Authors: Timothy H. Parsons
Tags: #Oxford University Press, #9780195304312, #Inc
farms. Coming to the realization that the generation of Kikuyu growing up in their midst was essentially colonizing the white highlands,
the Kenyan authorities began a program of forced relocation that sent
tens of thousands people back to the already overcrowded reserves on
the premise that improved soil conservation would open more land
for them.
This entirely unrealistic assumption demonstrated the imperial regime’s commitment to favoring the interests of the European
minority over those of its African subjects. The settlers’ entrenched
privileges subjected the African population of Kenya to an unprecedentedly burdensome form of imperial subjecthood. Ancient
British
Kenya 323
Britons, medieval Iberians, early modern Andeans and Bengalis, and
perhaps even Napoleon’s Italian subjects would have recognized the
basic template of the new imperialism’s extractive policies. Imperial tribute took many forms throughout history, but its ultimate
origin was always subject labor. This remained the case in British
Kenya. What was really new about the Kenyan experience of empire
was the biologically determined racism of the new imperial regime.
Although earlier empires were equally, if not more, violent, they
did not see their subjects as fundamentally and irredeemably inferior. Romanization was an avenue to imperial citizenship, Iberians
converted to Islam, and at least some Andeans and Bengalis stood a
reasonable chance of blending into the imperial ruling class during
the early modern era. Indeed, even Napoleon held out the possibility of assimilation through
amalgame
. In the modern era, however,
Kenyans were permanently inferior and at the mercy of the politically connected settler class.
Few of the young Britons staffi ng the lowest levels of the imperial
administration in the interwar era were willing to stand up to the settlers, but at least they believed in the new imperialism’s civilizing rhetoric. Nevertheless, they still spent most of their time traveling about
their districts collecting taxes, recruiting labor, and supervising the
chiefs. Their superiors in Nairobi expected them to do little more than
maintain law and order while keeping revenue fl owing. Just as Napoleon measured his prefects by their ability to extract tribute, the Kenyan
district offi cer’s reputation turned on tax collection. Terence Gavaghan
was frank in his recollection of the unpleasant realities of wringing
wealth from a poor and marginalized peasantry. “In itself the extraction of cash, often at the cost of sale of small stock, from people in bare
subsistence, was unedifying and burdensome. It was also a tedious and
grubby task.”43 Gavaghan’s Roman, Umayyad, Spanish, and Napoleonic
peers would have agreed with these sentiments. Yet in the Kenyan case
tax collection generated embarrassingly small returns, and the real mission of Gavaghan and his colleagues was to drive Africans into the labor
market.
Under the principles of indirect rule, the day-to-day responsibility for imperial administration fell to the chiefs rather than district
offi cers. While it is tempting to view the Kenyan chiefs as the equivalents of the Andean
kurakas
, Bengali
zamindars
, and other earlier
imperial intermediaries, the “native authorities” in British Kenya
324 THE RULE OF EMPIRES
had far less power than their predecessors. Some had infl uence before
the conquest, but the vast majority were imperial functionaries who
drew their status from the Kenyan state. Many were ambitious men
who had made themselves useful to the IBEAC. Others were former enemies, such as Koitalel’s oldest son, Lelimo, who made their
peace with the new regime. But in all cases, the key qualifi cation
for being a chief was outward obedience and the ability to enforce
imperial policy. Although they claimed that “native custom” was the
basis of indirect rule, British offi cials often simply invented new traditions to justify investing their allies with chiefl y authority. Thus,
the Luhya paramount chief Mumia acquired a cloak with a grandly
embroidered fringe and a silver-topped baton as symbols of his offi ce.
These trappings fooled no one, and ultimately the chief’s day-to-day
power rested on the tribal police force and, by extension, the imperial
regime.
Like most imperial rulers, however, the Kenyan authorities were
actually poor patrons, and it was quite diffi cult to be a tribal chief.
The British expected their proxies to assist in tax collection, maintain order, produce labor, and stifl e political opposition. These were
unpopular measures, and the inherent weakness of the imperial state
meant that “native authorities” needed at least some measure of local
support to govern effectively. But the chief who tried to be too popular by protecting his constituents faced replacement. As a British
offi cial admitted: “Either they had to work in our interests and risk
unpopularity which in their un-natural position was fatal to them,
or they had to side with their people against us and thus become the
instruments of their subjects while they pretended to help us. Most
of them tried to do both and failed all around.”44
Those who managed this diffi cult balancing act reaped considerable
dividends. By the interwar era, the chiefs earned annual salaries of up
to eighteen hundred shillings at a time when an unskilled laborer
was lucky to make two hundred shillings in a year.45 Moreover, the
chiefs’ control of the native courts and tribal police created ample
opportunities for graft and corruption. They could also manipulate
young district offi cers, who rarely developed a conversational command of African languages. The chiefs further dominated the local
native councils that managed tribal fi nances in the most politically
active reserves. As virtual tyrants in their locations, with the privilege
of defi ning custom and tradition, they could punish rivals and claim
British
Kenya 325
what was supposedly communal tribal land for themselves. Many
Kikuyu chiefs used this land to grow cash crops and invested their
earnings in businesses and education for their children.
The Kenyan government’s insistence on treating Africans as
primitive tribesmen legitimized and masked the chiefs’ self-serving
individualism. Assuming that African identities were exclusively
collective, the imperial authorities would deal with Africans only as
members of tribal communities. Common Africans understandably
often found these designations limiting and oppressive, but the realities of the native reserve system meant that they had to accept their
tribal status to gain access to land. The imperial authorities pretended
that the reserves belonged collectively to the tribe and claimed that
private land tenure was a western innovation with no precedent in
native custom. In the 1920s, the Kenyan supreme court went so far as
to rule offi cially that the Kikuyu in particular had no individual land
rights. Arguing that privatization would create an exploitive landlord
class, fragment the most productive land, and encourage social confl ict, government offi cials repeatedly rejected petitions by wealthy
Kikuyu for title deeds.
Profoundly suspicious of any practice or institution that might
lead to “detribalization,” the Kenyan government discouraged class
formation and individualism. District offi cers and missionaries ridiculed Africans wearing western clothing, and the Education Department refused to let the mission schools teach in English on the
grounds that, as one Colonial Offi ce study put it, “tribal vernaculars”
strengthened “the moral sanctions that rest on tribal membership.”46
In other words, peasant farmers did not need English, and European
employers could use a simplifi ed form of Swahili (popularly known as
“ki-settler”), consisting largely of common objects and commands, to
communicate with African workers. The Kenyan education authorities further mandated that government and mission schools teach an
adapted curriculum that combined vocational training with tribal culture. They hoped that these measures would preserve the integrity of
an imagined classless tribal society.
This imperial fi ction was impractical and unsustainable given the
social and economic realities of the new imperialism. The primary purpose of the native reserve system was to produce cheap African labor,
not protect the viability of tribal society. The overcrowded Kikuyu
reserves became particularly tense in the interwar era as family and
326 THE RULE OF EMPIRES
clan members vied with each other to claim the most productive land.
The stakes in these contests were high. Those who could control land
and labor could produce lucrative cash crops for sale in nearby Nairobi or for export to the wider world via the railway. Although most
of these entrepreneurs were Christians, their wealth enabled them to
marry multiple wives. This meant that younger men, who could not
afford to marry, faced the prospect of perpetual bachelorhood. Some
worked for wealthy men, but the majority become labor migrants or
squatters.
Those Africans who ventured outside their home reserves entered
a world where Europeans enjoyed unquestioned preeminence and
privilege. Asserting that there were no racial distinctions in Kenya
law, the imperial regime claimed that the Europeans’ preeminence
in the colony stemmed from their superior civilization rather than
their race. This fatuous assertion allowed the settlers to use their control of the local legislative process to create a formidable system of
racial discrimination and segregation. Not only did this “colour bar”
make it illegal for Africans to live permanently in the cities and the
highlands, it also followed the American model of social segregation
by banning them from European hospitals, hotels, bars, schools, and
churches. The settlers even rejected the Carnegie Foundation’s offer
to build a free library in Nairobi because it would have been open to
Africans, albeit through a separate door.
The settlers’ nearly total dependence on cheap and plentiful subject labor made the colour bar supremely hypocritical. Real segregation would have bankrupted them and destroyed the greatest
perquisites of empire. In addition to tending the settlers’ crops and
building their cities and towns, Africans also looked after the settlers’
personal whims. By the end of the 1930s, there were more than eight
thousand African domestic servants in Nairobi alone. Under Kenyan
law these butlers, cooks, nurses, and nannies were the only natives
eligible for permanent residence in European areas, and most settler’ houses included extensive servant quarters. Western children
led such an exceedingly privileged life that the imperial authorities
actually became concerned that the boys would lapse into sloth and
degeneracy.
The settlers worried even more about how life in imperial Africa
would affect their wives and daughters. Imagining that western
women were the embodiment of civilization and virtue, they believed
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Kenya 327
that they needed constant protection, particularly from sexually rapacious native men. Most African household servants in Kenya were
male, which meant they were a source of both domestic comfort and
danger. Although they obsessed about this “black peril,” the settlers
would not give up the luxury of having Africans cook and clean for
them. These gendered racial biases placed an enormous burden on
western women to uphold the prestige of the settler class. Lord Cranworth cautioned that only the right kind of women who could learn
when it was the “right time to have a servant beaten” should settle in
Kenya, and any white woman caught in a voluntary “unlawful carnal
connection with a native” faced up to fi ve years in prison. Settler men
were informally exempt from the ban on cross-cultural sex. Although
the Colonial Offi ce circulars banned conjugal relations with Africans,
Terence Gavaghan’s immediate superiors suggested that he take a
mistress to help him polish his conversational Swahili. Too junior
to attract the attention of a settler’s daughter, he credited a series of
African women with tutoring him in the “intricacies of sex.”47
Gavaghan was free to indulge himself in the reserves, but Nairobi
was supposed to be a safe and segregated bastion for European women.
On paper, it was an exclusively white city, but this was never the
case. In 1926 its population of roughly thirty thousand was approximately 60 percent African, 30 percent South Asian, and only 10 percent European. The vast majority of the African population lived in
informal “villages” that the Nairobi municipal council refused to recognize as legitimate settlements. While these urban equivalents of
rural “locations” in the reserves lacked even the most basic amenities,
they offered refuge from taxation and the vagrancy laws that made
it illegal for Africans to live permanently in the city. They were also
good places to discuss politics, market produce from the reserves, and
fence goods stolen from settler houses because they were largely outside the authority of the chiefs, district offi cers, and police. Crime was