connection with the South African Natives'
National Congress which held its first meeting in January 1912.[30]
The congress was seen by its founders, among whom Pixley Seme was a
prime mover, as a response to Union. Its aim was to foster the unity of the
'natives' and to combat 'tribalism'. The South African 'tribes' were not,
however, seen in themselves as an impediment to unity but as the building
blocks from which unity could be constructed. The Paramount Chiefs of the
major southern Africa 'tribes' were appointed as honorary presidents of the
organization and were viewed not only as a potential source of financial
support but also as a bridge between the growing African intelligentsia and
the rural masses. The congress, which was conceived along parliamentary
lines, was to have an Upper House of chiefs and a Lower House of
commoners. The legitimacy of the chiefs as the 'natural' rulers of their
people was assumed. Seme himself, who eventually married princesses of
the Swazi and Zulu royal families, was a consistent champion both of chiefly
authority and of 'race pride', by which he seems usually to have meant
ethnic or 'tribal' loyalty.[31]
The primary interest of the Swazi Queen and council in the congress was
undoubtedly in the campaign against the Land Act. They had embarked on a
campaign to buy back concession land from its holders and therefore had a
special interest in the restrictions on purchase which it imposed. The
extension of the terms of the Act to Swaziland would bring an end to their
schemes. Prince Malunge, together with Benjamin Nxumalo, the brother of
the young Queen Mother Lomawa, and uncle of Sobhuza, played an active
part in the early meetings of the congress, as did Josiah Vilakazi, secretary
to Queen Labotsibeni. When Prince Malunge attended the special congress
held in 1914 at Kimberley to protest against the Land Act, he was treated as
the most distinguished delegate.[32]
The premature death of Prince Malunge in 1915, which was publicly mourned
by congress leaders J.L. Dube, Pixley Seme and Sol Plaatje, did not end the
assertion of a wider South African role by the Swazi royal house.[33] In
1916 Cleopas Kunene, one of the first editors of Abantu-Batho and a
member of the Swazi deputation to England in 1894, organized an
extravagant reception in Johannesburg for Prince Sobhuza who was on his
way to school at Lovedale.[34] A few years later, in 1921, Sobhuza was to
buy six stands and a house in Sophiatown which became a meeting place for
the Swazi in Johannesburg.[35]
The first serious attempt at intervention by the Swazi Queen on behalf of the
Transvaal Swazi came in 1918 in connection with the implementation of the
section of the Land Act which provided for the creation of additional
reserves. Queen Labotsibeni heard in January 1918 that the Eastern
Transvaal Land Committee was seeking evidence and asked the Resident
Commissioner in Swaziland to inform it that it was 'my wish as well as the
wish of all the Swazi living in the Transvaal' that they be given 'a strip of
land [from] the Barberton line right down to the Pongola river near Chief
Sithambe'.[36] The High Commissioner, Lord Buxton, indicated that her
views would be put to the committee, but if they were, they can have had
little impact as there was no question of any highveld area in the
― 296 ―
The Botha government withdrew the bill, as, faced with the conflicting claims
for labour from highveld farmers and the mining companies, it was unable to
get a majority for it. The same conflict ensured that the scheduling of
reserves was indefinitely delayed.[40] Meanwhile in 1919 the Swazi Queen
and council made one further attempt to intervene on behalf of their
'subjects' in the Transvaal. In a trenchant petition, presumably drafted by
Seme and clearly influenced by the tone of Wilson's Fourteen Points, they
demanded among other things the recognition of 'the independence of
Swaziland with its own sovereign power' and the provision of land for the
Swazi in the districts of Barberton, Carolina, Ermelo, Piet Relief, and
Wakkerstroom. The petition referred for the first time to what would be a
recurring theme: promises allegedly contained in the conventions of 1881
and 1884 that 'locations' would be established for the Swazi in the eastern
Transvaal who were said to be living under a 'veiled form of slavery'.[41]
The responses to this petition and to petitions in 1921 and 1922 which
sought the recognition of Sobhuza as king of the Swazi on both sides of the
border were negative.[42]
At about this time the continuing influence of Queen Labotsibeni over the
Swazi of the eastern Transvaal was vividly demonstrated by the experience
of a group of South African Natives' National Congress fund-raisers who
visited the area in connection with the sending of a deputation to Europe.
Swazi chiefs in the eastern Transvaal told them that nothing could be given
without the consent of the Queen Regent. She told them that they could
collect in the Transvaal but that all funds raised should be brought to her for
allocation as she too was planning to send a deputation. When the President
of the Congress, S.M. Makgato, sought to use official channels to claim the
resulting £500, the Queen's Secretary informed the Resident Commissioner
that the Swazi of the Transvaal had only agreed to contribute for the Swazi
deputation.[43] When Sobhuza had his first ncwala in 1921, it was reported
that many Swazi from outside Swaziland attended. Before he left on his
long-planned deputation to London in 1922 he paid a visit to the Mjindini
royal villages in the Transvaal at Barberton to say farewell and thank
you.[44]
In the years following World War I, the position of the Swazi in the eastern
Transvaal deteriorated seriously. Even before the war, pressure on squatters
on the highveld had begun to increase as a result of the subdivision of farms
and the increase of commercial farming. Chiefs with their retainers and often
large herds of stock were especially vulnerable. Early in 1914 the Mbhuleni
royal village had set off on the first of a long series of migrations. It was to
move five times by 1949.[45] After the war similar pressures began
increasingly to be felt in the Barberton
― 297 ―
The case of Chief Mhola, of Mjindini, one of the three most important Swazi
chiefs in the Transvaal, however, vividly demonstrated that the policy of
'retribalization' applied only to malleable chiefs in reserves, and not to
independently minded chiefs who were squatters on white farms. It also
demonstrated the reawakening of ethnic consciousness as a defensive
strategy against proletarianization on the part of a rural elite and the strong
official hostility towards such manifestations. Chief Mhola, who was a
contemporary of Sobhuza and had been educated with him at the Swazi
National School at Zombodze, was installed as chief in 1923. In the following
year he was evicted, together with 37 other Swazi homesteads, from a farm
which lay within the 'town lands' of Barberton. He sought the assistance of
Sobhuza and his council who in 1925 asked the Swaziland administration to
intercede through the High Commissioner on his behalf. They asked if he
could be given space in a 'location' or on Crown Land.[50] The High
Commissioner, Lord Athlone, who believed that the South African
government had its eyes on the High Commission Territories as dumping
grounds for 'surplus' population, took up the case. He felt that South Africa
should make proper provision for its population within its own borders and
may have feared that the eviction of prominent Swazi would lead to a flood
of immigrants into Swaziland where congestion in Swazi Nation areas was
already a problem.[51]
― 298 ―
Sobhuza and his council were equally insistent that Mhola and his people
should not come into Swaziland. Sobhuza stated: 'He is in charge of all the
Swazis there and if he does not look after them, they will become
vagabonds.'[53] At a slightly later date Mhola's councillors repudiated with
equal vehemence the suggestion that they could 'return' to Swaziland. They
acknowledged that they were Swazi but stated that 'we do not regard
Swaziland as our home, our home is here where we originated'.[54]
Herbst did hold out some prospect that reserves might be created in the
district if Hertzog's draft Native Bills were passed, but he complained that
Mhola had 'no special status' and that 'his affinity with the Swazi Chief
confers no claim to consideration upon him . . . .' He pointed out that in
terms of the Convention of 1894, 'the interests of the Swazi Chief were to be
confined to the territory of Swaziland'.[55]
No reserves were in fact scheduled in the Barberton district for many years
and Chief Mhola and his followers survived as labour tenants on farm land
for at least thirty-five years. In remarkably lucid evidence to the Native
Economic Commission in 1930 several of his councillors protested vigorously
against the terms which they had to accept as labour tenants.
Acknowledging that there were differences in wealth within the 'tribe', they
demanded the creation of a reserve into which the most 'hard-pressed' could
move. They made it clear that these would include the chief and the larger
cattle owners who always found it difficult to maintain their herds as labour
tenants.[56]
Living as close as they did to the town of Barberton, Mhola's councillors also
displayed an acute awareness of the economic possibilities of the local urban
area. They protested that they were treated in the urban area in the same
way as 'other natives'.[57] This was presumably a reference to the influx of
'Shangaans', 'Nyasas' and others who less than twenty years later were said
to acknowledge Mhola as chief and pay tax as his followers. They protested
at their inability to buy plots or stands, or to engage in business within the
urban area, as well as at indiscriminate arrests of people found drinking beer
there.[58] They clearly believed that their historic claim to the area entitled
them to privileged access to whatever commercial opportunities existed.
There was a remarkable similarity between their urban demands and those
of Swaziland's intelligentsia, which were articulated, as will be shown below,
in the same year.
An alliance between the intelligentsia and the chiefs, as will be recalled, was
one of the basic premises upon which the South African Natives' National
Congress had been established. This was an alliance which, by the later
1920s, had been seriously eroded by a number of factors. These included
the failure of congress either to reverse or to have fully implemented the
terms of the Natives Land Act of 1913, and the increased rate of permanent
African urbanization which followed the growth of secondary industry during
World War I. Attendance by chiefs at the annual conferences of the ANC
declined, as did their financial contributions to it, and special conventions of
chiefs had to be called in 1927 and 1928 to obtain authoritative chiefly
responses to Hertzog's Native Bills and the Native Administration Act.
At the same time the Industrial and Commercial Workers' Union (ICU)
provided a mass-based alternative to the ANC and swept like a millenarian
― 299 ―
movement through the eastern Transvaal and parts of Swaziland itself. Many
Swazi chiefs, on both sides of the border, joined with thousands of their
followers. Sobhuza's uncle, Norman Nxumalo, brother of Benjamin, was
actively involved as an organizer in the Transvaal. This may have increased
the acceptability of the union among Swazi chiefs who were drawn to it, as
they had previously been drawn to the ANC, by the hope of regaining their
land. The ICU could do nothing to satisfy the expectations which it had
aroused, and by 1928 it was fading out of the eastern Transvaal as rapidly
as it had appeared two years before.[59]
Following the collapse of the ICU, and in the face of the increasingly
repressive policies of Hertzog and Oswald Pirow, who fought the 1929
election with the slogan of 'Swart Gevaar ' ('Black Peril'), there was a move
within the ANC to restore the alliance with the chiefs. The proven ability of
Swazi chiefs in the eastern Transvaal to deliver their followers to the ICU
may have inspired Pixley Seme, Sobhuza's close associate and legal adviser,
to advocate this strategy, though his motives were undoubtedly
conservative. At the annual conference of the ANC, in April 1930, J.T.
Gumede, who was sympathetic to the Soviet Union and who wished the ANC
to adopt a more militant stand, was, after a dramatic call for the 'Native
Republic', replaced by Seme. There is no evidence that Sobhuza actively
canvassed on Seme's behalf, but he certainly was pleased with the result. A
Swaziland branch of the ANC was established by Benjamin Nxumalo at
Sobhuza's house in Sophiatown in the same year, and it is probably not
fortuitous that Norman Nxumalo stands behind Seme in the 1930 ANC group
photograph.[60]
Seme, who had little in common with Champion, was also committed to the
'full restoration of the paramount chieftainship of the Royal House in order to
revitalize all the Zulu native institutions [and so] re-establish the old esprit
de corps of the Zulu nation'.[62] Seme presided over the ANC at a time
when it was almost destroyed by internal dissension. He stated his own
political philosophy clearly in 1932 when he answered those who accused
him of 'culpable inertia'. He wished the ANC to return to its 'original
constitution' by reviving the upper House of Chiefs where they could discuss
'the new problems which face them today, the problems of employment for
their people, the problems of conserving national pride, customs and
traditions'. He also called for the support of the younger intelligentsia while
denouncing the 'common agitator who only wants to create strife and class
hatred' as well as 'hatred between whites and blacks'. He deplored
'detribalization' and the fact that 'the Chiefs and their uneducated people are
despised and forsaken by their educated tribesmen'. He called for a revival
of 'Race Pride' and for a restoration in confidence between the educated and
uneducated. He made it clear that he looked to ethnic mobilization as a
counter to the disintegration caused by education, urbanization and
proletarianization.[63]
me signally failed to revive the ANC along these lines, but he did assist
Sobhuza number of cultural initiatives which he undertook in Swaziland at
the time.
― 300 ―
Sobhuza's failure to have the land partition reversed through the deputation
to London in 1923 and through the case against Allister Miller which the
Privy Council finally rejected in 1926 prompted him to take a fresh interest
in ethnic mobilization. By then Sobhuza was particularly concerned at the
effects of labour migrancy on Swazi society, the decline in royal and chiefly
authority, the growing division between educated and uneducated and
between Christian and 'pagan', and by what he saw as the breakdown of
discipline and morality among the youth. The Ballingers, who visited
Swaziland in 1931, commented on the relative looseness of royal authority
away from the royal capitals, while Sir Brian Marwick recalls the
independence of the chiefs on the Lebombo in the mid-1920s and Sobhuza's
efforts to 'tame' one of them through a dynastic marriage. From the late
1920s, therefore, Sobhuza and his council embarked upon a deliberate policy
of reviving royal authority and central control.[64]
― 301 ―
however, and it was not until after the war that the Swazi National Council,
itself, entered the commercial arena through the establishment of a pressure
group, 'The Swazi Commercial Amadoda' (Amadoda = men).[69]
The simultaneous establishment of the Swazi National School at Matsapa
was another initiative with which Sobhuza was more closely identified. This
was intended to become 'a genuine national undertaking and cater for the
cultural, social, and industrial development of the Swazi people'.[70] There
was to be an academic stream leading to the matriculation class at Fort Hare
University College, but it also had a strong emphasis on agricultural training.
It was intended that the school should 'take advantage of the better
elements in the traditional native code and culture', though an early visitor,
Sir Alan Pim, saw considerable difficulty in the way of its doing this.[71]
(a) It causes the Swazi scholar to despise Swazi institutions and his
indigenous culture;
(c) It releases him from the wholesome restraints which the Swazi
indigenous method of education inculcated, and does not set up any
effective substitutes for them.
To counter the disintegration of rural life which had aroused concern in both
Sobhuza and Seme, he proposed an extension of national schools and a
revival of the regimental or age-grade system, the Ibutho .[72] His
proposals unleashed a storm of protest from the missions and the settlers,
from some of the 'native intelligentsia', and from Mr and Mrs Rheinallt Jones,
who were then attempting to introduce the segregated Pathfinder and
Wayfarer movements into Swaziland. Sobhuza had the active support of A.G.
Marwick who believed that 'a modernized age-grade system more in vital
touch with the conservative elements in native life' might protect the youth
'from the objectionable form of hooliganism known as Amalyaita' . Sobhuza
was able to recruit the support of a number of anthropologists including Mrs
Winifred Hoernlé, Isaac Schapera, and the young Hilda Beemer, later Mrs
Kuper, as well as Bronislaw Malinowski, who accompanied her on her first
venture into Swaziland in 1934.[73]
Although the old regimental system, involving not only military training but
also tribute labour, was clearly moribund, Sobhuza and his council had
begun in the early 1930s to exact fines from young men who married
without permission. While some settlers feared that Sobhuza intended to use
the regiments as a form of cheap labour, the missionaries were publicly
concerned that Christian youth would be contaminated by 'pagan' sexual
practices. A.G. Marwick felt that the battle was principally one for control
over the educational process.[74]
The Ibutho was eventually established on a trial basis at the Swazi National
School. The curriculum of training included 'Swazi history, custom, lore and
law' as well as 'ceremonial'. Although the experiment continued for a
number of years, it was ultimately a failure. There was a good deal of
resistance among the pupils themselves, many of whom objected to the
singing of the Swazi anthem, 'Inqaba kanqofula' and to attendance at the
ncwala which had been revived after Sobhuza's installation in 1921.[75]
Many of those who had passed through the regiment in the 1930s, however,
later formed part of an educated conservative elite. The first indvuna of the
Ibutho was Mfundza Sukati, who was to become the Deputy Prime Minister
of Swaziland at independence, and the second indvuna
― 302 ―
was J.S.M. Matsebula, who became Secretary to the King in 1967 and was
the leading Swazi historian, publishing Izakhiwe ka Ngwane (in Zulu) in
1952, and A History of Swaziland in 1972. He was to play a leading part in
the development of siSwati as a written language as the author of a series of
primary school texts published in the early 1970s.[76]
Sobhuza also had some success in reviving the regimental system outside
the schools. Reinforcement of the system came with its use for the
recruitment of the Swazi contingent during World War II. The recruiting
centres, or tinkhundla, were to be developed in the 1950s as the new, but
allegedly 'traditional', basis of local government and in the 1970s for
parliamentary elections. There was not much place for girls in the Ibutho,
but in 1935 Sobhuza revived the umncwasho, a two year pledge of celibacy
by adolescent girls with a reciprocal pledge in relation to them by all men.
It may be surprising that there was no effort made at this time to promote
the Swazi language. With the arrival of Zulu-speaking 'Amakholwa'
(Christian) evangelists and missionaries in Swaziland from the 1880s, Zulu
had become the language of church and school. This was in spite of the
marked difference in pronunciation, syntax, and vocabulary between it and
Swati. The influence of Zulu was such that Queen Labotsibeni had to insist
that Sobhuza was brought up to speak Swati as well as Zulu, which was his
mother's tongue.[78]
There was, in fact, some official consideration in the early 1930s of the
feasibility of producing literature in Swati, but it was concluded that because
of the relatively small size of the Swazi population, it was improbable that a
full range of school texts would ever be produced.[79] It was not until the
publication of D. Ziervogel's A Grammar of Swazi in 1952 that official
interest in the development of Swati was revived.[80] In the following year
a committee was established under the chairmanship of A.G. Marwick 'to
investigate the question of a Swazi Orthography and the introduction of
Swazi as a written language'. This committee produced a draft orthography
in 1956 but decided that there should be no change in the schools until
written Swati had been further developed.[81]
It was not until the fresh upsurge of cultural nationalism in the 1960s that
the
― 303 ―
While there seems to have been little or no demand for the development of
Swati in the 1930s, and while the impact of Sobhuza's other cultural
initiatives on the Swazi outside Swaziland may have been limited, he did
make a number of moves intended to involve the Swazi of South Africa. He
established in 1931, at his house in Sophiatown, the Swazi National Royal
Club, which was intended to provide a social centre for all Swazi on the
Witwatersrand, regardless of origins, and to promote 'all aspects of Swazi
welfare'. This club has had a long and active life and survives at Kwa Thema,
Springs, but another scheme for a Swazi Labour Institute which would have
been concerned with the recruitment and welfare of Swazi workers
apparently came to nothing.[83]
The major initiative in which both Sobhuza and Seme were involved at this
time was 'The Petition of the Swazi Tribes of the Eastern Transvaal to the
Union Parliament', signed and dated by ten Swazi chiefs at the Ntfonjeni
royal village in Swaziland on 25 March 1932. The petitioners requested
reserves for their 'tribes' in the areas in which they currently lived in the
districts of Barberton, Carolina and Ermelo. The printed version of the
petition was prefaced by splendid photographs of Sobhuza and his mother
taken during the visit of the Prince of Wales to Swaziland in 1925. According
to Seme, these photographs were included 'only for sentimental reasons and
to indicate the nationality of the humble Petitioners'. In a brief sketch of the
history of the Swazi he pointed to some of the finer points of the 'Swazi
constitution', such as the high respect paid to women, and staked an
historical claim to territory as far north as the Sabi river.[84]
The Native Affairs Department took more than two years to reply to the
petition, but the Native Trust and Land Act which was finally passed in 1936
did provide accommodation for four of the Barberton chiefs, all of whom had
resided on or close to Crown Land in the lowveld. It was, however, to be
many years before they received official recognition. This partial success
prompted Seme to draft another petition in July 1936, which may never
have been submitted, but which was intended to be signed by the same
chiefs, and to make a special plea for land for the chiefs of Mbhuleni,
Mjindini, and Mekemeke who remained on farm land.[85]
At this stage the question of the transfer of Swaziland to the Union came
once again to the fore. The provision of at least some land for the Swazi on
his northern border seems to have led Sobhuza to take a more positive
interest in the possibility of incorporation as a means to the 'unification' of
his people. Officials in Hertzog's entourage on a visit to Britain in 1937
planted the rumour that Sobhuza would be prepared to consider a deal
which would 'formally bring under his allegiance the large number of Swazi
hitherto outside the borders of Swaziland'.[86] A year or so later, Sobhuza
held discussions in Swaziland with Douglas Smit,
― 304 ―
Secretary for Native Affairs in the Union, which touched on the position of
the Swazi in the Transvaal. He subsequently outlined in great detail the
historical case for the creation of further reserves, making once again a
special plea for the three royal villages. Smit maintained that Swaziland
itself had always been regarded as the Swazi 'location' and stated quite
frankly that: 'our difficulty is that the districts of Carolina and Ermelo are
purely European and we have no scheduled Native Areas or released area
there'.[87]
On the outbreak of World War II, Jan Smuts replaced Hertzog as Prime
Minister of South Africa and decided, much to the annoyance of the British,
to press for the immediate transfer of Swaziland. His emissary, Deneys
Reitz, indicated that 'Sobhuza could be got round'. As inducements. Smuts
was prepared to offer the 'purchase of land for the enlargement of Swazi
reserves', as well as reconsideration of railway plans and a reduction in
'Native' taxation.[88] Apparently in connection with this deal, Sobhuza's
lawyers sought the Governor General's consent for the purchase by the
Swazi Nation of sixteen farms in the Barberton, Carolina and Ermelo
districts, all but two of which were close to the borders of Swaziland. The
farms included the land on which the three best known royal villages were
established. Nothing came of the deal, but it is possible to see in it the germ
of the later KaNgwane 'land deal' proposal.[89]
By the time that the Afrikaner Nationalist government came into power in
1948 there is, then, little evidence that the Swazi of the eastern Transvaal
had been subjected to any policy of 'retribalization'. There is plenty of
evidence that at least their chiefs wanted to be 'retribalized', but had
managed to make very little headway in that direction. It may not be
surprising that the chiefs on the highveld farms had made such little
progress, but it is surprising that even the chiefs on Trust land in the
Barberton district had failed to achieve recognition. There had, however,
been one or two indications that the government was taking more interest in
ethnicity. The Native Commissioner at Bushbuckridge had sought, on his
own initiative, Sobhuza's advice in 1940 as to who should be regarded (not
recognized) as the senior Swazi chief in the newly created Nsikazi reserve in
the Nelspruit district.[92] The ethnological section within the Department of
Native Affairs began in 1946 to collect information for a survey of The Tribes
of
― 305 ―
Though the Bantu Administration Act of 1951 provided the machinery, in the
form of a three-tier system of Tribal, Regional, and Territorial Authorities,
which was to be used in the political evolution of 'Bantustans', it was not
until the publication of the Tomlinson Commission report in 1955 that a
blueprint for the consolidation and development of the reserves along ethnic
lines was produced. The commission saw Swaziland as the nucleus of a
Bantustan which would include reserves on its borders in the eastern
Transvaal and would have access to the sea through the Ingwavuma district.
It was, therefore, the source of the later proposals for the consolidation of
KaNgwane and for the proposed 'land deal' of 1982.[94]
The years after World War II saw dramatic changes in Swaziland. The
development of forestry and of irrigated sugar and citrus production, as well
as mining and the completion of the railway, transformed a stagnant
economy. Opportunities for local employment were greatly increased and
dependence upon labour migration to South Africa reduced. Labour was, in
fact, drawn into Swaziland from Mozambique, Nyasaland and South Africa to
meet the demands of the expanding economy. Political development was
relatively slow. From 1939 until 1950 Sobhuza had been largely preoccupied
with resistance to the government's schemes for indirect rule, realizing that
the bureaucratization of the chiefs, including himself, would undermine their
authority. He was largely successful in this campaign, ensuring that the
appointment and dismissal of chiefs was kept out of government's hands and
that they did not become salaried officials.[98]
When, in 1959, the colonial government, moving with the times, broached
the question of constitutional development in Swaziland, Sobhuza and the
Swazi National Council's executive committee—the Liqoqo —moved quickly
to pre-empt the development of mass-based political parties. They proposed
a deal with the conservative settlers under which each group would elect by
its own 'traditional' methods an equal number to the new legislative body.
Control over Swazi law and custom, as well as land and minerals, would be
vested in the king and council.
― 306 ―
Sobhuza was under strong pressure from the political parties and the
colonial authorities to remain above politics and prepare himself for the
position of constitutional monarch. He was, on the other hand, pressed by
the Liqoqo and the settlers to venture into politics. Finally, after the rejection
by the Libhandla, or general council, of his power-sharing scheme, he
launched in 1964 the Imbokodvo National Movement as the political arm of
the Swazi National Council.[101] Sobhuza's major tactic against the political
parties was to label them as 'foreign', divisive and hostile to Swazi 'tradition',
of which he was not only guardian but the unchallengeable interpreter. The
fact that, with the exception of Nquku and the South African Swazi,
MacDonald Maseko, who was prominent in the NNLC, all the leaders had
impeccable Swazi credentials does not seem to have worked against this
tactic. Sobhuza's major assets were the prestige he had acquired over 40
years of low-key resistance to colonial rule, the authority of the chiefs, and
the foundations of cultural nationalism which he had himself begun to lay in
the 1930s and continued to consolidate thereafter. He also enjoyed the
support of substantial capitalist interests which saw in him and Swazi
'tradition' a bulwark against more radical forms of African nationalism.
His party won all the contested seats in the 1964 elections after which many
of the political leaders, such as the two Nxumalos and Dumisa Diamini,
threw in their lot with it rather than face prolonged exclusion from public life.
They had in any case obtained only a derisory share of the vote, with the
chiefs throwing their full weight, including alleged threats of banishment and
dispossession, behind the Imbokodvo. The party was also helped by the
constituency boundaries which favoured the rural areas and by the
disenfranchisement of black, but not white, South Africans living in
Swaziland.[102]
― 307 ―
Sobhuza's capitalist backers, but they were satisfied with the hostility of his
government towards trade unions and the attempt which was made to
modernize the 'traditional' system of labour control through the king's
representatives or Ndabazabantu .[103]
The most vivid expression of this cultural nationalism was a new ethnic
exclusivism which was directed not so much against European settlers as
against Mozambicans and black South Africans, who constituted a significant
proportion of the labour force. An attempt by the colonial government to
tighten controls on African immigration in 1959–60 had failed owing to the
lack of cooperation from the Swazi National Council which resented
interference with what it considered its own prerogatives.[106] After the
post-Sharpeville influx of refugees and the labour unrest of 1963 there were
frequent demands for action to be taken against foreign labour, though there
was a fundamental difference of opinion between the Swazi National Council
and the government as to who was a Swazi and who was not. The
government believed that long residence in Swaziland qualified an 'African'
to be regarded as Swazi, while the Council maintained that a person could
only become a Swazi through ukukhonta —allegiance to a chief. They were
determined to keep control over citizenship in their own hands and were
able, after independence, to achieve this. Control over the process of
ukukhonta gave the 'traditional' authorities a potent economic and political
weapon, as well as a useful source of funds.[107]
The question of the status in Swaziland of the South African Swazi was a
complex one. Sobhuza had as early as 1960, in the context of a colonial
deportation ordinance, expressed concern that this could be used against
Swazi people from South Africa. But as Swaziland approached independence
there was popular resentment against immigrants from South Africa,
sometimes known as 'paper Swazi', who were thought to be cashing in on
claimed Swazi roots to the detriment of the Swazi of Swaziland. There is
evidence that Sobhuza himself, and some of his ministers, such as Prince
Bhekimpi, who was to become prime minister in 1983 and who, as chief at
Nkaba royal village, had followers in the Transvaal, saw the South African
Swazi as a special case, but the law made no exception for them.[108]
born within Swaziland, the hearing of citizenship cases was transferred from
the courts to a hastily created tribunal, and he was again deported. After the
tribunal was itself declared illegal, the independence constitution was
suspended and parliament handed all power over to the king and
council.[109] Among the laws promulgated after this was an exceptionally
exclusive citizenship law which further entrenched ukukhonta as practically
the only was of acquiring Swazi citizenship.[110] The case was probably the
excuse for, rather than the cause of, the suspension of the constitution
which the king and council had accepted under protest, but it did have the
effect of hardening the distinction between the Swazi of Swaziland and the
Swazi of South Africa, and increased the insecurity of people of marginal
status. It was hardly surprising that Ngwenya was reported in 1982 to be
campaigning in KaNgwane against the land deal.[111]
The eastern highveld farms were in the 1950s an important area of rural
support for the ANC under the leadership of the Ermelo-bom 'Lion of the
East', Gert Sibande.[112] The banning of the ANC and Pan Africanist
Congress in 1960 did not lead to an immediate channelling of political feeling
into ethnically based organizations. The chiefs of the two reserves
designated as Swazi were organized in 1959 and 1962 into the Nkomazi and
Nsikazi Regional Authorities, but it was not until 1968 that the Swazi
National Council of South Africa was established as a pressure group to
mobilize the Swazi in the urban areas, 'black spots', and 'white' farms in
support of 'separate development'. Its organizer was David Lukhele, a
former Seventh Day Adventist evangelist and life insurance salesman, who
was also the 'Swazi editor' of Africa South, a paper produced by Lloyd
Ndaba, a former South African Information Department official, who
promoted a number of ethnically based political parties in the 1960s.[113]
It was hardly a coincidence that this 'political party' was founded at a time
when the systematic resettlement of people from neighbouring white areas
into the Swazi reserves in the Barberton and Nelspruit districts was just
beginning. 'Commuter' towns were established in the Nsikazi reserve for
workers removed from the municipal townships of Nelspruit and White River.
The removal of 'surplus' population from farms and 'black spots' was also
beginning. There was
― 309 ―
never any possibility of these areas being able to support a fraction of their
population through agriculture. With a minimum of local employment, the
choice for most people was between commuting, labour migration, or
starvation. The proclaimed towns were soon surrounded by large squatter
settlements and health conditions rapidly deteriorated. The Nsikazi reserve
was to be the epicentre of the serious cholera outbreak which hit the eastern
Transvaal in 1980.[114]
There was never, of course, any question of the Swazi Bantustan being
consolidated in such a way as to match the actual distribution of Swazi
people on the ground. The 1972 proposals envisaged the concentration of
the Swazi in a single block of territory along the northern and northwestern
borders of Swaziland. This would clearly facilitate a deal with Swaziland in
the future, but it involved the excision of the Nsikazi reserve, with the
exception of the planned towns which would remain as dormitories for
Nelspruit and White River. The Pongola reserve, to the south of Swaziland,
which was regarded as Swazi but which had not been constituted as a
Regional Authority, was also be to excised.[116]
The proposals naturally incensed the Nsikazi chiefs and their people who
were threatened with removal after 50 years or more of residence. Even the
government-sponsored BENSO organization, which was concerned with the
economic development of the Bantustans, was alarmed at proposals which
involved the removal from the Swazi Bantustan of the only area in which
there was any infrastructure at all. For the government the proposals had
the merit of providing for the first time land on the highveld into which the
'surplus' population could be removed. They must also have been made in
the knowledge that King Sobhuza had little interest in the outlying Nsikazi
reserve where the population, although predominantly Swati-speaking,
included many people of Sotho, Tsonga and Zulu origin.[117]
These proposals had the effect of exacerbating the tensions which already
existed within the Swazi National Council and the Interim Committee
between those who advocated Bantustan development and opposed a land
deal with Swaziland, on the one hand, and the supporters of such a deal on
the other hand.
― 310 ―
While the Swazi National Council claimed branches all over the central and
eastern Transvaal and involved all the Swazi chiefs in white areas, it is
impossible to judge to what extent it represented Swazi opinion. Many of
those who were nominally Swazi no doubt rejected ethnic politics entirely,
but it is evident that within these organizations majority opinion was
opposed to any deal with Swaziland. The lesson of the Ngwenya affair was
not lost on the South African Swazi. David Lukhele was at this stage
particularly critical of what he saw as the domination of the Dlamini clan in
Swaziland and of the banning of all political parties which accompanied the
suspension of the constitution in 1973. Lukhele did not totally rule out the
possibility of amalgamation with Swaziland but maintained that this should
happen, if at all, after direct negotiations between a self-governing
Bantustan and Swaziland, and not as a result of a deal concluded by the
South African government. Swazi National Council literature was also critical
of the 'interference' by Swaziland in the affairs of the South African
Swazi.[118]
An example of such interference came with the appointment in late 1972 of
Dr Lancelot Gama as King Sobhuza's personal representative, or Indvuna
General, in South Africa. Dr Gama, a medical practitioner in Springs, was a
leader of the Swazi National Royal Club which was apparently at loggerheads
with the Swazi National Council in South Africa. By the end of 1973 Dr Gama
had established a rival 'Swazi Nation of the Republic', which had the support
of a number of Swazi National Council branches and of three chiefs,
including Chief Johannes Mkolishi Dlamini, the son and heir of James Maquba
Nkosi, of Mbhuleni, who was regarded as the senior Swazi chief in South
Africa.[119] Chief Mkolishi was still technically a squatter on a farm near
Badplaas. It was only in 1975 that he received the official recognition which
had eluded his father for so long. He then became chief of the Eerstehoek
resettlement camp in the new Regional authority of Mswati, which had been
established for the three senior Dlamini chiefs in the newly acquired lands
along the Swaziland border.[120]
Within little more than a year a split had occurred over the question of
whether KaNgwane, as it now came to be known, should progress to the
next stage of Bantustan development, which was self-government with a
Legislative Assembly. Sobhuza was known to be opposed to self-government
for the homeland as he correctly anticipated that it would create or
encourage vested interests which would be hostile to fusion with Swaziland.
In resisting this development, Chief Mkolishi was therefore acting in
Sobhuza's interests, though his reluctance to sign documents relating to land
consolidations may have reflected his own dissatisfaction with arrangements
that left his royal village of Mbhuleni outside of KaNgwane. The majority
opinion, however, felt that the acquisition of self-governing status would
strengthen the bargaining position of KaNgwane with
― 311 ―
Chief Mkolishi's failure to obtain the support of more than a minority of the
Swazi chiefs was an indication that the appeal to a kind of Swazi chauvinism,
which had worked so successfully in Swaziland itself, was out of touch with
'traditional' opinion in South Africa. It also reflected the fears of some chiefs
of Dlamini dominance, or more precisely, royal autocracy, as Chief Mkolishi
was not able to muster the support of all the Dlamini chiefs. Above all, it
reflected doubts about the desirability of union with Swaziland. Chief
Mkolishi did his best to exploit his royal status, holding an annual sibhimbi
(dance) for several days at Mbhuleni, which in the early 1980s was attended
by up to 5000 people. He could not, of course, hold an ncwala ceremony as
to do so would be tantamount to rebellion against the Swazi king. On his
periodic visits to the Provincial Supreme Court in Pretoria, he was
accompanied by busloads of supporters in 'traditional' dress.[125]
It is probable that Chief Mkolishi's limited power base lay with the rural farm
population, such as his own Mbhuleni people, who had been long resident
close to the Swaziland border and who identified with Swaziland.
Government policy was from the mid-1970s, however, acting to transform
sparsely populated highveld sheep farms into vast semi-urban squatter
settlements. These were the classic 'dumping grounds' where people were
forced to live in appalling conditions with no prospect of local employment.
Chief Mkolishi's father had claimed suzerainty over all the Swazi of the
Carolina and Middleburg districts and beyond, but the resettled population of
the new areas, though nominally Swazi, were often Zulurather than Swati-
speaking people who had been cleared from urban 'black spots' such as
Doornkop, near Middleburg, and Kromkrans, near Carolina, as well as from
farms all over the eastern highveld.[126]
― 312 ―
There was, however, some tension within the government and the
Nationalist party on this issue. Successive ministers responsible for
Bantustan affairs, M.C.
― 313 ―
Botha and Dr Piet Koomhof, were unenthusiastic and continued to press for
Bantustan development as late as 1980, although discussions on border
adjustments had evidently started in the mid-1970s. In the end, it was the
Minister for Foreign Affairs, Dr Pik Botha, and strategic planners, who
pressed for the deal, not only as a step towards a 'constellation of states' but
also as a way of 'incorporating' Swaziland and reducing the threat of
infiltration by the ANC through the country. Swaziland is, from a strategic
point of view, a part of the Transvaal and has a border with South Africa
which is as long as that of Mozambique.[133]
It became clear in 1984 that the land deal had been offered to Swaziland as
an inducement to sign a secret non-aggression pact, under the terms of
which Swaziland would clamp down on ANC activities. The agreement,
signed in February 1982, was a precursor of the Nkomati Accord with
Mozambique of March 1984, which, if it held, would reduce the value of the
deal with Swaziland and allow South Africa to renege on its commitment
without serious strategic loss. It is too early to assess the significance of the
dissolution of the Rumpff Commission in June 1984 and Dr Koornhof's
announcement that South Africa did not intend to proceed with the land deal
in the immediate future, but it is safe to say that South Africa's ultimate
actions will be dictated by its own strategic self-interest and considerations
of realpolitik .[134] No government has had more experience in the cynical
manipulation of ethnicity, and it was no doubt aware that a plausible ethnic
case could be made both for and against the land deal, though its validity in
terms of international law was open to serious question.
Once the land deal became a practical possibility, if not a probability, in
1982, Enos Mabuza was forced to argue against it in ethnic terms. It was
only then, and following the death of King Sobhuza in August 1982, that he
appears to have maintained explicitly that the South African Swazi had
become a distinct ethnicity and that there had been since the mid-nineteenth
century a 'divergence between the two groups such that each has developed
an independent socio-economic and political character of its own'. He went
on to argue that many of the Dlamini chiefs in the eastern Transvaal had
come there as refugees or rebels rather than as an integral part of the Swazi
nation, and that the history of the Ngomane, Mkhatjwa and Mahlalela clans
was 'completely independent of the Dlamini dynasty and domain'. The latter
arguments were, to say the very least, controversial, and he had to concede
that the 'military outposts' of Mbhuleni, Mjindini and Mekemeke had 'a direct
relationship with the Swazi monarchy'.[135]
― 314 ―
and maintained that the Swazi were being divided in the interests of the
personal ambitions of politicians who were the creation of the South African
government. There could be only one Swazi nation and the Swazi had no
desire to be divided like the Xhosa and the Tswana.[137]
Both Mabuza and Lukhele were guilty of special pleading, but Lukhele was
clearly unable to explain, except through the self-defeating argument that
the population was not Swazi, why it was that a majority of the chiefs and
others who had engaged in Bantustan politics were opposed to the deal. The
suggestion that they were government puppets was difficult to sustain as
they were opposing its policy. Nor did Lukhele produce a convincing
refutation of the socio-economic argument, which Mabuza himself did not
elaborate. It is a truism that Bantustan politics are elite politics. Support for
Mabuza may have been broadened by his opposition to the land deal, but his
original power base lay in the small business and professional class which
emerged in the planned towns of the Nsikazi reserve, which was finally
reprieved from excision in 1977.[138] Such people had established vested
interests in the Bantustan which could only be threatened by a land deal
with Swaziland where salaries were lower and business opportunities were
tightly controlled by an established elite. Mabuza also had the support of
prominent Swazi businessmen operating in Pretoria and on the
Witwatersrand, such as A.J. Sibanyoni and Ephraim Tshabalala (not the
Soweto 'millionaire' of the same name), who were the first directors of the
KaNgwane Economic Development Corporation, established in 1979.[139]
Witwatersrand-based businessmen may have seen participation in Bantustan
affairs as providing salaries, status, possible business opportunities,
including the chance to acquire freehold land, as well as protection, through
collaboration with the system, for their insecurely based urban ventures.
They are most unlikely to have supported a deal which would almost
inevitably undermine their position in the towns.
For the mass of the population of KaNgwane who were totally dependent
either on commuting or labour migration to the towns and farms of 'white'
South Africa there could be no possible advantage in the deal. Even less
could it benefit the majority of the South African Swazi who remained
outside KaNgwane in the central and eastern Transvaal. To such people,
ethnic politics were, if not an irrelevance, certainly a luxury. Mabuza's stated
commitment to the maintenance of a unitary South Africa, even if it was to
be like Seme's vision of 1912, a South Africa composed of ethnic building
blocks, reflected harsh socio-economic realities. The conclusion of the land
deal is now, following the installation of the new king of Swaziland, Mswati
II, in April 1986, and the disgrace of Prince Mfanasibili and pro-deal
members of the Liqoqo, most unlikely. But if it were concluded, it would in
all likelihood result in ethnic tensions between South African Swazi and the
Swazi of Swaziland, for it would result not only in 'denationalization' and the
loss of citizenship, which had in any case been compromised by the Bantu
Homelands Citizenship Act of 1970, but also loss of livelihood.
If the majority of the South African Swazi can be presumed to have been
opposed to the land deal, it is equally difficult to see what the Swazi of
Swaziland stood to gain from it. There is no doubt that for King Sobhuza
'border adjustments' meant the reclamation of the land of his ancestor,
Mswati, and the reunification of his people. It is, however, by no means
certain that he was satisfied with the terms of the deal as they emerged in
June 1982, leaving in South Africa, as they did, the royal villages of
Mbhuleni, Mjindini and Mekemeke.[140] He made no reference to the deal
in his last public speech on 22 July 1982, just a few weeks before his death.
Some of Swaziland's leaders may have seen little to lose in
― 315 ―
closer identification with South Africa, the bastion of capitalism in the region.
Some civil servants may have been attracted by higher South African
salaries and a larger field for their activities, but many of Swaziland's
leaders, including King Sobhuza's last prime minister, Prince Mabandla, had
doubts if only on grounds of security and Swaziland's probable loss of
international status. They did not all relish the prospect of becoming South
Africa's policemen in the rounding up of members of the ANC, towards whom
Sobhuza had always been sympathetic, conscious as he was of his family's
leading part in its founding. It is impossible, at this stage, to unravel the
Byzantine intricacies of the succession crisis which followed Sobhuza's death,
and which saw the gazetting of the Liqoqo as the 'Supreme Council of State'
and the removal first of Prince Mabandla and then of the Queen Mother,
Dzeliwe, but it is clear that disagreement over the land deal was one factor
in the imbroglio.[141]
If the land deal were to go ahead, Swaziland would acquire, apart from the
dubious advantage of access to the sea at Kosi Bay, a relatively small area
of undeveloped and disease-ridden territory with a relatively dense de facto
population and a de jure population of close to one million people. Several
hundred thousand people, who had been forcibly relocated on Swaziland's
borders in nominally rural, but practically urban slums, would become part of
its population. The probability was that it would become a dumping ground
for more of South Africa's 'surplus' population. It would lose its much-prized
ethnic homogeneity with the addition of significant ethnic minorities in the
Nsikazi and Ingwavuma areas. The degree of compatibility between the
Swazi of South Africa and those of Swaziland was in itself clearly in doubt.
Conclusion
The history of the two halves of the Swazi nation since World War II tends to
confirm Mabuza's contention that there has been a 'socio-economic and
political divergence'. While KaNgwane was created as a labour reservoir,
Swaziland's export of labour declined relative to its population. Swaziland
experienced dramatic changes in the period after World War II. The
development of forestry and of irrigated sugar and citrus production, as well
as mining and the completion of the railway, transformed a stagnant
economy. Opportunities for local employment thus greatly increased. In
1981 as many as 57,000 labour migrants and 40,000 commuters from
KaNgwane worked in white South Africa. Swaziland, with a far larger
population, supplied only 13,000 labour migrants and few, if any,
commuters.[142] While very few of KaNgwane's population had any real
access to land, the majority of Swaziland's population, even if in agricultural
or industrial employment, retained some stake in the soil. As a crude
indicator it could be shown that the ratio of cattle to people in Swaziland, at
over 1:1, was four or five times that in KaNgwane.[143] Swaziland also
remained one of the least urbanized countries of Africa. While it is true that
the volume of South African investment in Swaziland was large and growing,
and that Swaziland was closely tied to South Africa through the Customs
Union and the Rand Monetary Area, it did have a viable domestic economy.
On the political level it was clear that KaNgwane's petty bourgeoisie had
developed vested interests in the Bantustans and was bitterly opposed to
transfer. Ironically, if the South African Swazi had developed a distinct
ethnicity, this was at least in part because of the exclusive cultural
nationalism which had developed—or been developed—in Swaziland itself.
Some of those who, at the time of the Ngwenya affair, espoused a view of
Swazi ethnicity which confined it to the
― 316 ―
people of Swaziland alone are now among the leading exponents of a wider
view. Prince Mfanasibili, for example, featured prominently in both camps.
This may be taken as demonstrating that Swazi ethnicity is a highly volatile
concept and that ambiguity in relation to it is not the sole prerogative of
Enos Mabuza. In Swaziland there has been, among the leaders anyway,
some tension between an exclusive and an inclusive view of Swazi ethnicity.
Among the South African Swazi the tension has been between the few, like
Chief Mkolishi, who give primacy to their Swazi identity, and the many who
are either indifferent to it, or, like Enos Mabuza, value it, but in the final
analysis put their identity as South Africans first. The impact of the latest
state of emergency on the lowveld towns of KaNgwane, which has been
reflected in more strikes and stayaways, as well as in the visit of Mabuza and
his entire 'cabinet' to the ANC in Lusaka in March 1986, and the
assassination of David Lukhele at his home in Pretoria in June of that year,
tend to confirm that ethnic politics should increasingly be seen as no more
than a sub-theme in the broader struggle for South African national
liberation.
This study has shown that KaNgwane would make for Swaziland not only an
unpalatable, but almost certainly an indigestible, meal. If the tensions
resulting from the conclusion of the deal, which may now be unlikely, were
to express themselves in ethnic terms, as between South African Swazi, and
the Swazi of Swaziland, this would not be a case of irrational prejudice, but
the product of many years of different historical experience. Radical
differences have emerged during these years in social structure, in relations
with the dominant South African economy, and in political development as
well as in the realm of ideology. Chief Albert Luthuli showed prescience
when, after a meeting with King Sobhuza almost thirty years ago, he sensed
that 'people are clinging to a dream of a return of the old Swaziland—a
dream incapable of fulfilment now . . . .'[144]
11—
The Formation of the Political Culture of
Ethnicity in the Belgian Congo, 1920–1959[1]
Bogumil Jewsiewicki
A Prolegomenon
It may very well be that this chapter has been written with expectations in
mind that cannot be fulfilled within its compass. Yet it will serve a purpose
only to the extent that its sights are set high. It represents a gamble more
than a project, a reflection on research more than an exposition of current
knowledge on the subject of that unique form of collective cultural
identity[2] and political culture in Zairean society known as 'ethnicity'. I will
therefore strive systematically to avoid two pitfalls. The first would be to
treat ethnicity as a given gauge by which individuals may be assigned to
communities and communities to 'organic' wholes deemed meaningful,
operational, and eventually able to be manipulated by an outside power.[3]
The second would be to direct the study to practitioners or adherents of a
theory which reduces social problems to being merely the proving grounds
for the refinement of or disputing of an abstract theoretical paradigm.
Theorizing in the past two decades has been all too often engaged in for
theory's sake alone, which, in the terms of any of the conditioning theories—
neo-marxism, structuralism, Freudian psychoanalysis—has meant that the
beauty and the coherence of the theoretical construction have had to be
kept out of the sight and grasp of the social actors. The latter have been
thus reduced to being raw material for one theoretical system or another
and have ceased to attract the attention of the researcher, who, in his
struggle against empiricism, has produced a world without humanity.[4] In
such situations, knowledge, as that which produces rationalization in
Weber's sense of the word, and which is also a product of it, presents itself
as an instrument for imposing an order upon the world so as to circumvent
what is unforeseeable in human conduct and to impose structuring identities
on individuals so that they might be shaped in accordance with norms
established for their 'optimal' use.[5] These formulas, be they associated
with the Left or the Right, are developed without regard to contradicting
reality, if not in contempt of it, and they operate according to the twin
projections of, first, a theoretical model built according to the logical
assumptions and the historical experience of a particular society and,
therefore, not applicable in terms of what is described for other societies,
and, second, the belief in the necessity, or at least the inevitability, of the
homogenization of social actors, thereby in fact aggravating their actual
alienation.
Without wishing to involve myself here in the debate over the dilemma
which
― 325 ―
― 326 ―
At the same time, moreover, to the Jew have been attributed bourgeois
virtues transformed into biological vices. This process allows class conflict to
be channelled into the language and practice of racial conflict, thus
strengthening the bonds linking national identity to the safeguarding of a
healthy marriage between the state and national capital. It is also typical of
the popular democratic countries that alleged Jewish evils should be those
associated with the bureaucracy and that the State should take the place of
Capital for the role it plays in imagined Jewish conspiracies. If it is often
presumed that all 'capitalist' Jews are inherently bourgeois, so every
'socialist' Jew is presumed in anti-Semitic discourse to be a bureaucrat and
an intellectual. Just as Jews in the first category are branded as the deicidal
people, those of the second category are denounced as imperialists.
Internal enemies have been seen as existing in Zaire, but many of these
were identified as foreign: the 'West Africans' and whites from the outlying
zones of Europe. The Portuguese and the Greeks in colonial times ordinarily
symbolized the evils of mercantile exploitation. In the political culture of the
1960s and
― 327 ―
1970s, however, another internal enemy was added to the earlier list of
'strangers'. This new enemy's actual identity varied, mirroring and
personifying the ills inflicted by Zairean national mercantile and bureaucratic
domination of more parochial regional groups and interests. 'The Luba' (the
name given to those people native to Kasai who use the Luba language
when speaking with whites and who have worked for them) were one
example of this phenomenon of the internal enemy that was identified
throughout the country. The country's individual regions, however,
possessed their own particular examples in varying degrees, determined by
local mechanisms of colonial and post-colonial domination.[15] Even if, in
both instances, the 'foreigner' and domestic enemy partially complemented
one another, any resemblance with the case of the Jew in the West can only
be partial, given the country's distinctive history and its current socio-
economic condition. Yet there are similarities.
A certain early tolerance in the Belgian Congo of the small mercantile
careers of 'foreigners' by the dominant political powers provided
opportunities for their growth, as did also the preference of western big
businesses for 'foreigners' as their local agents. This early attitude, which
was underpinned by fears of the development of a local national black
bourgeoisie, was transformed during the industrialization of the 1920s when
the climate was marked by nearly open hostilities.[16] This change was
accompanied by a rise in popular resentment of 'the exploiters' and by the
fragmentation of these 'exploiters' into smaller groups who pursued the only
avenue open to outcasts, small businesses on the fringes of legality.
The disruption of the country's main economic networks that began after
Independence in 1960 offered to these marginalized businessmen the
opportunities of a huge market, activities which, licit or illicit, they rapidly
monopolized. Small businessmen, grouped in ethnic communities or family
arrangements, replaced the more formal credit institutions and the supply
systems which were previously inaccessible. Because of their unique position
as the sole people 'institutionally' equipped to confront the collapse of the
country's economic system and to tackle the reeling state apparatus, they
reaped profits. But they also paid dearly for it later, when they were caught
between growing popular resentment, which was fed by the economic crisis
of the 1970s, and the mounting hostility manifested towards them by the
state's bureaucrats who themselves were hoping to invest in commercial
activities. Altogether removed from political circles, and thus possessing no
political influence, they were relatively easily eliminated from the national
scene in the 1970s, expelled gradually as 'undesirables'.
In contrast with what has been observed with regard to so-called 'foreign'
enemies, the mechanisms necessary to the 'production' of domestic enemies
have been quite different, the direct—which is not to say planned—effect of
colonial social action in the context of industrialization. The case of the Luba
probably goes back farthest, and because it concerns a group known for its
numbers and its important involvement in the country's industrial
development—especially that of the Shaba area—it has acquired a national
significance and merits discussion here. Numerous analyses, as well as
popular perceptions, clearly indicate an initial relationship in the shaping of
Luba ethnicity which was at once contingent in regard to partners and
necessary as far as its structure was concerned.[17]
During the final decades of the nineteenth century, a vast and rather
heterogeneous group of agricultural peoples dwelling in the Kasai Basin of
Central Africa had come under pressure from neighbouring predatory
groups. Caught frequently between African agents of commercial penetration
from both
― 328 ―
the Atlantic and Indian Ocean coasts, on the one hand, and Belgian colonial
penetration on the other, many people had been driven to migrate. These
came to rely on the protection of various new colonial institutions such as
missions, business enterprises and the embryonic colonial state. Groups and
individuals alike settled under the protection of Catholic missions, state
posts, and, later, capitalist enterprises in general and, especially, the
Forminière company.[18]
In the 1920s, at the time when the new institutions of the colonial
administration were being set up, middle-range power fell to a new
indigenous bureaucracy presented as possessing 'traditional' power. This
process took place rather easily, as there was a lack of organized opposition
to it, and the Belgian bureaucracy met with little political resistance when it
implemented 'native' colonial policies. Thus the Luba, who already were seen
as stout, hard-working and intelligent collaborators, found themselves being
offered, rather forcefully perhaps, three quite 'untraditional, opportunities:
(1) wage-remunerated work in the mining region, at a time, during the
1920s, when working conditions in Industrial Upper Katanga (Haut-Katanga
Industriel) were improving considerably; (2) cash-crop agriculture in the
new villages lining the Bukama-Port Franqui railway; and (3) school
education in the missionary-codified written Luba language. At the same
time, colonial anthropology and the first formally trained Luba intellectuals
were beginning enthusiastically to elaborate the cultural and linguistic model
for being 'a Luba'.[19] The rapid spread of the market economy, bolstered
by the authoritarianism of colonial society, opened the way for this in that it
demanded the restructuring of African society in accordance with the
principles included in a new public model of social and economic organization
of the indigènes ('natives') predicated upon an assumed lineage-based mode
of production that was predominantly patriarchal in character. This approach
constituted the kernel of the so-called indigenization policy.[20]
― 329 ―
The widespread use of a Luba language that was greatly simplified out of
local dialectal variants and coded for use in trade and work as a lingua
franca of the colonial world offered many opportunities to Luba-speakers, its
use both setting limits to the importance of having a command of French
and eliminating competition from other 'ethnic' groups. The demands by the
colonial administration for indigenous African lieutenants and by commercial
enterprises for local African agents to serve as clerks made participation in
the exercise of power a possibility for Luba-speakers. The opening of the
Bukama-Port Franqui railway in 1928 gave new life to Luba as a language of
colonial communication and confirmed the Luba-speakers in their role as
agents of economic activity. In addition to the Luba colonialization effort
favoured by Forminière, moreover, regional recruitment of Luba workers by
the Union Minière du Haut Katanga (UMHK) was begun at the same time
that Luba agricultural resettlement along automobile routes and the railway
was occurring. The Luba language took its place alongside Swahili
(Kingwana) in the UMHK's worker compounds despite the fact that the
company adopted a policy of ethnic mixing following ethnically organized
resistance to the lay-offs of the Depression years. The company nonetheless
actively encouraged the reinforcement of the ethnic identity of its workers
who were then settled in the compounds. Marriages, for example, were
arranged at the worker's home village by the local recruiter, missionary, and
administrator, with the local chief also participating, while visits of the rural
chiefs to the camps were also organized. In fact, Luba replaced the Bemba
language, the use of which declined when the company ended recruitment of
workers from Northern Rhodesia. An urban Luba-speaking culture gradually
developed as may be witnessed by the importance of 'modern' popular songs
in Luba by the end of the 1950s and 1960s.[23]
However, it was Swahili which in Katanga would become the language of the
workplace and hence the language of colonial communication.[24] There
were two reasons for this, and they need no extensive elaboration. First, the
decision, in keeping with state policy, to entrust schooling and evangelization
in the camps to Catholic missions effectively offered to the missionaries the
choice of the language for communication in the colonial situation. The
choice appears to have been determined on the basis of whatever language
was already in use among the members of the religious orders charged with
evangelization and education in the region. Many such orders, such as the
Benedictines, decided to use Swahili as an expression of their 'modernistic'
views which showed their opposition to indigenization and as part of their
strategies to eliminate rival institutions.[25]
― 330 ―
was to be set apart by the prevailing use of Luba and the Katanga by the
use of Swahili.
To the extent that my argument that the autonomy of the colonial state
depended on its ability to draw reality out of the fiction of indigenous society
is valid, it is only logical that there was a realization of this on the provincial
level. It came about, in fact, through the conscious breaking up of the
economic bases of provincial autonomy. Thus the political creation of a
Congo-wide national space was accompanied by an initial phase involving
the development of specific regionalisms. Since they could not be based on
economic realities over which there was any local African political control,
collective identities took shape as those ethnic consciousnesses which best
expressed and gave form to the social solidarities necessary to survive in a
world subject to an imposed, arbitrary political order.
Thus regionalism occurred as a nascent political force prior to 1930 and took
ultimate shape as a specifically Katangese collective identity because of the
policies of white society.[27] It survived and assumed a particular
importance during the turmoil of 1960 essentially through the efforts of the
white Katanga society and through the manipulation of African resentment—
in large part that of the Lunda—over the successes of the Luba in being
integrated into colonial structures. This distinction suggests that regionalism
is a form of political articulation of collective identities in societies where
national integration in the form of the complete mobility of the workforce
and of capital is only a gradually realized event. Ethnic identification and
awareness would then be a type of political framework belonging to societies
where wage-remunerated migrant labour and non-economic management of
the workforce and the means of production are dominant. It would, in this
view, be a form of white political management, but it would be a form of
African internal control over the city-country space for as long as the social
autonomy of the cities and the capitalization of agriculture had yet to be
accomplished.
Towards the end of the 1930s the Kasai, under administrative supervision,
became a storehouse that supplied workers and agricultural products alike,
responding to the competing demands placed on it by enterprises in
Industrial Upper Katanga, by the industrial and administrative centre at
Léopoldville, and by the demand for crop exports. If Luba-speaking people
contributed in important ways to these developments and were thereby
involved deeply in the monetary economy, it should be pointed out that the
policies of indigenization and the imposition of a system of mandatory crop
production throughout the entire African agricultural sector ruled out the
possibility of any real capitalization of African agriculture. Therefore, only
commercial activities, such as small business opportunities, which became
increasingly accessible to Africans in the 1940s, and membership in the
industrial wage-earning class-in-the-making offered the possibility of a rise
in socio-economic standing and permitted 'investment' of consequent
earnings. Both avenues, however, led necessarily to the resettlement of
Luba-speaking people in areas outside the Luba-speaking region, where,
moreover, the thorough knowledge of this language of colonial
communication could be relatively advantageous to them. All non-
agricultural activity thus automatically placed the local African world in a
direct juxtaposition to the white colonial world. In this way, the Luba
progressively became the 'cultural brokers' (intermédiaires culturels )
[28]par excellence, first in the Kasai, then in the south, and then even in
the centre of the country, with the exception of the Lower Congo area. And,
as they did so, they became internally derived 'strangers' in the country.
― 331 ―
The course the Luba followed in the Kasai and in South Katanga was made
easier by the conflicts between Luba wage-earners and agents, on the one
hand, and the local African populations of the mining regions or in the future
urban areas on the other, just as these conflicts would lead ultimately to the
Luba's post-colonial exclusion. The Luba-speaking men initially worked as
labourers, something which was considered degrading by the local peoples
and as equivalent to being slaves of the white man.[29]
Through their status as the whites' assistants, however, Luba men were able
to carve out a privileged niche for themselves through the acceptance of
schooling, the establishment of written Luba as an officially recognized
colonial language, by their role as foremen of the established power, and by
the adaptation of their social structures to the demands of the colonial world
to such an extent that their culture and language became starting points for
the 'discovery' by Europeans of African cultures as ethnic cultures equal to,
but basically different from, the cultures of the rest of humanity. As
members of the model indigenous African society of the region, during the
1930s and 1940s many Luba found it appealing to cooperate with European
researchers and missionaries in selecting and assembling cultural elements
in order to elaborate a Luba theodicy and philosophy as a system of thought
and to work with European researchers and administrators in constructing a
judicial system that conformed to their expectations.[30] It is no accident
that an ethnic philosophy on a par with its western counterparts should have
been 'discovered' in Luba culture by Tempels following in Possoz's footsteps
and not in some other local African culture.[31]
The modern 'Luba' ethnic culture was thus selected and developed as a
modern 'traditional' system through the combined efforts of Luba-speaking
intellectuals, including catechists and school-teachers, chiefs, and other
notables incorporated in the colonial administrative structure, and the
colonial dispensers of learning, the missionaries, the administrators and the
magistrates. The sorting out of cultural data and the creation of particular
meaning for a term were all guided by the perception of a 'tradition' as being
fixed and unalterable by material conditions.[32] Such an attitude was a
widespread fixture of both European and African resistance to the reality of
socio-political ills engendered by colonial industrialization and of European
opposition to any kind of Creole culture.
Two points should be made in connection with this process. The first is
concerned with the relationship existing between the Luba-speaking cultural
brokers—a modernized elite—and the so-called traditional elites, the chiefs
(chefs médaillés ) and notables who were recognized as such by the
administration. The former, who acted from within the colonial world, were
generally learned, Christian and urbanized, and stood as the executors and
manipulators of colonial power. They considered themselves the agents of
progress. The latter were usually unlettered and necessarily rural. Their
legitimacy, in fact, stemmed only from the authority of the administration
and its fiction of a 'native' society, but their success as chiefs can be
accounted for in their ability to engage in double-dealing with the colonial
administration and in avoiding the use of military force against their people.
In this role, they were indispensable as they granted a measure of credibility
to this fiction of a coherent 'native' society and guaranteed the autonomy of
the colonial state.
Even if colonial legislation formally divided the 'elites' into two groups which
were separate in all respects except race (they both shared 'native' status)
and reserved the exercise of local power to the so-called 'traditional' elites, it
should be noted that, in practice, both the European administration and rural
societies showed an empirical tendency to put in power as chiefs those who
possessed at least some experience of the white world. Thus, while the
principle of separation between the two elites remained strong, at the same
time there were strong mutual needs drawing the two closer together. From
the end of the 1920s onwards, with growing industrialization in the Congo,
the majority of whites—as elsewhere throughout southern Africa—came to
condemn 'westernized' and 'detribalized' blacks. The white colonial world no
longer desired rootless African individuals. Urban African popular culture was
also widely condemned in the 1920s.
The judicial system of urban communities did not permit Africans to have
any civil status that was not recognized by 'traditional' customary law. In
these circumstances it became important for urban-dwelling Africans to
belong to, or at least to be said to be involved in, an ethnic 'customary'
culture. At the same time, new efforts were continually being made that
aimed at controlling workers' movement through legal sanction, and thus the
importance of specifically written legislation in the field of customary law
increased. Moreover, the spreading monetization of social and economic
relations, as well as the growing ability of
― 333 ―
The second point that needs to be made involves successive changes that
affected the role of chiefs. The chiefs of the rural administrative units
(cnefferie or secteur ) that were recognized by the administration were
named to their positions upon the recommendation of the territorial
administrator. His advice was based on an investigation into the customary
titles of the candidate and, hence, into the historical identity of his group.
This situation raises an important point for understanding the revision of
local perceptions of what constituted 'tradition'. This was embedded in the
very concept of 'native rural district', which shifted from being in the 1920s
and 1930s a chiefdom based on ethnic affiliation to an area defined on the
bases of its economic organization, and the duties which the chiefs carried
out, or were supposed to carry out, with respect to the rural community and
the colonial power. After a short, feverish period of research into local
particularities which aimed at establishing 'traditional chiefdoms' and at
identifying the dominant political body within them during the 1920s and the
first part of the 1930s, local cultures followed the general tendency towards
ethnic standardization, probably very strongly so. Later, language usage and
a rather vague historical tradition defined and fixed the 'indigenous' bases of
the native administrative units for which economic viability (that is, the
ability to be self-financing through the use of a supplement to the capitation
tax and other local taxes) was the fundamental criterion. This change, which
was embodied in a decree of 1933 and implemented from 1935, coincided
with the recovery in the demand for supplies of foodstuffs and for workers
from the Kasai, a demand for which the Luba would once again both pay the
price and reap some profit.
Without going into the details of the events occurring between 1935 and
1958, it may be shown that this demand for food and workers, which
remained strong throughout most of this period, benefited above all the
Luba established along roads and the railway line. They were at the same
time farmers and members of peasant groups who found themselves in a
precarious property situation, involving them with neighbours who were
often not Luba-speaking.
Thus, the role of the chief changed at the local level. Since 1935, it has
become increasingly bureaucratized and divorced from capitalist
accumulation, while the growing profitability of farm production for those
near the road or railway made the chief less and less of a supervisor over
agricultural work. On the other hand, his role gained in importance
whenever the property lines were redrawn. He was above all instrumental in
maintaining a distinct identity as against the autochthonous communities
whose own ethnic consciousnesses followed the later rise of economic
aspirations and expectations. In this way, the norms of the newly fashioned
Luba culture were interiorized in villages being settled during the 1920s and
1930s. At the same time, moreover, the community of political goals shared
by 'traditional' elites and their 'modernized' Luba counterparts grew
stronger. The conversion of many Luba cultivators, especially from the area
surrounding the railway, into either part-time or full-time suppliers to the
colonial economy, not only reinforced the monetization of social relations but
also intensified individual movement between the urban wage-earning class,
agriculture and the unregulated sector of small businesses, the sexual
services of young women, and
― 334 ―
The specifically ethnic politicization of social change during the 1950s and its
continuation afterwards may be explained, I think, by several factors: (1)
the authoritarian nature of the colonial state and its absence from any local
social involvement; (2) the fundamental racial division underlying colonial
society and the existence in the Congo of a political culture of race; (3) the
fundamentally uneven growth of the colonial economy which was intensified
in the 1950s; (4) the internal necessity for the dominant groups within
African society of containing the economic emancipation of women and
youth[35] that was based on the increasing monetization of society; and (5)
a tentative and ambiguous convergence of the interests of the 'traditional'
rural elite and 'modern' urban elites.[36]
― 335 ―
'Luba' or 'Lingala' from the continuities of pre-colonial life as embodied in
village social practices. Second, there is the group's insertion in a tradition
constructed out of a vision of the past which ignores the profound upheavals
of the second half of the nineteenth century.[39]
It should be noted here that the term 'Luba' did not initially denote a group
of villagers whose historical traditions and/or spoken language were linked
to the Luba model. The development of the model is concomitant with the
formation of an 'association' of immigrants, and by the beginning of the
twentieth century the colonial writings already made a distinction between
Luba from new 'colonial' villages and others.[40] In the colonial socio-
economic reality, there was on the one hand the Luba of the proletarianized
space of the city or workplace who approximated to the model as
individuals, and on the other hand there were specific rural communities,
organized in chiefdoms, and later in 'sectors' (secteurs ), which, although
possessing their own historical tradition and language (which then became
described as 'dialects') became 'Luba' on a collective basis. Tshundolela
Epanya has demonstrated how the ethnic conflict between 'the Luba',
immigrant workers who were Luba-speaking yet originated from other rural
communities, and the Bakwa Anga, a Luba cultural group in the
anthropological sense of the term, involved the very same mechanisms as
those present in the unambiguously ethnically-articulated conflict between
the Luba and the Luluwa in Luluabourg or between the Luba and the Lunda
in Industrial Upper Katanga.[41] This constant of ethnic consciousness in
the industrializing world must be kept in mind as it is that which links ethnic
formation to national formation.
― 336 ―
being oral forms of knowledge which are said to be unaware of their own
existence and written forms of knowledge which set standards.[43] Through
ethnologists' holding a mirror up to him, the 'native' sees himself as The
Other, and in so doing becomes an immigrant to his own 'culture', the
inferiority of which he accepts.[44]
The success of the Luba—or, rather, the success of the Belgian state's
indigenizing policies[45] —was marked by a profound contradiction. The
members of the Luba colonial elites, which constituted a potential national
state bureaucracy, were condemned by virtue of their peculiar position of
being in close alliance with the colonial state itself. The capture of the
colonial state seemed to figure in their destiny, yet the realization of
impending independence would in fact only lead to their exclusion from the
national political scene. Their strengths were what contributed to their
ultimate exclusion from the national political scene, as much on account of
fears of a Luba palace coup as on account of the weakness of their own
regional base, which could only lead to a regional secession that was
condemned from the outset. The regional and ethnic reactions against the
social and economic success of Luba modernization were outstanding
examples of reactions, by proxy, to the pax belgica . They often represented
a last-ditch effort to save the colonial order in its essence and, as such, they
were encouraged by the colonial administration, as may be witnessed in the
Luba-Lulua conflict.
The greatest weakness of the Luba—the very reason for their spectacular
success in colonial society through adoption of the model of the ideal colonial
'native' as expressed in the legal and political concept of indigène —lay in
their immigrant character in a 'national' space that had been systematically
'indigenized' since 1920. The Belgian colonial order's concept of political
legitimacy was grounded in two complementary principles: seniority
(history) and conquest, with the latter, having priority over the former,
provided that it be compatible with the interests of the colonial state, a
condition not met in the case of other nineteenth century conquerors, such
as the Swahili, the Chokwe, and others.
The departure of the colonial state, set up as it was as the absolute political
arbiter, came about in 1960 at the moment when 'native' political instability
had reached its climax. The economic policies in effect at the time and the
practical possibilities for economic exploitation and administrative
penetration made it possible in the 1930s and 1940s to create a socio-
political model based on regional symbiosis (or rather symbioses), pairing
ethnic/regional colonial 'elites' with the political system based on the double
intervention of the Roman Catholic Church and the state. The implicit
regionalization of economic exploitation placed the regional training of
'modern native' elites, the ethnic elites par excellence, in the hands of
religious bodies who practically monopolized the teaching profession. These
future African intellectuals were already being cut off from the rural world by
schooling as they became acculturated according to a normative and
synthetic cultural-linguistic model.[46] They were in residence at the
mission station during the whole period, and their return to the village was
discouraged. The administration directed the rural societies which, with the
help of the so-called 'traditional' authorities and in the absence of the elites
referred to above, had been shattered by the law into mosaics of 'native
administrative units'.
The 'modern elite'—that is, the elite which was integrated into the industrial
economy—was deeply involved in the building of an ethnic culture of which,
― 337 ―
Understanding the process which I have just described should help to make
the formation of class society in the rural-urban space of 'native' societies in
the colonial system more intelligible. In this setting two factors are especially
involved from a time prior to the acceleration of the process in in the 1950s.
First, the rapid development of bonds of personal dependence occurring
through the phenomenal increase of client-patron relationships penetrated
every level of colonial society without regard to the barrier of race and was
abetted by the arbitrary nature of the system.[48] If it was important to
have 'one's white', it was no less important to have 'one's blacks' in order to
fill any office having political aspects to it. The client-patron system
constituted the principal political force in the transformation of the colonial
'native' system according to the anthropological model. It was also
patronage that unified the city-country, urban-rural social space.
The second factor involved in the formation of a class society is the social
― 338 ―
concept of slavery. As Luc de Heusch has recently asserted, the 'two major
steps towards a class society are without a doubt, the introduction of slavery
on the one hand, and the development of links of personal dependence on
the other',[50] in order to affirm that for the Tetela, as for the Pende, the
slave is a dependant who finds that he is an outsider in relation to the
dominant social bond.[51] It should be noted that this social bond
determines the legal access to resources, including the means of production.
It is only to be expected that the Tetela considered forced cotton cultivation
during the colonial period as state slavery. De Heusch considers this an
accurate assessment. According to the social meaning given this form of
social dependence in central Africa during the nineteenth century, slavery
was socially equivalent to the proletarianization that occurred later.[52] A
slave is he who, once 'liberated' from any politically recognized social bond,
by force, or, more rarely, in accordance with his own will, is cut off from
legal access to resources. He acquires this access by being placed, or by
placing himself, in a position of dependence toward someone who, in
becoming his 'father' or 'mother', re-establishes the social bond. It was
completely natural, therefore, that soldiers and workers who had first been
recruited by force came to be considered slaves of the state. It was also just
as natural that the later mandatory cultivations which sanctioned de facto
control by the state of a portion of agricultural lands should be seen as a
form of partial enslavement, that is, proletarianization.[53]
When the demand for a particular political status to bring them closer to
white society was not satisfied, the évolués turned as individuals towards the
real political world where they were potential proletarians, and then set
about establishing their own network of alliances. It was also at this moment
that the
― 339 ―
In the political space where the évolués and the traditional authorities both
moved, the political aspects of the culture of ethnicity developed quickly. It
was in this context that the cultural models largely created and transmitted
by the évoluées intersected with traditional political practices while the men
and women who were being continually buffeted by the forces of colonial
proletarianization struggled for individual and social survival.
The current political dynamic in Zaire which keeps the crisis of the state
stable owes as much to the national grand bourgeoisie as it emerges, but
sets itself off from the political clique, as it does to the limited political
space[57] , where the state is still present. In this space solidarities operate
as much as a function of class positions as they are defined as a function of
regional identity, for the latter refers to the political circumstances and the
economic structures shaping the national space, whose guarantor remains
the state.[58]
Finally, ethnicity has been implicitly recognized until now as strictly a matter
involving men, because, according to the patriarchal model, men transmitted
only identity to their offspring. This was so because the indigène in colonial
society was excluded from the Napoleonic Code and could legally convey no
property to his descendants. A more accurate hypothesis would suggest,
however, that men, as the only recognized wage-earners in colonial society,
transmitted class position to other men. As, despite massive evidence
demonstrating it, the real proletarianization of women was never recognized
by either colonial legislation or historians, African women transmitted a legal
status of 'native', the basis of which lay in race. On the other hand, the
resultant cultural identity[59] —and this signifies the language being used
as much as the whole process of socialization in urban culture—was
transmitted by women and peer groups (children and adolescents of the
streets, neighbourhoods and compounds) which formed according to
principles we have not yet learned and whose impact on the reproduction of
the expressed identity we are unable to determine. The school provides an
impetus for wage-class socialization and status-related (racial) identity,
which at the time was embodied in the term 'native'. And, of course, in the
Belgian Congo the
― 340 ―
On the political level, ethnic culture was, and is, a purely male culture. At its
top, the associations of graduates and, later, the ethnic associations such as
Abaco ignored the very existence of women. In the colonial culture of the
urbanized African male as expressed in the missionary press or in the first
magazine for blacks. La Voix du Congolais, she is either the villainess—the
'free' woman (prostitute) who corrupts the race and is responsible for the fall
in the birth rate, with the drop even in the rural areas attributed to her loose
behaviour—or the faithful, reproductive shadow of her husband, who is
himself in turn depicted as the loyal servant of the civilizing European. The
ideal woman is effectively the shadow of a shadow.
I can only provide several clues into the matter, as its investigation awaits
completion. For a very long time, at least until the 1940s, the principal
strategy underlying the relationships between men and women in the city
seemed to follow the very principle of the economy responsible for imposing
proletarianization: individualism and trade, which means absolutely nothing
as far as the social mechanisms of reproduction in the village were
concerned. According to their own perception of things, those who went to
the city, by force or by their own will, found themselves cast in the role of
slaves because their legitimating ties with the rural community had been
temporarily cut.[60] They tried in this environment to take advantage of the
uncertain opportunities represented by wage-earning and the market, and it
was essentially for these reasons that associations of every sort, ranging
from recreation to mutual assistance, became so common. It was here that
men and the rare women lived, each on their side of the barrier separating
male wage-earners from their female counterparts who were ideologically
excluded from the wage-earning class. It was in this way that a trade
developed which conformed nonetheless to the practice of bourgeois society
in general and to colonial society in particular. The sexual relationship was a
matter of ownership—either one owned a woman by virtue of a contract, or
one purchased her services sporadically.
What is more, as the men were practically all either wage-earners employed
by 'civilized' masters, as white employers were termed in legal terminology,
or 'undesirables', the economic life of the African urban centres was carried
out by women. As the number of women in the urban areas grew from the
1940s onwards, economic life intensified. They circulated more easily than
men, whose assignments were controlled by the state. Finally, they were
able to cross ethnic and even racial barriers, if they were willing to pass from
one man to another as wife or cohabitant. With the development of native
urban centres, administrative practice recognized their importance in what
would today be called the informal economy,[61] but what at that time was
considered illicit for all purposes except tax collection. The women sold sex
and alcohol which they produced themselves in those urban centres or in the
surrounding villages. The fact that there was a tax on 'single women' and a
tax on beer allowed many families in para-traditional centres to survive, for
the colonial state found it to its fiscal advantage to permit women to remain
in the urban areas.
― 341 ―
The wage-earner's spouse, who had been brought to the urban industrial
centre to stabilize the man's labour in one place, was a perfect proletarian
since she was denied a wage and was, for a long time, even deprived of the
food ration that was a legal component of her husband's salary. Without any
resources whatsoever, she had to live and support her children by
miraculously multiplying her husband's food ration which the employers had
calculated as adequate to sustain a single working man. In the city she had
neither relatives, nor land, nor even a house, which ordinarily belonged to
the employer. Contrary to the situation in the rural 'extended family', which
could be observed existing in a continuum ranging from 'households' to
residence communities, and to relatives, the woman proletarian assumed a
narrowed role in an institution specializing in the reproduction of labour and
which was subjected to definite cycles.[62] Her social status was
undoubtedly worse in the urban area than in the village, because, although
'ethnic' law, whose codification was based on an abstract anthropological
model, epitomized arbitrariness in the village setting, economic activities
were fewer in number and less strenuous there. Three things allowed the
colonized woman to get around the role of spouse that colonial ideology
placed upon her: trade, which could only be illicit in terms of the existing
legislation; solidarity between women and relatives; and, to an ever-
increasing degree, the production of children, as the colonial world
considered the woman only as a reproducer and protected her in this role
alone.
Women established their own social and economic space in the city,
however, by the 1950s at the latest. This was essentially that city-country
space which assured the circulation of consumer goods as well as the
movement of children. At one time, children used to be sent back to the
village but increasingly from the end of World War II they came to the city
from the village to be introduced to urban culture, to go to school and, in the
1950s, to allow the 'father' to become eligible for family allowances and the
extra food ration for children under his guardianship. The women in cities
were legally powerless, but through their social practices they gave shape
and form to this space where the real identities of their children's generation
developed: identities which were moulded before these children later
became wage-earners or members of the lumpenproletariat. It is probably
this fact which explains the importance which the poets of Négritude give to
filial devotion toward the mother and which seems to me to be specifically a
characteristic of urban culture in the colonial world and not necessarily one
belonging to 'tradition'.
However, one ought not to yield to the illusion of autonomy for popular
female activities. Women were rigidly controlled unless they left this mixed
space for the lumpenproletariat,[64] where, being exposed to the arbitrary
nature of the colonial state, they oscillated between prostitution and
impossible wage-earning conditions.[65] With the perhaps essential
complicity of the colonial institutions, the existence of the dowry and its
manipulation structured the exploitation of women and the youngest male
family members,[66] and 'traditional' authorities still controlled its
mechanisms.
― 342 ―
Conclusion
12—
The 'Wild' and 'Lazy' Lamba: Ethnic
Stereotypes on the Central African Copperbelt
Brian Siegel
Introduction
― 351 ―
they have to say about the social relations between groups of stereotypers
and those they have stereotyped.[2]
I shall argue that while these ascriptive stereotypes of the Lamba—and the
resentment they generate—have a factual basis, they also reflect the salient
affective sentiments and material concerns of those groups which have
interacted with the Lamba. I hope to convince my readers that, while both
the external-stigmatized and internal-resentful dimerisions of Lamba identity
are best seen as unbalanced and one-sided, they are nonetheless relatively
accurate representations of how the Lamba in general responded to the new
relations established when, at the turn of the century, the lands and peoples
of the Central African Copperbelt were incorporated into the new colonial
industrial order.
Slave raiding here was only ended after Cecil Rhodes decided to challenge
Portuguese and Belgian claims to Katangan Ilamba and its reputed mineral
― 352 ―
Rhodes's other two expeditions mainly affected the southern (or Rhodesian)
Lamba and their Seba and Lima neighbours. The first, Joseph Thomson's
smallpox-carrying safari, never reached the Yeke capital, but turned back
after signing a vaguely worded treaty in November 1890 with Mwenda Msiri's
tribute-paying namesake, 'the important Iramba chief Mshiri', Lamba chief
Kabalu Mushili I. The BSAC originally staked its claim to Ilamba's mineral
wealth on Thomson's treaty, but later, when the Foreign Office refused to
recognize it, the Company had to fall back upon Lochner's agreements with
the Lozi king Lewanika, which accepted his brazenly fantastic claims to
tributary sovereignty over all of Ilamba.[7]
Second, and even more fundamentally, the peoples of Ilamba on both sides
of the border still resent their removal to Native Reserves when their lands
were appropriated for projected mining and farming developments. While
the advent of colonial rule and industrial capitalism probably saved the
residents of Ilamba from near extinction at the hands of intrusive slave and
ivory raiders, the overall injustices of the early colonial period, including the
loss of lands and chiefly authority, remain central focuses in the internal-
resentful dimension of Lamba ethnic self-identity. In similar fashion, the
stigmatizing, ascriptive stereotypes of the 'backward', 'wild' and 'lazy' Lamba
are also rooted in history.
― 353 ―
For the Lamba, the civil authority is a force which tries to interfere
in their own affairs. It never brings about anything good . . . This
being the case, the Lamba often dream of living in some lost valley
without roads or passage. There they live very primitively, but they
are fond of this liberty, this tranquillity, one might say, their own
sense of independence.
All development programmes clash with this desire for liberty and
mistrust of authority. If one wants to build a social hall, erect a
public service building, etc., one need not expect anenthusiastic
reception. Psychologically, when the beni [strangers to the clan, in
other words, the civil authority, townsfolk, whether white or
natives] appear, it is when they have designs upon the residents,
and they are never to the residents' advantage.[10]
Given the circumstances in Ilamba around the turn of the century and their
experiences of raids and attacks, it is not surprising that the early European
traders, prospectors, colonial officers and labour recruiters came to regard
the Lamba and their neighbours as wild, timid or mistrustful. They had every
reason to behave in such a manner and very probably did. Villagers simply
fled whenever 'strangers' came their way, and this, according to Captain
Verdick's account of the 1897–98 campaign against Chiwala's Swahili, seems
to have been the typical Lamba response:
There are several reasons why the [Lamba] natives leave their
villages so precipitously: the fact of their disrupted way of life; the
caravan men having become too demanding; the headmen or his
subjects having committed some misdeeds; the diviner perhaps
predicting some some calamity should they remain in the village
during the sojourn of the Whites; the fear of having their women
kidnapped, etc.
But generally one finds the villages deserted, or else a few men to
supply you with some misinformation and to guide you further. But
in no case do the women remain in the villages if there is any
suspicion. It will take a long while to instil in them an absolute
confidence in the representatives of the administration.[11]
― 354 ―
ill afford to provide the colonial officers, wild rubber collectors, sorghum
traders or labour recruiters with the food, porterage or labourers they
desired. Nor could they have been particularly willing to do so, given the
strong-arm methods used to secure these demands.
The tribes in the Kapopo division, and notably the Walamba, exhibit
more criminal tendencies than any others in the portion of the
Territory under report. . . . They are untrustworthy, abandoning
loads which they have undertaken to carry, or work which they
have agreed to do, without the slightest hesitation.[14]
Northern Rhodesia soon followed suit. With little to show for the many
Copperbelt mineral claims staked in the early 1900s, the BSAC in 1922
opened extensive tracts in southern Ilamba to large-scale mining
corporations—but only after reserving to itself the sites which soon became
Chingola, Nkana and Chambishi (near Kitwe), and Roan Antelope (Luanshya)
copper mines. The British Colonial Office assumed the administration of
Northern Rhodesia in 1924, and the Native Reserves Commission began
formalizing these land appropriations two years later under the explicit
charge 'not to place "any avoidable difficulties in the way of the mineral
development of the Territory" '.[16]
― 355 ―
While some of Ilamba's people did seek occasional wage labour, neither the
Katangan nor the Rhodesian groups showed enthusiasm for farm or mine
employment.[19] Their reasons for avoiding such employment were
complex, and merit mention. The mines and white farmers, first of all, faced
the common problem of luring labourers from small and scattered
populations to unfavourable working conditions. The work on white farms
was undoubtedly more onerous than that required on villagers' own slash-
and-burn gardens, and the Katangan Lamba objected to the farms' three-
year labour contracts.[20] All the mines had problems with labour
desertions in these early years. But those at Roan Antelope, where the
average length of service in 1927 was just three months, were complicated
by its high mortality rate and the fact that the local Lamba attributed these
deaths to the funkwe, the monstrous water snake of Lamba legend. Roan
Antelope, like Mufulira mine, was built on a malarial swamp. Until this
swamp was drained in 1929, illness and death were so common that
waggish Cape Town railway clerks discouraged European labourers travelling
there from buying round-trip tickets. The local Lamba avoided the mines,
especially underground work, so most African miners had to be drawn from
far more distant areas.[21]
― 356 ―
These and other equally subjective judgments on the Lamba cannot be taken
at face value. But they do demonstrate that the stigmatizing, ascriptive
stereotypes of the 'wild' and 'lazy' Lamba were determined by the
unreasonable demands of the colonial social and economic order. This point
is best summarized by the perceptive remarks of a Northern Rhodesian
colonial officer in 1926:
― 357 ―
Second, and more importantly, the Lamba were seen as remaining largely
apart from the colonial industrial order, from the African townsfolk's
'struggle for prestige' and its well documented emblems of the apparently
superior 'European way-of-life': smart clothes and stylish demeanour.[28]
Some of the Lamba, as participants in the Central African millenarian
tradition and Jeremiah Gondwe's Lamba-based African Watchtower
Movement, apparently rejected urban life itself as part of the colonial
order.[29] Far more, however, had chosen to remain peripheral village
cultivators, financing their tax obligations and purchases of manufactured
goods through their occasional sales of bush and garden produce.
This, I believe, best explains how the Lamba acquired their low reputation
among the African townsfolk on the Copperbelt. If present circumstances are
any guide to the past, the tattered and dusty Lamba villager, creaking his
sweet potatoes or cabbages to market on his dilapidated, overladen bicycle,
served to dramatize the townsfolk's invidious contrast between the very real
difficulties of village life and the urbane ideals of Mitchell's 'European way-of-
life'. Thus the Ndola Africans of the 1950s denigrated villagers (in Bemba) as
batuutu, 'bumpkins', and bena tulo, 'sleeping ones'.[30] The nearest
villagers at hand were and are the Lamba, and they are still occasionally
derided in these same terms today.
These inferences presumably apply to the northern Lamba as well. They too
were late to seek urban employment, maintained the same suspicious
mistrust of 'strangers', suffered the same invidious stereotypes and,
according to Crawford Young, Bogumil Jewsiewicki, and Brooke Grundfest
Schoepf, share much the same sense of grievance and resentment today.
This brand of stereotyping, however, is not unique to the Lamba. Robert
LeVine and Donald Campbell suggest that urbanites in general tend to view
their rural neighbours as backward and ignorant rustics, and that they, in
turn, are stereotyped as shrewd and dishonest sophisticates.[31]
These are the same reciprocal stereotypes found along the Zambian
Copperbelt today. Lamba villagers, particularly the elderly, consider the
towns to be 'bad' (abipile ) and beguiling places, townsfolk insufferably
'proud'; and they take personal pride in never having had to work there, or
pride in not having been corrupted by the experience if they have. There is
every reason to believe, then, that the Lamba on both sides of the border
have been historically stereotyped as weak and backward because they
remained predominantly rural peoples throughout most of the colonial
period, and conditions in rural Ilamba, as elsewhere in much of rural
Northern Rhodesia, could only have contributed to the genesis of invidious
stereotypes. Ilamba's impoverishing integration into the colonial industrial
order only confirmed the African town-dwellers in their prejudices.
The Lamba chose to remain peripheral rural cultivators through the 1930s,
but this was not because they derived greater wealth from their produce
sales than they could have found in urban wage labour. In Northern
Rhodesia, for example, with higher producers' prices than those in Katanga,
a villager selling one or two 200 Ib. bags of sorghum received the same
price per bag in 1932–12s 6d —as an unskilled labourer earned in the
month, not counting the labourer's rations.[32] And given the recurrent
reports of irregular rains, locusts, smallpox, influenza and the attendant food
shortages in Rhodesian Ilamba, there is no reason to believe that the Lamba
villagers were ever particularly prosperous.[33]
― 358 ―
Physically the Lamba-Lima people are good looking and well built
but not particularly strong. They are intelligent, outspoken and
good humoured but unenterprising and have no business instincts
and lack ambition. In spite of their proximity to the Copper Mines
and opportunities for money making, they remain poor and except
for their gardens, huts, a few primitive agricultural implements, a
spear and, rarely, a muzzle loading gun, they are without
possessions. They have a decided inferiority complex probably
owing to their past experiences when their country was a happy
hunting ground of the slave trader from both East and West. They
are today easily exploited by Natives from other tribes and have
been willing victims of the Watch Tower movement which today is
to some extent kept alive among them by natives of other and
more cunning tribes. They are, however, strangely resistant to
external influences on their daily habits of life, and village life has,
as far as one can tell, been little influenced by the neighbouring
industrial development and the near presence of a mass of natives
of other tribes.[35]
There was, to be sure, more cash in rural circulation during the 1930s than
ever before. But as in Northern Rhodesia, the improvident demand for cash
and calicos actually compounded village food shortages—again suggesting
that the Lamba market gardeners were not entirely rational, profit-seeking
calculators of material advantage. Thus in the Pedicle area of Elisabethville
Territoire in 1935,
. . . there has never been so much cash in the natives' hands than
at the present. The crops were abundant and they sold it all to the
point of not having enough to feed themselves. A few weeks ago,
the natives were even selling the little sorghum remaining to them
in order to buy calicos. They need to be taught some prudence
because by not properly feeding themselves, they expose
themselves to all the epidemics.[36]
Lured by better produce prices, more convenient markets and the alleged
'liberalisme du régime anglais, these Katangan Lamba immigrants only
worsened the overcrowded conditions on the Lamba-Lima Native Reserve.
Most of the Reserve was thinly populated, but nearly half of its 26,000
residents were concentrated on the fragile, sandy soils of Chief Mushili's and
Chief Nkambo's areas—those closest to the produce markets in Ndola and
Luanshya. William Allan, Northern Rhodesia's Assistant Director of
Agriculture, toured Lamba Chief Mushili's area in October 1940. While he
estimated the land's carrying
― 359 ―
capacity at about 18 persons per square mile, he found that the mean
population density then was more like 44 persons per square mile. Thus
Allan concluded, 'It may therefore be stated with considerable certainty that
the country at present occupied by Mushiri's people is greatly over-populated
in relation to the land requirements of their agricultural system.'[38]
This was during the Great Depression, when substantial numbers of laid-off
miners and unemployed Africans were willing to work for rations alone. This
cheap labour supply provided the Rhodesian Lamba, like their Katangan
brethren near Lubumbashi and Mufulira, with a brief but wretched success in
beer sales and prostitution.
Although the Lamba had by now been blackballed from the mines
themselves as undisciplined and unreliable labourers of an inferior physical
type, these peripheral village cultivators were, in the 1930s, finally being
fully integrated into the colonial industrial order.[40] Lamba women played
the leading role in their movement into the towns:
The [labour] exodus in the main districts of Ndola and Broken Hill is
small, most of the local natives being employed in agriculture and
fishing in their own native reserves. Contact with the urbanised
native is, however, considerable and demoralising influences are
sometimes observed. The villages near the industrial areas are apt
to become centres for beer drinking and prostitution unless closely
watched, and the temptation to women to go to the towns for the
purpose of finding temporary or irregular unions with employees is
strong.
This restlessness and laxity on the part of the local women . . . has
caused considerable concern to the Native Authorities and all
thinking natives and Europeans. . . . It is hoped . . . that women
who go to the industrial areas simply for the purpose of obtaining
money and clothes for their temporary services will come under
some means of control, as would happen in the purely native
areas. . . . No doubt an increase in prosperity in the rural areas
would play an important part in the solution of this difficult
problem.[41]
But prosperity never materialized and this problem was never resolved, for
the unusually heavy 1939–40 rains—after ruining three-quarters of the
sorghum crop in Chief Mushili's area alone—brought on the devastating
1940–41 Lamba famine. The South African Baptist mission initiated a
modestly successful vegetable purchase and marketing scheme that
operated between 1943 and 1956 to aid the villagers' recovery. But the
administration's own Ndola District Resettlement Scheme (1943–52)—with
its onerous cultivation requirements and compulsory village resettlement—
was such a dismal failure that, in 1953, the administration decided to import
African peasant farming families from Southern Rhodesia to show the
'apathetic' Lamba, 'by demonstration, the possibility of advancement in
agriculture'.[42]
― 360 ―
while nearly half of the taxable males remaining at home in the early 1950s
were involved in the market gardening trade, some 50 to 60 per cent of
those from the Reserve's northern chieftaincies—as well as unknown
numbers of unattached women—were off in the towns.[43] Those remaining
behind in the villages, the very old and the very young, were barely able to
feed themselves in good years. The Lamba-Lima Native Authority was
persuaded, therefore, to set regulations on rural produce sales in a futile
attempt to stave off further food shortages.
The years between 1930 and 1960 were bitterly frustrating ones for the
Rhodesian Lamba, but also for the administration which, by 1951, 'realized
that there were economic and social forces at work [in this district of
"demoralized subsistence producers"] which it was difficult, if not impossible,
to control'.[44] This was particularly true in the early 1950s, when, as the
Federation era (1953–63) approached, rumours about European sorcery and
cannibalism were in general circulation among the Africans on the
Copperbelt. Sugar sold to Africans was supposedly salted with medicines
causing sterility and stillbirths, and I, fifteen years after Federation had
ended, was shown the house in Luanshya where a European doctor was
alleged to have drunk the blood of kidnapped Africans, then sold their flesh
to the manufacturers of tinned meat.[45]
For the more distant future one can only see a degraded people on
a degraded soil, a race of 'hangers-on' inhabiting the midden of the
mines, hawkers of minor produce, vice and the virtue of their
women, such as it is.[46]
This accelerating impoverishment of Ilamba did not escape the attention of
the African townsfolk in Northern Rhodesia nor, I suspect, those in Katanga
either. By the 1950s the townsfolk of Luanshya and Ndola were calling the
Lamba bapwapwa (lung people), a derogatory nickname alluding to their
reputed habit of purchasing cattle lungs and other inexpensive cuts of
butchery meat.[47]
― 361 ―
Like other late arrivals to the towns, most of the Lamba—75 per cent
according to Mitchell's Copperbelt social survey—worked as unskilled
labourers. But far more of the Lamba—35 per cent—worked as domestic
servants (wash boys, garden boys, house boys or cooks) than any of the
other seventeen ethnic groups enumerated. The Ndembu and Ngoni came
closest, each with 31 per cent of their males employed in domestic
service.[49]
The district's dominant mission was that of the South African Baptists who,
in 1932, were joined by the Scandinavian Baptists at Mpongwe. The former
opened the district's first boys' boarding school at Kafulafuta Mission in 1907
and, thereafter, the 'native evangelists' affiliated with these two groups ran
a network of more than a dozen village 'outschools', using Lamba pamphlets
printed at Kafulafuta. But until the mid-1930s, the boarding school remained
a two-year programme distinguished by a blend of religious and basic Lamba
literacy instruction, together with 'industrial' training in brick, plank and
furniture making, cattle tending, and fruit and vegetable growing. It is little
wonder that some Lamba in every generation now critically regard this very
first schooling system as having been little more than a training programme
in domestic service (ubukaboi ).[50]
Through the early 1940s, the wages paid to these bakaboi ('boys')—nearly
one-third of the African urban labour force—were competitive with those
paid to other African employees. There were, in addition, certain informal
benefits attached to such work. Bakaboi were fed on the job. They often had
first choice of their employers' castoff clothes, and some received on-site
lodging in backyard servants' quarters. And judging from the photographic
memorabilia of former Lamba cooks and house boys, domestic servants
were able to adopt the same standards of sartorial elegance as the other
African townsfolk.
Yet these bakaboi did not enjoy much respect among other urban Africans,
at least when measured against the occupational ranking standards of
Mitchell's and Epstein's sample of 653 African secondary, teachers' training
and technical school students in Lusaka. Domestic servants, like
messengers, hotel waiters and hotel boys, had low occupational prestige as
compared with secondary teachers, headmasters or police inspectors (very
high prestige), senior clerks, primary teachers or artisans (high), or boss
boys and lorry drivers (neither high nor low). In their evaluation of thirty-
one African occupations, these students ranked domestic servants in twenty-
fifth place, and garden boys and scavengers (very low prestige) at the
bottom of the scale.[51]
Thus the Lamba bakaboi— with such colourful occupational names as Kapu
(Cup), Foloko (Fork) and Sigaletti (Cigarette)—may have had considerable
― 362 ―
familiarity with English and the European way of life, but they could never
claim this style of life themselves. Nor could they bask in the prestige that
the underground miners—mostly Northern or Luapula Province 'Bembas'—
claimed for themselves by virtue of their hazardous work, more secure
conditions and numerical dominance in the towns. Male occupational
preferences may have been instrumental in determining the Lamba's low
prestige ranking.
The urban authorities could afford to ignore these Lamba women, but this
was not the case in the countryside where the women, by leaving for town
before the November rains and garden work began and then returning after
the harvest in early June, only worsened villagers' prospects of self-sufficient
subsistence.[54]
Unlike the Congolese 'Kasai, however, these Lamba women were temporary
town wives rather than professional prostitutes. As such, they can be
identified with that category of townswomen known as bakapenta —the beer
and dance-hall girls who helped to 'make a business' out of marriage.[55]
And it was this reputation for casual marriages that won these women the
ridicule of the Bisa-recruited dance team reported in Clyde Mitchell's The
Kalela Dance .
― 363 ―
Lamba Resentment
So far this essay has been preoccupied with historical explanations for the
invidious, externally ascribed dimension of the Lamba ethnic identity, and
little attention has been given to their view of, or their response to, these
stereotypes. The time has come to shift our perspective to the internal-
resentful dimension of Lamba identity.
Two notes of caution are in order here. First, the available historical
materials were written by Europeans, and rarely reflect the Lamba point of
view. Most, instead, make repeated allusions to a mistrust of 'strangers' or,
as in J. L. Keith's report, to such 'tribal' character traits as an imputed
inferiority complex. Though Rev. Bobo Litana, Sr., near Fiwale Hill Mission, is
preparing his memoirs for publication, there are to my knowledge no written
accounts of Copperbelt history from a Lamba perspective. This, again,
probably reflects the relatively recent introduction of comprehensive primary
schools into this area.
Second, much of what I have to offer rests upon the oral recollections
collected during my 1977–78 field investigation of ethnic 'stranger'-'host'
relations between the local Lamba and 'Mazezuru' communities of the rural
Zambian Copperbelt. Though then not aware of the remarkable parallels in
the social and historical experiences of the northern and southern Lamba,
the reciprocal ethnic stereotypes that I noted do recall the events of the
early twentieth century as central elements in an enduring legacy of Lamba
grievance and resentment. One must keep in mind that the advent of
colonial rule was, at most, one or two generations removed from the
experience of Lamba adults, and that the Lamba-Lima Native Reserve was
instituted during the lifetimes of those who are now grandparents and great-
grandparents. It would be mistaken to construe these memories as newly
coined, eminently instrumental devices in the competition for Zambian
governmental and social services.
This resentful dimension of Lamba identity focuses upon the belief that they
—having been systematically 'cheated' of their lands and its mineral wealth,
and of their dignity and integrity as an autonomous people—have uniquely
'suffered' (ukuciula ) the costs of the Copperbelt's mineral development.
Nearly every village headman south of Luanshya, for example, can recount
the tale of how his people were 'chased' (ukutamfia ) to the Reserve, or fled
there from the Congo, or moved to accommodate incoming villages while the
lands outside the Reserve remained vacant and uncultivated.[58] They and
others will tell how the British in
― 364 ―
1938 deposed their legitimate, but uncooperative and allegedly corrupt chief,
Chamunda Mushili II, as well as how his extra-legal court and capital rivalled
that of the officially appointed Regent for a dozen years thereafter. And
some will even draw historical parallels between the removal of Chief Mushili
II and the temporary suspension in 1967 of Sr. Chief Mushili IV over the
repeated allegations of Lamba economic neglect.
One rainy January afternoon, for example, I was surprised to find one of my
Lamba informants drinking and dancing with a barmaid at the local bottle
store. Ploughing season was nearly over, but he, for lack of a tractor
transmission gasket, had hardly begun. I said something about the shortage
of spare parts holding him back, but he admitted that he really hadn't gone
to look more than once. Then he shrugged and said, by way of explanation,
'You know how we Lamba are; we only like to drink and dance.' He winked
and laughed, then returned to his companion. On yet other occasions, a
Baptist church deacon invited me to join him in a Sunday morning beer
(cipumbu ) drink, or the same men who complained that Lamba women 'just
prostitute themselves' by marrying a succession of husbands jokingly offered
their help to me in finding a Lamba wife or girl friend. Prominent local Lamba
farmers, however, are less likely to joke about such things, and take a dim
view of the leisurely work pace, the neighbourly beer drinks, and the petty
jealousies and marital instability which are so much a part of Lamba village
life. There is, in other words, some recognition that the townsfolk's
stereotypes about the Lamba represent more than uninformed, projective
fictions.
The Swahili community near Ndola, as the historical target for Lamba
resentment, is a notable exception to this pattern of ethnic accommodation.
Elderly Lamba still resent the special favouritism shown these former slavers
during the early colonial period, and a small but popular Lamba political
faction continues to contest the legitimacy of the Swahili chieftainship.
According to their argument, Swahili and Islam are not indigenous Zambian
culture traits so, their reasoning goes, this small core of nominally Muslim
Swahili-speakers must be 'foreigners'. And if, as the Swahili community
claims, this is not the case, then they are bound to recognize their
subordination to their area's original African chief, Lamba Chief Mushili.
Today, however, the most common focus of resentment for the Zambian
Lamba is the prosperous and ethnically encapsulated community of
polygynous 'Mazezuru' farmers—most of them Karanga Shona. The
Federation Administration
― 365 ―
The 'Mazezuru' living south of Luanshya all arrived in the early 1970s,
following bitter land disputes with the Lenje and their neighbours in Mumbwa
and Kabwe Rural Districts.[59] These hundred farms have markedly raised
the rural Copperelt's agricultural productivity. But few Lamba derive any
material benefit—such as tractor-plough services—from this 'Mazezuru'
presence, and given their historically conditioned sensitivity to ethnic slights,
they resent the 'Mazezuru's' disregard for the welfare of those whose land
they presently occupy. Members of the two communities participate in the
same social system, but rarely meet as social equals. So for all intents and
purposes, they inhabit separate social worlds. Such instrumental relations as
do exist between them only accentuate their genuine differences in material
interests and affective sentiments, and confirm the reciprocally invidious
ethnic stereotyping between the 'proud' and 'selfish' 'Mazezuru' and their
'jealous' and 'lazy' Lamba hosts.[60]
These Lamba stereotypes about the 'Mazezuru', and theirs about the Lamba
clearly refer to the patterned inter-ethnic relations on the rural Zambian
Copperbelt today. But the cultural sentiments which inform the Lamba view
of these 'stranger'-'host' antagonisms feed upon the enduring sense of
grievance and resentment that underlies Lamba self-perceptions, and
derives from their historical experience.
Conclusion
I have argued that the remarkably similar Belgian and British stereotypes
about the northern (Katangan) and southern (Northern Rhodesian) Lamba
were no coincidence, but instead represent common European perceptions of
the Lamba's response to their incorporation into a common colonial industrial
order. Similarly, African stereotypes about the weak and backward Lamba
country bumpkins—stereotypes found on both sides of the border—represent
generalized urban prejudices against rural folk, these townsfolk's common
'struggle for prestige' in the European-dominated colonial order, and their
common perception of the genuine and gradually worsening economic and
social conditions among the Lamba villagers.
I do not suggest that all stereotypes at all times and in all places are rational
or
― 366 ―
13—
From Ethnic Identity to Tribalism: The Upper
Zambezi Region of Zambia, 1830–1981
Robert Papstein
Introduction
This essay is about the development of this 'tribalism' in the Upper Zambezi
region of Zambia among the Luvale and Lunda speaking peoples between
around 1830 and 1980.[2] While ethnic differentiation, based on differences
of language, or at least dialect, historical traditions, small differences in
material culture and cosmology, did exist objectively in the past in the Upper
Zambezi, these differences have in the last hundred years been transformed
into rigid and self-conscious 'tribal' markers. The region's people sought to
adapt to and influence changes initiated during the colonial period which
continue to dominate local politics and local relationships with the Zambian
national state.
― 373 ―
With the exception of the Lunda-speakers, all the region's 'tribes' possess
the same clans. The matrilineal clans have no formal leadership or
organization yet they have played an essential role in Upper Zambezi
political, economic, religious and social life. As late as the 1940s they were
still regarded as more important, in personal relationships, than tribal
affiliation.[3] It was by ignoring the clans and emphasizing the 'tribe',
symbolized by the new, appointed chiefly hierarchy, that the fundamental
ideological restructuring of Upper Zambezian societies began.
It is not necessary to enter into the current debate over the utility of such
concepts as 'modes of production' except to say that all Upper Zambezian
societies in the early nineteenth century fell within some form of what is
generally described as lineage/domestic mode of production whereby the
means of production was regulated through indirect (clan) and direct
(genetic) relationships. When a group of men passed through the male
initiation ceremony, mukanda, this not only granted them social recognition
as adults but also entitled them to a part of the means of production in
anticipation of their marriage. Although villages in this agriculturally
marginal zone are generally small, in the better growing areas, such as
Chavuma, they can be quite large, with hundreds of people living in a
― 374 ―
The importance of clan as against tribe not only was a constant of the past
but is an essential element of the present. When travelling long distances or
entering unfamiliar villages one always performs an obsequy, invoking one's
clan formula, at the muyombo tree found in every Upper Zambezian village.
Upon hearing the formula—a largely fictive genealogy which links the reciter
to the clan founders—one is taken to one's 'relatives', who bear the
responsibility for hospitality and social introductions.[5]
It is not possible to explain here how these clans came into existence and
why they have retained their influence except to say that a developed Luvale
ethnic awareness was well advanced by the mid-nineteenth century. It was
based in part on the military force of the Luvale NamaKungu royal clan and
the historical, religious and technological innovations which they
introduced.[6] It was into this ancient system, already under stress because
of the individual economic and social opportunities offered by linkages with
the Atlantic slave trade, that British colonial administration, supported by
Lozi expansionist aspirations, intruded at the turn of the century.
I see tribalism replacing ethnic awareness in the Upper Zambezi area in four
overlapping phases. The first, from around 1830 to 1907, is the period of the
slave trade and of Luvale domination of firearms. The second, from 1906
through the 1930s, was shaped by the impact of the early administrative
policies of the colonial government. The third, beginning in the 1920s, saw
the evolution of the colonial moral and political economies. Through their
schools the Plymouth Brethren missions created a small group of locally
educated culture brokers who reinterpreted Lunda and Luvale history both to
the colonial authorities and to their own people and who articulated local
dissatisfaction against one another and against the colonial administration,
often using historical arguments. The participation of the Luvale and Lunda
in labour migration to Zaire, Angola, Northern and Southern Rhodesia and,
through the Witwatersrand Native Labour Association (WNLA), to South
Africa in the 1930s and 1940s heìghtened awareness of the Upper Zambezi
area's disadvantaged position vis-à-vis the rest of Northern Rhodesia's
peoples. The colonial administrative and education policies mandated by the
British government between 1941 and 1963 have remained largely
unchanged in independent Zambia's Zambezi District down to the present.
Finally, there is the fourth period, dominated by the impact of the continuing
Luvale History Project, which began in 1969 and which is still continuing in
the 1980s.
Luvale and Lunda speakers have occupied the Upper Zambezi since the
― 375 ―
Yet local politics are now dominated, to their last detail, by Luvale and Lunda
― 376 ―
Participation in the Atlantic slave trade reached the Upper Zambezi in the
mid-eighteenth century, attained its peak in the 1830s and 1840s, and
slowly died out between then and the turn of the century.[16] In 1907
slaves in that part of the Upper Zambezi under British administration were
officially freed by the new colonial administration but a system of debt
slavery continued on a limited scale for decades.[17] To understand the
significance of this for Luvale ethnicity and tribal identity, as well as the
importance of changes made in the chiefly system by later British
administrators, one must understand the essentials of Luvale political
succession. The Luvale are matrilineal and uxorilocal. Chieftainship is
restricted to a single clan among some thirteen clans, the NamaKungu. All
children of female chiefs are therefore chiefs (vamwangana ). A child of a
male chief is called Mwana Uta or 'child of the bow'. He can never become a
mwangana . This means that, depending on the number and fecundity of
female chiefs, it was possible to have hundreds of Luvale chiefs at any one
time. With very few exceptions, chiefly genealogies tend to be very shallow
for obvious reasons. During the slave trade certain vamwangana were able
to create important new chieftainships. These coexisted with older titles, and
with the Kakenge, whose ancient chieftainship provided the necessary
legitimizing historical links which each chief required to be accepted as a
mwangana .[18] This proliferation of chiefs with vastly varying degrees of
actual authority was to confront the early colonial administration with the
'need' to create a clear hierarchy of political power and one which was small
enough in number to be 'manageable'.
Because of their advantageous location on the plains which fall away from
the Angolan highlands to the west, the Luvale were the first in the Upper
Zambezi to receive Ovimbundu traders in search of export slaves. As a
general rule the Ovimbundu were not interested in taking the slaves
themselves, but preferred instead to buy them for guns, cloth and jewellery.
I have discussed elsewhere the response of the Luvale NamaKungu chiefs to
the opportunities offered them by the slave trade and the links between
Luvale expansion, guns and slaves.[19] By the mid-nineteenth century,
when we have travellers' accounts describing the region, virtually all of the
major chiefs were also important slave traders. Given the nature of Luvale
chiefly succession, it is clear that those who were able to control the slave
trade and the economic power and access to firearms which it represented
were those who became some of the most important chiefs.
The idea of chiefs as entrepreneurs is certainly not original to this essay. But
the opportunities of the time gave to Luvale chiefs, and, quite conceivably,
chiefly pretenders, the possibility of establishing a unique economic/military
position of unprecedented strength in their competition for lands and
followers. It is clear that the system of domestic production was being
augmented by elements of a new mercantile economy in ways which
strengthened chiefs and created 'big men' able to take advantage of
international trade. In terms of Luvale-Lunda relations, the relative Luvale
monopoly of firearms and the aggressive, expansionist policy which Luvale
chiefs were following meant that any defenceless group was subject to
enslavement. Luvale traditions are quite explicit in stating that many Luvale
—in addition to the Lunda—were enslaved, and sometimes by their own
chiefs. The systematic and large-scale enslavement of Lunda people by
Luvale chiefs and 'big men' was less an indication of some ancient ethnic
animosity as it was an
― 377 ―
After the retreat of the Lozi, the Luvale continued raiding the Lunda who fled
ever deeper into the forests. It is likely that, had the demand for slaves
continued, the Luvale would have decimated the Lunda, but the closure of
the market, for which the Luvale were dependent upon the Ovimbundu,
ended the Wars of Ulamba. It is still common, however, in the heat of
modern politics, for Luvale partisans to recall the Wars of Ulamba as 'proof
of their 'superiority' over the Lunda. It was these changes in the patterns of
the Upper Zambezi's history which cast relations between Luvale and Lunda
in terms of ethnic or tribal politics. However, the coming of colonial
administration created even more serious—or at least more immediate—
problems for both groups, and while the Wars of Ulamba helped to form
each group's view of the other, opposition to certain British administrative
policies required a temporary common front and cooperation.
The Lunda and, especially, the Luvale were totally opposed to direct or
indirect Lozi rule and complained vigorously to a succession of District
Commissioners that the historical justification used for Lozi overlordship was
mistaken. Nevertheless colonial administrators continued to assert Lozi rule
and each 'recognized' Lunda and Luvale chief was placed under the nominal
control of a Lozi induna . The language of local administration was Lozi. All
major decisions were referred to the Barotse Province headquarters in
Mongu. And the Lozi were given an essentially free hand to 'bring
administrative order' into Balovale Sub-District. To add to the injustice of
having autonomous peoples under their domination, the Lozi sought to
indenture the local population by instituting a system of corvée labour,
presumably for public works and the extension of royal gardens, and a royal
tribute from the rich fishing grounds.[22] Luvale and Lunda resisted Lozi
sub-imperialism, presenting their cases to the local authorities through
missionaries of the Christian Mission in Many Lands (Plymouth Brethren) and
a cadre of newly literate Luvale and Lunda mission-educated teachers and
evangelists.
While the Luvale and Lunda were cooperating to resist Lozi encroachments,
they became aware that the British, Portuguese and Belgian governments
had
― 378 ―
The division of the Upper Zambezi between three colonial powers and the
subsequent restructuring of the hierarchy of local chieftainships, when
combined with 'recognition' of a very few chieftainships, meant that the
Lunda and, especially, the Luvale were given a political structure that was
both almost wholly new and without significant customary power. Not only
was the structure pyramidal to an unprecedented degree, but the recognition
of a limited number of 'official' chiefs meant that the titles would remain
permanent.[24] In effect, the British created a form of positional
succession.
The Luvale at Chavuma and elsewhere resisted every effort to resettle them,
and violence soon broke out with the Lunda, who supported the plan. Bruce-
Miller pursued this foolish and unnecessary policy until he was replaced.
Even though the forced resettlement policy was never actually attempted
again, it became an article of faith among subsequent District
Commissioners that the Luvale belonged 'properly' on the Zambezi's west
bank and the Lunda on its east bank. Commitment to this point of view,
reflected in the formulation of subsequent policies, has been the single most
important stimulus to tribal strife between Lunda and Luvale. Every local
political decision was—and still is—evaluated in terms of whether it will
further or diminish each side's claim to Chavuma, the area's best agricultural
land.
― 379 ―
avenue of access to land, fishing and hunting rights, and social acceptance.
At the same time, the positions of the chiefs themselves came under
scrutiny with a view to limiting the number of chiefs and creating a hierarchy
of chiefs for each 'tribe'. Clearly, the chiefs with the largest land areas and
populations under their sovereignty were going to be 'recognized', and there
was considerable difficulty among both the Luvale and Lunda chiefs when
Ndungu and Ishinde were moved to lands traditionally held by other chiefs.
Thus the chiefs and headmen, who also faced the problem of 'recognition',
were naturally eager to have the greatest number of persons possible
inscribed in their 'book'.
I have already noted that the population of the district in 1948 contained, in
addition to Luvale and Lunda, significant numbers of Luchazi and Chokwe
and some Mbunda. Large numbers of Luchazi had entered Northern
Rhodesia after the failure of their revolt against the Portuguese in 1916–
1917 and the brutal repression which followed.[27] They originally entered
Bulozi, but because of Lewanika's objections to such large concentrations of
'foreigners', some were resettled at Kabompo. Neither Bulozi, where they
felt they were treated as slaves (vandungo ), nor the forest lands of
Kabompo were attractive, and many Luchazi migrated into Balovale
grasslands and settled among the Luvale either in their own villages or as
resident 'foreigners' in Luvale villages.[28] No doubt this was also a time of
significant intermarriage among Luchazi and the Luvale, who regarded the
Luchazi as 'relatives' sharing the same clans as well as the same historical
and social traditions.
From the scanty data extant, it is difficult to gain a firm idea of the scale of
Luchazi (as well as Mbunda) migration into Balovale. The 1920s and early
1930s was a period of important ethnic movement and redefinition, with the
'safest' ethnic identity in terms of rights of residence in the sub-district being
either Luvale or Lunda. The choice of ethnicity was related to area of
residence: non-Lunda residing in Chavuma would, if forced, choose a Lunda
identity to protect their farms and rights of residence after the relocation
policy was announced in 1923. Non-Luvale residing on west bank lands
would have to choose Luvale ethnicity to protect against their resettlement
to the east bank or their return to Kabompo and possibly Bulozi.
But how were these kinds of alignments possible when, in the case of
Chavuma and the better lands and fishing/hunting areas, a wholesale
incorporation of 'new' Luvale or Lunda would be resisted by those threatened
by the increased competition for resources? The answer, however tentative,
requires some discussion of local language, clan structures, cultural
taxonomies, material culture and historical traditions. We are so accustomed
to identifying the differences between people that often we fail to establish
the continuities.
Our written records and the oral testimonies of the peoples themselves
suggest some confusion concerning the meaning of ethnicity and, especially,
'tribe'. Portuguese records tend to lump all of the peoples of eastern,
savannah Angola and western Zambia (except the Lozi) under the pejorative
term 'ngangela' .[30] For
― 380 ―
the Portuguese, the ngangela was the vast plain which reached from the
central Angolan highlands to the Zambezi. In this area they saw no
significant cultural differences between the inhabitants. This term includes
the people we know as Luvale, Luchazi and Mbunda, as well as other,
smaller societies which view themselves as distinct from their neighbours.
Gluckman clustered the same basic group under the Lozi term 'wiko',
meaning 'peoples of the west'—again assuming that there existed little in
their political, social or material cultures to differentiate them as separate
groups. White wrote about the same people as the 'Balovale' and later as the
'Lwena'.[31]
There are five indigenous 'languages' spoken in the Upper Zambezi, plus two
imported languages, Lozi and English. Lunda, one of the five, is actually two
mutually intelligible dialect clusters, Lunda and Lunda-Ndembu. The other
four are the dialects of Luvale: the vakaKasavi (language spoken by the
people along the Kasavi/Kasai river); vakaMbunda (spoken were the earth is
red (mbunda )); vaka Yambeji (spoken along the Zambezi); and
vakaMbalango (spoken in the plains area between the Lungevungu river and
Bulozi). The Balovale are peoples who speak one of these dialects and live
where the mavale plant grows. C.M.N. White preferred to use the term
'Lwena' instead of 'Luvale', but this term, which has connotations of venereal
disease, was usually only applied to Luvale dialect speakers in the northern
areas of Luvale country near the Lwena river in Angola but not in Zambia.
― 381 ―
We know very little about labour migration from the Upper Zambezi. Most of
― 382 ―
Labour migrancy gave the Luvale and Lunda their first urban experience,
and those who migrated to the Copperbelt were shocked to learn that they
were regarded as social inferiors by the more numerous Bemba and, of
course, the Lozi. The Balovale people spoke unfamiliar and difficult
languages, they remained fiercely committed to customs which others found
'bizarre', as, for example, the mukanda circumcision ceremony, and their
reputation for herbal and magical expertise often made others spiteful or
fearful of them. Their lack of education and urban experience, and their
relatively small numbers, made it easy for others, in the bitter competition
for work, to view them as rustics fit only for the worst and lowest paid jobs.
The Luvale in particular soon developed an urban reputation as night soil
carriers and menial workers. In general, 'Lunda' and 'Luvale' became very
lowly ethnic identifications in town.[38] There is little doubt, however, that
ethnic identification was merely an idiom used in the broader political
economy of the urban centres in the competition for better jobs.
At the same time that perceived low ethnic status was a hindrance to finding
jobs, it also laid the foundations for even more enduring social problems for
Upper Zambezian peoples. By 1964, the time of Zambian independence,
certain ethnically defined groups had come to dominate the choice positions
within certain sectors of the economy. The Bemba, for example, had
achieved this in the mining sector. And the fact that for decades such
preferences were 'justified' or accepted meant not only that at independence
most Upper Zambezian people held relatively unskilled positions, but also
that the possibilities for rising in the system were limited. This situation was
certainly not limited to any single group, but there is no question that within
contemporary Zambian society certain ethnic groups or 'tribes' have larger
representation in certain government departments or parastatals than their
absolute numbers would permit in a random selection of qualified personnel.
The political economy of the colonial state had encouraged the creation of
tribal groups in the rural areas and consequently these identities applied
within the urban industrial economy as well, reinforcing the rural
perceptions. This not only meant that rural peoples had to identify
themselves with a 'tribe' in order to 'fit in' and enjoy official legal recognition
in their local district, but also ensured that tribe, through the Pass System
which allowed only so many tribesmen to migrate to town, was used to
identify and tacitly to separate workers according to
― 383 ―
their presumed abilities into such categories as the 'clever' Bemba or Lozi
and the 'backward and wild' Luvale or Lamba.
The official colonial policy which regarded the Luvale and Lunda as subjects
of the Lozi plagued every District Commissioner from the day he arrived in
Balovale boma until the day he left. The dispute consumed so much time
and so inhibited the administration of the area that it was finally decided in
the late 1930s to hold a Commission of Enquiry into the issue. The Luvale
and Lunda rejoiced at the prospect, partly because they were certain of
victory and partly because the colonial administration had at last accepted
their claims that only through an investigation of their history and customs
could the matter be equitably adjudicated. The MacDonnel Commission thus
took testimony in Bulozi, Balovale, the Copperbelt and Lusaka between 1938
and 1939.[39]
The MacDonnel Commission is the epic event of modern Luvale and Lunda
history. By 1938 both groups had a cadre of literate, experienced
intellectuals who, in cooperation with local missionaries, orchestrated their
testimonies to the Commission and who, in the preparation of masses of
written materials—almost all of which was historical in nature—sought to
demonstrate the separate and independent origins and development of the
Lunda and Luvale tribes and their autonomy from the Lozi. In doing this they
presented, consciously and unconsciously, a picture of ancient and
centralized tribal polities which neatly fitted British preconceptions but
which, in fact, they had only recently created. Both Luvale and Lunda set
down, on paper and for the first time, universalist rather than local views of
their histories. They understood that not only was this immediately
important for their claims to autonomy from the Lozi, but that ultimately
they would have to make similar presentations concerning their own conflict
over Chavuma. Therefore the Luvale and Lunda testimonies asserted their
independence from the Lozi but differed dramatically in their interpretation
of their origins in the Congo, the 'migration' into the Upper Zambezi and, of
course, the antiquity of each group's presence in the Chavuma area.
headmen would have given them greater control over land, trading licences
and, later, after the beginning of the MPLA nationalist struggle in Angola,
control over refugees who could easily be converted into underpaid farm
labourers.[42] For the majority of Chavuma's population, who by this time
had seen the new power of the chiefs and Native Authorities, the thought of
a Lunda chief pursuing Lunda interests in a predominantly Luvale area was
unthinkable.
As the Chavuma dispute festered, its influence was felt at every level of
district administration, with both sides tending to see every decision and
every policy as somehow related to the issue of Chavuma. Not only were the
Luvale and Lunda involved but the by now substantial and increasing
number of Chokwe and lesser groups of Luchazi and Mbunda, none of whom
had recognized chiefs in the area, 'sat the fence' as their rights of residence
and to land were thus bound to the fates of competing Luvale and Lunda.
Since Chavuma was declared 'chiefless', with real local power being taken up
by a few very strong headmen, it was less pressing, and in fact could
ultimately become dangerous, to choose a new ethnic identity.
Some of the critical institutions in the 1940s were the Lunda and Luvale
Native Authorities. There can be little doubt that the creation of Native
Authorities, which gave in theory but rarely in practice the 'tribes' a 'modern'
administrative structure, was moderately useful in carrying out Indirect
Rule.[44] Yet the term coined was something of a misnomer; perhaps
'Native Responsibilities' would be more descriptive of their functions as they
never had serious authority in making policy. While their creators saw the
Native Authorities as institutions of modernization, their creation
encouraged, or indeed forced, people to seek the solutions to local problems
through the newly formulated tribal structure.
The Native Authorities were not merely the organizations through which
disputes such as the Chavuma issue could be presented. They also offered to
chiefs, headmen and the newly established Chiefs' Courts unprecedented
power in legal matters, especially the right to collect fines in cash and kind.
They thereby provided a bureaucratic 'class' or group with a new source of
wealth and control. Ironically, the tribe became the very ideal of modernism,
representing as it did 'modern' administration, and, through its Native
Authority, access to the clear benefits to be had from western-style trading,
agricultural improvements, transportation, medicine, and, most important of
all, education.
― 385 ―
The majority Luvale population believed that this decision would ultimately
mean the installation of a Lunda chief as well. In 1949 violence between
Lunda and Luvale in the form of the burning of houses and crops and the
assaulting of people reached the point where the District Commissioner in
Balovale declared a State of Emergency in Chavuma and summoned troops
to re-establish order. Both Luvale and Lunda informants today agree that in
the late 1940s it was not safe for a Luvale to use the road along the east
bank of the Zambezi from Balovale to Chavuma.
I am not certain how the school language problem was actually negotiated,
but a compromise was reached which provided both Lunda and Luvale
language schools. This solution avoided the question of when the Chokwe
and Luchazi would also have their own schools. The language policies of the
government merged in the general problem of 'control' over Chavuma, and
since there was no easy, mutually acceptable solution at hand, it
procrastinated. By the mid-1950s the Luvale, frustrated by broken promises
and delays, actually installed a chief in Chavuma. The Lunda threatened to
go to war if the government did not remove the illegal chief and again a
State of Emergency was declared.
By the 1950s Luvale and Lunda tribalism was fully developed. It reached into
every aspect of life and into every corner of the district and beyond. Lunda
boycotted Luvale traders and vice versa. Travel in one another's territory
was unsafe and the same people who had sat together to prepare evidence
for the MacDonnel Commission and who had celebrated their joint victory
over Lozi pretensions now no longer spoke to each other. Couples who had
married across ethnic lines found themselves ridiculed by both sides and, at
times, even forced by their families to divorce.[46]
Luvale and Lunda contact with the Ruund state of the Katanga region of
southwestern Zaire had profound effects on the self-image of both groups.
The ancient, highly centralized Ruund state was a perfect foil to the claims of
the Lozi and others that Upper Zambezian societies were without 'proper
histories and chiefs'. Here was a historical tradition to which both Luvale and
Lunda had ancient claims even if their actual knowledge of the Ruund was
piecemeal and rudimentary. In 1956 Luvale and Lunda delegations visited
Musumba, the capital of the Mwaant Yaav, as a part of the arbitration
process for Chavuma, and they later entertained his representatives in
Balovale and Chavuma.
― 386 ―
For his part the Mwaant Yaav was more than willing to cooperate with
Belgian and British officials, not because he wished to lend an arbitrating
hand to the Chavuma matter, but because he also was attempting to foster
in the middle and late 1950s a pan-Ruund movement, a 'gathering-in of all
of the peoples of the Ruund tradition. In this way Mwaant Yaav Ditend
(Tschombe) hoped to lay foundations for his own expansive political
ambitions of the 1960s.
Mose Sangambo, perhaps more than any other Luvale or Lunda, was
intensely interested in history and perceived the political use to which a new
kind of history could be put. Sangambo was elated by his visit to the Congo,
first to Musumba and later to Inkalanyi, the remains of the ancient polities
which predated the rise of the Ruund Empire and to which the earliest Luvale
traditions are linked. There was a potential contradiction in Luvale identity
with the Ruund: for the Ruund hegemony meant the suppression of the
Inkalanyi polities. And it is to the Ruund that the earliest Lunda traditions
are connected. But Sangambo and the Lunda representatives both preferred,
though for somewhat different reasons, to see the totality of the historical
traditions as common to both groups.
I do not wish, however, to represent all histoncal interests of the Luvale and
Lunda, and especially those of Mose Sangambo, as being centred on
Chavuma. Sangambo in particular has been collecting historical information
for fifty years and, while he recognizes its utility in putting forward Luvale
claims and views, he has also developed into a professional historian, as
have many of his colleagues who, through their literacy and their exposure
to modern historical writing, have attempted an unprecedented synthesis of
Luvale history for future generations. This has necessarily involved
interpretation, extrapolation from limited data and the informed judgments
which all historians are forced to make. It has also meant that Sangambo
and his colleagues have reconstructed traditions which they feel best
represent their present and historical culture, and have also elaborated
certain elements which respond to external or internally felt requirements. I
hasten to note that the 'invention of tradition' is hardly restricted to the
Upper Zambezi and that it plays an important role in articulating and
directing opinion in most societies.[47] Nor need I elaborate on the conflict
of historical interpretation which generates the great arguments within the
historical profession. What Sangambo and his contemporaries have written is
unique only in the sense that we are unaccustomed to finding such research
and dedication in rural Africa. Out of these concerns Sangambo has given
the Luvale people their first comprehensive, albeit contentious, history—a
history which elaborately sets out the origins of his tribe at Inkalanyi, the
emergence of the Mwaant Yaavs and the rise of the Ruund Empire, and the
subsequent evolution of Luvale history down to the present day. Thomas
Chinyama attempted, in far shorter form and with far less research, to do
the same for the Lunda.
― 387 ―
To enhance the tribal identities which their histories described and to assert
the vitality and modernity, as well as the antiquity, of their tribal structures
the Luvale and Lunda adopted, or—as they see it—readopted in the 1950s
new forms of ancient political symbols from the Ruund which they had lost
or which had developed at Musumba since their migration from Uruund.
These included the royal crowns (michama ), the royal executioner's sword
(mukwale ), and the elaborate royal fences (lilapa ) which today surround
the houses of the Senior Chiefs. The stability of titles which the colonial
imperium imposed encouraged the building of permanent 'capitals'—in
violation of ancient custom which decreed that the chiefs capital was
destroyed at his death and moved to a 'clean' place.[48]
While the visit to Musumba gave the Luvale and Lunda the opportunity to
enhance their historical knowledge and to rediscover their origins, it
provided no satisfactory solution to the Chavuma problem. Mwaant Yaav
Ditend found his own 'pan-Ruund solution' by appointing his 'daughter'
Luweji as chief at Chavuma. While this solution disappointed both Luvale and
Lunda, it was nonetheless acceptable to the Northern Rhodesian
government. Luweji was given Lunda and Luvale advisers to help her
administration, but both sides eventually came to believe that she was
actually administering Chavuma in the interests of her Chokwe
husband.[49] During the late 1950s and early 1960s this led to a three way
struggle for power in Chavuma between the Chokwe, Luvale and Lunda, and
to the ultimate breakdown of authority and the return to house burnings,
school boycotts and petitions to the government. In 1963, with
independence approaching, Luweji was deposed and returned to Zaire.
Luvale and Lunda partisans both attempted to place a chief of their own in
Chavuma. Both failed. The government again declared Chavuma a chiefless
area and turned the problem over to the new Zambian government which
today still faces the same dilemma as its colonial predecessor and has had
the matter 'under study' for twenty years.
During this period there have been many attempts by both sides to install a
chief. Their tenacity is not the atavistic response of tradition-bound people.
More correctly, no one in the Chavuma area regards their interests as
adequately protected by constantly changing and often indifferent civil
servants. While the lack of a chief is still a very important local issue, it is
essentially an idiom which masks the anxious desire of the local population
for material improvements. Luvale and Lunda intellectuals and civil servants,
some of whom now hold important national positions, realize that a major
contributing factor to the lack of 'development' in this potentially rich
agricultural area is the tribal strife and antagonism which lead the central
government to doubt the wisdom of investing limited resources in an area
where localism is likely to hinder the success of any project. At the same
time the Upper Zambezi is at the end of the road—at least it was for decades
during the war of independence in Angola and the civil war which followed.
But the major locally perceived reason why the issue must be settled is that
this would be a first step towards economic development, better school and
medical services, and the creation of an infrastructure which would allow
local farmers and fishermen greater participation in the national economy.
The Luvale History Project, 1938–1981
The Luvale History Project is something of a misnomer in that it had its roots
in the 1930s but did not reach its current state of organization until the late
1960s. The original impetus to write a synthesis of Luvale oral traditions—or
more correctly, the Luvale political traditions—came, as I have shown, out of
the
― 388 ―
For those Upper Zambezian people long resident in town during the colonial
period, and perhaps even more strongly after independence, improving their
'tribal' image by making available to their fellow citizens books about their
customs and their history—written almost always in English, for writing in
Luvale would have been to lose their most important audience—was one
method to create local pride and to counteract existing prejudices. The
continuation of earlier stereotypes has stimulated—indeed commanded—
Luvale intellectuals to reinterpret Luvale custom and history and thus give
the concept of a Luvale or a Lunda tribe a modern, as well as an ancient,
significance. It has also created the intellectual dilemma of attempting to
show the vitality and variety of their 'tribal' life without threatening the often
enunciated anti-tribal policies of the Zambian state.
This process has involved many individuals. During a long and difficult
beginning, Senior Chief Ndungu Sakavungu and Mose Sangambo led the
Luvale through the harrowing years of the Lozi and Chavuma disputes.
Today it involves the Mwondela brothers, John and Willie, who began their
careers as mission teachers and who are still important figures in both
national and local politics. The Mwondelas became the driving force of the
Luvale History Project and the source of funds and inspiration for the revival
and elaboration of Luvale customs. John Mwondela is largely responsible for
the revival of the Likumbi lyaMize (Mize Days), a ceremony held each August
which recalls Luvale history and custom and demonstrates many of the old
crafts and skills now rarely practised.[50] Willie Mwondela has, from his
positions as Zambian Ambassador to the People's Republic of China and
currently the Republic of Kenya, written extensively on Luvale custom and
tradition. James Chinjavata, originally a research assistant to C.M.N. White,
participated in White's research into Luvale language, history and customs.
These are but a few examples of the Luvale who have used their literacy to
conserve and explain Luvale history to a broader world.
I have far less information about the Lunda, but they also seized the
opportunities offered by the Plymouth Brethren mission schools and they
too, like the Luvale, sent some of their 'best and brightest' to Chitokoloki,
Chavuma and Sakeji schools. Among the currently important Lunda who
attended Brethren schools are Samuel Mbilishi, who has served on the
Central Committee of the United Independence Party (UNIP), and Dawson
Muhongo, who worked first as a boma messenger and then for many years
as a hotel waiter in Salisbury, and who was installed as Senior Chief Ishinde
in the 1950s because he was considered an educated man who could 'deal'
with Europeans. He forcefully directs Lunda affairs today as he has for the
last thirty years. Then there is Thomas Chinyama, a Lunda with a prestigious
Luvale name, who wrote the first Lunda history after the end of the Lozi
dispute.
― 389 ―
to help rationalize the data and give it a publishable form. They initially
found this aid in the person of Dr Arthur Hansen who, with his wife Dr Anita
Spring, was then conducting anthropological research in the Chavuma area.
Dr Hansen helped Sangambo to collect data among Luvale chiefs and
provided an outline for the book. On the departure of Hansen and Spring in
1972, 1 arrived in Zambia to conduct historical research among the Luvale
and was immediately enlisted into the project.[51] My main contribution
was providing Sangambo with transportation as I went about my own
research; I also made a visit, with him, to the Ruund and to Inkalanyi in
1973. In 1979 Hansen and I edited Sangambo's material into a book and
500 copies were printed as Mose Sangambo's A History of the Luvale People
and Their Chieftainship, with Hansen and myself as editors. The books
arrived in Zambezi District in 1980 and were sold out in three weeks.
Sangambo's history book had been, like Chinyama's forty years earlier, a
bombshell in local politics.
In keeping with the gentle pace of local affairs in Zambezi, Sangambo's book
was perceived in the first instance as a rebuttal to Thomas Chinyama's of
1941, which had elevated the Lunda over the Luvale chieftainship.[52]
Sangambo also made a vigorous historical assertion of Luvale claims to
Chavuma. But it also transcends local disputes and sets out Luvale political
history for all Zambians to read, hence his insistence that it be published in
English. This brings to national attention rural and urban Luvale wishes for
higher ethnic status, a greater role in Zambian affairs, and easier access to
employment. And, perhaps most importantly, it is the gift of Sangambo and
all of the people who worked with him over decades to future generations of
Luvale and Zambians.
The Lunda in Zambezi District regard the book as the newest and perhaps
most dangerous of all Luvale attempts to control Chavuma. They are not
surprised by this, but they are profoundly offended by Sangambo's assertion
that their Senior Chief Ishinde was only a headman when he 'left' Uruund,
not a chief, and that he became a chief years later through his own initiative
and not through actual genealogical connections to the Ruund royal family.
In this view, he is seen as a jumped-up latecorner, brought into Northern
Rhodesia at the time of the British restructuring of chieftainships, when
compared with the antiquity of Luvale chieftainship and settlement in
Chavuma.
At the provincial and national level the Lunda sought to have the book
banned, confiscated and burned. The Luvale reacted with equal vigour,
threatening to 'march to the President' if the book was banned and if my
research, part of which was directed towards preparing a new, expanded
edition, was prohibited. After weeks of meetings between the District
Governor, an Mbunda man of inexhaustible patience and moderation, Luvale
and Lunda delegations and myself, it was unanimously decided to permit my
research, on a limited scale and in a very restricted part of Chavuma. The
Lunda are still seeking a banning of the book; Sangambo remains adamant
that what he writes is historically true—that it is only
― 390 ―
The Lunda say they are beginning new historical research to give a 'clearer'
idea of their past and to challenge elements in Sangambo's interpretation.
This was one of the compromises reached in our meetings; that the proper
answer to the Luvale claims was a new Lunda book. The Luchazi, whose
history I had originally attempted to include in my own research and who
had refused to be lumped together in a 'Luvale' book reproached me for
their exclusion but have embarked on a book of their own.[55] The Kaonde
and Mbunda have also begun local history projects.
Conclusion
What I have tried to describe in this essay are the outlines of how two
'tribes', the Luvale and the Lunda, have arrived at their contemporary
political structures and self-identities. Not only have the Luvale and Lunda
taken up more centralized political structures with new symbols of power
and authority and expanded a historical tradition from a local to a more
universal level of interacting 'tribes' which explains and justifies these
innovations, but unfortunately they have also come—at least at the local
level—to regard these new forms of tribal identity both as exclusive and as
their only effective way of asserting influence on local, provincial and
national affairs. There is no question but that there are Luvale and Lunda
tribes today and that tribalism—however that may be defined—is a central
factor in local and national politics. But it is instructive to note that
regionalism, ethnic separatism and movements that would be described in
Africa as 'tribal' are widespread in some of the oldest western states, and
that there is no necessary conflict which cannot be overcome in reconciling
local cultural, linguistic and historical differences within the structure of the
national state.[56] This resolution certainly cannot be found by ignoring
tribal differences; rather, it is essential to understand their historical
evolution and meaning. One of the most important intellectual unifiers for
the national state is its sense of common history. This does not mean that
each ethnic group or region has shared the same experience but that for a
multiplicity of historical reasons they now share borders and institutions
which serve their citizenry. Once schools began to teach Central African or
Zambian history the issue of ethnic representation became a crucial one. If
the Luvale and Lunda, and the other peoples of the Upper Zambezi, find no
place in their national school books and are required to learn the histories of
other peoples whom they regard as competitors in the search for jobs,
status, and economic opportunity, the idea of the 'History of the Nation' has
little local meaning.
The Luvale and Lunda recognize to some degree that they have been
tribalized in the negative sense. They face the dilemma of wanting to know
and be proud of their local history, and to show both to succeeding
generations and to the world at large how they have evolved as a society. At
the same time they recognize that history cannot be solely concerned with
local issues and that their 'tribal' consciousness as Luvale and Lunda must
also make way for a national Zambian consciousness. The colonial period
redefined the tribe and created for it what were called, at the time, modern
institutions. If tribalism is the idiom through which local societies are still
forced to participate in the modern political economy, Sangambo writes
hopefully: 'We [Luvale, Lunda, Luchazi, Mbunda and Chokwe] were once
brothers at Inkalanyi; we have separated to found different tribes but now
we are coming back together again in our new Zambian nations.'[57]
― 391 ―
14—
Ethnicity and Pseudo-Ethnicity in the Ciskei
Anonymous[1]
The Ciskei is unique among the South African Bantustan 'homelands' in that
it has absolutely no basis in any ethnic, cultural or linguistic fact whatsoever.
Unlike Bophuthatswana, KwaZulu, Venda and other territories which are the
designated homelands of speakers of the Tswana, Zulu, Venda and other
languages, there is no distinctive Ciskeian language and there is no
distinctive Ciskeian nationality. The inhabitants of the Ciskei speak Xhosa, as
do the inhabitants of the Transkei homeland, but whereas the Transkei
leadership rejects the concept of a specifically Transkeian identity and calls
for a single greater Xhosaland, the Ciskei government of President Lennox
Sebe tries to legitimize itself through the creation of a wholly artificial
Ciskeian ethnicity. It is the aim of this paper to trace the origins and
progress of this vain attempt.
The Ciskei, as its name implies, is a block of territory situated on the side of
the Kei River closest to the old Cape Colony of which it once formed part.[2]
It is separated from the Transkei by a wedge of European-owned land
running from South Africa's tenth-largest city, East London, through King
Williams Town and up to Queenstown. This strip, usually referred to as 'the
white corridor', was carved out of Xhosa territory during the frontier wars of
the nineteenth century. If current proposals are duly implemented, the
Ciskei will eventually consist of some 8300 square kilometres. This area
contained in 1980 a resident population of some 650,000, a population
density of 126 to the square kilometre—the highest of any South African
homeland except for Qwa Qwa.[3] Over one-third of this population is
urban, concentrated around the centres of Mdantsane and Zwelitsha which
are nothing but dormitory suburbs for the white corridor cities of East
London and King Williams Town respectively.
― 396 ―
capitalist entrepreneurs involved than for the mass of the Ciskeian poor.
The Ciskei/white corridor area was the scene of intense black-white contact
in schoolhouse and marketplace, and on the battlefield, throughout South
Africa's frontier period. The dogged resistance of the Rharhabe Xhosa held
the line against Colonial invaders for more than a century, longer than any
other southern African anti-colonial resistance.[7] At the same time, the
region also experienced extensive missionary activity. Mission schools such
as Lovedale and Healdtown paved the way for the college at Fort Hare,
founded in 1915, which became the subcontinent's premier institution for
African higher education until its seizure by the South African government in
1959. Rural districts such as Peddie and Keiskammahoek nurtured an
independent commercial peasantry, which still flourished at the turn of the
century.[8] Elected headmen and literate spokesmen replaced old-style
hereditary chiefs as the true representatives of this new class. Newspaper
editors and politicians such as J. T. Jabavu and W.B. Rubusana were
prominent in Cape politics during the days of the African franchise, and they
laid the foundations for twentieth century progressive political movements in
South Africa.[9]
The emergence of the revived African National Congress (ANC) in the 1940s
effectively fused the resistance and the educational traditions in the Eastern
Cape region. East London has been a stronghold of the ANC since the
Defiance Campaign of 1952, and ANC leaders Nelson Mandela, Oliver Tambo
and Govan Mbeki are all Xhosa-speakers, as was Robert Sobukwe, the
founder of the Pan-Africanist Congress.[10] King Williams Town was the
home of Steve Biko and the spiritual centre of the black consciousness
movement during the 1960s and 1970s. More recently, the workers of East
London have given strong support to the South African Allied Workers Union
(SAAWU), which began to organize in the city in the late 1970s.[11] The
significance of this is that the region which now forms part of the Ciskei has
a deep-rooted historical tradition of fierce resistance to colonial domination
which transcends ethnic boundaries and pre-colonial political structures and
is now closely linked with a broad South African nationalism. Moreover, as a
recent commentator remarked, 'The East Cape's unique combination of a
high level of education and a low level of subsistence has always made it one
of the most inflammable regions of South Africa.'[12]
The Ciskei Versus the Transkei in Historical Perspective
― 397 ―
could, when suitably adjusted, serve as a fig-leaf for autocratic control. The
Ciskei was totally different. It consisted at the time of a number of distinct
black 'reserves' interspersed in patchwork style with pockets of white-owned
farms and towns. Even in the rural areas, elected headmen had largely
replaced hereditary chiefs, and the most visible and articulate spokesmen of
black interests lived in towns and wanted nothing to do with the so-called
Bantu Authorities. Whereas the Transkei was virtually tailor-made for
apartheid-style independence as early as 1963, the Ciskei obviously still had
a long way to go. In the urgency which surrounded the launching of the
Transkei—Self-Government in 1963 and 'Independence' in 1976—the
problem of the Xhosa communities of the Ciskei was temporarily shelved,
and when it finally recalled itself to official attention, it did so as a separate
problem.
The Ciskeian government grew out of the old Ciskeian General Council
established in 1934.[13] In 1961, this was reconstituted as the Ciskei
Territorial Authority under the Bantu Authorities policy, and Proclamation
R143 of 1968 created an Executive Committee of six ministers and the basis
of an autonomous civil service. The first Chief Councillor was Justice
Mabandla, chief of the Bhele Mfengu people. In 1972 Lennox Sebe, a
member of the cabinet, broke with Mabandla and started his own political
party, the Ciskei National Independence Party (CNIP). This was victorious in
the 1973 elections, largely due to the connivance of the South African
electoral officers. Mabandla's party, the Ciskei National Party, crumbled away
in the face of Sebe's impregnable position. Two other opposition parties were
started, but neither got off the ground. In 1978 the remaining opposition
members, including Mabandla himself, crossed the floor and the Ciskei
officially became a one-party state. After a rigged referendum in December
1980, the Ciskei accepted South Africa's version of independence in
December 1982.[14] Prophetically, the new Ciskeian flag collapsed the first
time it was raised. Mounting opposition in schools, streets and factories led
the President to confer increasingly arbitrary powers on his half-brother,
Charles Sebe, the commander of the dreaded Ciskei Central Intelligence
Service. Charles's power grew steadily for about eighteen months until his
vaulting ambition, in the form of an assassination plot, brought his downfall
in June 1983. Shortly thereafter, the violent attempts of the Ciskeian
authorities to suppress a bus boycott in Mdantsane precipitated a bloody
conflict between government and people.[15]
Ever since the fall of Charles Sebe, President Lennox Sebe has ruled alone.
Rumours concerning the poor state of his health and the unusual medication
he is said to require are fuelled by the fact that, alone in the entire Ciskeian
cabinet, the Minister of Health is usually a white. The dissolution in 1985 of a
Committee of Four, which screened development proposals before they
reached the President's eyes, opened the way for a number of highly
dubious entrepreneurs, many of them Israelis, who milked the Ciskeian
government for two straight years.[16]
― 398 ―
vassals. The Transkei was warned off, and Lennox Sebe's position in the
Ciskei now seems stronger than ever.[17]
These are the bare bones of the Ciskei's political history. We now turn to the
role of ethnicity in shaping the course of these events.
Mfengu-Rharhabe Rivalry and the Rise of Lennox Sebe
On the 14 May 1835, the Mfengu gathered under an old milkwood tree in
Peddie district and swore a great oath to obey the Queen, to accept
Christianity, and to educate their children. This oath was to have momentous
consequences. The Mfengu fought alongside the Colonial forces in all the
Frontier Wars and were rewarded by extensive tracts of Rharhabe land. As
the better-educated and more European-oriented group, they naturally
secured the bulk of elite positions as clerks, teachers, peasants, and petty
traders that were available to blacks in an elective system based on merit
and achievement, as opposed to the pre-colonial Xhosa pattern of strong
hereditary chiefs. They viewed themselves as the bearers of a great
universal Christian Civilization, and tended to regard the Rharbabe and other
Xhosa as backward and uncivilized. Every 14 May since 1907 has been
celebrated as Fingo Emancipation Day, with a ceremony held under the old
milkwood tree where the Mfengu oath was sworn.
― 399 ―
Ironically, it was the Mfengu attempt to preempt their Rharhabe rivals which
precipitated their downfall. Justice Mabandla, who was both a Mfengu
hereditary chief and an educated man, seemed to accommodate both
government and Mfengu aspirations. Uncomfortably aware that the new
dispensation played into Rharhabe hands, in 1968 Mbandla and his
associates issued a 'Fingo Manifesto', in which they requested that the
Mfengu be regarded as entirely independent of the Rharhabe, and that
representation in the coming 'New Deal' arrangements outlined by the
Proclamation R143 of 1968 should be structured along ethnic lines. The
South African government was not averse to stirring up ethnic hatreds and
the Commissioner General made a public attack on the Xhosa during the
Fingo Emancipation celebration of 1969. The New Deal Executive was
explicitly made up of two Mfengu, two Rharhabe, one Sotho and one
Thembu. With the excision of Herschel and Glen Grey districts, which
became part of the Transkei in 1976, the latter groups lost their political
significance.
Mabandia was Chief Executive. Sebe, the leading Rharhabe, was Minister of
Education. They did not work well together. Mbandia accused Sebe of
holding secret meetings and plotting against his government. Sebe accused
Mabandla of ethnic favouritism and of blocking the applications of Rharhabe
chiefs for government recognition. When Sebe was dropped to the less
glamorous Agriculture portfolio, he began to organize his own political party,
the Ciskei National Independence Party (CNIP), for the upcoming 1973
elections. The CNIP was backed by almost all those Rharhabe who were
prepared to accept Bantu Authorities. The other Xhosa member of the
Executive Council, L.S. Mtoba, stayed with Mabandla, as did the Rharhabe
Paramount Chief, Bazindhlovu Sandile. But the presence of such prominent
Rharhabe in his ranks did not help Mabandla. 'Why should we be ruled by a
Fingo?' the CNIP asked, and by persistently beating on the ethnic drum, they
awakened the historical and material grievances of the Rharhabe and rallied
them to Sebe's cause.
Resettlement and Ethnicity
The CNIP victory in the 1973 elections was almost certainly the result of a
South African governmental decision, as is shown by the role of South
African officials in committing electoral irregularities on Sebe's behalf.[19]
One can only speculate as to why South Africa preferred Sebe. Mabandla
was docile enough, though his performance as Chief Executive had been
weak and unimpressive. On the other hand, certain long-term factors were
working in Sebe's favour. These were intimately connected with South
Africa's policies of retribalization and resettlement and it is appropriate to
discuss them in some detail.
We have already seen that the frontier wars of the nineteenth century
resulted in the wholesale destruction of the old Rharhabe chiefdoms and the
confiscation of their lands. Some of these were given to the Colony's Mfengu
allies and the rest were distributed to white settlers. In order to confer some
sort of geopolitical unity on the Ciskei, the South African government was
forced to embark on a massive programme of reallocating territory, officially
termed the 'consolidation of the Ciskei'. Briefly the idea is to join up most of
the scattered patches of black-owned land by purchasing some 300,000
hectares of adjacent white farmland, while knocking out eleven 'awkwardly
situated Bantu areas' in the white corridor. Even though much of this land
has been earmarked for the
― 400 ―
The purchase of white farmland and the influx of displaced persons from the
white rural areas created the necessary opportunity for the resuscitation of
several old Rharhabe chieftainships which had been in abeyance since the
Ninth, and last, Frontier War of 1877–8.[22] Government ethnologist A. O.
Jackson has indicated that aspirant chiefs need to fulfil the following practical
requirements:
First, the population of a given location could reject the authority of their
officially recognized chief and invite in a new chief. The Rharhabe of
Gqumahashe, Victoria East, for example, had long campaigned for the return
of the old Tyhali chieftainship to supersede the authority of their recognized
chief, the Mfengu Justice Mabandla. Second, where white farmlands were
allocated for black resettlement, aspirant chiefs with enough influence could
claim the newly released land as their ancestral home, and thus acquire both
territory and following in one fell swoop. Thus after the South African
authorities had decided to turn the farm vacated by a Mr Fetter into Ndevana
resettlement camp, President Sebe himself was able to recognize the farm
as his long lost ancestral land and its people as his own personal chiefdom,
the amaKhambashe.[24] Third, when individuals settled in a rural area as
tenants or squatters without permanent land rights, these newcomers might
band together under an ethnic banner and claim to be a single 'tribe', having
historical rights. This occurred in Nyaniso, Peddie district (always a Mfengu
area), where the newcomers were incited by an aspirant chief with a fake
pedigree to declare themselves members of the Gwali chiefdom and thus
claim historical rights from their unfortunate Mfengu hosts.[25]
― 401 ―
One of the first things that Lennox Sebe did after attaining a position of
unquestionable power was to attempt to heal the ugly breach between
Rharhabe and Mfengu which he himself had done so much to inflame. Sebe
had always had some Mfengu supporters, notably the Zizi chief, Njokweni,
whose support—said
― 402 ―
to have been purchased by a bribe—gave him his first narrow majority. Sebe
sought to extend this support by placing pro-Sebe candidates into vacant
Mfengu headmanships and regencies, and he eventually welcomed the whole
opposition party, including the wretched Mabandla, into the CNIP. The
annual Fingo Emancipation and Ntsikana Day ceremonies were suppressed
because they 'divided the Ciskei nation along ethnic lines'.[30] President
Sebe now aimed to build a new and united nation owing allegiance to neither
Rharhabe nor Mfengu ethnic loyalties, but united in a single ciskeian
nationalism. It is possible, of course, that the President was motivated
exclusively by a desire to promote peace and harmony, and that he
perceived the dangerous possibilities of uncontrolled ethnic hatreds. But
there were other factors as well, and these must be considered in turn.
One major anomaly in Sebe's role as champion of the Rharhabe cause was
the uncompromising hostility of the Rharhabe Paramount Chief, Bazindhlovu
Sandile. This is not as strange as it might seem. The Sandile family was
exiled to the Transkei after the Frontier War of 1877–8, and it only returned
in 1961, thanks to the apartheid policy of boosting traditional authorities.
Though acknowledged as Paramounts of all the Rharhabe, the Sandile family
nevertheless possessed no territory or subjects under their direct control and
were regarded as possibly dangerous interlopers by the Ciskei Rharhabe
chiefs. Bazindhlovu Sandile, who ascended the Rharhabe throne in 1969,
was a weak, colourless man who drank too much and lacked the stature of
his late father.
His youth had been passed among the Transkei Rharhabe chiefs, and he
recognized the seniority of the Transkei-based Gcaleka branch of the Tshawe
royal clan. The political insignificance of the Transkei Rharhabe exiles had,
moreover, led them to exalt hereditary rank and faithful adherence to the
old customs above the sort of power games and backstairs intrigue endemic
in homeland politics. Bazindhlovu rejected Sebe as an upstart commoner,
and somewhat naïvely called on his people to follow their Paramount Chief.
His view of ubuRharhabe (Rharhabe-hood) thus far transcended the Ciskei in
both space and time. It could even be argued that the Sandile family
represented an authentic historical tradition of Rharhabe ethnicity, which
was incompatible with the bogus pseudo-tradition inherent in any South
African-sponsored ethnic homeland.
Bazindhlovu Sandile died suddenly and prematurely in April 1976.[31]
Whereas Bazindhlovu alive was an acute embarrassment to the Ciskeian
authorities, Bazindhlovu dead might well have proved an asset. The noble
chief Sandile (d . 1878) was precisely the sort of folk-hero whom Sebe and
his friends professed to respect, and they wished to co-opt his name into the
emerging Ciskei pantheon through the support of his descendants. The
Sandile family wished to give Bazindhlovu a traditional funeral at which his
Transkei Rharhabe relatives and the Gcaleka Paramount Xolilizwe Sigcawu
would all be present. The Ciskei government wanted a Ciskei state funeral at
which no 'outsiders' (that is, Transkeians) would be present. A strong CNIP
delegation travelled up to the mourning Great Place and demanded the
body. Fortunately, the family had already deposited it with a firm of white
undertakers. The CNIP men then demanded the body from the undertakers
who, forewarned by the Sandile family, refused to give it up. Unable to stop
the funeral, the Ciskei government obstructed it as far as possible by
refusing to assign earth-moving equipment and by initially refusing to
contribute a state subsidy.
Xolilizwe Sigcawu, the Transkei-based king of all the Xhosa, was present at
the funeral. So were Sebe and the CNIP. But when Xolilizwe announced that
Bazindhlovu's widow would carry on as Regent for her minor son according
to
― 403 ―
Xhosa custom. Chief L.W. Maqoma rose on the government side. This was
something for the 'Rharhabe Tribunal', a pro-CNIP body, he said, not a
matter for the family or outsiders to decide. Chief Maqoma himself was, in
fact, the CNIP's man for the job. The family nominated Bazindhlovu's widow.
To no one's surprise, the government ethnologist supported Maqoma who
remained Regent until he fell from Sebe's favour in 1978. In 1987 there is
still no sign of the installation of Bazindhlovu's son, Maxhoba, although he is
past thirty. This suggests that, for all his vaunted traditionalism, Sebe still
sees the Rharhabe paramountcy as a wild card and a potential threat to his
exclusive monopoly of legitimacy.
The tragic farce of Bazindhlovu's funeral was repeated at that of his chief
councillor, Isaac Sangotsha. Sangotsha had been an active figure in
opposition politics until the collapse of the Mabandla party when, an old
man, he retired to his country home. A fervent Catholic, Sangotsha refused
to attend Easter services at Ntaba kaNdoda (see below) and, almost alone in
his village, he went to church on Good Friday. He must have been somewhat
indiscreet in his opinions because he was picked up by the police. He
returned, broken in health and spirit and died soon thereafter in July 1982.
The Ciskei government offered to pay for the funeral and arrange the
programme. The Master of Ceremonies was the then Ciskei Vice-President,
the Reverend Wilson Xaba, who delivered a sermon on the theme, 'He made
some mistakes, but he was one of us.' Isaac Sangotsha was buried in a
beautiful coffin by the very men he most hated and struggled against. In the
Ciskei one cannot even call one's body one's own.
Returning to our main theme, there was yet another reason for Sebe to
abandon a Rharhabe ethnic posture. In as much as me CNIP was an ethnic
party expressing pro-Rharhabe, anti-Mfengu sentiments, it was truly a party
of like-minded individuals working for common goals. Sebe was the leader,
but the party had a raison d'être independent of his personal will and
ambition. Men such as S.M. Burns-Ncamashe, L.F. Siyo, A.Z. Lamani and
L.W. Maqoma gave their loyalty to the CNIP rather than to L.L.W. Sebe, and
they regarded themselves as potential leaders of that party. They saw the
election victory of 1973 as a triumph for the CNIP rather than a vote of
confidence in Sebe personally. Sebe, however, wished to rule alone. He
disliked the corporate nature of his party and wanted to turn it into a
patronage machine dependent entirely on himself. First Bums-Ncamashe, in
1975, and then Siyo, in 1977, were pushed out of the CNIP. Prominent
hereditary chiefs Maqoma and Jongilanga were shuffled around the
ministries so as to remind them of their utter dependence on the word of
Sebe. Political nonentities such as A.M. Tapa and Sebe's brother-in-law,
Simon Hebe, whose only conceivable qualification for office was their loyalty
to the President, were elevated to positions of power. The promotion of
selected Mfengu, including arch-rival Mabandla, to the cabinet was an
integral part of Sebe's strategy of replacing government by party with
government by patronage. Sebe knew that he could count on the absolute
loyalty of his Mfengu recruits, who depended entirely on him for support
against their Rharhabe rivals and their own betrayed followers. Dropping his
anti-Mfengu rhetoric was a small price to pay for the broadening of his
support.
― 404 ―
Transkei, being much the larger, wealthier and more populous, would
swallow up the Ciskei in any merger which might take place. Matanzima was
openly willing to sponsor any Ciskei politician who supported amalgamation,
and it is rumoured that Mabandla, Sebe and L.F. Siyo all received Transkeian
aid while they were in opposition. The Transkei assembly passed a motion
unilaterally annexing the Ciskei, and Transkei paid the costs of two Supreme
Court legal battles against the establishment of a second Xhosa homeland.
Although Matanzima is not a popular figure in the Ciskei, many people are
well-disposed towards unification. 'We are all one people,' they tend to say,
if the subject of unification is broached, and they regard the creation of two
separate Xhosa states as a device to ensure the safety of the white corridor.
Ciskei government spokesmen struggle to answer the case for unification.
Clearly they cannot state publicly that they fear for their power and their
positions. Vice-President Willie Xaba, using the Afrikaans word 'suiwer',
argued that the Ciskeians were 'pure' Xhosa, whereas the Transkei consisted
of mixed Xhosaspeaking tribes.[33] In the Supreme Court, Ciskei counsel
stated that Ciskeian ethnic groups were 'independent' of Transkeian ethnic
groups. These arguments collapse in the face of the existence of the
Transkei Rharhabe and the traditional subordination of the Rharhabe to the
Transkei-based Gcaleka royal house. As for the Mfengu, there are four
Mfengu magisterial districts in the Transkei, which together constitute a
Regional Authority known as Fingoland. Clearly the Ciskei government
urgently required a national identity for the Ciskei which sharply
differentiated it from the Transkei.
The years since the Soweto Uprising of 1976 have seen an upsurge in public
opposition to the Ciskei authorities. School boycotts in 1976, 1977, 1980 and
1983; riots at Fort Hare, including an attack on Sebe's motorcade; trade
union organization; clandestine ANC paramilitary activity; and the bloody
Mdantsane bus boycott of 1983—all indicate the growing disaffection of the
mass of the so-called 'Ciskeian' population who never accepted ethnicity or
homelands in the first place. Sebe was forced to close down his own alma
mater at Lovedale and the old mission institution of Healdtown. He is clearly
perturbed by his lack of appeal to the rising generation, and his calls to 'the
youth' are not without a touch of pathos:
The central feature of Sebe's new Ciskeian nationalist ideology is the Temple'
or 'national shrine' at Ntaba kaNdoda ("Mountain of Man'), a somewhat
overgrown foothill of the Amatole range about 30 kilometres from King
Williams Town. The national shrine is the personal brainchild of the
President, conceived during a visit to Mount Massada in Israel in 1977.[35]
Every self-respecting nation had something to worship:
― 405 ―
In Egypt, it's the Nile; in Kenya, it's Mount Kenya; in India, it's the
cow; in America, it's the national flag.[36]
The place for the national shrine was probably suggested by S.E.K. Mqhayi's
well-known poem, studied by every Xhosa school-child, which says that the
old chiefs and diviners used to point to Ntaba kaNdoda and that it was a
place where the Xhosa High God Qamata heard his people:
So far, so good. But Mqhayi nowhere mentions the word 'Ciskei'. The poet (d
. 1945) was a leading figure in the Ntsikana Day celebrations, and his
'Intaba kaNdoda' is above all a Rharhabe poem. Nor is it true, as Sebe often
claims, that Ntaba kaNdoda was the scene of the last stand by the bold
Ciskeian warriors against the Colonial invaders. That honour belongs more
correctly to the isiDenge forests, which are not even within the boundaries of
the modern Ciskei, and which are, in any case, too closely associated with
the descendants of Chief Sandile, who lies buried there. On the whole,
however, one cannot dispute that, if one is determined to have a national
shrine in the Ciskei, Ntaba kaNdoda is as good a place as any other.
It is when we come to the shrine itself and the ceremonies associated with
it, that the equivocation really starts. Unlike the centralized Zulu kingdom,
the Xhosa lacked any great capital or politico-religious centre. Each of the
many chiefs had his own Great Place, but even this was barely
distinguishable from the common man's homestead.[38] The Xhosa did not
build in stone, and had no great annual ceremonies such as the first-fruits
celebrations further north. Even prayers for rain, the only occasion on which
the Xhosa normally invoked the High God, were usually held on a chiefly
rather than an ethnic basis. Despite, or perhaps because of, this singular
lack of precedent, President Sebe decided that a massive complex costing at
least R.860,000 and built by LTA (Ciskei)[39] —a company in which several
Ciskei cabinet ministers enjoy directorships—was the most appropriate
expression of the Ciskeian spirit.
Until the building of a new capital at Bisho (see below), most official
ceremonies, such as party congresses and passing-out parades, were held at
Ntaba
― 406 ―
A wise person says, 'If you are proud of your nation you should
make your presence visible on Ntaba kaNdoda.'[44]
Despite all the emphasis on the warrior chiefs of old, only three of Sebe's
leading followers had any ancestry worth boasting about. Of these, Chief
Lent Whyte Maqoma was the most ambitious.[46] He was descended, albeit
somewhat circuitously, from indubitably the greatest of the nineteenth-
century fighting chiefs. The original Maqoma (d . 1873) had perished alone
on Robben Island, the only man that the Imperial government never dared
to release. Lent Maqoma had substantial personal support in Port Elizabeth
and the Fort Beaufort/Adelaide areas. He was appointed Acting Chief of the
Rharhabe after Bazindhlovu's death. When Siyo and his friends were
expelled from the CNIP in 1977, Lent became the obvious Number Two to
Sebe in the CNIP hierarchy. Indeed, he was a little too obvious. Sebe did not
like any authority not stemming directly from himself.
Lent Maqoma seems to have been genuinely interested in the ancestor to
whom he owed his high position. Acting on his own initiative, he launched a
campaign to bring back old Maqoma's bones from Robben Island. After all
efforts by officials and historians to locate Maqoma's remains had failed. Lent
engaged an albino seer named Charity Sonandi who allegedly discovered a
few manacled bones on Robben Island to the accompaniment of rainfall,
thunder and lightning. These supposed remains were loaded on a South
African warship and carried off to Ntaba kaNdoda for a hero's burial in
August 1978. Sebe gave the keynote address, but, in retrospect, it is clear
that he hated every minute of it. Admittedly, the occasion was a copybook
example of everything he had ever said about the link between the old chiefs
and Ciskei nationhood, but clearly the hero of the hour was L.W. Maqoma
and not L.L.W. Sebe. The reinterment simply highlighted the contrast
between Maqoma's noble birth and Sebe's own extremely suspect ancestry.
Maqoma had stolen Sebe's thunder on the President's very own mountain.
― 407 ―
The contractors appear to have taken the President at his word, and with a
budget of some R158 million they have not needed to be overly concerned
with the problem of minimizing costs. From the results of their efforts, it
would appear that the life and spirit of the Ciskeian people were best
expressed in terms of another huge stadium; a new Legislative Assembly
building adorned with a bust of President Sebe to match his statue at Ntaba
kaNdoda; vast rectangular office block buildings for the extortionate Ciskei
civil service; new headquarters for the Ciskei Security Police; and, last but
not least, a presidential palace. Bisho will get a new university, since Fort
Hare is insufficiently patriotic. It will also get an elite school 'modelled on
English public school principles', a curious nursery for the Ciskeian spirit.
Naturally President Sebe could not admit that the new capital, dubbed Bisho,
was just a poor substitute for King Williams Town. So he was forced to claim
that 'Bisho' was in fact the 'original name of antiquity of the whole of the
King Williams Town municipal area'. In fact, the original Xhosa name for the
district was Qonce (Buffalo River), which Sebe cannot appropriate because it
is always used by the Xhosa to refer specifically to that very city of King
Williams Town which had been definitively excluded from the Ciskei. Bisho is
a perfectly legitimate synonym, popularized moreover in a well-known Xhosa
song, 'Bisho, my home', but it is false to assert, as Sebe has done, that it is
a more ancient and therefore more valid name than Qonce.[49]
Not wanted on the site are the old villages of Tyutyu, Bhalasi and Skobeni,
long established as eyesores and anachronisms by Ciskeian planners. In
March 1987, South Africa gave President Sebe a 'free gift' of R6.1 million to
remove the three communities so as to permit expansion of Bisho's elite
housing projects. Within six months more than 1000 Tyutyu residents had
been removed with very little in the way of compensation. They told the
press that 'their forebears were buried at Tyutyu and they would like to be
buried next to them according to the Xhosa custom'.[50] Clearly, however,
such unreasonable customs cannot form part of the 'traditional' heritage of
the new Ciskei. 'Nation' (isizwe ) and 'nationhood' (ubuzwe ) are the most
overworked words in
― 408 ―
The fallen heroes were often invoked to give Ciskei nationhood some sort of
time-depth, although, as we have seen, they belong to the Rharhabe rather
than to the Ciskeian past. Ciskeian military bases have been named after
Sandile and Jongumsobomvu (Maqoma). The word 'nation' figures in the title
Ikrwela leSizwe (Sword of the Nation), a 'crack Ciskeian anti-terrorist squad'
presented with their wings at Ntaba kaNdoda, comprising men of whom
President Sebe remarked, 'one man was capable of facing 500 men without
wasting bullets'.[52] The Intsika yeSizwe (Pillar of the Nation) is a youth
movement modelled on the Malawi Young Pioneers movement and trained
with Israeli and South African Defence Force assistance. Its aim is to:
bring the cultural and historic heritage of the Ciskei to the notice of
Ciskeian youth, provide useful and profitable employment to school
leavers, serve the territory and the community, and stimulate in
youth a sense of discipline, patriotism, nationalism, and a love of
the soil.[53]
Its director, Reverend Matabese, said that his movement would be 'run on
military lines' with the emphasis on drawing urban youth into a rural
environment. The urban youth, who hate the Ciskei government, found the
idea completely unattractive, however, and a completely new youth scheme,
with higher rates of pay, is now envisaged.[54] The symbolism of national
consciousness has found further expression on the bus fleets of the
monopolistic parastatal Ciskeian Transport Corporation, which sports the
logo 'Zezama-Ciskei Amahle', officially translated as 'We belong to the
beautiful Ciskeians', which sentiment the Managing Director assured the
public represented the philosophy of the bus company.[55] The bloody bus
boycotts of late 1983 adequately demonstrated the feelings of the beautiful
Ciskeians towards their patriotic bus company.
Napoleon is reputed to have said that men are led by toys. President Sebe is
both an ardent exponent and an eminent example of this dictum. The
President bought himself a R2 million Westwind 2 jet which no airfield in his
statelet could handle and no Ciskeian could fly. Soon afterwards the
President signed a R25 million contract with a Panamanian-registered
company to build a new 'international airport' for Bisho. This airport is now
complete. It can take a Boeing 747, which makes it larger than the South
African airport in nearby East London, but by the end of 1987 nothing larger
than light planes and helicopters had used its 2.5 kilometer runway.
Although it costs R2.5 million a year to maintain this white elephant, one
cannot travel from the Ciskei's capital to the airport without crossing South
African territory.[56]
― 409 ―
What is good for Sebe must of course be good for the Ciskei. So now there is
the Order of Ntaba kaNdoda, 'awarded only to those general officers and
brigadiers of the Ciskei Department of State Security and other armed forces
for exceptional meritorious services of major military importance'.[59] First
recipient was L.L.W. Sebe, who, incidentally, is also a full general and
commands the Ciskei Defence Force.[60] For deeds of lesser merit, there is
the Sandile medal. L.L.W. Sebe has one those as well. For 'loyal and
dedicated employees of the Ciskei Government' ere is the Order of the Blue
Crane. This too adorns the President's lapel. All these decorations and
medals are awarded at special ceremonies held on Ntaba kaNdoda.
The quest for a 'Ciskeian' culture extends even to feminine apparel. Beads
and the breasts have official approval as never before. A 'Miss Traditional
Ciskei' beauty contest forms part of the annual Independence
Celebrations.[62] Although the Ciskei is arguably the most successfully
missionized of all South Africa's homelands, its President took a bevy of
bare-breasted dancers to represent its 'culture' at an Israeli trade exhibition
in 1983.[63] Still to come is the 50,000 hectare, R12 million Lennox Sebe
Game Reserve and a R4 million cultural museum at Ntaba kaNdoda,
complete with an 'outdoor kraal museum' and a craft centre at which such
obsolete trades as beadwork, stick-carving and the manufacture of beer-
strainers will be encouraged. Last but not least, the Ciskei has acquired its
own hangman, who will execute his duties at the Ciskei's new, fully-equipped
central prison.[64]
Conclusion
Once in power, however, it suited Sebe to defuse the ethnic situation. This
turned out to be easy. Once loyalty to Lennox Sebe replaced loyalty to one's
ethnic group as the main avenue to power and wealth, ethnic association
became less important and ethnic feeling correspondingly less bitter. But
once he had abandoned his ethnic stance, Sebe faced a crisis of legitimacy.
He required a hegemonic ideology which would win the support of Ciskeian
subjects against the rival claims of older ethnicities, such as that of the
Rharhabe royal house, the pan-Xhosa nationalism as proposed by K. D.
Matanzima of the Transkei, and the
― 410 ―
How effective has this programme of pseudo-ethnicity been? There are those
who argue that, given time, these admittedly artificial signs and symbols will
acquire an aura of tradition. Others argue that whereas, for example, Chief
Gatsha Buthelezi in KwaZulu can call on a potent feeling of national pride
and military achievement, Sebe's appeals to a Ciskeian national
consciousness will not take root because they refer to something which is
simply not there. I tend to the second conclusion. It has been the failure of
the concept of Ciskeian nationhood to capture, to even the slightest extent,
the imagination and support of the ordinary person which drove the Ciskeian
regime to an ever increasinr dependence on brute repression in the form of
Charles Sebe and the Ciskei Central Intelligence Service.
The nouveau riche city of Bisho is at least a faithful reflection of the society
which gave it birth. Inside its rapidly expanding shopping arcades the
Ciskeian elite contemplate the purchase of Jacuzzis and three-piece suits.
Outside, prestigious housing developments have already over-run the village
of Tyutyu and stand poised to attack the next target, Bhalasi. Across the
road, hundreds of glassy-eyed civil servants pop coils of one Rand coins into
flashing slot machines at the Amatola Sun casino.
But some things never change. Lennox Sebe has used the Transkei's 1987
attack on his palace to whip up a little pro-Ciskei sentiment. Sick
Transkeians were expelled from Ciskeian hospital beds.[68] A new 'Ciskei
Development and Security Fund' was started for purposes which have never
been specified. 'Voluntary donations' of between R1O and R20 per Ciskeian
and R500 per business have been levied, and those foolish enough not to
volunteer have lost their pensions or their cattle or their business
licences.[69] Through this patriotic exercise R200 000 was amassed. In
March 1987, President Sebe mounted yet another customary ceremony at
the Bisho Independence Stadium. The time had come for the sixteen
government departments to present their contributions to the new fund. As
each delegation stepped forward to hand over its cheque, dancers ululated
and sang traditional songs.[70]
Notes
Preface
2. For discussions of this process, see L. Vail, The making of the "Dead
North": a study of Ngoni rule in northern Malawi, c. 1855-1907', in J. Peires,
ed., Before and After Shaka: Papers in Nguni History (Grahamstown, 1981),
pp. 230-67; and L. Vail, 'Ethnicity, language and national unity: the case of
Malawi', in P. Bonner, ed., Working Papers in Southern African Studies, Vol.
2 (Johannesburg, 1981), pp. 121-63; as well as the essay by Vail and White
in this volume.
3. In this context, it is worth noting that, although I canvassed African
academics widely for papers for this conference, not a single one would
undertake the writing of a paper which might be seen as 'subversive' to the
goal of political 'nation-building'. break
2. This situation is reflected in the fact that many political leaders felt the
need to fabricate a 'philosophy' of government in an attempt to compensate
for the intellectual banality of the nationalist movements after independence.
These 'philosophies' generally had far greater appeal for well-intentioned
non-nationals than for those dwelling within the particular countries for
which they were composed.
12. M. Chanock, Law, Custom and Social Order: The Colonial Experience in
Malawi and Zambia (Cambridge, 1985), is an important study that goes far
in exploring the role of the perceived need to control women in the
development of concepts of law during the colonial period.
14. In a recent survey the author conducted among women dwelling in the
squatter locations around Lusaka, Zambia, not a single woman interviewed
admitted a preference for the urban environment, and all said they looked
forward to returning 'home' in the future because of the lower cost of living
and greater tranquillity there.
1. I would like to thank the Jan Smuts Memorial Trust Fund of the University
of Cambridge and the Research Committee of the University of Cape Town
for financial assistance towards research on this chapter.
8. A.B. du Toit, 'No chosen people: the myth of the Calvinist origins of
Afrikaner nationalism and racial ideology', American Historical Review, Vol.
88, No. 4 (1983), pp.920-52.
9. This term is used to indicate that the concept of 'Afrikaner' had not
become crystallized by the second half of the nineteenth century.
10. J.C. Visagie, 'Willem Frederik Hertzog, 1793-1847', Archives Year Book
of South African History, Vol. 37 (1974), pp.55-72.
11. J.H. Hofmeyr, The Life of Jan Hendrik Hofmeyr (Onze Jan) (Cape Town,
1913), p.42.
15. A. Atmore and S. Marks, 'The imperial factor in South Africa in the
nineteenth century: towards a reassessment'. Journal of Imperial and
Commonwealth History, Vol. III, No. 1 (1974), pp.120-25.
17. S.F. Malan, Politieke Strominge onder die Afrikaners van die Vrystaatse
Republiek (Durban, 1982), pp. 54-5.
18. For an analysis of rural Transvaal society, see S. Trapido, 'Landlord and
tenant in a colonial economy: the Transvaal, 1880-1910', Journal of
Southern African Studies, No. 5 (1978), pp.27-58, and his 'Aspects of the
transition from slavery to serfdom, 1842-1902', Societies of Southern Africa,
No. 6 (1976), pp.24-31. On the role of the field-cornet, see F.A. van
Jaarsveld, 'Die veldkornet en sy aandeel in die opbou van die Suid-
Afrikaanse Republiek tot 1870', Archives Year Book of South Africa, Vol. 2
(1952), pp. l87-352.
19. De Tijd, 25 March 1868, letter from 'Vrystater'; De Tijd, 15 April 1868,
letter from 'Een Eigenaar . . . en een Afrikaander'.
32. J.L. McCracken, The Cape Parliament, 1854-1910 (Cape Town, 1967),
pp.36-7, 52; Hofmeyr, Hofmeyr, p.42. break
33. A.J. Purkiss, 'Politics, capital and railway building in the Cape Colony,
1870-1885', unpublished Ph.D. dissertation, Oxford University, 1978, pp.32,
55.
42. De Tijd, 8 July 1868, letter from 'Opmerker'; J.A. Henry, Die Eerste
Honderd Jaar van die Standard Bank (Cape Town, 1963), pp. 10-13, 28, 47;
Standard Bank Archives (SBA), Henry's précis of general managers' letters
to London, letter of 12 March 1882.
48. G.T. Amphlett, The History of the Standard Bank of South Africa Limited
1862-1913 (Glasgow, 1914), pp. 202-3.
51. A. Mabin, 'Class as a local phenomenon: conflict between Cape Town and
Port Elizabeth in the nineteenth century', unpublished paper presented at the
University of the Witwatersrand, 1984.
52. S. Trapido, ' "The friends of the natives": merchants, peasants and the
political and ideological structure of liberalism in the Cape', in S. Marks and
A. Atmore, eds., Economy and Society in Pre-Industrial South Africa
(London, 1980), pp. 247-74.
53. A.R. Zolberg, 'Political conflict in the new states of tropical Africa',
American Political Science Review, No. 68 (1968), p.4.
56. 'Our agricultural population'. The Cape Monthly Magazine, Vol. 6, No. 33
(March 1873), p.130.
57. Zuid-Afrikaan, 12 April 1873, 'Die Bijbel in Afrikaans'. The foregoing two
paragraphs draw on an excellent student essay by Jean du Plessis, 'Notes on
political consciousness on the periphery: with specific reference to the issue
of language in the South Western Cape during the 1870s', unpublished
paper, University of Stellenbosch, 1983. break
58. Zuid-Afrikaan, 8, 15, and 22 July 1874, articles by 'A True Afrikaner'.
60. Genootskap van Regte Afrikaners, Die Afrikaanse Patriot, 1876 (facsimile
reproduction of the first year of the newspaper, 1974), pp. 35, 41, 82, 113-
14. See also G.D. Scholtz, Die Ontwikkeling van die Politieke Denke van die
Afrikaners, IV: 1881-1899 (Johannesburg, 1977), pp. 169-71, 298-300.
65. For these and similar statements, see Van Jaarsveld, The Awakening,
pp.150-213; Malan, Politieke Strominge, pp.70-92. For the Hofmeyr
quotation, see Hofmeyr, p. 164.
74. Purkiss, 'Politics, capital and railway building', pp.1-84, 137-46, 451; for
an in-depth analysis of the collaborating relationship, see D.M. Schreuder,
The Scramble for Southern Africa, 1877-1895 (Cambridge, 1980).
84. C.T. Gordon, The Growth of Boer Opposition to Kruger, 1890-1895 (Cape
Town, 1970), p.10.
86. Bun Booyens, 'Ek Heb Gezeg': Die Verhaal van Ons Jongeliede en
Debatsverenigings (Cape Town, 1983); Malan, Politieke Strominge, pp.186-
206.
89. The paragraphs on the Standard Bank and local financial institutions are
based on primary research in the Standard Bank archives, and draw
particularly on the inspection reports for Stellenbosch and Paarl between
1880 and 1930. Specific references are given in my paper, 'Farmers and
polities', presented to the conference of the Economic History Society,
University of Natal, July 1984. break
90. S. W. Pienaar, ed., Glo in U Volk: Dr. D.F. Malan as Redenaar (Cape
Town, 1964), p.175.
91. G.J. Pretorius, Man van die Daad (Cape Town, 1959), pp.62-3.
99. See the succinct analysis by D. Denoon, A Grand Illusion: The Failure of
Imperial Policy in the Transvaal Colony During the Period of Reconstruction,
1900-1905 (London, 1973), pp.59-95.
100. Cited by N.G. Garson, ' "Het Volk": the Botha-Smuts party in the
Transvaal, 1904-1911', The Historical Journal, Vol. 9, No. 1 (1966), p.128.
103. Cited by E.C. Pienaar, Die Triomf van Afrikaans (Cape Town, 1973), p.
274.
107. C. van Onselen, Studies in the Social and Economic History of the
Witwatersrand, 1886-1914, Vol. 2: New Nineveh (London, 1982), pp.111-
170.
109. For an illuminating case study see R. Morell, 'A community in conflict:
the poor whites of Middleburg, 1900-1930', paper presented to the
University of the Witwatersrand History Workshop, 1984.
110. Bun Booyens, Die Lewe van D. F. Malan: Die Eerste Veertig Jaar (Cape
Town, 1969), pp.273-95.
113. J.H.H. de Waal, Die Lewe van David Christiaan de Waal (Cape Town,
1928), pp. 303-08. break
2. E.P. Thompson, The Making of the English Working Class (New York,
1963), p.9.
5. This essay uses 'race' to refer to the groups legally defined by the South
African state—black (African), white, coloured (mixed race) and Asian; and
'ethnic group' for divisions within those 'races'. Thus Afrikaners are
minimally defined as white and Afrikaans-speaking, and the overwhelming
proportion of them (over 90 per cent) are nominally members of the Dutch
Reformed Churches in South Africa or their descendants.
8. Ibid .
8. Ibid .
11. A. Sedgwick, The Third French Republic, 1870-1914 (New York, 1966),
pp.100-103.
13. C. van Onselen, 'The Main Reef Road into the working class'. Studies in
the Social History of the Witwatersrand 1886-1914, Vol. II, New Nineveh,
(London, 1982), pp.111-170.
18. G. P. Cook, in 'Towns of the Cape Midlands and Eastern Karoo', Survey
of the Cape Midlands and Karoo Regions, Vol. II (Grahamstown, 1971), p.10,
classified Grahamstown as a 'major country town', Cradock and Graaff
Reinet as 'country towns'. Dorp is widely used as a term of semi-affectionate
contempt, roughly 'Hicksville'.
19. J. Butler, 'Introduction: land and people' to 'A history of Cradock and its
district, 1926-1960' (mimeo).
20. Union of South Africa, Department of the Interior, Voters' List, 1925,
Electoral Division of Cradock, Polling District No. 322; Census of the
European Population 1926—Part VIII—Religions (European), p. 13 (1926
Census). This argument assumes that the proportion of white males
registered for the vote was extremely high, over 90 per cent.
21. T.R.H. Davenport, 'Appendix: office bearers', The Afrikaner Bond, 1880-
1911 (Cape Town, 1966), p. 397. break
22. W.M. Macmillan, The South African Agrarian Problem and its Historical
Development (Grahamstown, 1915), pp.8-10; Grosskopf, 'Rural
impoverishment', p.22.
22. W.M. Macmillan, The South African Agrarian Problem and its Historical
Development (Grahamstown, 1915), pp.8-10; Grosskopf, 'Rural
impoverishment', p.22.
25. Union of South Africa, Dept. of the Interior, 'List of male voters, 1931:
electoral division of Cradock' and ibid ; 'Electoral division of Somerset East'.
Two polling districts in the Somerset East constituency were in the fiscal
division of Cradock, the basis of the census. By 1931, 'bywoner' was
becoming a pejorative term. For 'lowliest occupations', see Grosskopf, 'Rural
impoverishment', p.vii.
26. Partnerships and sons must be taken into account. However, the number
of putative farmers as a percentage of farms held by each ethnic group is
172 per cent for Afrikaners, 133 per cent for Englishmen. This account
assumes that the white poor in Cradock were overwhelmingly Afrikaans-
speaking; I have no statistical measure of the English poor, urban or rural.
27. Wilson and Thompson, South Africa, Vol. II, pp.127, 131; Grosskopf,
'Rural impoverishment', pp.82-7.
28. O'Meara, Volkskapitalisme, pp. 36-7. Sales of wool fell from £22.6m in
1920 to £5.4m in 1932, and rose to £8.8m in 1938. Hay (almost entirely
lucerne in South Africa) fell from £2m in 1920, to £1.1m in 1932, and rose
to £2m in 1938 - Union Statistics for Fifty Years (Pretoria, 1960), Vol. 1,
'Agriculture', pp.24, 26.
33. On irrigation works and influx to small towns, see Macmillan, Agrarian
Problem, pp.46-8; Grosskopf, 'Rural impoverishment', pp.186-8.
35. Ibid .
35. Ibid .
36. Cradock School Board, Minute Book of the Poor School Committee: 6
Dec. 1894, 14 Feb. 1898, 9 Dec. 1902, 10 Feb. 1903, 14 Dec. 1911.
38. E.G. Malherbe, Education in South Africa II: 1923-1975 (Cape Town,
1977), pp.49, 155-60.
42. The two photographs are in the Cradock Museum; that of the women is
also published in ACVV, Feesbrosjure 75: ACVV Cradock (ACVV, Cradock),
p.10, hereafter 'ACVV 75'.
43. For example, D.W. Krueger, The Age of the Generals (Johannesburg,
1958).
44. H. Cloete, The History of the Great Boer Trek (London, 1899), pp. 178-
90; E.A. Walker, A History of Southern Africa (London, 1957), p.222.
45. P. Warwick, ed., The South African War (London, 1980), p.162. 46. Ibid
. pp. l61-5.
47. Ibid ., p.174. 'Khaki' was usually synonymous with British soldier, but
here clearly means 'fighting man'.
45. P. Warwick, ed., The South African War (London, 1980), p.162. 46. Ibid
. pp. l61-5.
47. Ibid ., p.174. 'Khaki' was usually synonymous with British soldier, but
here clearly means 'fighting man'.
45. P. Warwick, ed., The South African War (London, 1980), p.162. 46. Ibid
. pp. l61-5.
47. Ibid ., p.174. 'Khaki' was usually synonymous with British soldier, but
here clearly means 'fighting man'.
48. H. Lamar and L. Thompson, eds., The Frontier in History (New Haven,
1981), p. 314, draw attention to the need for the examination of the role of
women on the frontier.
49. 'ACVV 75', pp.8-10; Warwick, ed., South African War, pp. 164-6. break
54. H.C. Lambrechts and E. Theron, Vrouevolksdiens: Die Werk van die
Afrikaanse Christelike Vrouevereeniging (Cape Town, n.d. (1960?)), pp.6-
10; 'ACVV 75', p. 11.
55. Statement by Mrs van Hoepen, curator of the Cradock Museum, attached
to the photograph of the female 'undesirables'. Mrs van Hoepen is the
daughter of Emmie Venter.
57. E. Kedourie, Nationalism in Asia and Africa (New York, 1970), p.36:
'Nationalist doctrine . . . decrees that just as nations exist, so nations by
definition must have a past.'
58. 'ACVV 75', pp. 11-12.
59. DSAB, Vol. I, p.436; Interview, Mrs van Hoepen, 25 April 1981.
61. S.W. Pienaar and J.J.J. Scholtz, eds., Glo in U Volk: Dr Malan as
Redenaar 1908-1954 ('Believe in Your Volk: Dr Malan as Orator 1908-1954')
(Cape Town, 1964), p.234. The title of this collection is taken from Malan's
speech of 2 May 1937 out of which came the slogan 'Believe in God! Believe
in Your Volk! Believe in Yourself!'
65. W.M. Macmillan, My South African Years (Cape Town, 1975), pp.122-3.
66. Wilson and Thompson, South Africa, Vol. II, p. 205; Grosskopf, 'Rural
impoverishment', p.21; Pienaar and Scholtz, Dr Malan, pp.121, 191.
68. 'ACVV 75', pp.11-12. This 'grave' was almost certainly the monument
erected in 1907, and moved to the Moederkerk in 1976.
68. 'ACVV 75', pp.11-12. This 'grave' was almost certainly the monument
erected in 1907, and moved to the Moederkerk in 1976.
71. Ibid .; Smith, Cradock 1814-64, p. 177; S.W.J. van Rensburg, From the
Horse's Mouth (Pretoria, 1983), pp.41, 44-5. Van Rensburg, a noted
veterinarian, is Mrs J.J. van Rensburg's son,
70. 'ACVV75', pp. 11-12.
71. Ibid .; Smith, Cradock 1814-64, p. 177; S.W.J. van Rensburg, From the
Horse's Mouth (Pretoria, 1983), pp.41, 44-5. Van Rensburg, a noted
veterinarian, is Mrs J.J. van Rensburg's son,
74. Q. Hoare and J. Nowell Smith, Selections from the Prison Notebooks of
Antonio Gramsci (New York, 1971), p.5.
75. Ibid .
74. Q. Hoare and J. Nowell Smith, Selections from the Prison Notebooks of
Antonio Gramsci (New York, 1971), p.5.
75. Ibid .
76. The minutes are held by the ACVV Cradock and are on film at Sterling
Memorial Library, Yale University, Film No. 824.
77. ACVV Minutes, 4 Sept. 1926: the bestuur decided to share profits of a
tea with the Dingaansfees (Dingaan festival, i.e. the Day of the Covenant, 16
December) committee.
78. In 1926, there were 4419 members of the Dutch Reformed Churches,
800 Anglicans and 450 Methodists, the three largest denominations,
comprising together 90 per cent continue
of the white population of town and district. 1926 Census, Part VIII, Table 4,
13.
79. Cull also audited the books of the Kerkraad for years without
remuneration. See Cradock Dutch Reformed Church, 'Notules van die
Kerkraad' (Minutes of the Church Council), 4 May 1935.
80. ACVV minutes; De Kock reported surpluses of £108 on 25 June 1927 and
£160 on 25 Nov. 1927.
81. I have found no cases of welfare work by the ACVV among English-
speaking poor in Cradock.
82. Wilson and Thompson, South Africa, Vol. II, pp. 126-36.
84. Union of South Africa, House of Assembly Debates, 7 March 1927, col.
1142.
88. Cape of Good Hope, Provincial Council, Report of the Select Committee
on Educational Matters (Cape Town, P.C. Sel. Com. 8 - 1912), p. 108. The
report shows 100 European children out of school in the Cradock district in
1912, with about 1000 in school; 100 is a figure of the same order as in
neighbouring towns, but far below those in the northwest, e.g., Calvinia 330,
Hay 300, Kenhardt 750.
89. Smith, Cradock 1814-64, pp. 53, 55, 57. The average size of farms in
the Cradock district was 1935 morgen in 1929, roughly 4000 acres.
93. The Midland News, 1 and 3 April 1926, for reports of ACVV Congress in
Cradock.
100. Official Year Book of the Union of South Africa, No. 26 (Pretoria, 1953),
pp.345, 367; E.G. Malherbe, Education in South Africa II: 1923-1975 (Cape
Town, 1977), pp.155, 159.
100. Official Year Book of the Union of South Africa, No. 26 (Pretoria, 1953),
pp.345, 367; E.G. Malherbe, Education in South Africa II: 1923-1975 (Cape
Town, 1977), pp.155, 159.
103. Ibid ., 14 Dec. 1928. The minutes of the Kerkraad also show a
continuing concern about Afrikaner children going to the convent. See 2
March and 13 July 1935.
105. Ibid ., 5 Dec. 1931. At this date 230 children were being fed for £96,
but the period was not stated.
103. Ibid ., 14 Dec. 1928. The minutes of the Kerkraad also show a
continuing concern about Afrikaner children going to the convent. See 2
March and 13 July 1935.
103. Ibid ., 14 Dec. 1928. The minutes of the Kerkraad also show a
continuing concern about Afrikaner children going to the convent. See 2
March and 13 July 1935.
105. Ibid ., 5 Dec. 1931. At this date 230 children were being fed for £96,
but the period was not stated.
103. Ibid ., 14 Dec. 1928. The minutes of the Kerkraad also show a
continuing concern about Afrikaner children going to the convent. See 2
March and 13 July 1935.
105. Ibid ., 5 Dec. 1931. At this date 230 children were being fed for £96,
but the period was not stated.
103. Ibid ., 14 Dec. 1928. The minutes of the Kerkraad also show a
continuing concern about Afrikaner children going to the convent. See 2
March and 13 July 1935.
105. Ibid ., 5 Dec. 1931. At this date 230 children were being fed for £96,
but the period was not stated.
106. Ibid ., 6 Aug. 1927, 2 Feb. 1929, 4 June 1932.
110. See R. Harris, Prejudice and Tolerance in Ulster (Towota, N.J., 1972),
pp.x, 178, for a discussion of the frequent greater intensity of feeling among
women on ethnic, in this case mainly religious, issues. break
114. The 1960 census showed that among whites under 15 years of age 18
per cent could speak only English while 42.4 per cent could speak only
Afrikaans. Weighting these figures in the proportion, 40 per cent English, 60
Afrikaans speaking in the total white population, suggests that roughly 45
per cent of English-speakers, and 70 per cent of Afrikaans-speakers are
unilingual. Malherbe, Education in South Africa, Vol. II, p.139.
115. Language issues were important in the party split in 1969. See T.R.H.
Davenport, South Africa: A Modern History (Johannesburg, 1977), p.306.
118. On Jews in South Africa, see E.A. Walker, A History of Southern Africa
(1957), p.655; Wilson and Thompson, South Africa, Vol. II, pp.108, 389.
122. Cape Archives, PAS 3/45/P101A, Provincial Secretary to Mrs E.C. van
Lingen, Secretary, Nasionale Vroueparty van die Kaap Provinsie to
Administrator, 25 Feb. 1929.
125. J. Butler, 'Public health in a small South African town: Cradock, Cape
Province, 1924-1937' (mimeo), p.19.
136. See The Midland News, 15 March 1920 on poor local organization as
reason for defeat of the SAP candidate.
140. T.D. Moodie, The Rise of Afrikanerdom (Berkeley, 1975), Chapter 10.
145. Cf. Van Onselen, New Nineveh, pp. 111-170, and Gilomee's essay in
this volume.
1. For some excellent work within the modernization paradigm, which sees
cultural homogeneity as extending from core to periphery, see E. Weber,
Peasants into Frenchmen: the Modernization of Rural France, 1870-1914
(London, 1977); G. Eley, 'Nationalism and social history', Social History, Vol.
6, No. 1 (1981); and T. Zeldin, France 1848-1945, 2 vols. (Oxford, 1973 and
1977). I have been particularly influenced by H. Wolpe, 'The theory of
internal colonialism: the South African case', in I. Oxaal et al., eds., Beyond
the Sociology of Development (London, 1975); J.U. Garang, 'On economics
and regional autonomy', in D.M. Wai, ed., The Southern Sudan: The Problem
of National Integration (London, 1973); M. Hartwig, 'Capitalism and
Aborigines: the theory of internal colonialism and its rivals', in E.K.
Wheelwright and K. Buckley, eds., The Political Economy of Australian
Capitalism, Vol. 3 (Sydney, continue
1978; M. Hechter, Internal Colonialism (London, 1975); W. Sloan, 'Ethnicity
or imperialism?', Comparative Studies in Sociology and History, 1979; and
especially by J. Saul, The dialectics of class and tribe', in his State and
Revolution in East Africa (New York, 1979). The classic works remain V.I.
Lenin, The Development of Capitalism in Russia (Moscow, 1956), pp.172-7,
363ff. and A. Gramsci, "The southern question', in his The Modern Prince
and Other Questions (New York, 1957).
5. A history of these migrations has yet to be written, but see J.D. Krige,
'Traditional origins and tribal relations of the Sotho of the northern
Transvaal', Bantu Studies, Vol. 11 (1937); Junod, 'Ba-Thonga', pp.229-31,
237; idem, Life of a South African Tribe (London, 1927), Vol. I, pp.17, 28;
Vol. II, pp.169, 584-6; B.H. Dicke, "The Northern Transvaal Voortrekkers',
South African Annual Year Book (henceforth SAAYB ) (1953), pp.138-41;
Grandjean, La Mission, pp.59-60, 77; N.J. van Warmelo, A Preliminary
Survey of the Bantu Tribes of South Africa (Pretoria, 1935), p.91; A.
Nachtigal, 'Beitrage zur Geschichter der Knopneuse', in Tagebuch, band 2,
vol. I (University of South Africa Archives), pp.237, 277-84.
7. J.B. de Vaal, 'Die rol van João Albasini in die geskiedenis van die
Transvaal', SAAYB (1953); T.A, SN.1.A., Oscar Dahl, 'Estimate of able-
bodied armed men in the Zoutpansberg, 1879'; Interviews with Chiefs
Chevane, Nqcapu and Lucas Siweya, and headman Maswanganyi, April
1979; and with Edmund Mabyalane, February 1981.
11. N.J. van Warmelo, 'Grouping and ethnic history', in I. Schapera, ed., The
Bantu-Speaking Tribes of South Africa (London, 1934), pp.56, 63.
13. The Maputo (Mabudu) used the term with reference to the senior
(Tembe) branch of their clan. It was also used by the Gaza Nguni in the
Lower Zambezi river valley. C. de B. Webb and J. Wright, eds., The James
Stuart Archive, Vol. 2 (Durban, 1979), p.143; A. Isaacman, The Tradition of
Resistance in Mozambique (London, 1976), p.xxiv, n.2. break
15. The adoption of this term has been strongly criticized as it represents
another soundshift in the terms /ronga/ and /tonga/ ('easterners'). H.
Berthoud, 'Quelques remarques sur la famille des langues bantous et sur la
langue Tzonga en particulier', in Xe Congrès International des Orientalistes
(1894); Junod, Life, Vol. 1, pp.16-17.
16. The word 'mulandi' was used by the people of the Delagoa Bay area to
designate all blacks, irrespective of their origins. This term was then adopted
by the Portuguese as 'Landim' and was used variously to describe the black
peoples in the neighborhood of Lorenco Marques, blacks living south of the
Sabi river, displaced Nguni groups, Mozambican soldiers of African extraction
serving in the Portuguese army, and blacks in general. C. Montez, 'As racas
indigenas de Mocambique', Mocambique, No. 23 (1940), pp. 53-66; Nunes
to GGM, 4 Oct. 1830 in F. Santana, Documentacao avulsa Mocambicana
(Lisbon, 1967), pp.ii, 222; F.L. Barnard, A Three Year Cruise in the
Mozambique Channel (London, 1848); pp.165, 261; E.C. Tabler, ed., The
Zambesi Papers of Richard Thornton , Vol. 1 (London, 1963), pp.53-5, 57,
69; H.A. Junod, Grammaire et Manuel de Conversation Ronga (Lausanne,
1896), p.4-5.
17. East Coast traders were also called 'Tcheke' because they had discarded
skins for cotton clothing. In the Phalaborwa area eastern hunters were called
'Mabono'. North Sotho-speakers referred to the Gwamba as 'Koapas'
because of a sound-shift and sometimes used the term 'Toka', the northern
Sotho sound-shifted form of 'Tonga'.
Many Chopi, Shona and Tonga chiefdoms also tattooed their faces. This
custom had largely died out by the 1880s and was never practised by the
Tsonga-speaking immigrants from the southern Delagoa Bay region. Junod,
Life, Vol. 1, pp.178-80; Nachtigal, Tagebuch, band 2, 1, p.281. For the
different terms, see P. Berthoud, 'Grammatical note on the Gwamba
language in South Africa', Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society, Vol. 16
(1884), pp.45-7.
18. See P. Harries, 'The roots of ethnicity: discourse and the politics of
language construction in southeast Africa', African Affairs, No. 346 (1988),
pp.25-52.
19. They were particularly influenced by the work of two Sotho evangelists,
who had translated prayers and songs into Gwamba before their arrival, and
by two assistants known only as Zambiki and Mbizana. M.C. Bill, ed., Tsonga
Bibliography, 1883-1983 (Braamfontein, 1983), p.l2.
21. For the debate between Junod and Berthoud, see S.M.A. 1255/B, H.
Berthoud, 'Rapport sur l'expedition à Magude, 1885', 'Rapport sur
l'expedition chez Gungunyana, 1891', and 'Quelques remarques sur la
famille des langues Bantou'; 1254/B, H. Junod, 'Étude comparative du
shiGouamba et du shiRonga', March 1893; H. Junod, Thonga, Gouamba,
Djonga, Ronga', BMSAS, No. 114 (1894); Ilse Hone, "The history of the
development of Tsonga orthography', unpublished manuscript, 1981.
27. Junod, Life, Vol. 1, pp.14-15, 356. For a socio-political analysis of African
language construction, see Harries, 'The roots of ethnicity', passim . break
28. H.A. Stayt, The Ba Venda (London, 1931), p.55; War Office, Native
Tribes, p.133; W.L. Distant, A Naturalist in the Transvaal (London, 1892),
p.101; E. Thomas, 'Le Bokaha', But. Soc. Neuchâteloise de Geogr ., (1894),
164-7; P. Berthoud, Lettres Missionaires (Lausanne, 1900), p.268.
29. Junod, Life, Vol. 2, p.622; War Office, Native Tribes, p.131; see also
Manuel Simões Alberto, 'Contribuição para o Estudo Antropologico dos
"Tongas do Sul" ', Bol. Soc. Estudos Moc ., Vol. 25, No. 92 (1955); R. Dart,
'Racial origins', in Schapera, ed., Bantu-Speaking Tribes, pp.23-4, 27.
30. Stayt, The Bavenda, pp.188-9; Junod, Life, Vol. 1, pp.71-2, 254, 292; E.
Krige, The Realm of the Rainqueen (Oxford, 1943), p.88-94, 121; Thomas,
'Le Bokaha', p.161.
31. Probably the leading, but by no means only, example of this form of
'ethno-history' is to be found in M. Wilson and L. Thompson, eds., Oxford
History of South Africa, Vol. 1 (London, 1969).
32. G. Theal, History of South Africa since 1795, Vol. 4 (London, 1908),
p.476; E. Walker, A History of South Africa (London, 1928), p.286; B.H.
Dicke, The first Voortrekkers', South African Journal of Science, Vol. 2
(1926), p.1012; War Office, Native Tribes, Vol. 2, p.64; H.W. Grimsehl,
'Onluste in Modjadjiland, 1890-1894', SAAYB (1955), pp.204, 211-15, 229;
J.A. Moulton, 'General Piet Joubert in die Transvaalse Geskiedenis', SAAYB
(1957), pp.152, 156.
34. Ibid., 20 March 1888, 5 Aug. 1888, 16 Nov. 1900; H. A. Junod, Ernest
Creux et Paul Berthoud (Lausanne, 1933), p.55.
34. Ibid., 20 March 1888, 5 Aug. 1888, 16 Nov. 1900; H. A. Junod, Ernest
Creux et Paul Berthoud (Lausanne, 1933), p.55.
35. Junod, Life, Vol. 1, p.356. One of Junod's informants remarked that 'a
clan without a chief has lost its reason; it is dead'. Ibid., p.382. Another
missionary stated, 'take away the chief, break the tribe and the individual
becomes more conscious of himself. SMA 513/B, A. Grandjean to Leresche,
5 Sept. 1894.
39. Berthoud, Lettres Missionaires, p.376-7; B.H. Dicke, The Bush Speaks
(Pietermaritzburg, 1936), pp.38-40; Interview with Ncapu Siweya and
Ndengeza Wamunungu, 16 April 1979.
40. P. Rich, 'The origins of apartheid ideology', African Affairs, No. 315
(1980), pp.178-9.
46. In the 1890s, the South African Republic attempted to extract a tax of
12 s 6 d from all Africans. Those living in the reserves paid an extra £2 and
10 s for each additional wife. B.H. Dicke, evidence in the Transvaal Labour
Commission (Pretoria, 1904), p.323; E. Brookes, A History of Native Policy
in South Africa (Cape Town, 1924), pp.121-2; Petrus Naude, 'Boerdery in die
Suid-Afrikaanse Republiek, 1858-1899', unpublished Ph.D. dissertation,
University of South Africa, 1954, p.217.
47. Zoutpansberg Review, 3 Feb. 1892.
48. Zoutpansberg Review, 14 Jan. 1895, 2 Oct. 1896, 9 Nov. 1896, 14 Dec.
1896; De Boerevriend, 9 Nov. 1895; Evidence of Brandt in Transvaal
Indigency Commission continue
1906-7, Report 207. See also Naude, 'Boerdery in die S.A.R.', passim, and
J.L. Hattingh, 'Die Trekke uit die Suid-Afrikaanse Republiek en die Oranje-
Vrystaat, 1875-1895', unpublished Ph.D. dissertation, University of Pretoria,
1975, passim .
53. Natives' Land Commission, UG 19-16, Appendix IV, pp.7, 126, 230.
55. Tenants paid rents of £2, plus grazing fees for cattle and sheep, to land
companies and £1 for Crown Land. Three months' labour service undertaken
by a single male was valued at £4 10s in the late 1920s. Eastern Transvaal
Natives' Land Commission (1918), UG 32-1918, 82-3; SC10-27, 117-23.
57. This is evident from the interviews of the NEC of 1930 by Gilbertson,
pp.39, 44, 49, Lyle, pp.115-21, Daneel, pp.190, 195, 213, and Sibasa,
p.149. Stevenson Hamilton, The Low-Veld (London, 1929), pp.182, 251.
58. N.J. van Warmelo, A Preliminary Survey of the Bantu Tribes of South
Africa (Pretoria, 1935), p.90.
62. S. Bovet, BMSAS (1911), p.82; Natives Land Commission (UG 19-'16)
Appendix IV, p.7.
64. Evidence of Daneel to NEC, p.227. See also pp.202, 210-11, 221, 228.
68. SB. Louis Trichardt Annual Reports, 1928, 1930, 1932-3, 1933, 1935.
69. Zoutpansberg Review, 28 Jan. and 25 Feb. 1936; SB, 1/1/366, Louis
Trichardt Report, 1937.
76. P. Harries, 'The anthropologist as historian and liberal: H.-A. Junod and
the Thonga', Journal of Southern African Studies, Vol. 8, No. 1 (1981),
pp.37-50.
78. Cf. the Bantu Affairs Act No. 23 of 1920 and, especially, the Native
Administration Act of 1927. For the history of this legislation, see S. Dubow,
'Holding "a just balance between black and white": the Native Affairs
Department in South Africa, c. 1920', Journal of Southern African Studies,
Vol. 12, No. 2 (1986), pp.217-39. On Tsonga customary law, see T.D.
Ramsay, 'Tsonga Law in the Transvaal', African Studies, Vol. 5, No. 3
(1946).
82. E. Krige, 'The place of the north-eastern Transvaal Sotho in the southern
Bantu complex', Africa, Vol. 9, No. 3 (1938), p.292.
84. Evidence of Takilane, one of (the Venda) chief Sibasa's headmen, before
Natives' Lands Commission (UG 22-1916), p.70. For similar views, see
Headman Piet Boi, UG 19-'16, p.381.
86. C.E. Davel, 'Die Werk van die WNLA, 1900-1910', unpublished M.A.
thesis, University of Pretoria, 1969, p.73; J.K. McNamara, 'Development of
the recruitment infrastructure: labour migration routes to the Witwatersrand
gold mines and compound accommodation, 1889-1917', South African
Labour Bulletin (1979).
87. Chamber of Mines, Annual Report (CMAR) (1894), p.34; CMAR (1895);
TA SSA 329 R1959, Sec., Robinson Mines to SS, 7 Feb. 1896, encl. in
R9607, pp.33, 37, 43, 44; Annual Report of the Association of Mines (1896),
p.61; CMAR (1898), p.57.
90. Native Grievances Enquiry (1913-14) (UG 37), Report, p.64; D. Horner
and A. Kooy, 'Conflict on South African mines, 1972-1979', SALDRU Working
Papers No. 29, University of Cape Town, 1980, p.17.
92. TA. GNLB 125. 2201/13. 'Competitive dances among the Portuguese
natives in mine compounds', September 1920.
93. Chamber of Mines, 'The native worker on the Witwatersrand goldmines',
Public Relations Department series, No. 7 (1947), p.8.
94. H. Tracey, Chopi Musicians (London, 1948), p.30, cited in L. Vail and L.
White, 'Forms of resistance: songs and perceptions of power in colonial
Mozambique', American Historical Review, Vol. 88, No. 4 (1983), p.915. The
skins referred to in the song are those of the costumes worn by Chopi
dancers in the migodo, and the implication is that the Sotho and Xhosa have
been busy grabbing food for themselves while the Mozambique workers have
been heedlessly enjoying themselves by dancing.
96. E.G. Jansen, Native Policy in the Union of South Africa (Pretoria, 1950),
pp.4-8. See also T. Dunbar Moodie, The Rise of Afrikanerdom (Berkeley and
Los Angeles, 1975), Chapter 13.
98. SMA Valdezia Mission Station, receipt for 1957. See also ibid ., 1956.
99. Surplus Peoples Project, Vol. 5 (Cape Town); P. Harries, 'A forgotten
corner of the Transvaal: reconstructing the history of a relocated community
through oral testimony and song', in B. Bozzolli, ed., Class, Community and
Conflict: South African Perspectives (Johannesburg, 1987).
99. Surplus Peoples Project, Vol. 5 (Cape Town); P. Harries, 'A forgotten
corner of the Transvaal: reconstructing the history of a relocated community
through oral testimony and song', in B. Bozzolli, ed., Class, Community and
Conflict: South African Perspectives (Johannesburg, 1987).
101. In 1960 it was estimated that the northern Transvaal reserves carried 5
times too many people and 4 times too many cattle. Noord Transvaaler, 12
Dec. 1960.
102. The material upon which the following section is based has been drawn
largely from the private records of the people concerned. See also C.
Desmond, The Discarded People (Johannesburg, 1969), pp.147-8.
104. "The case against the proposed incorporation of the farm Ongedacht
and the consequent removal of the Shangaan residents' (n.d. May 1984?),
privately circulated.
107. GLA, Vol. 27, 1982, pp.586-93; A. Zwi, 'Piecing together health in the
homelands', Carnegie Conference, University of Cape Town, April 1984,
paper No. 187, pp.17-19.
108. GLA, Vol. 29, May-June 1982, pp.87, 148, 183; Surplus Peoples
Project, Vol. 5, pp.158, 174-5; GLA, Vol. 29, 1982, p.122.
109. Cf. Rand Daily Mail, 27-8 Feb. and 1 March 1985; private
correspondence.
116. SAIRR, Annual Survey (1985), pp.266-68. This marks a decrease from
71 per cent in 1982/3. GLA, Vol. 25, 1982, p.35.
117. Ibid ., first session, 11-17 April 1972, pp.8-9, 34, 40; Vol. 7, 1973,
pp.25, 57.
119. Ibid ., 8th session, Vol. 13, 1978, 21—'Descendants of Gwambe and
Dzavana', the founding ancestors of the Djonga according to Junod, Life, Vol.
1, p.21; Vol.2, p.349.
116. SAIRR, Annual Survey (1985), pp.266-68. This marks a decrease from
71 per cent in 1982/3. GLA, Vol. 25, 1982, p.35.
117. Ibid ., first session, 11-17 April 1972, pp.8-9, 34, 40; Vol. 7, 1973,
pp.25, 57.
119. Ibid ., 8th session, Vol. 13, 1978, 21—'Descendants of Gwambe and
Dzavana', the founding ancestors of the Djonga according to Junod, Life, Vol.
1, p.21; Vol.2, p.349.
116. SAIRR, Annual Survey (1985), pp.266-68. This marks a decrease from
71 per cent in 1982/3. GLA, Vol. 25, 1982, p.35.
117. Ibid ., first session, 11-17 April 1972, pp.8-9, 34, 40; Vol. 7, 1973,
pp.25, 57.
119. Ibid ., 8th session, Vol. 13, 1978, 21—'Descendants of Gwambe and
Dzavana', the founding ancestors of the Djonga according to Junod, Life, Vol.
1, p.21; Vol.2, p.349.
116. SAIRR, Annual Survey (1985), pp.266-68. This marks a decrease from
71 per cent in 1982/3. GLA, Vol. 25, 1982, p.35.
117. Ibid ., first session, 11-17 April 1972, pp.8-9, 34, 40; Vol. 7, 1973,
pp.25, 57.
119. Ibid ., 8th session, Vol. 13, 1978, 21—'Descendants of Gwambe and
Dzavana', the founding ancestors of the Djonga according to Junod, Life, Vol.
1, p.21; Vol.2, p.349.
10. H.H.K. Bhila, Trade and Politics in a Shona Kingdom: The Manyika and
their Portuguese and African Neighbours, 1575-1902 (London, 1982).
10. H.H.K. Bhila, Trade and Politics in a Shona Kingdom: The Manyika and
their Portuguese and African Neighbours, 1575-1902 (London, 1982).
10. H.H.K. Bhila, Trade and Politics in a Shona Kingdom: The Manyika and
their Portuguese and African Neighbours, 1575-1902 (London, 1982).
18. These citations are taken from the original early chapter of Maurice
Nyagumbo's draft autobiography, now in my possession. The material was
omitted from the text published in M. Nyagumbo, With the People (London,
1980).
20. 'Diary from the Memorial College and Industrial Native Mission',
Mashonaland Quarterly, No. 27, Feb. 1899, p.17.
25. H.I. James's report, Official Record, 1917, p.28; J.R. Gates's report,
Official Record, 1919, p.33.
26. 'Gospelizing the greatest continent' and 'And He said unto me write',
African Advance, 2 April-June, 1918, No. 1.
27. E.H. Greeley's report, Minutes of the first session of the East Central
Missionary Conference, 1901, p.48.
34. E.H. Greeley's report, Official Record, 1916, p.29; E.H. Greeley's report,
Minutes, 1925, p.43.
39. T.O. Ranger, 'Religions and rural protests: Makoni district, Zimbabwe,
1900 to 1980', in J. Bak and G. Benecke, eds., Religion and Rural Revolt
(Manchester, 1984). For Anglicanism in Makoni in particular, see T.O.
Ranger, 'Literature and political economy: Arthur Shearly Cripps and the
Makoni labour crisis of 1911', Journal of Southern African Studies, Vol. 9, No.
1 (1982), and T.O. Ranger, 'Medical science and Pentecost: the dilemma of
Anglicanism in Africa', in T.O. Ranger and W. Shiels, eds., The Church and
Healing (Oxford, 1982).
43. "The Bishop's letter', 9 Jan. 1894, Mashonaland Quarterly, No. 8, April
1894, pp.5-6.
44. 'The Bishop's letter', 26 Nov. 1895, Mashonaland Quarterly, No. 15,
February 1896, p.4.
47. H.M. M'tobi's letter, 17 Aug. 1896, Letters for the Children, No 4,
November 1896, pp.2-3.
48. Bishop Gaul's letter, 1 March 1897, Mashonaland Quarterly, No. 20, May
1897, p.4.
49. Ronald Alexander's letter, 15 Dec. 1898, Letters for the Children, No. 13,
February 1899, p.3.
50. Ronald Alexander's journal, Letters for the Children, No. 19, August
1900, p.2.
51. A.S. Gibson's letter, 31 July 1904, Mashonaland Quarterly, No. 50,
November 1904, pp.14-16.
52. W.J. Roxburgh's letter, 17 Sept. 1904, Mashonland Quarterly, No. 51,
February 1905, p.10.
56. Ibid .
56. Ibid .
57. C. M. Doke, 'Report on the unification of the Shona dialects', Map 11.
Doke wrote: 'Practically every large Mission in the country has extended its
work outside the dialectical area in which it began, and in so doing has
employed the medium of the first dialect for preaching, instruction and the
use of books. . . . Perhaps the most convincing example of this is to be
found in the spread of Manyika. Map 11 appended to this report shows
convincingly how Manyika books, issued by the Church of England Mission
from St Augustine's and Rusape, and by the Methodist Episcopal Mission
from Old Umtali, are being used not only in the Manyika area but in
practically every other Shona area as well.'
58. E.H. Etheridge's letter, 21 Sept. 1909, Mashonaland Quarterly, No. 70,
November 1909, p.13.
59. Ibid .
58. E.H. Etheridge's letter, 21 Sept. 1909, Mashonaland Quarterly, No. 70,
November 1909, p.13.
59. Ibid .
60. S.J. Christelow's letter, 3 Dec. 1914, Mashonaland Quarterly, No. 91,
Feb. 1915, pp.10-11.
63. 'Letter to the children', Selukwe, Southern Rhodesia Quarterly, No. 114,
November 1920, p.10.
65. B.H. Barnes, 'The progress of the new Shona orthography', Native
Affairs Department Annual, No. 12 (1934), p.31.
66. Brother Aegidius, 'History of Triashill', n.d., Box 195, Jesuit Archives,
Mount Pleasant, Harare, Zimbabwe.
69. Fr. C. Bert to Msgr. Sykes, 1 Oct. 1911, Box 260, File 5, Jesuit Archives.
break
70. Fr. Withnell to Fr. Johanny, 30 Jan. 1932, Box 260, File 2; Withnell to
Johanny, 19 May 1931, Box 260, File 3, Jesuit Archives.
71. Triashill teachers to Fr. C. Bert, 26 Feb. 1923, Box 260, File 1, Jesuit
Archives.
72. Fr. Richartz to Pro-Prefect, 15 July 1922, Box 260, File 1, Jesuit
Archives.
73. Fr. Withnell to Fr. Johanny, 16 June 1930, Box 260, File 3, Jesuit
Archives.
74. Msgr. R.B. Brown's circular letter, 25 Aug. 1923, Box 13, Jesuit Archives.
75. Msgr. Brown to Fr. Johanny, 23 Sept. 1924, Box 195; entry for 4 Oct.
1924, Chronicle of Triashill; Fr. Ignatius Arnoz to Msgr. Brown, 4 and 12 Oct.
1914, Box 260, File 1, Jesuit Archives.
76. Msgr. Brown to 'Your Excellency', 8 Aug. 1927, Box 139, File, Jesuit
Archives.
77. The fullest evidence of this imbroglio is to be found in Box 139, Jesuit
Archives, which contains a useful summary by Fr. Rea, 'The Mariannhill
dispute'.
78. Fr. O'Hea to Msgr. Brown, 20 March 1930, Box 195, Jesuit Archives.
79. Fr. O'Hea to Msgr. Brown, 11 Sept. 1930, Box 195, Jesuit Archives.
80. Ibid .
79. Fr. O'Hea to Msgr. Brown, 11 Sept. 1930, Box 195, Jesuit Archives.
80. Ibid .
81. Admin. Apost. to Deleg. Apost., 18 March 1931, Box 195, Jesuit
Archives.
82. Ibid .
81. Admin. Apost. to Deleg. Apost., 18 March 1931, Box 195, Jesuit
Archives.
82. Ibid .
84. Ibid .
84. Ibid .
88. K. Hendricks, The Bend in the Road (Cape Town, n.d.), pp.12; 14; 93.
90. C. Bullock, The Mashona and the Matabele (Cape Town, 1950), p.25.
91. For a vivid account of how a young Makoni migrant activated these
networks, see M. Nyagumbo, With the People, passim.
92. Interview with Chief Tandi and elders, Tandi, 27 Feb. 1981.
104. R.H. Baker, St Augustine's, 28 Oct. 1931. Society for the Propagation of
the Gospel, Annual Reports, 1931, USPG Archives, Westminster.
105. J. Peires, "The Lovedale Press: literature for the bantu revisited',
History in Africa, Vol. 6 (1979), pp.160-1. break
107. B. Reitz to Miss N. Johnson, 19 Oct. 1947, Green File, 'Scripture Gift
Mission', Old Umtali Archives.
108. Tribalism running down the Muzorewa's group', Zimbabwe Star, 6 Dec.
1975.
111. J. MacManus, 'The bullies in the bush' The Guardian, 8 Feb. 1980.
112. T.O. Ranger, 'The Church and war: holy men and rural communities in
Zimbabwe, 1970-1980', in B. Shiels, ed., The Church and War (London,
1983).
113. 'Angola and Zimbabwe: the parallels', Zimbabwe Star, 17 Jan. 1976.
break
1. This essay is based on research carried out in the Public Record Office,
London (P.R.O.); the National Library of Scotland, Edinburgh (N.L.S.); and
the Malawi National Archives, Zomba. In addition, we have used field data
from research carried out in Malawi between 1967 and 1971, in Zambia in
1974, and again in Malawi in 1982 and 1985. We have also drawn on
material collected by various researchers of the University of Malawi's
Zomba History Project and, in particular, that of Drs Kings Phiri and Megan
Vaughn. Citations for field interviews indicate the names of the informant(s),
village (vge.), district, and date of interview. Unless otherwise specified, all
references are to files in the Malawi National Archives. We acknowledge with
thanks financial support from the University of Malawi and from the
Leverhulme Trust. Earlier versions of this essay have benefited from many
critics, but we would especially like to thank Swanzie, the Dowager Lady
Agnew of Lochnau, for her most useful suggestions.
4. For a discussion of the decline in the real income of the peasantry during
the years of independence, see J. Kydd and R. Christiansen, 'Structural
change in Malawi since independence: consequences of a development
strategy based on large scale agriculture', World Development, 10, 5 (1982),
pp.335-75.
5. The most notable of the studies that concentrate upon the growth of
nationalism as the key to an understanding of Malawi's modern history are
G. Shepperson and T. Price, continue
6. See J.D. Omer-Cooper, The Zulu Aftermath (London, 1966), pp.64-85, for
an outline of Ngoni history.
10. L. Vail, 'The making of the "Dead North": a study of the Ngoni rule in
northern Malawi, c. 1855-1907', in J. Peires, ed., Before and After Shaka:
Papers in Nguni History (Grahamstown, 1981), pp.143-5.
11. Interviews with Mayibale Munthali, Kaporo vge., Karonga dist., 10 Aug.
1971; and with Nelson Kapila, Katumbi vge., Karonga dist., 11 Aug. 1971.
15. Much of the material in this section of the essay was covered in an
earlier working paper published as L. Vail, 'Ethnicity, language and national
unity: the case of Malawi', in P. Bonner, ed., Working Papers in Southern
African Studies, Vol. 2 (Johannesburg, 1981), pp. 121-63.
20. Interviews with David Sibande, Emoneni vge., Mzimba dist., 14 Sept.
1971; and with Mopho Jere, Ekwalkweni vge., Mzimba dist., 22 Sept. 1971.
Also, N. L.S., MS 7879, Walter Elmslie, 'Report for Ngoniland of the
Livingstonia Mission, 1895'.
21. McCracken, Politics and Christianity in Malawi, pp.118-19.
28. Ibid .; Interview with Chitamo Gondwe, Mwenilondo vge., Karonga dist.,
13 Aug. 1971.
29. Ibid .
28. Ibid .; Interview with Chitamo Gondwe, Mwenilondo vge., Karonga dist.,
13 Aug. 1971.
29. Ibid .
29. Ibid .
30. Interview with S.P.K. Nyasulu, Mwenilondo vge., Karonga dist., 12 Aug.
1971; Malawi Society Library, Blantyre, Rangeley Papers, File 1/2/1, T.C.
Young to Rangeley, 30 Aug. 1950; Saulos Nyirenda, 'History of the
Tumbuka-Henga people', trans. and ed. by T.C. Young, Bantu Studies, 5, 1
(1930), pp. 1-75.
32. Young's most important works were his Notes on the Speech and History
of the Tuumbuka-Henga Peoples (Livingstonia, 1923), Notes on the Speech
of the Tumbuka-Kamanga People in the Northern Province of Nyasaland
(London, 1932), and Notes on the History of the Tumbuka-Kamanga Peoples
in the Northern Province of Nyasaland (London, 1932).
33. Young, History of the Tumbuka-Kamanga, passim, but especially pp. 54-
5, 84-6. It is worth noting that at the very time when Young was preparing
his history, he was teaching John Gondwe, the son of Chief
Chikulamayembe, and was hence in direct contact with the font of 'official'
history.
34. In fact, the Tumbuka were divided into many highly localized regional
groupings that were frequently almost coterminous with ancient clan
boundaries.
35. His interpretation surfaced again in the most recent popular account of
Malawi's history, which unaccountably ignores the latest professional
historical writing. Pachai, Malawi, pp.10-12.
36. For most of this information about the life of Edward Manda, we are
indebted to Dr T.J. Thompson, letter dated 10 March 1977. break
39. Manda saw himself explicitly as the representative 'for all the educated
Henga people, both [in Nkhamanga] and at Karonga'. NN 1/7/4, 'Chiefs and
Headmen, 1930-32', Encl. A in Burden to Provincial Commissioner, 28 Aug.
1931.
41. For a general discussion of this change, see L. Vail, 'The political
economy of East Central Africa', in D. Birmingham and P.M. Martin, eds.,
History of Central Africa, Vol. 2 (New York, 1983), pp.200-211.
42. See, for example, E.P. Makambe, 'The Nyasaland African labour
"ulendos" to Southern Rhodesia and the problem of African "highwaymen",
1903-1923: a study in the limitations of early independent labour migration',
African Affairs, 317 (1980), pp.548-66.
44. Interviews with Mopho Jere, Ekwalwani vge., Mzimba dist., Malawi, 22
Sept. 1971; and with Timoti Zimba et al., Mjulu vge., Lundazi dist., Zambia,
11 May 1974; S1/1008/19, 'Annual Report, Mombera, 1918'; S1/1347/19,
'Nyasaland Civil Servants Asscn: petition to Secretary of State for improved
conditions of service'; P.R.O. CO 525/97, Smith to Churchill, 29 Aug. 1921,
and enclosures.
48. This insight is perhaps best brought out in Martin Chanock's seminal
study, Law, Custom and Social Order: The Colonial Experience in Malawi and
Zambia (Cambridge, 1985), passim, but especially pp.192-216.
60. For the work of Read, who had been hired by the government to study
the effects of labour migrancy on northern Nyasaland, see Vail, 'The making
of the "Dead North'", pp.231-3.
61. This process in discussed in some detail in Vail, 'The making of the
"Dead North"', pp.238-43.
66. P.R.O. C.O. 525/66, Smith to Bonar Law, 17 Jan. 1916, encls. 1 and 4.
69. Interview with Levy Mbalo Mtonga, Euthini vge., Mzimba dist., 15 Sept.
1971.
71. Obituary of Charles Chinula, The Times (of Blantyre), 19 Nov. 1970.
72. S1/210/20, 'Minutes of Mombera Native Association', meeting of 1-2
Sept. 1920.
73. For an opposing view, see Tangri, 'Inter-war "Native Associations'", p.87,
and 'Colonial and settler pressures', p.291, where Tangri describes the
associations as 'non-tribal in purpose and outlook.'
87. Ibid .
87. Ibid .
87. Ibid .
88. Minute of Livingstonia Mission Council, 15 July 1933, end. in P.R.O. C.O.
525/150.
99. File 14, 143, 'Vernacular language policy'. Acting Chief Secretary to
Provincial Commissioner, Northern Province, 8 July 1947.
100. Mlanje, Blantyre, and Zomba District Books, Vol. 1; Centra] African
Planter, 12 May 1897; Chikowi Historical Texts, collected by Kings Phiri, with
C. Chidzero and G. Maluza, nos. 1, 3, 6, 7, etc. (deposited in the University
of Malawi Library, Zomba, Malawi). For a full account, see Megan Vaughan,
'Social and economic change in southern Malawi: a study of rural
communities in the Shire Highlands from the mid-nineteenth century to
1915', unpublished Ph.D. dissertation, University of London, 1981.
103. BCAG, 1 June 1895; Chikowi Historical Texts, nos. 4, 17, 20, etc. Group
interviews in Chiradzulo district in Mpawa vge., 9 Feb. 1982; Komiha vge.,
19 July continue
1982; Bowadi vge., 22 July 1982; and Mpotola vge., 5 Aug. 1982. Mianje,
Blantyre, and Zomba District Books, Vol. 1; interviews by Megan Vaughan in
Zomba district at Kabango vge., 2 Feb. 1978; Kapichi vge., 19 May 1979;
and Chikanda vge., 9 May 1979.
105. The classic study of the Rising remains Shepperson and Price,
Independent African .
105. The classic study of the Rising remains Shepperson and Price,
Independent African .
107. See L. White, "Tribes" and the aftermath of the Chilembwe Rising',
African Affairs, 84 (1984), pp.511-41, for a discussion of this process.
108. The British were aware that there were Nyanja people in the area, but
these were largely disregarded as but a remnant of an inferior people
displaced by the superior Yao in the mid-nineteenth century.
109. COM 6/3/1. 'Chilembwe Rising: Judge's records', No. 29; COM 6/3/4/1,
'Magistrate's Court', passim .
110. Ibid., nos. 156-275; COM 6/3/2/3 'Chilembwe Rising: war roll';
S10/1/2, 'Chilembwe Rising: statement of Aida Chilembwe'.
109. COM 6/3/1. 'Chilembwe Rising: Judge's records', No. 29; COM 6/3/4/1,
'Magistrate's Court', passim .
110. Ibid., nos. 156-275; COM 6/3/2/3 'Chilembwe Rising: war roll';
S10/1/2, 'Chilembwe Rising: statement of Aida Chilembwe'.
111. COM 6/2/1/1. 'Chilembwe Rising: oral evidence', evidence of
Moggridge. NSB 7/3/2, Chiradzulu. Monthly Reports, reports for February
and March 1915, including letters of Milthorpe to Moggridge, 27 Jan. 1915,
28 Jan. 1915, 2 Feb. 1915 and 4 Feb. 1915.
113. NSB 7/3/2, Report for Aug. 1915 and Wade to Moggridge, 17 Aug.
1915; 11 Oct. 1915; 4 Dec. 1915; NSB 7/3/3, Reports for Feb. and March
1916 and Wade to Moggridge, 11 March 1916, 8 July 1916; NSB 2/1/1,
Moggridge to Wade, 12 Oct. 1915.
114. NSB 7/3/3, Reports for April 1916 and March and April 1919; District
Book for Chiradzulu.
117. GOB/G, 'A.L. Bruce Estates, Ltd.', Phillips to Ellis, 16 Dec. 1939 and file,
passim .
119. This sketch of Bandawe's life is taken from L.E. White, Magomero:
Portrait of an African Village (Cambridge, 1987), pp.193-4.
121. The literature touching nyau is substantial, but perhaps the most useful
in this context is Page, 'The Great War and Chewa society', pp.171-82.
123. See, for example, J.L. Pretorious, 'An introduction to the history of the
Dutch Reformed Church in Malawi, 1889-1914', in Pachai, ed., The Early
History, pp.372-5; Linden, Catholics, Peasants and Chewa Resistance,
pp.143-4.
127. For a full discussion, see J. McCracken, 'Planters, peasants and the
colonial state: the impact of the Native Tobacco Board in the Central
Province of Malawi', Journal of Southern African Studies, 9,: (1983), pp.172-
92.
127. For a full discussion, see J. McCracken, 'Planters, peasants and the
colonial state: the impact of the Native Tobacco Board in the Central
Province of Malawi', Journal of Southern African Studies, 9,: (1983), pp.172-
92.
132. S1/89A-E/35, 'Annual Reports, 1934', Reports for Dedza and Lilongwe
districts.
133. H. Rangeley, 'A brief history of the tobacco industry in Nyasaland, Part
II', Nyasaland Journal, 11, pp.40-41.
134. G.S. Mwase, Strike a Blow and Die, ed. by R.I. Rotburg (London,
1975).
136. For a brief discussion of the roots of this crisis, see Vail, 'The state and
the creation of colonial Malawi's agricultural economy', pp.67-72.
140. NSD 2/1/1-4, 'Annual Reports for Chiradzulu District, 1930-41', passim
.
142. Colonial Office, Report of the Commission Appointed to Enquire into the
Financial Position and Further Development of Nyasaland (London, 1938),
p.l3.
144. See Vaughan, 'The 1949 Famine', paper presented at the Malawi Social
Science Conference, July 1982.
145. For a discussion of this famine, see M. Vaughan, 'Poverty and famine:
1949 in Nyasaland', Journal of Social Sciences, 11 (1984), pp.46-72.
159. See Vail, 'The state and the creation of colonial Malawi's agricultural
economy', pp.72-8.
160. For a discussion of this process, see Kydd and Christiansen, 'Structural
changes in continue
167. Many of these themes may be found, for example, in speeches made
by President Banda on the nature of the Chewa language at the University of
Malawi, Limbe, 4 February 1966, and on the nature of Chewa history at the
University of Malawi, Bunda, in 1968. See also Chiume, Kwacha, pp.166-76,
for a discussion of Banda's earlier imperial desires.
170. M. Schoffeleers, 'The meaning and use of the name Malawi in oral
tradition and pre-colonial documents', in Pachai, ed., Early History, pp.91-
103; 'Myths and legends of creation'. Vision of Malawi (December 1972);
'Towards the identification of proto-Chewa culture: a preliminary
contribution'. Journal of Social Science, 2 (1973), pp.47-60; M. Schoffeleers
and I. Linden, 'The resistance of the nyau societies to the Roman Catholic
missions in colonial Malawi', in T.O. Ranger and I.N. Kimambo, eds., The
Historical Study of African Religion (London, 1972), pp.252-73; Linden,
Chewa Resistance, passim, among other works by the two scholars.
171. For example, J.B. Webster, 'From Yao Hill to Mulanje Mountain: ivory
and slaves and the southwestern expansion of the Yao', unpublished seminar
paper, University of Malawi, 30 Nov. 1977.
172. Roderick J. Macdonald, 'A history of African education in Nyasaland,
1875-1945', unpublished Ph.D. dissertation. University of Edinburgh, 1969,
pp.542-3.
175. See Vail, 'Ethnicity, language and national unity', pp.121, 148.
1. Jean Maes and Olga Boone, in their 'Les peuplades du Congo belge', show
'Holoholo' on both sides of the Lukuga river, 'Ruwa' on one of their maps and
'Luba' on another in the same place west of the 'Holoholo', and 'Tabwa'
south of these to the 'Bemba', who appear in lands some distance north of
the Belgian Congo/Northern Rhodesia border. In the most recent reckoning
of ethnic identity in the area, Olga Boone's 'Carte ethnique du Congo, quart
sud-est' (Musée Royal de l'Afrique Centrale (MRAC), Sciences Humaines,
1961), 'Tumbwe' appears where in 1935 she had 'Holoholo' or where on
earlier maps were found 'Rua', 'Gua' or something similar; 'Bwile' where
thirty years before there had been 'Ruwa' or 'Luba'; and 'Tabwa' down to the
Zambian border, cut off there in such a way as to indicate their further
extension southward. To the west of these apparently well-defined, large
groups is an area on either side of the Luvua showing a veritable salad of
colours with names like 'Kunda', 'Boyo', 'Lumbu', 'Hemba' affixed;
hyphenated combinations of these shown with different-coloured stripes;
and a few 'Yeke' for good measure.
8. Ibid . Ethnic identity poses problems for African art history. For a
discussion of Tabwa art and material culture as a factor of the social
processes of identity formation and definition, see A. Roberts, 'Social and
historical contexts of Tabwa art', in A. Roberts and E. Maurer, eds., The
Rising of a New Moon: A Century of Tabwa Art (Ann Arbor, 1986), pp. 1-48.
8. Ibid . Ethnic identity poses problems for African art history. For a
discussion of Tabwa art and material culture as a factor of the social
processes of identity formation and definition, see A. Roberts, 'Social and
historical contexts of Tabwa art', in A. Roberts and E. Maurer, eds., The
Rising of a New Moon: A Century of Tabwa Art (Ann Arbor, 1986), pp. 1-48.
10. The use of this term in such a context was suggested by linguistic
anthropologist Hoyt Alverson. break
11. C. Geertz, ' "From the Native's point of view": on the nature of
anthropological understanding', in C. Geertz, Local Knowledge (New York,
1983), pp. 66-8.
21. See A. Roberts, ' "Comets importing change of times and states":
ephemerae and process among the Tabwa of Zaire', American Ethnologist, 9,
4 (1982), pp. 712-29; and idem,' "Fishers of men": religion and political
economy among colonized Tabwa', Africa, 54, 2 (1984).
23. H. Wack, The Story of the Congo Free State (New York, 1905), pp. 37-8.
24. Archives of the Royal Museum for Central Africa, Tervuren, Fonds-
Storms (FS-A.M.R.A.C.), Storms to Strauch, from Mpala, March 1884, B-
II/22/F-V; idem, 'Journal de la Station de Mpala', 1 Dec. 1884.
25. FS-A. M.R.A.C., B-II/F-VI, E. Storms, untitled pages. Leopold's agents
established 450 concessions of plots, 'protectorates', or other treaties of
varying nature. Once the Congo Free State was recognized by world powers,
these were used to divest traditional rulers of their rights to land they had
'sold'. See the polemicist E.D. Morel, The Black Man's Burden (New York,
1920, repr. 1969), p. 115.
32. See Renault, Lavigerie, p. 364. Among the many works devoted to
Cardinal Lavigerie's life and times, his personal intellectual development
leading to his stance on proselytism, abolition of slavery and establishment
of a Christian Kingdom in Africa is best traced in X. DeMontclos, Lavigerie, le
Saint-Siège et I'Eglise, de l'avènement de Pie IX à l'avènement de Léon XIII,
1846-1878 (Paris, 1965).
33. White Fathers' Central Archives, Rome (W. F.), c-19-295, I. Moinet to
Eminence (Cardinal Lavigerie), from Mpala, 2 Aug. 1885.
34. I. Linden, Church and Revolution in Rwanda (New York, 1977), p.30.
35. London Missionary Society staff established a post at Mtoa on the west-
central shore of Lake Tanganyika in 1879; see J. Wolf, ed., Missionary to
Tanganyika, 1877-1888: the writings of Edward Coode Hore, Master Mariner
(London, 1971). Protestant and Catholic missionaries cooperated with each
other, but in a manner only thinly veiling their mutual disdain and
competition; see, for example, W. F., c-19-243, Moinet to T. R. P., from
Kapakwe, 25 March 1885.
44. L. Griendl, 'Notes sur les sources des missionaires d'Afrique (Pères
Blancs) pour l'Est du Zaire', Etudes d'Histoire Africaine, 7 (1975), p. 190.
Heremans, for instance, avoided the issue by assuming that Lavigerie only
ever meant to 'foster the birth of a Christian state' led by Africans, rather
than 'constituting a sort of ecclesiastical principality in the region of the
African Great Lakes' ('Etablissements', p.97). In a later thesis he corrected
this, citing the complaint of an administrator in 1904 of the 'State within a
State' of the White Fathers southwest of Lake Tanganyika, See Heremans,
'Missions et écoles: l'education dans les missions des Pères Blancs en Afrique
Centrale avant 1914. Objectifs et realisations', unpublished Ph. D.
dissertation. Catholic University of Louvain, 1978, I, p.113 and passim .
46. A. Des Forges, 'Kings without crowns: the White Fathers in Ruanda',
Boston University Papers on Africa, 3 (1969), pp. 176-207.
49. See M. Weber, The Theory of Social and Economic Organization (New
York, 1969), p. 156 and passim ; G. Balandier, Political Anthropology (New
York, 1970), reviews the literature.
50. W. F., c-19-222, Moncet to Révérend Venere Père, from Mpala, 26 July
1888. This same phrasing was used for many years. See White Fathers,
'Diaire de la Mission de Baudouinville' (1892-1947), 30 June 1903, typescript
at A.K.M.D.
52. White Fathers, 'Mpala', 8 Sept. 1890; L.-L. Joubert, 'Diaire' (1884-1927),
24 Aug. 1887, incomplete photocopy in FJ-AMNZ.
53. The territory of Mpala was called a 'colony' in the older missionary
literature, as in F. Klein, Le Cardinal Lavigerie et ses oeuvres (Paris, 1890),
p. 196. Given communication difficulties—Joubert received no mail for three
years—and the personalities of Joubert and the early Fathers, a case can be
made for their virtual independence from all higher authority during stressful
years of contention with slavers.
54. These skirmishes are briefly outlined (or merely listed) in Joubert's
diaries. Some of the consequences of Storms's, Moinet's and Joubert's
systems of reward and punishment are discussed in A. Roberts, ' "Fishers" '
and idem, 'Insidious conquests: war-time politics along the southwestern
shore of Lake Tanganyika', in M. Page, ed., Africa and the First World War
(New York, 1987).
56. These events are detailed in the various mission diaries of the White
Fathers. See A. Roberts,' "Like a Roaring Lion": Tabwa terrorism in the late
nineteenth century', in D. Crummey, ed., Banditry, Rebellion and Social
Protest in Africa (London and Portsmouth, N.H., 1986), pp. 65-86.
57. W.F., 'Baudouinville', 20 and 28 Nov.; 8, 22, 27 Dec. 1902. The mission
scribe makes the priests' intentions very clear (20 Nov.):
We are doubly pleased by this news. Our people will find a great
outlet, in the Moliro market, for their produce; and then the
presence at Moliro of a large contingent of troops can only be
favourable to us. Corvées and requisitions will rain down upon the
natives outside of our jurisdiction, and will make our people
appreciate the more life within the shadow of the Cross.
61. Ibid., July 1911, 8 Oct. 1908, May 1909, 16 July 1910. The tax-
collector's brash act is mentioned but not explained in the diary.
62. Ibid., 10 March, 17 June 1913. The political economy of the Tabwa area
is discussed in A, Roberts, ' "The ransom of ill-starred Zaire": plunder,
poverty and politics in the OTRAG Concession', in G. Gran, ed., The Political
Economy of Underdevelopment (New York, 1979), pp. 211-36. Material here
is also from interviews with Father Joseph Kimembe, Sept. 1977, at Kalemie.
57. W.F., 'Baudouinville', 20 and 28 Nov.; 8, 22, 27 Dec. 1902. The mission
scribe makes the priests' intentions very clear (20 Nov.):
We are doubly pleased by this news. Our people will find a great
outlet, in the Moliro market, for their produce; and then the
presence at Moliro of a large contingent of troops can only be
favourable to us. Corvées and requisitions will rain down upon the
natives outside of our jurisdiction, and will make our people
appreciate the more life within the shadow of the Cross.
58. Ibid., 12 Feb. 1907, 21 July 1908, 4 Feb. 1910.
61. Ibid., July 1911, 8 Oct. 1908, May 1909, 16 July 1910. The tax-
collector's brash act is mentioned but not explained in the diary.
62. Ibid., 10 March, 17 June 1913. The political economy of the Tabwa area
is discussed in A, Roberts, ' "The ransom of ill-starred Zaire": plunder,
poverty and politics in the OTRAG Concession', in G. Gran, ed., The Political
Economy of Underdevelopment (New York, 1979), pp. 211-36. Material here
is also from interviews with Father Joseph Kimembe, Sept. 1977, at Kalemie.
57. W.F., 'Baudouinville', 20 and 28 Nov.; 8, 22, 27 Dec. 1902. The mission
scribe makes the priests' intentions very clear (20 Nov.):
We are doubly pleased by this news. Our people will find a great
outlet, in the Moliro market, for their produce; and then the
presence at Moliro of a large contingent of troops can only be
favourable to us. Corvées and requisitions will rain down upon the
natives outside of our jurisdiction, and will make our people
appreciate the more life within the shadow of the Cross.
61. Ibid., July 1911, 8 Oct. 1908, May 1909, 16 July 1910. The tax-
collector's brash act is mentioned but not explained in the diary.
62. Ibid., 10 March, 17 June 1913. The political economy of the Tabwa area
is discussed in A, Roberts, ' "The ransom of ill-starred Zaire": plunder,
poverty and politics in the OTRAG Concession', in G. Gran, ed., The Political
Economy of Underdevelopment (New York, 1979), pp. 211-36. Material here
is also from interviews with Father Joseph Kimembe, Sept. 1977, at Kalemie.
57. W.F., 'Baudouinville', 20 and 28 Nov.; 8, 22, 27 Dec. 1902. The mission
scribe makes the priests' intentions very clear (20 Nov.):
We are doubly pleased by this news. Our people will find a great
outlet, in the Moliro market, for their produce; and then the
presence at Moliro of a large contingent of troops can only be
favourable to us. Corvées and requisitions will rain down upon the
natives outside of our jurisdiction, and will make our people
appreciate the more life within the shadow of the Cross.
61. Ibid., July 1911, 8 Oct. 1908, May 1909, 16 July 1910. The tax-
collector's brash act is mentioned but not explained in the diary.
62. Ibid., 10 March, 17 June 1913. The political economy of the Tabwa area
is discussed in A, Roberts, ' "The ransom of ill-starred Zaire": plunder,
poverty and politics in the OTRAG Concession', in G. Gran, ed., The Political
Economy of Underdevelopment (New York, 1979), pp. 211-36. Material here
is also from interviews with Father Joseph Kimembe, Sept. 1977, at Kalemie.
57. W.F., 'Baudouinville', 20 and 28 Nov.; 8, 22, 27 Dec. 1902. The mission
scribe makes the priests' intentions very clear (20 Nov.):
We are doubly pleased by this news. Our people will find a great
outlet, in the Moliro market, for their produce; and then the
presence at Moliro of a large contingent of troops can only be
favourable to us. Corvées and requisitions will rain down upon the
natives outside of our jurisdiction, and will make our people
appreciate the more life within the shadow of the Cross.
61. Ibid., July 1911, 8 Oct. 1908, May 1909, 16 July 1910. The tax-
collector's brash act is mentioned but not explained in the diary.
62. Ibid., 10 March, 17 June 1913. The political economy of the Tabwa area
is discussed in A, Roberts, ' "The ransom of ill-starred Zaire": plunder,
poverty and politics in the OTRAG Concession', in G. Gran, ed., The Political
Economy of Underdevelopment (New York, 1979), pp. 211-36. Material here
is also from interviews with Father Joseph Kimembe, Sept. 1977, at Kalemie.
57. W.F., 'Baudouinville', 20 and 28 Nov.; 8, 22, 27 Dec. 1902. The mission
scribe makes the priests' intentions very clear (20 Nov.):
We are doubly pleased by this news. Our people will find a great
outlet, in the Moliro market, for their produce; and then the
presence at Moliro of a large contingent of troops can only be
favourable to us. Corvées and requisitions will rain down upon the
natives outside of our jurisdiction, and will make our people
appreciate the more life within the shadow of the Cross.
61. Ibid., July 1911, 8 Oct. 1908, May 1909, 16 July 1910. The tax-
collector's brash act is mentioned but not explained in the diary.
62. Ibid., 10 March, 17 June 1913. The political economy of the Tabwa area
is discussed in A, Roberts, ' "The ransom of ill-starred Zaire": plunder,
poverty and politics in the OTRAG Concession', in G. Gran, ed., The Political
Economy of Underdevelopment (New York, 1979), pp. 211-36. Material here
is also from interviews with Father Joseph Kimembe, Sept. 1977, at Kalemie.
65. W.F., c-19-430, Roelens to Livinhac, from Karema, 12 Feb. 1892; c-19-
431, Roelens to Livinhac, from St Louis de Mrumbi, 16 Sept. 1892.
72. Ibid., pp.50-3. The relationship between the mother's brother and
sister's son (i.e. a man and his heir) is problematic for people like the Tabwa
who observe matrilineal descent. Many Tabwa myths portray this, as people
seek through story-telling to understand complicated human relations. The
stories of Kaoze's 'mother's brother' should be seen in this idiom, a bit like
the 'stepmother' of Western myths such as 'Cinderella'.
72. Ibid., pp.50-3. The relationship between the mother's brother and
sister's son (i.e. a man and his heir) is problematic for people like the Tabwa
who observe matrilineal descent. Many Tabwa myths portray this, as people
seek through story-telling to understand complicated human relations. The
stories of Kaoze's 'mother's brother' should be seen in this idiom, a bit like
the 'stepmother' of Western myths such as 'Cinderella'.
77. Revue Congolaise (1910), pp. 406-37, (1911), pp. 55-63. Kaoze's article
is introduced by A. Vermeersch in 'Les sentiments supérieurs chez les
Congolais', pp. 401-6, in which we are told that 'Stephano Kaoze (the author
of the memoir) is not an ordinary nigger' (p.402), lest the reader think the
contrary.
79. Roelens, Notre Vieux Congo, pp. 199-214. See also his 'La formation du
clergé indigène au Grand Seminaire de Baudouinville', Grands Lacs, 51, 11-
12 (1935), pp. 562-95; and his 'Esquisse psychologique de nos noirs',
Grands Lacs, 51, 7 (1935), pp. 279-86, 8 (1935), pp. 341-5, and 9 (1935),
pp. 415-23.
82. A. Hoornaert, 'M. 1' Abbé Stephano Kaoze, premier prètre noir du
Congo, est mort le jour de Pacques', Revue Coloniale (1951), pp. 33, 35.
The Lake Tanganyika Campaign of joint Anglo-Belgian forces ended with the
fall of Tabora in September 1916. See G. Moulaert, La Campagne du
Tanganika (Brussels, 1934).
84. That missions at Lubanda and Kirungu were built as fortresses against
possible attack by hostile slavers in the 1880s and 1890s has meant that
White Fathers have been both physically and symbolically enclosed,
separated from the communities they serve.
85. This last is a poor translation of Kaoze's 'les Europeens font aussi du
tribalisme entre eux', since in Kaoze's French there is a sense of action,
literally, 'the Européans also make tribalism between themselves.' Kimpinde,
Kaoze, pp. 95-6, 193-4.
85. This last is a poor translation of Kaoze's 'les Europeens font aussi du
tribalisme entre eux', since in Kaoze's French there is a sense of action,
literally, 'the Européans also make tribalism between themselves.' Kimpinde,
Kaoze, pp. 95-6, 193-4.
90. Moinet complained in 1885 about the lack of a reliable interpreter, since
'language' changed every sixty miles; these languages had much in
common, he added, but whereas local people could master them in several
months, the priests had great difficulty with them. W. F., c-19-243, Moinet
to T.R.P., from Kapakwe, 25 March 1885. Language learning was such a
preoccupation that the Fathers temporarily suspended evangelization. W.F.,
c-19-219, Moncet to Lavigerie, from Mpala, 1 Jan. 1887. Missionary policy
through which 'literary instruments' became important are discussed by J.
Fabian, 'Missions and the colonization of African languages: developments of
the former Belgian Congo', Canadian Journal of African Studies, 17, 2
(1983), pp. 165-87, and T. O. Ranger in his essay in this volume. For an
apposite West African case, see P. Alexandre and J. Binet, La groupe dit
Pahouin (Fang, Boulou, Beti; Paris, 1958).
95. Kimpinde, Kaoze, pp. 153-63. Proceedings of the eighth session (28
April-7 May 1947) of the Permanent Commission for the Protection of
Natives attended by Kaoze (the first and only African participant) are in L.
Guebels, Relation complète des travaux de la Commission permanente pour
la Protection des indigènes (Elisabethville, n. d. (c. 1952)). Kaoze would
have participated in the ninth session, in 1951, but he died that Easter. He
was not replaced.
' "Fishers" '.) Only then could the spirit be induced to define its desires,
therapy could begin, and Kaoze would return to his senses. Kaoze was
furious on hearing this and never again spoke to these erstwhile friends.
They, in turn, explained his death by invoking his failure to heed their advice
to supplicate the spirit. (Interview at Kalemie, 10 Sept. 1977.)
98. Interview with Fr. J. Kimembe at Kalemie, July 1977. Ironically the
mulopwe, too, was radically separated from his subjects by coronation ritual
including incest. On the Luba concept of bulopwe, see T. Reefe, The Rainbow
and the Kings: A History of the Luba Empire to 1891 (Berkeley, 1981), and
L. de Heusch, The Drunken King, or, The Origin of the State (Bloomington,
1982).
101. As Kizumina concluded his tale (at Nkuba, 3 June 1977), Kaoze was
locked in his rosary because he had refused to marry and so had 'lessened
the world' (anapunguza dunia ) by begetting no offspring. Tabwa make
abundantly clear that the purpose of life is to give birth: those who cannot
are pitied and scorned; those who do not are deemed absurd or, possibly,
evil.
103. Late in 1976, for instance, as tension grew in Zaire prior to the 'Shaba
I' attempted coup d'état of March 1977, a Sanga clan member was arrested
at Moba. He had been a lifelong, active adversary of Manda, especially as a
territorial administrator of the secessionist State of Katanga in the early
1960s. Accused of collusion with 'Katangans' in Angola, the man
'disappeared' after transfer to a Kinshasa prison. In the same few months,
Manda prepared to run for election as a People's Commissar.
104. The terms of the accord signed by Mobutu and officials of Orbital
Transport und Raketan A.G. (OTRAG) granted virtual sovereignty over a
Montana-sized portion of southeastern Zaire in a manner one author
compared to the Panama Canal Treaty of 1903. Only Tabwa and closely
related people lived there. See Roberts, '"Ransom"'. break
7— Patriotism, Patriarchy and Purity: Natal and the Politics
of Zulu Ethnic Consciousness1
5. Ibid., pp.3-4.
5. Ibid., pp.3-4.
6. For a brilliant satire on this propensity among whites, see Anthony Delius,
The Day Natal Took Off (Cape Town, 1963); Tom Sharpe's equally biting
Riotous Assembly and Indecent Exposure (London, 1971 and 1972) are also
based on Natal's separatist traditions.
8. Under four million Zulu live in Natal-Zululand and are thus more directly
available for ethnic mobilization.
10. S. Marks, 'Natal, the Zulu royal family and the ideology of segregation'.
Journal of Southern African Studies, 4 (1978), pp.190-3; see also N.L.G.
Cope's important thesis, 'The Zulu royal family under the South African
government, 1910-1933', unpublished Ph.D. dissertation, University of
Natal, Durban, 1986, which covers much of the same ground in far greater
detail. Unfortunately this was only presented after this paper was written.
11. See Marks, 'Natal, the Zulu royal family and the ideology of segregation'.
12. For the wider pattern of heightened militancy and the reasons for it, see
S. Marks and S. Trapido, "The politics of race, class and nationalism in
twentieth century South Africa', in the book of that title edited by Marks and
Trapido (London, 1986). break
13. Killie Campbell Library (KCL), Durban, South Africa. Ms. Nic.2.08.1 KCM
3348, Heaton Nicholls to J.H. van Zutphen, 28 May 1929. Cf. also UG 48,
Native Affairs Commission, 1936, p.6, where it is argued that
Cf. also Ms. 2.08.1 KCM 3362c, R.F.A. Hoernlé to Heaton Nicholls,
26 July 1937: A few weeks ago I read an article of yours
contributed to the South African supplement of the Daily Telegraph
. I was very much interested in your presentation there of the case
for trusteeship and especially in two of your phrases, viz. 'Bantu
Nation vrs Bantu Proletariat' and 'Paramountcy of Native interests
in Native area'. Speaking for myself I am willing to back any policy
which aims at the realisation of these objectives, and if that is the
direction in which you and your colleagues on the (Native Affairs]
Commissions are working, more power to your elbow.
14. Cf. KCL. Ms. Nic.2.08.1 KCM 3362d, carbon copy fragments of a letter,
addressee and date unknown, but probably 1930-31:
The use of the term 'race purity' is somewhat ironic in view of Solomon's
known promiscuity and the fact that at this very time many of his wives
were suffering from venereal disease, having been infected by Solomon
himself. See R. Reyner, Zulu Woman (New York, 1948).
15. See A. Luthuli, Let My People Go (London, 1962), pp.37-8. Luthuli's
involvement with the Zulu Society and the paramountcy was quite intense
until 1945, and he depended on its support for his election to the Native
Representative Council. By the end of 1945, however, he had become
disillusioned with the conservative character of the Society. See Note 45
below.
18. For events in the Natal countryside, see Bradford, 'The Industrial and
Commercial Workers' Union', passim; idem, 'Mass movements and the petty
bourgeoisie: the social origins of ICU leadership, 1924-1929', Jouroal African
History, 25, 3 (1984); and idem, 'Lynch Law and labourers: the ICU in
Umvoti, 1927-8', Journal of Southern African Studies, 11 (1984). For the
beer boycotts, see P. la Hausse, 'The struggle for the city: alcohol, the
ematsheni and popular culture in Durban, 1902-1936', unpublished MA
thesis, University of Cape Town, 1984, passim . For Champion's role and his
banishment, see S. Marks, The Ambiguities of Dependence in South Africa.
Class, Race and Nationalism in Twentieth Century Natal (Baltimore and
Johannesburg, 1986), Chapter 3. break
19. For the 1927 Native Administration Act, see S. Dubow, 'Holding "a just
balance between white and black": the Native Affairs Department in South
Africa, c. 1920-1933', Journal of Southern African Studies, 12, 2 (1986).
20. See Luthuli, Let My People Go, p.95. Mshiyeni's role comes out clearly in
the account given by Carl Faye, a clerk in the Native Affairs Department,
'Résumé of proceedings', Annexure 5 to 'Bantu Conference held in the
Umgeni Court, Pietermaritzburg, 22-25th October, 1935', in Natal Archives,
Chief Native Commissioner's Papers, Box 110 (Provisional numbering) CNC
94/19 N1/15/5.
22. The rivalry between Champion and Dube was legendary; it continued
until the latter's death in 1946. It almost led to legal action between
Champion and the Natal Native Congress leaders in 1939—only prevented
through the action of ANC national leaders. See, e. g., Calata to Champion,
27 Dec. 1939 and 10 Jan. 1940, microfilm of the Carter-Karis Collection,
CKM 15a Xxc3: 41/9, 10; J.S. Malinga, Sec, NNC to Champion, 17 Nov.
1939; 41/41, J.T. Gumede to Champion, 24 Nov. 1939. The President of the
NNC at this time was John Dube, the Vice President, A. Mtimkulu; by this
time Champion was the Secretary for Lands and Locations in the national
ANC; letters between Champion and Dube, ibid., 41/28-30, 1939. For the
various ICU factions, see D. 4683 (Hoover Library microfilm of Champion
papers) I 32, passim . For splits in the Durban ICU, D.4683 I 1933 37,
'Report on Internal Differences. ICU Yase Natal, 1932-3'; and ibid., 1934-44,
Champion to Kadalie, 8 Oct. 1937.
23. See, for example, the letters between Champion and (?) Xaba in 1939
and Champion and W.J. Gobhozi from 1937 in CKM 15a, passim .
24. See, for example, CNC16/19 N/1/9/3 (H.C. Lugg) to SNA Pretoria, 2
March 1935. Cf. also Champion to Editor, Natal Mercury, 13 April 1939: 'The
Government eventually got certain school teachers to organise the Zulu
Society which is carrying on a sort of propaganda whose aims and objects
are not known to many native leaders.'
28. M.S. Evans, White and Black in South East Africa (London, 1916), p.82.
Evans was one of the Commissioners.
31. Union of South Africa, UG 51-1949, Population Census, 7 May 1946, Vol.
1, Geographical Distribution of the Population of the Union of South Africa
(Pretoria, 1949), Table 7, pp. 28-9. I have changed the numbers to the
nearest hundred. The rise for Durban was from 27,000 African men and
1500 African women in Durban proper and 12,700 and 5100 in the 'rural
areas' around Durban in 1921 to 53,700 men and 30,700 women (with 1500
men and 18 women in 'rural Durban') in 1936, to 81,500 continue
men and 30,000 women (856 and 12 in 'rural' Durban) in 1946. Ibid., p.24.
31. Union of South Africa, UG 51-1949, Population Census, 7 May 1946, Vol.
1, Geographical Distribution of the Population of the Union of South Africa
(Pretoria, 1949), Table 7, pp. 28-9. I have changed the numbers to the
nearest hundred. The rise for Durban was from 27,000 African men and
1500 African women in Durban proper and 12,700 and 5100 in the 'rural
areas' around Durban in 1921 to 53,700 men and 30,700 women (with 1500
men and 18 women in 'rural Durban') in 1936, to 81,500 continue
men and 30,000 women (856 and 12 in 'rural' Durban) in 1946. Ibid., p.24.
35. Rev. J.L. Dube, 'The arrest of progress of Christianity among the
heathen tribes of South Africa', in The Evangelisation of South Africa. Report
of the Sixth Genera] Missionary Conference of South Africa, Held at
Johannesburg, June 30th -July 3rd 1925 (Cape Town, 1925), p.64.
36. MS MAR 2.08.5 File 74, KCM 8337, 24 Feb. 1928, cited in Cope, "The
Zulu royal family', p.301.
39. ZS IV/1/3, Ngidi to Mpanza, encl. TSS, not signed, but initialled 'AHN'.
39. ZS IV/1/3, Ngidi to Mpanza, encl. TSS, not signed, but initialled 'AHN'.
44. So unpopular were the Regent's war efforts that in 1942 it was reported
that he was 'nearly stabbed by one of his own men at Mome, [and] someone
else threw a big stone . . . at him in his tent . . . at Eshowe'. ZS II/7, A.W.
Dhlamini to Mpanza, 17 March 1942.
45. Selby Ngcobo was the first to express his disaffection, when he resigned
from the Zulu Society and the Natal Bantu Teachers' Association in 1939,
although the grounds are not clear (see ZS VI/1, Ngcobo to Mpanza, 30 June
1939). Although in 1944 Luthuli called the members of the Zulu Society his
'great friends', by the end of 1945 Ngidi was warning Mpanza that Luthuli
'has industriously and consistently of late absented himself from all our Z.S.
Executive meetings'. (ZS II/17, Luthuli to Mpanza, 4 Jan. 1944 and ZS II/13,
Ngidi to Mpanza, 1 Nov. 1945.) Cf. ZS II/15, Luthuli to President, 19 Jan.
1946, where Luthuli excused himself from the Zulu Society Conference,
allegedly because he had been called home on urgent business, and asked
that his name as seconder of Ngidi's 'subject on African townships' be
omitted 'because as I pointed out even as a society we had not come to a
common policy on the matter even apart from the matter being linked with
high African politics. Towns are not artificially sponsored, but grow around
industries or fairly mass occupation with labour legislation. . . . What chance
have Africans under the present economic state?' A.W.G. Champion was
never a vigorous supporter of the Zulu Society, and Ngidi accused him also
of 'working very hard [with Luthuli] to undermine the very life of the Zulu
Society, or at least its present office-bearers'. (ZS II/13, Ngidi to Mpanza, 1
Nov. 1945.)
48. The material on and quotations from R.R.R. Dhlomo come from T.
Couzens, "The New African. Herbert Dhlomo and Black South African
Literature, 1903-1956', unpublished Ph.D. dissertation, University of the
Witwatersrand, 1981. break
52. Natal Archives, Acc. No. 302, Charter of the Zulu Society.
54. Natal Archives, Chief Native Commissioner's files. Box 110 (provisional
numbering), CNC 94/19, Part II, 'Conference of Native Chiefs,
Pietermaritzburg, 31st July, 1939'.
55. Cf. ZS II/7, Dhlamini to Mpanza, 6 Nov. 1945, where he describes the
reversal of the decision of the royal family to appoint Thandayiphi heir to
Solomon kaDinizulu as 'disastrous to the Society' and a 'nullification of all
our toil and sweat'.
56. For Mshiyeni's role, see, for example, the records of the various
meetings between state officials and the Zulu chiefs, reports of the Native
Advisory Council, the correspondence between Edgar Brookes and the Zulu
Society, and that between Luthuli and the Zulu Society. His greatest coup
was settling the so-called 'faction fight' between different segments of the
Embo people in 1934, after six years of intermittent strife and several deaths
and injuries. See Natal Archives, Faye Papers, Box 11, 'Record of Public
Proceedings at Peace making ceremony at Mbumbulu Store, 19 Oct. 1934';
Natal Witness, 16 Oct. 1934. This was the first time that the Native Affairs
Department had called on the services of the Zulu royal house to intervene
in a dispute amongst Natal Africans.
57. Charter of the Zulu Society, sections 24 and 35.
60. H.J. Simons, African Women: Their Legal Status in South Africa (London,
1968), pp.202ff.
64. Section 7 (a) and (d) of the Native (Urban Areas) Act, 1923. Amendment
Act 1930 (n. 25), cited in Mariotti, 'The incorporation of African women', on
which this section draws heavily.
65. Natal Archives, CNC Papers, Box 110 (provisional numbering), CNC
94/19 N/1/15/5, Part IV, 'Meeting of Chiefs etc at Eshowe, 28 July, 1937.'
66. Ibid., Box 41 (provisional numbering), CNC 38/47/ N/1/7/2 (X): 'Meeting
of Chiefs with Minister of Native Affairs, Pietermaritzburg, 1939.'
65. Natal Archives, CNC Papers, Box 110 (provisional numbering), CNC
94/19 N/1/15/5, Part IV, 'Meeting of Chiefs etc at Eshowe, 28 July, 1937.'
66. Ibid., Box 41 (provisional numbering), CNC 38/47/ N/1/7/2 (X): 'Meeting
of Chiefs with Minister of Native Affairs, Pietermaritzburg, 1939.'
69. KCL. Killie Campbell Oral History Transcripts: KCAV interview with Bertha
Mkize, Durban.
70. This section draws heavily on Marks, 'Not Either an Experimental Doll',
Introduction. continue
For her stay in the United States, see R.H. Davis, 'Producing the "Good
Africa": South Carolina's Penn School as a guide for African education in
South Africa', in T.A. Mogomba and M. Nyaggah, Independence Without
Freedom: The Political Economy of Colonial Education in Southern Africa
(Santa Barbara, 1980), pp.83-112.
71. See D. Gaitskell's pioneering essay, 'Wailing for purity: prayer unions,
African mothers and adolescent daughters, 1912-1940', in S. Marks and R.
Rathbone, eds., Industrialisation and Social Change: African Class
Formation, Culture and Consciousness, 1870-1930 (London, 1982).
72. Cope, 'The Zulu royal family', records the use of the term izimpantsholo
from the beginning of the century (p.50); S.L. Kark, 'The social pathology of
syphilis in Africans', South African Medical Journal, 23 (29 Jan. 1949),
maintains that isifo sedolopi and isifo sabelungu were the only terms known.
He was writing, however, nearly fifty years later, in 1949.
73. S.L. Kark, "The social pathology', pp.77-84. He also reviews the other
literature cited.
77. G.L. Mosse, 'Nationalism and respectability', pp. 242-3. For a brilliant
evocation of the impact of 'modernity' on consciousness in the nineteenth
and twentieth centuries, see Marshall Bermann, All That is Solid Melts into
Air. The Experience of Modernity (London, 1983). It is interesting that
European anti-modernist nationalists also inveighed against the evils of
ballroom dancing, fearing it loosened sexual control. (Mosse, p.228.)
78. Natal Native Teachers'Journal, April 1949, p.186.
79. Ibid . For the editor's views, see the issue for October 1948; Gibben
expresses his opinion in the issue for July 1949, p.186.
79. Ibid . For the editor's views, see the issue for October 1948; Gibben
expresses his opinion in the issue for July 1949, p.186.
86. For the complexities of so-called 'faction fighting' in Natal, see J. Clegg,'
"Ukubuyisa Isidumbu" —"Bringing Back the Body": an examination into the
ideology of vengeance in the Msinga and Mpofana rural locations (1882-
1944) ', paper presented to the African Studies Seminar, African Studies
Centre, University of the Witwatersrand, May 1979. I am grateful to Heather
Hughes for calling my attention to the reasons for the provisions of the Natal
Code.
87. P. la Hausse, 'The struggle for the city', pp.222-30, 272-6. The
quotations are from pages 229 and 273.
89. For the history of Adams, see C.C. Grant, Adams College, 1853-1951
(Pietermaritzburg, c. 1951). For the upheavals in August 1950, Grant to
Parents and Governors, 18 Sept. 1950, published in 'Not Either an
Experimental Doll' ; Minutes of a Special Meeting of the General Purposes
Committee, Adams, 7 Sept. 1949 (KCL MS ADA 1.07, Adams College
Minutes). For the expulsion of the two students in June 1949, see Adams,
Minutes of the General Purposes Committee, Report No. 2, 24 June 1949
(KCL, MS ADA 1.07).
90. S.M. Molema Papers (CAMP Microfilm 456/1), Meeting of the National
Executive of the ANC, Bloemfontein, 1 Feb. 1947; Ibid., S. Msimang to S.M.
Molema, 13 Feb. 1952. Cf. Anthony Ngubo, 'The African university students -
a problem of group adjustment', B. Sc. essay, 1960, Durban, pp.14-15:
92. See C. Bundy, 'Land and liberation. Popular rural protest and the
national liberation movements of South Africa, 1920-1960', in Marks and
Trapido, eds., The Politics of Race, Class and Nationalism, as well as the
introduction to the collection. break
1. The classification of the population of South Africa used in this essay will
follow the official classification outlined in the Population Registration Act,
No. 30 of 1950. For definitions of the statutory race groups, see M. Horrell,
Legislation and Race Relations (Johannesburg, 1971) and its supplements.
Following the official census, the term 'Coloured' in this essay will for the
period after 1904 refer to the statutory group which excludes Africans. The
term 'Coloured identity' will refer to an ethnic identity which does not
necessarily correspond with the official race classification. Indeed, many
people defined as Coloured, African or white reject those definitions. The
term 'black' in this paper will refer to people designated as Coloured and
African and should not be confused with the state's use of the term to refer
to people previously categorized as 'Africans', 'Natives', 'Bantu' or 'Kaffirs'.
When referring to the nineteenth century the term Coloured, unless
otherwise stated, will refer to that class of people who in the twentieth
century came to be defined as Coloured.
2. See, for example, C. Bundy, The Rise and Fall of a South African
Peasantry (London, 1979), and S. Marks and R. Gray, 'Southern African and
Madagascar' in R. Gray, ed., The Cambridge History of Africa Vol. 4: c. 1600
to 1790 (Cambridge, 1975).
3. Ibid., p. 443.
4. Ibid., p. 451.
2. See, for example, C. Bundy, The Rise and Fall of a South African
Peasantry (London, 1979), and S. Marks and R. Gray, 'Southern African and
Madagascar' in R. Gray, ed., The Cambridge History of Africa Vol. 4: c. 1600
to 1790 (Cambridge, 1975).
3. Ibid., p. 443.
4. Ibid., p. 451.
2. See, for example, C. Bundy, The Rise and Fall of a South African
Peasantry (London, 1979), and S. Marks and R. Gray, 'Southern African and
Madagascar' in R. Gray, ed., The Cambridge History of Africa Vol. 4: c. 1600
to 1790 (Cambridge, 1975).
3. Ibid., p. 443.
4. Ibid., p. 451.
8. Ibid., p.109; G. Cary, The Rise of South Africa (London, 1968), p.149.
8. Ibid., p.109; G. Cary, The Rise of South Africa (London, 1968), p.149.
12. Cited in Trapido, "The friends of the natives', p.262, and Trapido, 'White
conflict', p.39.
13. Ibid .
12. Cited in Trapido, "The friends of the natives', p.262, and Trapido, 'White
conflict', p.39.
13. Ibid .
15. Ibid .
15. Ibid .
16. See Trapido, 'White conflict', passim ; Trapido, "The friends of the
natives', passim ; M. Legassick, 'The frontier tradition in South African
historiography', in Marks and Atmore, eds., Economy and Society in Pre-
Industrial South Africa, pp.44-79, passim .
22. Ibid .
22. Ibid .
25. Rev. J. McLure, cited in E. van Heyningen, 'Refugees and relief in Cape
Town, 1899-1902', in C. Saunders et al., eds., Studies in the History of Cape
Town, Vol. 3 (Cape Town, 1980), p.70.
30. Ibid .
30. Ibid .
30. Ibid .
32. Ibid .
32. Ibid .
33. See B. Nasson, '"These Natives think the war to be their own"', Institute
of Commonwealth Studies, Collected Seminar Papers on the Societies of
Southern Africa in the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries (London, 1979),
p.8.
35. Ibid .
36. Ibid .
35. Ibid .
36. Ibid .
34. Marais, Cape Coloured People, pp.275-6.
35. Ibid .
36. Ibid .
38. Ibid .
38. Ibid .
39. See Marais, Cape Coloured People, passim ; Trapido, 'The friends of the
natives', passim ; S. Trapido, 'The origins and development of the African
Peoples' continue
41. Ibid .
41. Ibid .
42. F. Molteno, 'Colour, caste and ruling class stragegy in the South African
class struggle', in M. Murray, ed., Black Political Opposition (Cambridge,
Mass., 1982), p.267.
44. Ibid .
44. Ibid .
46. Ibid .
44. Ibid .
46. Ibid .
44. Ibid .
46. Ibid .
44. Ibid .
46. Ibid .
48. H.J. and R.E. Simons, Class and Colour in South Africa, 1850-1950
(Harmondsworth, 1969), p.74.
50. Simons and Simons, Class and Colour in South Africa, pp. 74-6.
51. Ibid .
50. Simons and Simons, Class and Colour in South Africa, pp. 74-6.
51. Ibid .
50. Simons and Simons, Class and Colour in South Africa, pp. 74-6.
51. Ibid .
68. M. Swanson, 'The sanitation syndrome: bubonic plague and urban native
policy in the Cape Colony, 1900-1909', Journal of African History, 18 (1977),
passim . See also M. Swanson, 'Urban origins of separate development'.
Race, 10 (1968), passim .
71. For this paragraph see Saunders, 'The creation of Ndabeni'; Swanson,
'Sanitation syndrome'; Swanson, 'Urban origins of separate development'.
73. Ibid .
73. Ibid .
75. See Trapido, 'Origins and development', passim ; R. van der Ross, The
Founding of the African Peoples' Organisation (Pasadena, 1975), passim .
break
76. South African Spectator, 14 Jan. 1901 and 8 Feb. 1901, cited in Trapido,
'White conflict', p.419.
77. Ibid .
78. Ibid ., p.433, para. 1.
76. South African Spectator, 14 Jan. 1901 and 8 Feb. 1901, cited in Trapido,
'White conflict', p.419.
77. Ibid .
76. South African Spectator, 14 Jan. 1901 and 8 Feb. 1901, cited in Trapido,
'White conflict', p.419.
77. Ibid .
79. Cited in Van der Ross, The Founding ofthe African Peoples' Organisation,
p.12.
83. South African News, 2 Oct. 1902, cited in G. Lewis, '"Your votes are your
guns": the emergence of Coloured political organisation at the Cape',
unpublished seminar paper, University of Cape Town, 1983, p.36.
84. Cited in B. Magubane, The Political Economy of Race and Class in South
Africa (London, 1979), pp.10-11.
85. Cited in Van der Ross, The Founding of the African Peoples'
Organisation, pp.21-23.
3. The changing tenor of the refrain 'We are all Portuguese' can be followed
in: O Africano, 25 Dec. 1908; Brado Africano, 27 Sept. 1919, 14 Nov. 1925,
29 Jan. 1927; Voz Africans, 30 Dec. 1933.
4. There were also Chopi and Makua elite groupings linked (respectively)
with American Board Mission or American Methodist Episcopal religious
traditions, and with English language or Islamic/Arabic and Swahili language
educational traditions. Much more research is necessary adequately to place
these groups in the struggle considered here, but for a limited analysis of
interplay amongst all the elite groups see Jeanne continue
5. There are several versions of who formed the original Grêmio and when it
was formed. See Clamor Africano, 10 Dec. 1932; Brado Africano, 24 Dec.
1939, 30 Dec. 1939, 12 Dec. 1946, and 24 Dec. 1948; Interviews with
Joaquim da Costa and Roberto Tembe, 16 June 1977 and with Da Costa,
Tembe and Guilherme de Brito, 5 July 1977, all Port Authority, Maputo
(Tapes G, M, and N); and Raul Bernardo Manuel Honwana, Memorias:
Histórias Ouvidas e Vivadas dos Homens e da Terra (Maputo, 1985), p.61.
Professor A. Isaacman kindly allowed me to read the Honwana MS.
10. De Carvalho, Les Colonies, pp.42-3; L. Vail and L. White, Capitalism and
Colonialism in Mozambique: A Study of Quelimane District (London and
Minneapolis, 1981), pp.58-63.
11. England controlled 57 per cent and France 20 per cent. See De Carvalho,
Les Colonies, pp.61-2; J. P. Oliveira Martins, Portugal em Africa—A Questão
Colonial—O Conflito Anglo-Portuguez (Porto, l981), p.19.
20. For biographical data on these men see the following sources:
Diocleciano Fernandes das Neves, Itinerório de uma Caça dos Elephantes
(Lisbon, 1878); General Ferreira Martins, João Albasini e a Colonia de S.
Luís: Subsídio para a História da Província de Moçambique e as suas
Relações com o Transvaal (Lisbon, 1957), pp.107-8; Alfredo Pereira da
Lima, História dos Caminhos de Ferro de Moçambique (Lourenço Marques,
1971), Vol. I, pp.24-5; Julião Quintinha e Francisco Toscano, A Derrocado do
Império Vátua e Mousinho d'Albuquerque (Lisbon, 1935), 3rd ed., Vol. I,
pp.65 and 74n, 96-100; Letters by António Gabriel Gouveia and João
Albasini dating from 1847 to 1862 in Códice 1317 Annexe, Manuscritos
Ultramarinos da Biblioteca Pública Municipal do Porto (BPMP), Oporto,
Portugal.
21. Biographical information on the black elite of Lourenço Marques has been
culled from a great many sources, but principal among them are the
following: Assimilation records contained in Secretaria de Negócios Indígenas
(SNI—Native Affairs Department), Documents 3-141 and 3-408 and
Administração de Concelho de Lourenço Marques (ACLM), Document 1517/1,
all now housed at the Arquivo Histórico de Moçambique (AHM), Maputo;
Social news in O Africano and O Brado Africano ; Interviews conducted in
Maputo, Mozambique, June to November 1977, see especially Tapes G, M,
and N; C. Santos Reis, A População de Lourenço Marques em 1894 (Um
Censo Inédito) (Lisbon, 1973); Quintinha and Toscano, A Derrocado do
Império Vatua, 3rd ed., Vol. 1, pp.79-130.
25. Quote from Harries, 'Labour migration from Mozambique'. This point is
also well documented in S.J. Young, ' "What have they done with the rain?":
twentieth century transformation in Southern Mozambique with particular
reference to rain prayers', unpublished paper presented at the African
Studies Association Annual Conference, 2 Nov. 1978; idem, 'Fertility and
famine: women's agricultural history in Southern Mozambique', in R. Palmer
and N. Parsons, eds., The Roots of Rural Poverty in Central and Southern
Africa (Berkeley, 1977 and James Currey, 1988), pp.66-81; and R. Pélissier,
Naissance du Mozambique (Orgeval, 1984), Vol. 2, Chapter 7.
33. Santos Reis, Censo Inédito, p.21; 'Mappas Estatisticas', ACLM document
11/12, A.H.M., Maputo.
39. Note the cases of Paulino Fornasini and the Albasinis in Santos Reis,
Censo Inédito, unpaginated census sheets.
40. See the example of the Fornasini children 'Para todos lerem', in O
Progresso, Sept. to Dec. 1907.
41. Santos Figueiredo, 'A vida social', p.9; Anuário Estatístico (1940),
pp.236-7; Voz Africano, 30 Jan. 1934.
42. Santos Reis, Censo Inédito, p.21; 'Mappa Estatística', ACLM, Doc. 15/16,
AHM, Maputo.
45. S. Gool, Mining Capitalism and Black Labour in the Early Industrial
Period in South Africa: A Critique of the New Historiography (Lund, 1983),
Chapter 4; R. First et al., Black Gold: The Mozambican Miner, Proletarian
and Peasant (New York, 1983), pp.xx, 16.
46. See, for example, O Progresso, 27 June, 30 Sept., 3 and 17 Oct. 1907;
and A Tribuna, 15, 23-28 Aug. 1907.
47. The penetration of British Indian traders into this area is detailed in the
following: Pirio, 'Commerce, industry and empire', pp.174-84; Harries,
'Labour migration from Mozambique', Chapter 8; Clarence-Smith, Third
Portuguese Empire, Chapter 4; Andrade, Colonização de Lourenço Marques,
p.30.
58. David Hemson, 'Class consciousness and migrant workers: dock workers
of Durban', unpublished Ph.D. dissertation, University of Warwick, 1979,
pp.75, 110.
59. Quotes from O Simples, 6 Feb. 1911 and O Progresso, 18 Feb. 1909.
See also analysis in J. Capela, O Movimento Operário em Lourenço Marques,
1898-1927 (Oporto, 1983), pp. 9-10, 37-52.
60. See Note 5 above and O Progresso, 26 March 1908; O Simples, 5 Sept.
1911; O Africano (Almanach), 1913, p.27; O Voz do Operário, 13 March
1922, O Africano, quoting from A Vanguard, 30 Jan. 1934.
65. Ibid .
65. Ibid .
66. 'Peste em Lourenço Marques, 10 December 1907', Relatórios e
Informações (1908).
67. A similar process was occurring at the very same time on the
Witwatersrand. See C. van Onselen, Studies in the Social and Economic
History of the Witwatersrand, Vol. 2: New Nineveh (New York, 1982), p.138.
70. This is broadly evident throughout the press, but see especially O
Africano, 1 March 1909 and Brado Africano, 25 Dec. 1918, 4 Jan. and 12
July 1919.
72. See especially O Africano, 13 May 1909, but also 13 July 1913, 9 May
1914, 14 April 1915, 10 Jan. and 22 Aug. 1917.
73. Quote from Brado Africano, 17 May 1924, but see also 16 June 1923, 18
Aug. 1923, and 16 Feb. 1924.
77. O Africano, 13 May and 31 July 1909, 29 Aug. 1912, 30 Sept. 1911, and
5 Dec. 1914.
78. Composited from O Africano, 22 May 1909, 31 July 1909, 29 Aug. 1912,
14 Jan. 1914, 27 Feb. and 30 Sept. 1917; Brado Africano, 10 May and 12
July 1919, and 18 Aug. 1923.
79. This is an ironic pun. Portugal's nineteenth century map which showed
her idealized African coast-to-coast empire stretching from Angola to
Mozambique was painted pink and the expression mappa côr de rosa had a
similar connotation to the English expression'Cape to Cairo'. O Africano, 30
Sept. 1911.
83. See, for example, O Progresso, 30 Sept. 1907, 17 Oct. 1907, 12 Dec.
1907, 2 Jan. 1908, and 18 Feb. 1909; Os Simples, 6 Feb. and 5 Sept. 1911;
O Emancipador, spring of 1922. See also, Capela, O Movimento Operário,
Introduction and Chapter 1.
86. Quote from Quintinha and Toscano, Derrocado do Império Vátua, 3rd
edition, Vol. 1, p.98. Compare with homage to Estácio Dias in Brado
Africano, 13 Feb. and 30 Oct. 1937.
88. J. Hay and M. Wright, eds., African Women and the Law (Boston, 1982),
p.x.
98. Ibid .
98. Ibid .
99. 'ACLM Relatório', 21 May 1909 and Brado Africano, 1 Feb. 1919.
100. Legislation for this period is as follows: Portaria Provincial (PP) 1198 of
10 Sept. 1913; Dec . 951 of 14 Oct. 1914 authorized in Mozambique by PP
18 Sept. 1915; Dec . 312 of 4 Dec. 1922 and PP 352 of 30 Jan. 1923. See O
Africano, 22 Aug. 1912, 20 Sept. and 11 Oct. 1913, 11 March 1914, 22
Sept. 1915, and 26 Feb. 1916; Brado Africano, 10 Nov. 1923 and
'Informação', 2 March 1916. SNI, Caixa 249, AHM.
101. The original assimilation legislation is PP 317 of 9 Jan. 1917, but it was
subsequently modified in various ways by PP 1041 of 18 Jan. 1919, Dec .
7151 of 19 Nov. 1920, Portaria 58 of 2 Aug. 1921 and Dec . 352 of 20 Jan.
1923. The final change for the period under consideration here was Dec . 12,
533 of 1927. Legislation can be followed in: Boletim Oficial de Moçambique
and José Caramona Ribeiro, Sumários de Boletim Oficial de Moçambique,
1855-1965 (Lourenço Marques, n.d.).
102. O Africano, 27 Jan. 1917 for quote. See also O Africano, 20 July 1918,
24 Jan. 1917 and 28 Feb. 1920; Brado Africano, 4 and 18 Jan., 1 March, 19
April and 19 July 1919, 3 Jan. and 28 May 1920.
104. Albasini authored the column entitled 'a tal portaria' carried in O
Africano and Brado Afhcano throughout the period 1917 to 1920.
106. Quote from homage to Albasini on the tenth anniversary of his death,
Brado Africano, 20 Aug. 1932.
112. Interviews with Samuel Mussongueia Mussona, 4 July and 3 Oct. 1977,
CMM, Maputo; Nicodemus Salamão Nhaca, 11 Oct. 1977, AHU, Maputo,
Tapes A and F.
113. Penvenne, 'Forced labor and the origin of an African working class:
Lourenço Marques, 1870-1962', Boston University, African Studies Center
Working Paper, 13 (1979), pp.17-20.
121. For the reasons behind the economic crisis see Vail and White,
Capitalism and Colonialism, pp.202-5, and Clarence-Smith, Third Portuguese
Empire, Chapter 5.
122. For details see Penvenne, 'Labor struggles at the port of Lourenço
Marques', pp.264-6.
123. By the 1940s, however, the younger mulatto generation petitioned for
assimilation. See AHM SNI Files 3-141 and 3-408 and ACLM Doc. 1517/1.
124. Interviews with Tembe and da Costa, 5 July 1977, 24 and 25 Aug.
1977, Maputo; Brado Africano, 4 June 1932; Rocha, Catálogo, p.322;
Honwana, 'Memorias', p.63. These associations were social associations
which commonly incorporated persons of diverse economic classes and
political persuasions. It is misleading to paint one group as any more or less
'militant' than another. The Associação Africana, for example, was not '. . . a
more militant outgrowth' of the Gremio Africano, any more than the
Instituto Negrófilo was '. . . yet another militant faction' breaking away from
the Gremio . The leadership of each group was predominantly of petty
bourgeois origin, and their positions on most important issues were similar.
Quotations from T.H. Hendriksen, Revolution and Counterrevolution,
Mozambique's War of Independence, 1964-1974 (Westport, Ct., 1983)
pp.16-17; and B. Munslow, Mozambique: The Revolution and Its Origins
(London, 1983), pp.65-6.
129. Among the most pathetic examples of this genre are Brado Africano, 15
May 1937 and 11 June 1938.
130. Karl Marx, 'The Eighteenth Brumaire of Louis Napoleon' in Karl Marx
and Frederick Engels, Selected Works, 3 vols. (Moscow, 1969), Vol. 1,
p.398. break
1. Accounts of the 'land deal' negotiations can be found in The Land Dispute:
Incorporating Swaziland?, DSG/SARS Publication 7 (Johannesburg, 1982),
pp.1-28, and in Forced Removals in South Africa: The Surplus Peoples
Project Reports, Vol. 5, Transvaal (Cape Town, 1983), pp.76-88. See also
Institute of Race Relations, Survey of Race Relations in South Africa 1982 (
SRRSA ) (Johannesburg, 1983), pp.375-9, and SRRSA 1983 (Johannesburg,
1984), pp.326-7, 343-4.
5. N. Garson, 'The Swaziland question and the road to the sea', Archives
Year Book, Vol. 2 (Pretoria, 1957), pp.271-87; J.S.M. Matsebula, A History
of Swaziland (Cape Town, 1972), pp.49-67.
6. bid., pp.53-5.
7. Bonner, Kings, Commoners and Concessionaires, pp.164-81.
12. Report of the Native Land Commission, Vol. 1, Appendix III, p.7.
13. J. van Warmelo, Preliminary Survey of the Bantu Tribes of South Africa,
Department of Native Affairs, Ethnological Publications, No. 5 (Pretoria,
1935), pp.45, 86; Report of the Transvaal Labour Commission
(Johannesburg, 1903), evidence of J. Hulley, 26 Aug. 1903, para. 9618.
14. M. Lacey, Working for Boroko: The Origins of a Coercive Labour System
in South Africa (Johannesburg, 1981), pp.30-31, 389.
15. Results of a Census of the Transvaal and Swaziland taken on the night of
Sunday, 17th April, 1904 (Johannesburg, 1906), Vol. 1, p.20, and Plate 32.
16. R. Hyam, The Failure of South African Expansion (London, 1972), p.8;
Garson, The Swaziland Question, pp.346-72.
19. A.G. Marwick, The Attitude of the Swazi Towards Government and its
Causes (Mbabane, 1955), pp.31-3; Financial and Economic Situation in
Swaziland, Dominions No. 135 (Pim Report), pp.25-6, 30, 120.
20. J.S. Crush, 'The colonial division of space: the significance of the
Swaziland land partition', International Journal of African Historical Studies,
13 (1980), pp.81-2, quoting the SelboRNe Memorandum, 3 Feb. 1908, in
Public Record Office, London (PRO) C.O. 417/456/71.
26. Kuper, The Uniform of Colour, p. 1; Native Land Commission Report, Vol.
2, p.403. An example of ethnic ambiguity was, however, offered by Chief
Sithambe who lived in the Piet Relief district but had many followers in
Swaziland. He was the only Transvaal chief to attend meetings of the Swazi
Nation in connection with the land partition of 1914 but told the Stubbs
Committee in 1917 that he was 'a chief of the Zulu'. Ethnic ambiguity would
appear to be a continuing feature of the Piet Relief and Wakkerstroom
districts. Mourners at the funeral in 1983 of Saul Mkhize, the murdered
leader of the people of the Driefontein 'black spot' who were under the
threat of relocation to the KaNgwane and KwaZulu Bantustans, told the
press that they did not know whether they were Swazi or Zulu. Minutes of
Evidence of the continue
28. H.M. Jones, Report on the 1966 Swaziland Population Census (Mbabane,
1968), pp.122-4; A.R. Booth, 'The development of the Swazi labour market',
South African Labour Bulletin, 7 (1982), p.44. A Native Recruiting
Corporation office was established at Mbabane in 1913.
30. SNA RCS 51/26, C.S. Mabaso, manager, Abantu-Batho Ltd., to Financial
Secretary, Swaziland, 15 Aug. 1927; W.T. Hall, liquidator, Abantu-Batho
Ltd., to Resident Commissioner, Swaziland, 24 Jan. 1929.
32. S. Plaatje, Native Life in South Africa (London, n.d. (1916)), p.183;
Walshe, The Rise of African Nationalism, p.205; SNA RCS 842/13, A.G.
Marwick, Mbabane district reports, 21 April 1913 and 8 May 1914.
33. T. Couzens, 'Irish traders, cricket scores and Paul Kruger's dreams: the
search for Grendon', unpublished typescript, pp.50-52, quoting 'Mafukuzela
in Swaziland', by 'Incognitus' (Robert Grendon), in Ilanga lase Natal, 7 May
1915; letter (in Zulu) from P. KaI. Seme to the editor, Abantu-Batho, 15
April 1915, copy in SNA RCS 23/15; The African World, 20 Feb. 1915.
44. H. Kuper, 'A royal ritual in a changing political context', Cahiers d'études
africaines, 21 (1972), p.596; Kuper, Sobhuza II, p.81. break
45. A.C. Myburgh (edited in cooperation with the author by P.G.J. Koornhof),
Die Stamme van die Distrik Carolina, Ethnological Publications No. 34
(Pretoria, 1956), p. 108.
46. Lacey, Working for Boroko, Appendix A, pp.382-8; W.M. Macmillan,
Complex South Africa (London, 1930), pp.232-54.
48. The Powers of the Supreme Chief under the Native Administration Act,
1927, Original Machinery of the African Native Government and Native
Social Life (Johannesburg, 1928), p.2.
49. H.J. and R.E. Simons, Class and Colour in South Africa (Harmondsworth,
1969), pp.345-6; Lacey, Working for Boroko, pp.94-5, 84-119, passim,
51. Hyam, The Failure of South African Expansion, p. 107, quoting Athlone
to Secretary of State for the Colonies, 7 Nov. 1924, in PRO C.O.
417/709/5868.
52. SNA RCS 276/25, J.F. Herbst to Government Secretary, 15 Sept. 1925.
52. SNA RCS 276/25, J.F. Herbst to Government Secretary, 15 Sept. 1925.
55. SNA RCS 276/25, J.F. Herbst to Bede Clifford, Imperial Secretary, 4 Nov.
1926.
57. Ibid ., pp.495, 504; A.C. Myburgh, The Tribes of the Barberton District,
Department of Native Affairs Ethnological Publications, No. 25 (Pretoria,
1947), p.33.
56. Evidence to Natives Economic Commission, pp.494, 503-4.
57. Ibid ., pp.495, 504; A.C. Myburgh, The Tribes of the Barberton District,
Department of Native Affairs Ethnological Publications, No. 25 (Pretoria,
1947), p.33.
60. Kuper, Sobhuza II, pp.99-101; Simons and Simons, Class and Colour in
South Africa, pp.428-9; Walshe, The Rise of South African Nationalism,
pp.230-31. Two of the most prominent chiefs in the ANC at the time had
Swazi connections. Chief Mandlesilo Nkosi was a Swazi chief in the
Wakkerstroom district, probably at Daggaskraal, and Chief Stephen Mini, of
the Edendale 'Amakholwa', had acted as secretary to King Mbandzeni in the
1880s and had owned a mineral concession in Swaziland in his own right.
See T.D. Mweli Skota, African Yearly Register (Johannesburg, n.d (1932),
pp.200, 227, 231, 422, 427.
61. C. Kadalie, My Life and the ICU (London, 1970), p.222; G. Carter and T.
Karis, eds., From Protest to Challenge (Stanford, 1972), Vol. 1, p.335,
quoting from a pamphlet entitled Blood and Tears . See also S. Marks, The
Ambiguities of Dependence in South Africa: Class, Nationalism and the State
in Twentieth Century Natal (Baltimore and Johannesburg, 1986), pp.74-109.
62. Walshe, The Rise of African Nationalism, p.213, quoting The Cape Times,
13 Feb. 1934.
405/1, f.72; Sir Brian Marwick, interview with the author, Castletown, Isle of
Man, 3 Oct. 1983.
65. Ibid .
64. W. Ballinger and M. Hodgson, 'Swaziland', 7 March 1931, copy of an
unpublished report in the Charles Roden Buxton papers, Rhodes House,
Oxford. Brit. Emp. S continue
405/1, f.72; Sir Brian Marwick, interview with the author, Castletown, Isle of
Man, 3 Oct. 1983.
65. Ibid .
66. SNA RCS 331/30, A.G. Marwick to Resident Commissioner, 1 June 1930,
encloses draft of the 'Swazi National Constitution', not nowin file. Kuper,
Sobhuza II, p. 103, refers to a request from T. Ainsworth Dickson, Resident
Commissioner, 18 June 1929, for a memorandum on the 'forms and
procedures of his councils, executive and general . . .'. See A.G. Marwick,
The Attitude of the Swazi towards Government, 89ff. for lengthy extracts
from this document.
68. SNA RCS 152/30, "Minutes of meeting of Native intelligentsia with H.H.
the R.C.', 30 Jan. 1930, and copy of draft constitution; RCS 300/30, copy of
draft constitution of 'Bantu and Coloured Peoples Welfare Association', with
comments from Assistant Commissioners.
69. Sir Brian Marwick, interview with author, 3 Oct. 1983; Kuper, Sobhuza
II, p.171; Kuper, The Uniform of Colour, pp.137-8; J. Halpern, South Africa's
Hostages (Harmondsworth, 1965), p.369; SNA Secretariat File 1479, minute
on Swazi Commercial Amadoda by Government Secretary, 16 June 1948,
with comments by District Commissioners; also in SNA, unfiled, two draft
constitutions of the Swazi Commercial Amadoda. See also Kuper, Sobhuza
II, p.171.
73. Swaziland, Report on Education, 1932, p.31; SNA RCS 503/35, A.G.
Marwick to Col. R. Rey, Resident Commissioner, Bechuanaland Protectorate,
13 Nov. 1935; Kuper, Sobhuza II, pp.2-10; B. Marwick, The Swazi
(Cambridge, 1940), pp.271-5, includes long extracts from the memorandum
by Mrs A.W. Hoernlé and Dr I. Schapera entitled 'Joint report on the
advisability and possibility of introducing the Ibuto system of the Swazi
people into the educational system', n.d. (1934). There is a copy of this
memorandum in SNA RCS 503/35.
76. Ibid ., and Kuper, Sobhuza II, pp.138-41; Interview with J.S.M.
Matsebula by Lee Nichols, Voice of America, Conversations with African
Writers, Tape 46, 1976.
76. Ibid ., and Kuper, Sobhuza II, pp.138-41; Interview with J.S.M.
Matsebula by Lee Nichols, Voice of America, Conversations with African
Writers, Tape 46, 1976.
77. B. Sundkler, Zulu Zion and some Swazi Zionists (London, 1976), pp.206-
38; Kuper, Sobhuza II, p.104; Halpem, South Africa's Hostages, pp.348-50;
personal knowledge.
78. H. Kuper, interview with the author, Los Angeles, 14-15 April 1983.
81. Swaziland, Annual Report of the Director of Education, 1953, para. 64;
'A Swazi Orthography' in African Teachers Journal, 10 (Mbabane, May 1954),
pp.22-3; 'Proposed Swazi Orthography' in African Teachers Journal, 18 (May
1956), pp.10-12.
84. The Petition of the Swazi Tribes of the Eastern Transvaal to the Union
Parliament (Newcastle, Natal, 1932), with preface by P. kal. Seme, p.2. In
view of later developments, it is interesting to note that four of these ten
'Swazi' chiefs were marginally Swazi, having a probable majority of
'Shangaan' followers, and later claimed, or were alleged to be, 'Shangaan'.
85. SNA RCS 604/36, reference to reply dated 12 April 1934 (Secretary for
Native Affairs, File 247/308) in draft petition, Aug. 1936, encl. in Seme to
Resident Commissioner, Swaziland, 3 Sept. 1936; RCS 258/39, D.L. Smit
(Secretary for Native Affairs) to Resident Commissioner, 28 July 1939; RCS
604/36, Minutes of meeting of Resident Commissioner, A. G. Marwick, with
Paramount Chief, 6 July 1936; Seme to Resident Commssioner, 13 July
1936; Resident Commissioner to Seme, 16 July 1936; Paramount Chief to
Resident Commissioner, 23 July 1936, enclosing Seme to Paramount Chief,
13 July 1936.
87. SNA RCS 258/39, Paramount Chief to Secretary for Native Affairs, 13
Feb. 1939, in Paramount Chief to Resident Commissioner, 12 Feb. 1939;
Secretary for Native Affairs to Resident Commissioner, 28 July 1939.
88. Hyam, The Failure of South African Expansion, pp.159 and 163-71; D.
Reitz, No Outspan (London, 1943), pp.244, 249. Reitz met the Duke of
Devonshire on 24 Oct. 1939.
89. SNA RGS 258/39, Reitz and Van der Merwe, attorneys, Pretoria, to
Secretary for Native Affairs, 27 October 1939.
90. SNA Secretariat File 651, Secretary for Native Affairs (South Africa) to
Administrative Secretary, High Commissioner's Office, 26 April 1947.
90. SNA Secretariat File 651, Secretary for Native Affairs (South Africa) to
Administrative Secretary, High Commissioner's Office, 26 April 1947.
96. Extract from The Times of Swaziland, n.d., reproduced in J. Daniel, G.N.
Simelane, and V.M. Simelane, eds., Politics and Polity in Swaziland, UBLS
Readings, Vol. 3, 1975, from S.S. Ndwandwe, Politics in Swaziland
(Johannesburg, 1968).
97. A.J. van Wyck, Swaziland, a Political Study (Pretoria, 1969), p. 50.
100. Sir Brian Marwick, 'A farewell message to the Ngwenyama and his
people . . . 20th April 1964', copy in author's possession; M. Fransman,
'Labour, capital and the state in Swaziland', South African Labour Bulletin, 8,
6 (April 1982), p.66; Report of the Commission Appointed to Inquire into the
Causes and Circumstances of the Strike which Took Place in the Big Bend
Area during March 1963 (Mbabane, 1963), pp.39-41, 47.
102. Marwick, 'A farewell message'; Halpern, South Africa's Hostages, pp.
363-4.
105. Kuper, Sobhuza II, p.238; Stevens, Botswana, Lesotho and Swaziland,
p.240.
112. Carter and Karis, From Protest to Challenge, Vol. 4, Political Profiles,
p.140; M. Benson, The Struggle for a Birthright (Harmondsworth, 1966),
pp.114-16.
116. SRRSA, 1973, pp.154-5; Forced Removals, Vol. 4, Natal, pp.l60, 162-3.
121. The Land Dispute: Incorporating Swaziland?, p.6; The Swazi Observer
(Mbabane), 18 Sept. 1982; 'Petition of Swazi Chiefs', p.22; Mabuza,
'KaNgwane—the road ahead',pp.11-14.
124. 'Petition of Swazi Chiefs', p.24. I have seen no other reference to this
petition, and the date may be inaccurate.
130. Informa, April 1981, p.1; Africa News, 11 Oct. 1982; Rand Daily Mail,
11 Oct. 1979; The Star, 21 May 1981. The latter three references are to
interviews with Enos Mabuza.
131. Informa, April 1981, pp.3, 5, 12-13; Rand Daily Mail . 2 June 1978.
139. The Black Who's Who of South Africa Today (Johannesburg, 1979).
143. Stats, July 1981, p.101, gives the number of cattle in KaNgwane as
72,000. Swaziland: An Economic Survey and Businessman's Guide
(Mbabane, 1981) gives the cattle population of Swaziland as 660,000, of
which 525,000 were on Swazi Nation land and 135,000 on title deed land.
10. J. Lonsdale, 'When did the Gusii (or any other group) become a tribe?',
Kenya Historical Review, 5 (1977), pp.123-33.
14. For good examples, see O. Debhonvapi, 'Société zairïise dans le miroir
de la chanson populaire', in B. Jewsiewicki, ed., Etat Independant du Congo,
p.129; B. Jewsiewicki, 'Political consciousness among African peasants in the
Belgian Congo', Review of African Political Economy, 19 (1980), pp.23-32;
and J.-L. Vellut, 'Matériaux pour reconstituer une image du Blanc dans la
société coloniale du Congo Beige', in J. Pireotte, ed., Stéréotypes nationaux
et préjugés raciaux aux XIXe et XXe siécles (Louvain-la-Neauve, 1982),
pp.91-114.
15. See C. Young and T. Turner, The Rise and Decline of the Zairian State
(Madison, 1985). E. Bustin, Lunda under the Belgian Rule (Cambridge, MA,
1975), presents a very different, but contiguous case of the colonial state's
manipulations of ethnic history and identity.
17. T.K. Biaya, 'De l'aube des temps jusqu'alors: l'histoire contemporaine
des Luluwa par Nyuinyi wa Lwimba', in Jewsiewicki, ed., Etat Indépendant
du Congo, pp. 23-4, presents oral 'popular' history. Mabika Kalanda, Baluba
et Lulua: Une ethnic à la recherche d'un nouvel équilibre (Brussels, 1959)
and C. Young, Politics in the Congo (Princeton, 1965), have made scholarly
analyses.
18. See J.-L. Vellut, 'Les bassins miniers de I'ancien Congo Belge: essai
d'histoire economique et sociale (1900-1960) ', Cahiers du CEDAF, 1 (1981).
A shortened version of this was published in English in D. Birmingham and P.
Martin, eds., History of Central Africa (New York, 1983), Vol. 2,pp.126-62.
19. For a theoretical analysis, see P. Bourdieu, Ce que parler veut dire
(Paris, 1982). For examples from Central Africa, see W. Samarin,
'Colonization and piginization on the Ubangi River', Journal of African
Languages and Linguistics, 4 (1982), pp.1-42 and J. Fabian, 'Missions and
the colonization of African languages: development in the former Belgian
Congo', Canadian Journal of African Studies, 17 (1983), pp.165-87.
20. See B. Jewsiewicki, 'Zaire enters the World System: its colonial
incorporation as Belgian Congo, 1885-1960', in G. Gran, ed., Zaire: The
Political Economy of Underdevelopment (New York, 1979), pp.29-53.
21. The social history of white colonial society in the Belgian Congo remains
to be written. We have only J.-L. Vellut's very brief, but excellent, essay,
'Les belges au Congo, 1885-1960', in A. d'Haenens, ed., La Belgique:
Sociétés et cultures depuis 150 ans (Brussels, 1980), pp. 260-5.
22. 1 use the term 'elite' as J.N. Paden and E. W. Soja, The African
Experience (Evanston, 1970), define it, on the basis of education and special
employment. This conforms to colonial perceptions and includes the idea of
possessing a special potential for influence in historical changes.
23. We know almost nothing about the urban culture of the Belgian Congo.
See J. Fabian, 'Popular culture in Africa: findings and conjectures', Africa, 48
(1978), pp.315-34, continue
28. For this concept, see Centre méridional d'histoire sociale des mentalités
et des cultures, Les intermédiaires culturels (Aix-en-Provence, 1981). It is
important to place this concept within the context of the history of
mentalités . See M. Vovelle, Idélogies et mentalités (Paris, 1982); R. Darton,
The Great Cat Massacre (New York, 1984); P. Hutton, "The history of
mentalities: the new map of cultural history', History and Theory, 20 (1981),
pp.237-59.
31. J. Fabian, Placide Tempels et son oeuvre dans une perspective historique
(Brussels, 1970); Bilolo Mubabinge, 'La philosophic nègre dans l'oeuvre
d'Emile Possoz, I: 1939-1945', Revue africaine de Théologie, 5 (1981),
pp.197-226, and his 'Impact d'Emile Possoz sur P. Tempels: Introduction au
destin du possozianisme', idem ., 6 (1982), pp.25-57. See also A. Smet's
introduction and new translation of Tempels's Philosophie bantou (Kinshasa,
1979), and his 'La conception de la philosophie dans 1'oeuvre du Père
Tempels', in Ethique et société, Actes de la 3e Semaine Philosophique de
Kinshasa du 3 au 7 avril 1978, Kinshasa, Faculté de théologie catholique
(1980), pp.333-44. It is worth noting that the only other Central African
ethno-philosophy has been that of the Tutsi: A. Kagame, La philosophie
bantu rwandaise de 1'Etre (Brussels, 1956), and his La philosophie bantu
comparées (Paris, 1980). Kagame stresses in his Introduction that Tempels
had influence upon his ideas.
32. E. Hobsbawmand T. O. Ranger, eds., The Invention of Tradition
(Cambridge, 1983) ; J. Pouillon, 'Tradition: transmission ou reconstruction?',
in J. Pouillon, Fétiche dans fétichisme (Paris, 1975); and E. Shils, Tradition
(Chicago, 1981). break
35. The French term 'cadet' is a better word; see for discussion and an
extensive bibliography B. Jewsiewicki and J. Létourneau, eds., Mode of
Production: the challenge of Africa (Quebec, 1985). As far as the concept of
'household' is concerned as an analytical tool, I prefer Sacs's in 'Sisters and
wives: the past and future of sexual equality', Contributions in Women's
Studies, 10 (Westport, Ct., 1979). See also J. Guyer, 'Household and
community', African Studies Review, 24 (1981). How can we study the
phenomenon of women's contribution if the basic assumption is that a
woman is always given to a man by some other man? Cf. C. Levi-Strauss,
cited by E. LeRoy Ladurie, 'Le carré d'amour occitan', Le Débar (1984), p.
65.
36. See J. MacGaffey, 'The effect of rural-urban ties, kinship and marriage
on household structure in a Kongo village', Canadian Journal of African
Studies, 17 (1983), pp. 69-83.
37. One should also be aware of Kalamba Mangole's fate—and that of many
others. T. K. Biaya, 'Kalamba Mangole et Nkwembe: histoire, idéologie et
politique', in Jewsiewicki, ed., Etat Indépendent du Congo, pp. 66-9.
must also note the supposed opposition between Lingala and Lomongo that
is strongly stressed by Hulstaert as an opposition between an 'artificial'
product and a true 'ethnic' creation. The discussion between Hulstaert and
Mumbanza in Zaire Afrique, 78 (1973), pp.471-83; 83 (1973), pp.173-85;
90 (1974), pp. 625-32, and in Likundali, 2 (1974), pp. 129-49 is very
important for anyone studying the 'production' of 'modern' ethnic identity.
39. It is the same process of invention of an ideal social space as in the case
of the Shtetl. See R. Gay, 'Inventing the Shtetl', American Scholar, 53
(1984), pp. 329-49. See also C. Karnoouh, 'National unity in Central Europe:
the state, peasant folklore and mono-ethnism', Telos, 53 (1982), pp.95-105;
P. Bourdieu, 'Espace social et genèse des "classes" ', Actes de la recherche
en sciences sociales, 52-53 (1984), pp.3-12; and L. Dramalieve, 'Les
coordonnées de l'espacetemps dans une idéologie de la conscience
collective', Diogène, 117 (1982), pp. 27-51.
40. E. Torday, Camp and Tramp in African Wilds (London, 1913). See also
for comparison J. Hay, 'Local trade and ethnicity in Western Kenya', African
Economic History Review, 2 (1975), pp. 7-12.
For local people a specific regional identity is chiefly the result of industrial
change. See also D. Greenwood, 'Continuity in change: Spanish Basque
ethnicity as a historical process', in M. Esman, ed., Ethnic Conflict in the
Western World (Ithaca, 1977), pp. 8l-102.
46. See the essay in this volume by Allen Roberts for a case study of this
process.
49. The phrase is Crawford Young's in 'Zaire: the unending crisis', Foreign
Affairs, Fall continue
54. See J.-L. Vellut, 'Le Katanga industriel en 1944: malaises et anxiétés
dans la société coloniale', in ARSOM, Le Congo beige durant la seconde
guerre mondiale (Brussels, 1983).
sociales, 31 (1980), pp.2-3, and Ce que parler veut dire, pp. 135-48. This
point cannot be ignored.
63. L. Verbeek and J.-L. Vellut, eds., 'Mouvements religieux dans la region
de Sakania (1925-1931) ', Enquetes et documents d'bistoire africaine, 5
(1983), pp.60-66; and private communication from Eveline Libert.
64. See for migrant workers and social control, M. Verdon, The Abutia Ewe
of West Africa (The Hague, 1983); C. Pairault, 'L'économiste et
I'anthropologie', Cahiers Intemationaux de sociologie, 66 (1979), pp.170-
71; and, for Greece, B. Vernier, 'La circulation des biens de la main-d'oeuvre
et des prenoms a Karpathas', Actes de la recherche en sciences sociales, 31
(1980), pp.63-87.
66. See J. Berque, 'Identites collectives et sujets', p.12: 'Thus, we are not
able to consider again the struggle of socio-economic classes, in the sense
that Marx gives to this word, as defining all the actors in the debate. There
are still other classes in society that are not just economic ones: that of
youth and that of women—and these may be reduced to an economic base
only artificially.' Also M. Davis Caulfield, 'Equality, sex and mode of
production', in G. Berreman, ed., Social Inequality: Comparative and
Developmental Approaches (New York, 1981), p.202: 'Erosion, distortion
and near annihilation of use value relations in class societies . . . have
resulted in the devaluation and exploitation not only of "women's work" and
of women themselves, but also of human relations generally . . .'
69. T. Nairn, "The modern Janus', New Left Review, 94 (1975). break
On the 1890 locust famine and smallpox epidemic, and the 1892-94
rinderpest epizoötic, see A. Delcommune, Vingt Années de Vie Africaines,
Vol. 2 (Brussels, 1922), pp.326-32; Delvaux, L'Occupation du Katanga,
pp.36, 42; Doke, The Lambas, p.43; Faber, 'The Mshiri-Thomson meeting',
p.135; L. Lambo, 'Etude sur les Balala', Bulletin des Jurisdictions Indigènes
et du Droit Coutumiers Congolais, 14, 8-10 (1946), p.323; A. Roberts, A
History of Zambia (London, 1976), p.171; Tilsley, Dan Crawford, p.227.
13. Doke, The Lambas, pp.47-48; Doke, Trekking, pp.96, 127; ZNA KSN
2/1, Ndola District Notebook, Vol. 1, pp.151-56; Stephenson, Chirupula's
Tale, pp.63, 87, 105, 181-82, 188-92, 216, 220-23, 227-36. On 'Chirupula'
Stephenson himself, see Doke, Trekking, pp.95-98; K.S. Rukavina, Jungle
Pathfinder (New York, 1951); M. Wright, 'Chirupula Stephenson and
Copperbelt history: a note', African Social Research, 14 (1972), pp.311-17;
Stephenson's testimony to the 1926 Native Reserves Commission in PRO,
C.O. 795/17-18, Reserves Commission, VoL 2, pp. 95-119; ZNA HM
23/ST/1/1/1-4, 'J.E. Stephenson Correspondence'. The Public Record Office,
London, in addition, is said to have many files of Stephenson's
correspondence.
14. 'Kafue District Report' and 'Report of Civil Commissioner P.H. Selby,
1900-02' in Reports on the Administration of Rhodesia, 1900-02 (London,
1903), pp.411-12, 419.
15. B. Fetter, 'La création d'un colonat Européen et la situation des Africains
au Katanga, 1916-1930', Etudes Congolaises, 11 (1968), pp.51-52;
Comptes-Rendus, Comité Régional de la Province du Katanga, Avr. 1921,
Anexe 22, Avr. 1924, p.4; Avr. 1925, pp.14-17; Avr. 1926, pp. 210, 216-19;
F. Grevisse, 'Le centre extra-coutumier d'Elisabethville', Bulletin du Centre
d'Etude des Problèmes Sociaux Indigènes, 15 (1931), pp.151-6.
16. Roan Consolidated Mines, Zambia's Mining Industry: The First 50 Years
(Ndola, 1978), pp.22-25; PRO C.O. 795/17-18, Reserves Commission, Vol.
1, pp.75-76.
17. Ibid ., pp.44, 150-51; Vol. 2, pp.2-6, 8-9, 14-16, 42-3, 58-9, 68-9; W.
Allan, Studies in African Land Usage in Northern Rhodesia, Rhodes-
Livingstone Paper No. 15 (London, 1949), pp.26, 42.
16. Roan Consolidated Mines, Zambia's Mining Industry: The First 50 Years
(Ndola, 1978), pp.22-25; PRO C.O. 795/17-18, Reserves Commission, Vol.
1, pp.75-76.
17. Ibid ., pp.44, 150-51; Vol. 2, pp.2-6, 8-9, 14-16, 42-3, 58-9, 68-9; W.
Allan, Studies in African Land Usage in Northern Rhodesia, Rhodes-
Livingstone Paper No. 15 (London, 1949), pp.26, 42.
18. ZNA KSN 3/1/2, Luangwa District, Ndola Sub-District Annual Reports,
Years Ending 31 Mar. 1925 and 31 Mar. 1926; PRO C.O. 795/17-18,
Reserves continue
Commission, Vol. 1, p.312; Vol. 2, pp.23, 31-4, 40, 46, 53-4, 82-3, 92, 117-
18.
19. The Seba and Temba peoples of Katanga, living nearest Elisabethville
and the mines, became domestic servants, market gardeners and labourers
for private urban firms. The Katanga Lamba worked instead as woodcutters,
porters or labourers for the railway, prospecting parties or private firms in
Sakania. The Rhodesian Lamba worked with mineral prospecting and railway
construction teams, served as porters during the German East African
campaign of World War I, and as gardeners and domestic servants
thereafter.
22. PRO C.O. 795/17-18, Reserves Commission, Vol. 1, pp.75-80, 312; Vol.
2, pp.33, 82-3.
23. A.J. Cross, Twenty Years in Lambaland (London & Edinburgh, 1925),
p.6; H. Masters and W. Masters, In Wild Rhodesia: A Story of Missionary
Enterprise and Adventure (London, 1920), pp.121, 181, 214, 224; J.M.
Springer, The Heart of Central Africa: Mineral Wealth and Missionary
Opportunity (Cincinnati and New York, 1909), pp.81-5; PRO C.O. 795/17-18,
Reserves Commission, Vol. 1, pp.45, 149; Vol. 2, pp.9, 40, 53-4, 76.
24. ZNA KSN 3/1/2, Ndola Sub-District Annual Report, Year Ending 31 Dec.
1926, pp.12-13. It is, I think, no accident that these remarks so closely
parallel 'Chirupula' Stephenson's August 1926 testimony to the Native
Reserves Commission (PRO C.O. 795/17-18, Vol. 2,pp.117-18).
28. Mitchell, The Kalela Dance, pp.11-14; A.L. Epstein, 'Linguistic innovation
and culture on the Copperbelt', Southwestern Journal of Anthropology, 15
(1959), pp.235-53; A.L. Epstein, Urbanization and Kinship: The Domestic
Domain on the Copperbelt of Zambia, 1950-1956 (London & New York,
1981), pp. 56-7, 259-60.
29. A.E. Beech, 'Early days around the Copperbelt', Northern Rhodesia
Journal, 2 (1953), pp.47-8; S.J. Chibanza, Kaonde History, Central Bantu
Historical Texts, I, Part II, Rhodes-Livingstone Communication No. 22
(Lusaka, 1961), pp.78-81; E.A.M. Harris, 'A harvest to be reaped: Chisalala
Mission Station, Northern Rhodesia', Pioneer (South Africa General Mission),
27 (1914), pp.149-51; W.M.J. van Binsbergen, 'Religious change and the
problem of evil in Western Zambia [long version] ' in his Religious Change in
Zambia: Exploratory Studies (London & Boston, 1981), pp.147-50; Doke,
Lamba Folk-Lore, pp.276-7; Doke, The Lambas, pp.30-31, 180, 276;
Stephenson, Chirupula's Tale, pp.11-15.
32. ZNA KSN 3 1/4, Ndola Sub-District Annual Report, Year Ending 31 Dec.
1932.
33. A partial record of disease and food shortages among the Rhodesian
Lamba runs as follows: 1901-02 smallpox; 1907 locusts; 1910 drought;
1917 'kaffirpox' ( akamabokoshi ); 1918-20 Spanish influenza and food
shortages; 1922-23 drought and famine; 1926-27 'kaffirpox', influenza and
famine; 1929-30 smallpox and food shortages; 1932 'kaffirpox', influenza
and locusts; 1934-35 severe locusts; 1940-41 severe famine; 1945-46
smallpox and food shortages; 1948 drought; 1950 drought, sorghum rust
and famine.
The principal references here are Lambaland, 3-122 (Apr. 1917-Apr. 1950);
ZNA KS 3/1 1-4, Ndola Sub-District Annual Reports, Years Ending 31 Mar.
1920-26 and 31 Dec. 1926-32; KSN 3/1/5, Ndola District Annual Reports on
Native Affairs, 1933-36; SEC 2/1101-1109, Ndola District Tour Reports,
1931-51.
35. J.L. Keith, 'Human geography report: Ndola District, Central Province,
Northern Rhodesia', unpublished 1935 MS, British Association of
Geographers, p. 6.
40. Northern Rhodesia, Native Affairs Annual Report for 1933 (Livingstone,
1934), p.30; Spearpoint, "The African native', pp.1-9.
41. Northern Rhodesia, Native Affairs Annual Report for 1935 (Lusaka,
1936), pp.19-20.
42. Northern Rhodesia, African Affairs Annual Report for 1952 (Lusaka,
1953), pp.11-12.
43. Census figures from the 1948-56 Ndola District Tour Reports record
some 17 to 25 per cent of the taxable males in those Lamba-Lima Native
Reserve chieftaincies nearest the towns (Lamba chiefs Nkana and Mushili,
and Lima chiefs Malembeka and Kalunkumya) were engaged at home in
either 'agricultural production other than subsistence' or 'other economic
production or distribution'. The 1948-52 Tour Reports suggest that another
50 to 60 per cent of the taxable males from chiefs Nkana's, Mushili's and
Malembeka's areas were away at work, as well as 40 to 50 per cent of the
taxable males from Lima chiefs Kalunkumya's and Lesa's areas, further to
the south. Percentages are calculated from the census records in ZNA SEC
2/1104-1114, Ndola District Tour Reports nos. 1 & 8 of 1948, 3, 8 & 10 of
1949, 9 & 12 of 1950, 1, 2, & 3 of 1951, 3, 5 & 8 of 1952, 1 of 1954, 1 of
1955, and 2 of 1956.
45. A.L. Epstein, 'Unconscious factors in the response to social crisis: a case
study from Central Africa', The Psychoanalytic Study of Society, 8 (1979),
pp.4-5; Epstein, Urbanization and Kinship, pp.144n; Roberts, History of
Zambia, pp.208-11.
47. Epstein, "The network and urban social organization', p.105; Epstein,
Urbanization and Kinship, pp.269-70.
49. Mitchell's survey data are cited in Epstein, Ethos and Identity, pp.132-
33.
50. A.J. Cross, Twenty Years in Lambaland, pp.12, 29-31; Masters and
Masters, In Wild Rhodesia, pp.199-208; ZNA KSN 3/1/2-3, Ndola Sub-
District Annual Reports, Years Ending 31 Dec. 1926 and 31 Dec. 1929; ZNA
KSN 2/1, Ndola District Notebook, Vol. 1, pp.215-20.
51. Mitchell, The Kalela Dance, pp. 14, 45; J. C. Mitchell and A. L. Epstein,
'Occupational prestige and social status among urban Africans in Northern
Rhodesia', Africa, 29 (1959), pp.22-39.
54. ZNA SEC 2/1109-1110, Ndola District Tour Reports Nos. 3 of 1951 and 3
of 1952.
55. Epstein, Ethos and Identity, pp. 12-13, 158n; Epstein, Urbanization and
Kinship, pp.126, 251, 259-60, 284-85, 311-12, 318, 322-23.
58. By 1939, the year before the Lamba famine, only 24 of 152 recognized
lease holdings for European farmers were even occupied, while as late as
1954 at least 85 per cent of the lands under European fanners, thanks to
termitaria, remained uncleared and unstumped. See A.T. Wilson, et al .,
Department of Agriculture, Report of a Soil and Land-Use Survey,
Copperbelt, Northern Rhodesia (Lusaka, 1956), pp. 1-2, 42.
5. During our many field trips in Zambia and Zaire this was always the
protocol used when we arrived as 'strangers' in a new village.
12. There is no historical evidence for a conflict between the Luvale and
Lunda systems of production prior to their fairly recent competition for
Chavuma. This competition appears to be largely based on the possibility of
producing for the increased market in food and the largely unrealized
potential for 'exporting' food to the Copperbelt.
14. Papstein, 'History of the Luvale people', p. 121; and R.M. Derricourt and
R.J. Papstein, 'Lukolwe and the Mbwela of North-western Zambia', Azania,
11 (1977), pp.169-76.
15. Mose Kaputungu Sangambo, The History of the Luvale People and their
Chieftainship, eds., A. Hansen and R. J. Papstein (Los Angeles, 1979),
pp.35ff.
16. Slave trading caravans were still operating in the Upper Zambezi area as
late as 1906. Zambia National Archives (ZNA), A/1/1/10, 'BSAC In-Letters',
Selborne to High continue
18. C.M.N. White, 'An outline of Luvale social and political organization',
RhodesLivingstone Paper No. 30 (1960). This was confirmed by my own field
work.
21. British South Africa Company claims to the territory of west central
Africa were based on a series of agreements signed with Lewanika, King of
the Lozi. It was therefore in Lewanika's interest to claim that his territories
were far wider than was actually the case. The BSAC encouraged these
extravagant claims for they gave the company the widest possible
concession area.
22. This system of corvée labour, already existing in Bulozi itself, was never
actually implemented in Balovale. For the Luvale and Lunda, however, it
presaged Lozi administrative intentions.
24. I have already indicated how Luvale chiefly titles proliferate in so far as
all the children of female chiefs are entitled to the chiefly title, mwangana .
The British colonial administration ignored the custom and did not end it.
The Luvale responded by seeking out their most able vamwangana, moving
them from chieftainship to chieftainship to give themselves the greatest
leverage with the British. In one case a 'senior' chief was never actually
installed and yet he functioned in that capacity because of his effectiveness
in representing Luvale interests to the colonial government.
25. It is unclear why Bruce-Miller decided to use the river as a formal 'tribal'
boundary. It probably stemmed from a misreading or hearsay report of the
views of Livingstone, who met the Lunda chief Ishinde on the eastern bank
of the Zambezi in 1854 and who was told that the Luvale lived on the other
side. In any event, Bruce-Miller's attempt to 'tidy up' the ethnic boundaries
of the district was the beginning of the Chavuma land dispute which has
continued to the present day.
26. For the area in general, see S. Shaloff, "The Kasempa salient: the
tangled web of British-Lozi relations', African Social Research, 5 (1972);
C.M.N. White, 'Notes on the political organization of the Kabompo district',
African Studies, 9 (1950), pp.185-93; Kusum Datta, 'The policy of indirect
rule in Zambia (Northern Rhodesia), 1924-1953', unpublished Ph.D.
dissertation, University of London, 1976; and B.C. Kakoma, 'Colonial
administration in Northern Rhodesia: a case study of administration in the
Mwinilunga district, 1900-1939', unpublished M.A. thesis, University of
Auckland, N.Z., 1971.
28. Many Luvale remember this time of Luchazi immigration into Northern
Rhodesia. I was frequently shown 'Luvale' villagers who were, in fact, of
Luchazi origin or who were known as 'children of the village', a form of debt
peonage for having been taken in as refugees.
29. Admitting to being Mbwela—thus not of Luvale royal tradition—was not
an admission easily made. However, very important Luvale identified
themselves to me in this way as a means of clarifying for me the different
socio-ethnic elements which today are subsumed under 'Luvale'.
33. Most of the shops which still exist in Zambezi town, except for the
parastatals, are owned by mission-educated Zambians.
36. Virtually all former migrants I spoke with indicated that Angola and Zaire
were destinations of the last resort; that South Africa offered the best
salaries; and that the Copperbelt and Southern Rhodesia were second best.
41. Thomas Chinyama, 'The early history of the Balovale Lunda', typescript,
n.d. (c. l941), pp.6-7.
42. The restriction of the offices of chief and headman to a few recognized
political leaders and the policy of Indirect Rule augmented earlier political
prerogatives by granting the right to influence and even decide who would
benefit from the new opportunities offered by the emergent economy.
46. This too was a recurring theme when discussing the Chavuma issue.
How widespread this phenomenon was I cannot say. It was, however, one of
the major domestic problems mentioned in connection with the dispute over
the Chavuma area, especially for those people actually resident there.
47. See, for example, T.O. Ranger and E. Hobsbawm, eds., The Invention of
Tradition (London, 1983), passim .
48. While the Luvale and the Lunda recognize that that it is no longer
practically possible to move the capital at the death of a chief, Mize Capital is
a testimony to how they managed to hold to the essence of the custom
without wholly abandoning it. Formerly chiefs' houses were simply sealed
up; later, only the room in which the chief had died was sealed. Most
recently, the chief has been removed from the house prior to death so that
the substantial investment a modern chief's house represents can be
inherited by his heir.
49. Ultimately, the chiefs authority rests on the consent of the headmen and
the population. Once both Luvale and Lunda decided that Luweji would not
choose theirside and that she favoured the rapidly increasing Chokwe
population, she was forced to abdicate.
50. I am now told that the Lunda have responded with a 'traditional'
ceremony of their own—to demonstrate Lunda crafts and dancing, and to
serve as a focal point of orientation for Lunda dwelling in the cities.
51. My role was originally to 'help' with the project while conducting research
on a regional scale. But for reasons which are by now obvious, it proved
impossible to work with both the Lunda and the Luvale.
54. When I suggested to Sangambo that he might wish to delete the section
on the Ishinde chieftainship (p.32) in the interests of local harmony, he
declined.
56. For example, Welsh, Friesan and Occitan ethnic consciousness and
languages coexist, occasionally abrasively, with the British, Dutch and
French national states.
6. Ibid ., pp.336-8.
6. Ibid ., pp.336-8.
8. C. Bundy, The Rise and Fall of the South African Peasantry (London,
1979).
10. T. Lodge, Black Politics in South Africa since 1945 (London, 1983),
pp.27, 55-8, 348-9.
13. For the early constitutional development of the Ciskei, see C.C.S. Holdt,
'Constitutional development' in University of Fort Hare, The Ciskei—A Bantu
Homeland . For the later period, N. Charton and G.R. kaTywakadi, 'Ciskeian
political parties' in Charton, Ciskei .
15. For the most recent events in the Ciskei-East London area, see N.
Haysom, 'Ruling with the whip', Occasional Paper 5, Centre for Applied Legal
Studies, University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, 1983.
17. These events were covered in detail in the local press. See, for example,
Daily Dispatch, 30 Sept. 1986; 20 Feb. and 11 April 1987.
18. This section and the next are based on R. A. Moyer, 'Some current
manifestations of early Mfengu history'. Institute of Commonwealth Studies,
Collected Seminar Papers on the Societies of Southern Africa, Vol. 3 (1971-
2), and C.W. Manona, 'Ethnic relations in the Ciskei', in Charton, Ciskei .
21. On the causes of forced relocation in the Ciskei, see Surplus People
Project, Forced Removals, pp.99-111.
27. On Sebe's initial claims see Peires, 'Continuity', pp. 138-9. Sebe's
allegedly illegitimate birth was common gossip throughout the Ciskei after
Charles Sebe was detained. break
29. Surplus People Project, Forced Removals, p.119. Cf. ibid ., pp.89-90, for
attitude of Chief Njokweni of Peddie towards resettlement.
32. Matanzima's wish to amalgamate the Ciskei with the Transkei has often
been expressed. See, for example, Daily Dispatch, 28 Oct. 1976; Star, 24
March 1977. For the Transkei-sponsored court cases against Ciskei
independence, see Star, 29 Sept. 1981.
37. S.E.K. Mqhayi, 'Intaba kaNdoda' in Mqhayi, Ityala lama Wele (1914; 7th
edition, Lovedale, 1931), p.87.
39. For the building and the costs at Ntaba kaNdoda, see Rand Daily Mail,
17Aug. 1981; Daily Dispatch, 14 Jan. 1981.
40. Institute of Race Relations, Annual Survey of Race Relations, Vol. 33
(Johannesburg, 1979), p. 326.
48. Daily Dispatch, 28 May 1981. For Bisho, see also Institute of Race
Relations, Annual Survey of Race Relations, Vol. 35 (Johannesburg, 1981),
p.302.
49. For the debate on the meaning of 'Bisho', see Evening Post (Port
Elizabeth), 21 May 1981; Daily Dispatch, 11 June 1981.
56. Eastern Province Herald, 30 Nov. 1983, 17 May and 22 June 1984, 21
Jan. 1987. Weekly Mail, 16 July 1987.
57. Daily Dispatch, 9 May 1984 and 28 July 1987; Eastern Province Herald,
4 Dec. 1985 and 4 Aug. 1987.
58. Eastern Province Herald, 30 April 1979. Sebe has what is called in South
Africa 'JC plus three', that is, a Junior Certificate (two years short of final
year) and a three-year course at a teacher training college. The Transkei's
former Prime Minister George Matanzima once accused Sebe of having failed
his final examinations.
65. Much of the information in this paragraph is derived from the eulogistic
pages of T. Bates's glossy brochure, "The Republic of Ciskei' (Durban and
Bisho, 1987), subtitled ' The Tax Paradise of Southern Africa'.
66. The land in question was originally purchased by the South African
government for between R350 and R1000 per hectare. Daily Dispatch, 6
June 1987.
African National Congress (ANC), 16 , 215 -7, 219 , 298 , 308 , 313 , 315 -6
, 396 , 404 , 410
Agriculture, African, 95 -7, 171 , 174 -8, 330 , 333 , 355 , 357 , 359 , see
also labour tenancy and thangata
alcoholism, 273
amakholwa ('converted ones'), 217 , 223 -4, 230 , 302 , see also petty
bourgeoisie American Methodist Episcopal Church
(AMEC), 125 -29, 144
anti-Semitism, 72 , 326
assimilado status (Mozambique), 256 , 258 , 269 -70, 272 , 274 , 277 , 280
Bantustans:
Bantustan policy, 82 , 104 -110, 305 , 308 -14, 395 , see also names of
individual bantustans
Bible, 32 -4, 126 -8, 130 -3, 154 , 166 , 172 , 351
British South African Company (BSAC), 123 , 352 , 354 , 377 , 392 n
― 416 ―
Buthelezi, Chief Gatsha, Chief Minister of the KwaZulu Bantustan, 107 , 110
, 215 -6, 240 n, 289 , 312 , 410
Cabinet Crisis, in Malawi (1964-5), ix -x, 151 , 179 -80, 182 , 184
chieftainship, 15 , 90 -91, 97 -100, 103 , 108 , 155 -9, 292 , 295 , 297 , 307
, 332 -4, 338 -9, 373 , 376 -9, 384 , 392 n, see also indirect rule
Christian Mission in Many Lands, see Plymouth Brethren, 377 , 380 , 388
Ciskei (Bantustan), 313 , 395 -413
identity, 62 ;
cultuce brokers, 11 , 17 , 73 , 152 , 156 , 162 -3, 181 , 256 , 312 , 330 -32
Depression, Great, 97 , 138 , 172 , 175 , 218 , 227 , 256 , 279 -81, 300 ,
329 , 356 , 359
Dhlomo, Rolfes, 224 -5
divide and rule policies, 3 , 83 , 99 , 102 , 104 -5, 110 , 146 , 164 , 169 ,
241 -2, 249 , 261 , 373 , 378
Dube, John, 100 , 216 , 219 , 221 -4, 227 , 236 n, 295
― 417 ―
Gramsci, A., 65 , 76
Grêmio Africano, 256 -7, 260 , 268 -72, 275 , 280 , 287 n
Hamelberg, H.A.L., 25
Hertzog, James Barry, Prime Minister of South Africa, 44 , 46 , 219 , 298 -9,
303 -4
Hofstede, H.J., 29
Hoogenhout, C.P., 33 -4
illiteracy, 32 , 38
Indirect Rule, 11 , 13 -15, 158 , 165 , 169 , 172 , 300 , 304 -5, 328 , 331 -2
, 373 , 377 -9, 384 -5
Industrial and Commercial Workers Union (ICU), 138 , 216 , 218 -9, 222 ,
250 , 277 , 298 -9
Inkatha movement (among Zulu), 215 -7, 222 , 234 , 240 n, 312
labour migrancy, 8 -10, 14 -16, 102 -3, 107 , 137 -41, 156 , 158 -9, 161 ,
163 , 176 -7, 226 , 228 -9, 262 , 264 , 292 , 294 , 300 , 305 , 315 , 329 -30
, 381 -2
― 418 ―
legislation, Malawi :
District Administration (Natives) Act (DANO) (1912), 158 , 162 , 169 -71;
Lomwe people (Malawi), 167 -73, 180 , 182 -3, 191 n, see also Nguru
people
Luchazi people (Angola and Zambia), 372 , 375 , 379 , 384 , 390
Mabuza, Enos, Chief Minister of KaNgwane Bantustan, 289 , 303 , 310 -16
MacDonnel Commission (1938-41), 383 -5
Makoni, Chief (Zimbabwe), 122 -5, 128 -9, 131 -2, 134 , 139 -41, 143
Manda, Rev. Edward Bote, 156 -7, 159 , 162 , 172 , 182 , 187 n
Matanzima, Kaiser, Chief Minister of Transkei Bantustan, 396 -7, 403 , 409
― 419 ―
missionary organizations:
Roman Catholic, 165 , 174 , 196 -201, 328 -9, 336 , 338 -40;
Scottish Presbyterian Livingstonia Mission, 153 -7, 159 -60, 162 -6;
as definers of ethnic borders, 11 -13, 85 -9, 91 , 125 -37, 204 , 328 -9, 335
;
as educators, 12 , 100 , 133 , 139 , 154 , 174 , 202 , 249 , 275 , 278 , 301 ,
329 , 331 , 338 -40, 361 , 380 -1;
native reserves, 8 , 92 -4, 98 -9, 103 -5, 223 , 293 , 295 -6, 298 , 303 -4,
308 -9, 352 , 354 -5, 358 , 363 , see also Indirect Rule
Native Trust and Land Act (1936) (South Africa), 98 , 303 , 309
― 420 ―
Nyanja language, 153 -4, 164 -5, see also Chewa language
one-party system, 2
Pennevis, A., 33 -4
petty bourgeoisie, 82 , 96 , 100 -1, 108 , 128 -9, 143 , 154 , 156 , 168 -9,
175 -6, 180 -2, 204 , 218 , 222 , 230 , 242 , 244 -8, 250 , 255 -81, 299
-300, 315 , 326 -8, 336 , 396 , see also amakholwa, culture brokers and
é.volué.s
railways, 261 -2
resettlement policy, 105 , 107 , 170 , 172 , 308 -9, 311 , 315 , 332 -3, 335 ,
358 -9, 378 , 398 -401, 407 , see also Bantustan policy
retribalization policy, 217 , 220 -1, 290 , 297 , 304 , 332 -3, 336 , 346 n,
399 , see also indirect rule
Roman Catholic Church, 165 , 174 , 196 -201, 328 -9, 336 , 338 -40
Sebe, Lennox, L. W., President of Ciskei Bantustan, 395 , 397 -401, 403 -9
smuggling, 258
― 421 ―
stereotypes, ethnic, 82 , 95 , 109 , 140 -41, 151 , 231 , 247 , 257 , 267 -70,
350 -66, 382 -3, 388
thangata (labour rent system) (Malawi), 167 , 170 , 174 , 176 , 179 -80,
183
Transkei (Bantustan), 312 -3, 396 -8, 401 -4, 409 -10
Transvaal, 23 -5, 29 , 36 -41, 45 -50, 82 -110, 258 , 261 , 277 , 289 -316
Tsonga language, 82 , 85 -9
urbanization, 8 , 57 , 60 , 67 -8, 73 , 218 , 220 , 229 , 243 -4, 299 , 340 -1,
357
Voortrekkers, 22 , 36
as dancers, 409 ;
as workers, 69 ;
control of, 14 -15, 140 , 158 , 163 , 220 -1, 225 -30, 331 -2, 339 -41;
World War I, 8 , 12 -13, 60 , 155 , 158 , 162 , 170 -1, 173 , 200 , 203 , 272
, 279 , 291 , 296 , 298 , 368 n
writing, reduction of African to, 126 -7, 132 , 135 -6, 142 , 144
Young, Rev. Thomas Cullen, 156 , 159 , 164 , 181 -2, 186 n
Zezuru people (Zimbabwe), 118 -21, 127 , 129 , 134 -5, 139 , 359 , 363 -5
Zulu (Cultural) Society, 216 -7, 219 , 222 -3, 225 , 228 , 230 , 233 -4
Preferred Citation: Vail, Leroy, editor. The Creation of Tribalism in Southern Africa. London
Berkeley: Currey University of California Press, 1989.
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