Authors: Timothy H. Parsons
Tags: #Oxford University Press, #9780195304312, #Inc
a problem in Nairobi from its earliest days, and in the 1920s African
burglars had learned to break open safes, avoid leaving fi ngerprints,
and escape in automobiles.
The municipal authorities therefore tried frantically to stamp out
unauthorized African settlements and pulled down an average of
thirty to forty illegal dwellings each week. But by the early 1920s, they
had to accept the African “locations” of Pumwani and Kariokor (on
the site of the old Carrier Corps depot) as permanent neighborhoods.
328 THE RULE OF EMPIRES
They could also do nothing about Kibera, a location that began as
a settlement of discharged Sudanese veterans of the King’s African
Rifl es. This did not, however, mean that they provided these African
settlements with water, sewage, or other basic amenities.
The Nairobi municipal council justifi ed this policy of malignant
neglect on the grounds that Africans were temporary labor migrants
who would eventually return to homes and families in the reserves.
Apart from a small percentage of nurses and nannies, the logic of
the colour bar also dictated that urban Africans were to be almost
exclusively male. This freed employers from having to pay the higher
wages needed to support a family in the city and allowed them to
house their workers in simple barracks. The municipal authorities
never could enforce these provisions, but their single-sex residence
policies meant that the ratio of men to women in Nairobi was approximately eight to one by the end of the 1930s. The humanitarian lobby
worried that this imbalance would lead to crime and vice, but more
pragmatic government offi cials believed that a small number of prostitutes could tend to the migrants’ needs.
The relatively few young African women who settled in Nairobi endured the indignities of urban imperial life because the cities
provided an escape from the reserves, where the imperial regime
rewarded the chiefs by backing their authority over tribeswomen.
Some female migrants did work as prostitutes, but others provided
rooms, home-brewed alcohol, and other basic domestic services.
Although these arrangements made the government’s gendered
labor policies more bearable, the end result was a surge in rootless
young people who swelled Nairobi’s informal economy by the end
of the interwar era. Worried that this “urban crowd” would follow political agitators like Harry Thuku, the municipal authorities
fi nally admitted the necessity of allowing Africans to bring their
families to the city.
The imperial regime’s inability to keep the settled areas “white”
exposed its inherent weakness. Illegal urban migration was just one
of many strategies that Africans of all walks of life used to lessen the
weight of the new imperialism. Lacking the means to resist openly,
local communities took advantage of the Kenyan government’s inability to govern them directly. A profusion of labor unrest and strikes
in the late 1930s hinted at the potential of collective action, but in
the interwar era vagrancy, trespassing, cattle rustling, prostitution,
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Kenya 329
moonshining, and burglary were the most sensible and effective survival strategies for common people.
This was in contrast to the small handful of converts and mission
school graduates whose mastery of western culture and English literacy qualifi ed them for relatively lucrative careers as teachers, clerks,
and interpreters. Free from the need to trespass in foreign reserves
or live by their wits in the informal urban economy, they used the
legitimizing ideologies of the new imperialism to attack the racist
underpinnings of the Kenyan state. In founding their independent
churches and schools, they sought to break the link between Christianity, western culture, and imperial authority by demonstrating that
they too were a civilized people. The independent church movement
fi rst took hold among the Luo and Luhya communities before World
War I and then spread to the Kikuyu reserves in the interwar period.
Beginning with debates over the translation and interpretation of the
Bible, independency rapidly became a moral and political force. Ultimately, the converts imagined a new African Christian society freed
from the condescension of the missions and the political dominance
of the settlers, but in the short term they wanted the freedom to conduct their own baptisms, marriages, and other religious rituals.
The Kikuyu independents in particular rejected Anglican and Presbyterian attacks on their culture and established a series of breakaway
churches in the early 1920s. The confrontation came to a head in 1929
over the missionaries’ insistence that their converts renounce female
circumcision. Galvanized by Jomo Kenyatta’s eloquent defense (if
not reinterpretation) of Kikuyu tradition, large numbers of Kikuyu
deserted the missions for these new churches. Many converts
returned in time, but the independent churches remained viable. In
the mid-1930s, church elders brought in an archbishop of the African
Orthodox Church in South Africa named Daniel William Alexander
to ordain their clergymen. The Kenyan police’s Criminal Investigation Division kept the “coloured” Archbishop under surveillance, and
the missions refused to recognize his baptisms and ordinations.
Despite these obstacles, Alexander’s work legitimized the Kikuyu
independent churches and, more important, their schools. In many
ways, African demands for formal education lay at the root of the
independence movement. At a time when schooling offered the best
chance to escape the imperial regime’s unyielding labor demands, African parents were immensely frustrated that the Kenyan government
330 THE RULE OF EMPIRES
provided school spaces for only about thirty thousand of their children at the close of World War I.48 This meant that just over 1 percent
of the nearly three million Kenyan Africans had access to the “civilizing” western education that was a central ideological prop of the new
imperialism. Even worse, there were only several hundred secondary
school places for Africans.
This explains the school building boom in the Kikuyu reserves
in the years before the Second World War. In 1936, the Education
Department estimated that the independent institutions had enrollments of over fi ve thousand students. Kenyan offi cials would have
preferred to close them down, but they lacked the legal authority.
While they probably could have an invented an excuse to do so, it
would have been diffi cult to explain to the humanitarian lobby why
teaching English, Christianity, and western values constituted an
illegal act. At a time when modern communication gave the metropolitan government and general public the means to exercise unprecedented oversight over the wider empire, the imperial authorities had
to appear to make good on their legitimizing rhetoric by giving their
subjects at least some access to western culture and education.
The Kenyan government did not grasp the potential power of
independence because its district offi cers still believed most Africans
thought tribally and locally. The imperial authorities did not understand that discriminatory and oppressive land and labor policies and
the inherent racism of the colour bar inspired Africans to imagine a
larger, potentially violent, collective response to the imperial regime.
In 1938, Jomo Kenyatta, the future president of Kenya, issued the
prophetic warning that his fellow subjects were beginning to realize
that it would take united action, if not force, to regain their freedom.
Appropriating the imperial terminology of “the African,” he cautioned that “he realises that he might fi ght unceasingly for his own
complete emancipation; for without this he is doomed to remain the
prey of rival imperialisms, which in every successive year will drive
their fangs more deeply into his vitality and strength.”49
Confi dent in their power, neither the metropolitan British government nor the Kenyan imperial regime paid much attention to
Kenyatta’s threat. Even as war with Germany loomed, most Britons
still assumed that the empire would last for centuries. As Britain
recovered from the depression, the African territories seemed particularly secure. Brushing aside the economic failures of the interwar
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Kenya 331
era, the imperial lobby still promised to provide protected markets,
new frontiers for settlement, and military manpower for the coming
war. While some contemporary imperial sympathizers argue that the
Colonial Offi ce developed plans to train subject peoples for self-rule
in the late 1930s, no one in offi cial or unoffi cial imperial circles ever
really imagined dismantling the empire at this point.
British offi cials optimistically believed that they could fi x the
imperial system to make it more acceptable to their subjects. On this
score they were willing to grant non-Europeans a measure of selfgovernment so long as they remained within the overall umbrella of
the empire. In India, the fi rst elections under the new Government of
India Act gave the Indian National Congress control of India’s provinces and most of its central administration in 1937. But loosening
their hold on the Raj only made the British government more committed to retaining the rest of the empire. In 1938, the Colonial Offi ce
launched an ambitious new development initiative that promised to
make good on the imperial lobby’s grand promises about the mutual
benefi ts of empire building. Its Colonial Development and Welfare
Act of 1940 earmarked fi ve million pounds per year for the development of “any colony or the welfare of its people.” To a large degree,
this was an answer to critics who equated the most oppressive and
racist aspects of the new imperialism with Nazi fascism.
The realities of the Second World War postponed these development initiatives and forced Britain to instead make heavy demands
on the empire. The wartime government implemented uncompromising extractive policies that wrung food, raw materials, manpower,
and capital out of its remaining imperial territories around the world.
Britain reasserted direct control over the Raj after the Indian National
Congress withdrew from the government to protest its unilateral
decision to draw India into the war with Germany. Putting aside the
power-sharing compromises of the 1930s, British offi cials committed
more than two million Indian men and 286.5 million pounds’ worth
of Indian goods to the imperial war effort and obligated the Raj to pay
the operating costs of Indian Army units serving abroad. Common
Indians paid the price for these contributions in the form of heavy
manpower demands, higher taxes, and widespread food shortages.
By comparison, the war was a boon to the Kenyan settlers. Japanese
conquests in the Far East eliminated much of their competition and
the increased global demand for food and raw materials opened new
332 THE RULE OF EMPIRES
markets and drove up prices. In 1941, Kenya and the other East African territories assumed primary responsibility for supplying British
forces during the North African campaign. Never before had Kenya’s
exports been so profi table, but these factors alone did not account
for the European community’s sudden prosperity. African farmers
were still much better equipped to produce for the global market,
and the settlers remained hamstrung by ineffi ciency and high labor
and transport costs. Wartime emergency measures made the Colonial Offi ce much less likely to intervene to protect African interests,
which gave the Kenyan government the opportunity to expand subsidies and price supports for European agriculture. Settler leaders also
maneuvered Kenyan offi cials into buying their maize at nearly twice
the African rate on the grounds that peasant farmers had lower production costs and should be discouraged from overplanting to protect
the soil. In practice, speculators bought African maize for resale at the
higher European rate and manipulated mandatory livestock auctions
in the reserves to do the same thing with African cattle.
The imperial special interests also secured cheap African labor by
convincing the government to classify their enterprises as “essential
undertakings.” While this designation was supposed to apply only to
strategically important sectors of the economy, the Kenya authorities
broadened its defi nition to include the production of tea, coffee, and
virtually anything else that could grow in the white highlands. The
essential undertakings legislation also allowed the settlers to requisition conscripted civilian laborers. Pressure from metropolitan Britain
forced the Kenyan government to revise these rules in 1943 to exclude
some of the most embarrassing abuses, but not before the settlers
made windfall profi ts. Conversely, although some African farmers
also benefi ted from rising wartime prices, in 1943 food exports and a
labor shortage brought on by civil conscription and military recruiting caused widespread famine in many reserves.
Britain paid a political price for asking so much of its subjects during the war. Although Winston Churchill insisted that the 1941 Atlantic Charter, which affi rmed that all peoples had the right of national