Slower Than A Massacre - The Multiple Sources of Racial Thought in Colonial Africa
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that overthrew the sultanate in January 1964, a few weeks after independence.''
Outsiders viewed the massacres as emblematic of the "primordial attachments" that
blocked the way of those who wished to build nations in the former colonies.^ But,
in many ways, the obstacle had been created by the nation-builders themselves.
The schoolteachers and their rhetoric typify the elite intelligentsia who dominated mainstream nationalism throughout Africa in the middle decades of the
twentieth century. In suggesting that Zanzibar's postwar racial hatred was rooted in
the political discourse they authored, I am going against several currents in the
literature on exterminationist ethnic violence in the colonial and postcolonial
world. Much of that literature assumes that ethnic conflict arose more or less
automatically from social structures that had been bolstered or even created
outright by colonial rule. Its emphasis, then, is not on indigenous political thinkers
but on European policymakers who defined and divided their subjects by race and
ethnicity.^ Historians who do take cognizance of indigenous racial thinkers usually
portray them as marginal figures, the tools of colonial mentors. The result is that
the intellectuals who incited dehumanizing violence are treated as aberrations,
"sub-nationalist" demagogues isolated from the anti-colonial mainstream of nationalist thought.''
Authors who give any consideration to the role of local thinkers in the rise of
Zanzibari racial politics (they are remarkably few, for reasons to be explored below)
generally bypass the intelligentsia altogether and focus instead on the poorly
educated ideologues of the African Association and its successor, the Afro-Shirazi
Party (ASP), whose virulent racial populism informed most of the pogroms. These
subaltern intellectuals came late to the political scene, as did the migrant workers
and urban poor who constituted the core of their constituents, and their rhetoric is
'' To describe the revolution in this way is to take a stand on an issue that has aroused much
contention. The extent of racial violence in 1964 is undeniable, yet several authors have argued that
"so-called ethnic divisions" merely masked the fundamental fact that the coup was "not an ethnic, but
a social revolution." This distinction between "ethnic" and "social" phenomena is, of course, false. I
fully endorse these authors' contention that racial identities are mere "images people have of
themselves and others." But the events of 1957-1964 are eloquent testimony to the impact such images
can have on people's thoughts and actions, and it is imperative that the historian try to account for how
they were constructed. Quotes are from L. Rey, "The Revolution in Zanzibar," in Lionel Cliffe and
John Saul, eds.. Socialism in Tanzania (Dar es Salaam, 1972), 1: 30; and (for "images") Abdul Sheriff,
"A Materialist Approach to Zanzibar's History," in A. Sheriff and Ed Ferguson, eds., Zanzibar under
Colonial Rule (London, 1991), 7.
5 For a forceful statement, see Michael Lofchie, "Zanzibar," in James Coleman and Carl Rosberg,
eds.. Political Parties and National Integration in Tropical Africa (Berkeley, Calif., 1964), 506. The
quoted phrase is from Clifford Geertz, "The Integrative Revolution: Primordial Sentiments and Civil
Politics in the New States," in Geertz, ed.. Old Societies and New States (New York, 1963). Prominent
examples of Western perceptions of the Zanzibar violence include V. S. Naipaul's 1979 novel, y4 Bend
in the River, and Gualtiero Jacopetti's 1966 film, Africa Addio.
* I will consider the African literature below. The classic argument for South Asia is Gyanendra
Pandey, The Construction of Communalism in Colonial North India (Delhi, 1990); for broad critiques,
see Sudhir Kakar, The Colors of Violence: Cultural Identities, Religion, and Confiict (Chicago, 1996),
12-24; C. A. Bayly, Origins of Nationality in South Asia: Patriotism and Ethical Govemment in the Making
of Modem India (Delhi, 1998); Rosalind O'Hanlon, "Historical Approaches to Communalism:
Perspectives from Western India," in Peter Robb, ed.. Society and Ideology: Essays in South Asian
History (Delhi, 1993), 247-66.
^ See the suggestive comments in Michael Chege, "Africa's Murderous Professors," The National
Interest 46 (Winter 1996); also Gyanendra Pandey, "In Defense of the Fragment: Writing about
Hindu-Muslim Riots in India Today," Representations 37 (1992): 27-55.
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usually assumed to have been derived from external sources, especially the
abolitionist history taught in colonial schools. The intelligentsia, in contrast, were
the pioneers of nationalism, first in the Arab Association and later in the islands'
first viable political party, the Zanzibar National Party (ZNP). For decades, they
had advocated an inclusive form of national identity that bridged racial and class
divides by enjoining common loyalty to the sultan and to the longstanding traditions
of Islamic civilization that he supposedly represented. This unifying message
steadily gained support throughout the 1940s and 1950s (according to the standard
account), only to run aground on the racial fears whipped up by the ASP during the
Time of Politics of 1957-1963.8
Although it is undeniable that ASP demagoguery lay behind much of the
violence of the Time of Politics, the racial thinking from which it emerged, and
which made so many Zanzibaris susceptible to its seductions, was fairly pervasive
and as such is unlikely to be traced to a single cause. On the contrary, as Ann Laura
Stoler has observed, a "scholarly quest for origins"a quest for the moment of
"original sin" when "the die of race was cast"can only obscure a full understanding of the etiology of racial thought.^ Such quests assume what Loic Wacquant
describes as "the logic of the trial," with investigators seeking to name "victims and
culprits" rather than understand complex historical processes.^o A pointed illustration of the dangers involved can be found in the literature on Rwanda, a case that
parallels Zanzibar's in many ways." In a recent synthesis, Mahmood Mamdani
focuses on the processes by which notions of difference became racialized during
the colonial era. This concept of racialization can be indispensable, for it prompts
us to ask how diverse forms of ethnic and national thought can become invested
with racial meanings.i^ Yet, like many authors, Mamdani traces the racialization
process back to a single source, the actions of the colonial state.^^ The result is a
* Allowing for the oversimplification necessary in summing up a complex and nuanced work, this
stands as a fair representation of the argument in Michael Lofchie, Zanzibar: Background to Revolution
(Princeton, N.J., 1965). Anthony Clayton criticizes Lofchie for underestimating the divisiveness of ZNP
rhetoric; his own account of the Time of Politics serves as a useful corrective: The Zanzibar Revolution
and Its Aftermath (London, 1981), 37-49. Lofchie's study remains the standard account of the islands'
political history, although subsequent authors have emphasized more the colonial derivation of
Zanzibari racial thought: for example, Alamin Mazrui and Ibrahim Noor Shariff, The Swahili: Idiom
and Identity of an African People (Trenton, N.J., 1994); Laura Fair, Pastimes and Politics: Culture,
Community and Identity in Post-Abolition Urban Zanzibar (Athens, Ohio, 2001). For a fuller discussion
of the ASP'S racial rhetoric, see Jonathon Glassman, "Sorting Out the Tribes: The Creation of Racial
Identities in Colonial Zanzibar's Newspaper Wars," Joumal of African History 41 (2000): 395-428.
' Ann Laura Stoler, "Racial Histories and Their Regimes of Truth," Political Power and Social
Theory 11 (1997): 183-206, quotes from 185.
0 Loic Wacquant, "For an Analytic of Racial Domination," Political Power and Social Theory 11
(1997): 221-34, quote from 222.
" Rene Lemarchand, "Revolutionary Phenomena in Stratified Societies: Rwanda and Zanzibar,"
Civilisations 5, no. 1 (1968); Catharine Newbury, "Colonialism, Ethnicity and Rural Political Protest:
Rwanda and Zanzibar in Comparative Perspective," Comparative Politics 15 (1983): 253-80.
'2 The concept is often associated with the sociologist Michael Banton, The Idea of Race (London,
1977); Jean-Pierre Chretien makes use of it in his studies of Rwandan intellectual history, some of
which are cited below.
'3 Villia Jefremovas observes that most authors neglect the role of elite indigenous intellectuals:
"Treacherous Waters: The Politics of History and the Politics of Genocide in Rwanda and Burundi,"
Africa 70, no. 2 (2000): 298-308.
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view of colonial intellectual history in which Europeans are the only actors,
inventing and imposing identities as prompted by administrative needs.!"*
The literature on colonial Africa is rife with such interpretations. To understand
why this is so, one must confront a cluster of misapprehensions about the nature of
race and associated forms of ethnic and national thought, some specific to the study
of Africa, others more general. Only then can one craft a strategy that does not
underestimate the role played by African thinkers in the construction of race.
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the Nazis, from more general concepts of ethnic and national difference. ("Ethnicity," in fact, was something of a neologism.)^^ Yet the distinction is misleading,
for it obscures the fact that all these modes of thought build on the same two core
elements. First is the assumption that humanity consists of a discontinuous series of
authentic cultural wholes, each internally homogeneous, the creation and property
of a distinct "people."3'* Second is the metaphor of descent, that is, the general idea
that the peoples who are the guardians of these discrete cultures are somehow
linked by consanguinity. Such "blood ties" are imagined with greater or lesser
degrees of vagueness. Language we call "race" places more explicit emphasis on the
metaphor of descentor, indeed, on the conviction that the "blood relationship" is
more than mere metaphorthan does language we call "ethnicity."^^ The distinction between "race" and "ethnicity," then, is one of degree not kind; and, rather
than regard them as qualitatively distinct, it is more useful to recognize them as
modes of thought that fall toward opposing ends of a single continuum, the "aura
of descent" hovering around them alL^^
I do not mean to deny the usefulness in historical analysis of distinguishing
descriptively between doctrines or political ideologies based on explicitly racial
concepts and those based on other kinds of ethnic criteria, (So, for example,
contrary to the claims of neo-conservative critics, one must acknowledge the
historical specificity of white supremacy and the unique forms of oppression it has
produced.37) But it should be recognized that at any particular historical juncture
all such doctrines are part of a common discourse of difference that categorizes
3' Miles, Racism, 42-44; Saul Dubow, "Ethnic Euphemisms and Racial Echoes," Joumal of
Southern African Studies 20 (1994): 355-70; Elazar Barkan, The Retreat of Scientific Racism: Changing
Concepts of Race in Britain and the United States between the World Wars (Cambridge, 1992), esp,
296-302, As Barkan observes, the trend began between the wars. Similar trends can be found in the
history of the French word ethnie, which, for example, was first applied to Rwanda only in the early
1960s, Dominique Franche, "Genealogie du genocide rwandais: Hutu et Tutsi; Gaulois et Francs?" Les
temps modemes 582 (1995): 10; Claudine Vidal, "Le genocide des Rwandais tutsi et I'usage public de
l'histoire," Cahiers d'etudes africaines 38, no, 150-52 (1998): 660,
3'' Nowadays, a belief in such "cultural monads" is typically associated with functionalist anthropology and is often criticized as such. But it also formed a central component of classic racial thought
and was among the targets of Franz Boas's famous critiques of the latter. Stocking, Race, Culture;
Stocking, Volksgeist; Wolf, "Perilous Ideas,"
'^ An explicit emphasis on the blood relationship is not incompatible with an awareness that the
relationship is a metaphor for something else, Sati al-Husri, a nationalist intellectual active in Baghdad
and Cairo and a major influence throughout the Arab world, including among the Zanzibari
intellectuals discussed below, recognized that common descent was merely a metaphor, yet he insisted
that it was a useful metaphor for forging national unity, Sati al-Husri, "The Historical Factor in the
Formation of Nationalism," in Kemal Karpat, ed,. Political and Social Thought in the Contemporary
Middle East, rev, edn, (New York, 1982), 39-43,
^^ This abbreviated discussion describes views held by a variety of authors, many of which were
anticipated by Weber, The phrase "aura of descent" is from Ronald Cohen, "Ethnicity: Problem and
Focus in Anthropology," Annual Review of Anthropology 1 (1978): 379-403, Discussions relevant to the
metaphor of descent also include Charles Keyes, "Towards a New Formulation of the Concept of
Ethnic Group," Ethnicity 3 (1976): 202-13; Eric Voegelin, "The Growth of the Race Idea," Review of
Politics 2 (1940): 283-317; and various sources already cited. For an insightful discussion of the
ambiguity of distinctions between race, nation, and ethnicity, see Elizabeth Tonkin, Maryon McDonald,
and Malcolm Chapman, History and Ethnicity (London, 1989), 1-21, Religious ethnicities would seem
at first glance to be an exception to this argument. Yet in fact the notion of religious identity as an act
of choice was "a delayed result of the Reformation and a direct result of the Enlightenment,,, Outside
the West, religion remained an ascriptive affiliation" (Horowitz, Ethnic Groups In Conflict, 50),
3' For a discussion of the neo-conservative position, see Sanjek, "Enduring Inequalities," 8-9,
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humanity via metaphors of descent. The "family resemblance''^^ among them must
be grasped if we are to understand how virtually any form of ethnic thought carries
implications that are capable of being elaborated in terms of qualities fixed in the
"blood." Such elaborationthe process of racializationis rarely the work of a
unified cadre, inspired by a single coherent doctrine. Rather, it emerges from the
debates of a diverse range of intellectuals, drawing on multiple and overlapping
sources, united only by the general assumptions of racial/ethnic discourse.
Nationalism is one variant of ethnic thought that has proven especially
susceptible to racialization.^^ By the mid-twentieth century, the politics of the
nation-state had become a global "categorical order," a set of concepts taken for
granted by leading political thinkers throughout the colonial world.'*" Of course, this
did not automatically lead to unity. Nations have never been defined by any single
set of criteria, and conflicts have always been rife among nationalist ideologues over
who, precisely, belongs to the national community.''! It has become a truism that
nations are defined as much by exclusion as inclusion, that is, in terms of who does
not belong. When such exclusionary rhetoric is considered alongside the genealogical metaphors that underlie all ethnic discourse, one can understand how virtually
any form of national thoughtincluding, as we shall see, thought based on an
ostensibly inclusive, universalizing language of civilizationmight be interpreted in
ways that denigrate certain categories of people by dint of their descent. There is
no firm line between national thought and racial thought, and a racial paradigm of
exclusion and dehumanization is implicit in virtually all nationalist projects, even
the most liberal.''^
^* Horowitz, Ethnic Groups in Confiict, uses this phrase to describe similarities between idioms of
kinship and ethnicity.
^' We may define nationalism as any political philosophy based on the assumption that each of the
mutually exclusive ethnic groups into which humanity is presumably divided ought "naturally" to
control its own state. This gloss is derived chiefly from Weber, "The Nation," in From Max Weber, H.
Gerth and C. Wright Mills, eds. (London, 1948). Tonkin et al. observe that "it is no more than a
tautology to say that nations have ethnic origins" {History and Ethnicity, 18)provided, of course, that
one remember that ethnic communities are no less "imagined" than nations.
'"' Liisa H. Malkki, Purity and Exile: Violence, Memory, and National Cosmology among Hutu
Refugees in Tanzania (Chicago, 1995); A. M. Alonso, "The Politics of Space, Time and Substance: State
Formation, Nationalism and Ethnicity," ^nfl/ Review of Anthropology 23 (1994): 379-405; Benedict
Anderson, Imagined Communities, rev. edn. (London, 1991). This is not to say that national thought was
taken for granted at all levels of colonial society, as has been made clear by historians working on
popular politics in Africa and South Asia.
"I As Eric Hobsbawm has written, the criteria are "fuzzy": Nations and Nationalism since 1789:
Programme, Myth, Reality (1990; Cambridge, 1992), 6. For an unusually strong rejection of the search
for a consistent definition, see Valery Tishkov, "Forget the 'Nation': Post-Nationalist Understandings
of Nationalism," Ethnic and Racial Studies 23 (2000): 625-50.
^ Authors who have recognized this include Etienne Balibar, "Racism and Nationalism," in
Balibar and Wallerstein, Race, Nation, Class, Yl-kl; Zygmunt Bauman, "Soil, Blood and Identity,"
Sociological Review 40 (1992): 675-701; Carole Nagengast, "Violence, Terror and the Crisis of the
State," Annual Review of Anthropology 23 (1994): 109-36; George M. Frederickson, The Comparative
Imagination: On the History of Racism, Nationalism, and Social Movements (Berkeley, Calif., 1997),
77-97. For a splendid historical analysis that makes use of this insight, see James R. Brennan, "Nation,
Race and Urbanization in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania, 1916-1976" (PhD dissertation. Northwestern
University, 2002).
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beyond the reach of the poor), stressing them as marks of national identity risked
dividing the very nation that the nationalists aspired to unify. Balibar has observed
that this is why proponents of "civilizing" nationalisms often turn their constituents'
attention to the threat of "false nationals" ("Jews, 'wogs,' immigrants") who
threaten the nation from within.^" In Zanzibar, as elsewhere, the concept of
civilization became an effective tool of nationalist mobilization when it was used to
define barbarians to be purged.
Long before the Time of Politics, Zanzibar's elite intellectuals had devoted
much energy to reflecting on the history of the Islamic civilization of the Swahili
coast, of which they considered Zanzibar the exemplar. This civilization, they
argued, distinguished the coast and islands from the rest of East Africa. In the
1950s, the implications of their historical narratives were noticed by the less
cultured activists of the African Association/ASP, who accused the intelligentsia of
seeking to exclude anyone who did not fully identify with urban high culture,
particularly agricultural workers and the urban poor, many of whom traced their
roots to the African mainland. To the intelligentsia's invocation of an Arab-driven
history of civilization, African Association propagandists responded with historical
narratives of Arab conquest and enslavement, and with an alternative definition of
national identity based on race rather than civilization. By the late 1950s, ASP
charges of racial blood guilt were routinely met by ZNP charges of innate
barbarism. The resulting rancor spiraled into every corner of society, contributing
directly to racial violence. Thus any attempt to trace the history of popular racial
nationalism must begin, paradoxically, with the intelligentsia's rhetoric of history
and civilization.
Of course, it would be misguided to neglect the impact of Western thought,
including general Western concepts of ethnicity and nation. But such concepts were
usually introduced indirectly and only after much reworking.^' The key actors were
local intellectuals, for whom Western thought was but one of many influences, of
many provenances; only they were capable of innovating versions of national
thought that were locally compelling in ways that pallid imitations of Western
discourse could not be. The potential complexities are well illustrated by Zanzibar's
political intelligentsia, a vibrant and self-conscious intellectual community that was
hardly susceptible to colonial control. The most prestigious intellectual circles were
drawn from town-based elite families who considered themselves ethnically Arab.
Their main idiom of discourse was Islamic, although, as we shall see, a new cadre
of secular intelligentsia began to emerge early in the twentieth century, often from
the same families that dominated the ranks of the ulamaa (religious scholars). The
most learned knew Arabic, with which they read not only religious texts but also
Cairo newspapers that championed Islamic modernism and Arab nationalism.
Families were especially proud if they could send their children to study in Cairo.
Intellectual accomplishment was an important component of family pride, and,
60 Balibar, "Racism and Nationalism," 60.
6' It is by now a commonplace that anti-colonial nationalism was derived from European discourse:
Elie Kedourie, Nationalism in Asia and Africa (New York, 1970); B. Anderson, Imagined Communities,
Basil Davidson, Black Man's Burden (New York, 1992). Of course, this does not mean that nationalist
thinkers in the colonial world had "nothing left to imagine": Partha Chatterjee, The Nation and Its
Fragments (Princeton, N.J., 1993).
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given the kind of learning that was most valued, it is not surprising that such
accomplishment was closely connected to a family's ability to claim elite status as
Zanzibar's intelligentsia, then, were keenly cosmopolitanmore so, in many
ways, than their European rulers and sometime teachersand, though not isolated
from colonial discourse, they had ample intellectual resources to be able to engage
with the ideas of nationalism without merely parroting Western ideas. In fact,
influence flowed in more than one direction: Zanzibari intellectuals had a marked
impact on the thinking of British educators and administrators. Colonial historians
acknowledged the influence of their local informants far more readily than is
consistent with the image of a discrete and overpowering colonial discourse.^^ x^g
lower echelons of the provincial administration were staffed almost entirely by
members of local elite families, who were especially prominent as mudirs, the rough
equivalent of district officers in other British colonies. These men were routinely
commissioned to write reports on local customs and history, which were then
circulated throughout the colonial bureaucracy.^"
In sum, it is just as misleading to speak of two discrete spheres of discourse
one colonial, the other indigenousas it is to speak of the colonial state's
domination of its subjects' consciousness. It is equally misleading to assume that
popular discourse existed in isolation from that of the elite intelligentsia. The
subalterns who would later support the ASP were not as lacking in political
awareness in the interwar years as the standard sources assume;^^ they were
listening to and arguing about many of the same issues that propelled the urban
intelligentsia. Like any change in political culture, new ways of thinking of ethnic
difference emerged from circuits of discourse in which diverse intellectuals spoke to
one anotherelite and popular, European and Africanand in which their ideas
were interpreted and debated by the population at large. Thus the history of the
popular racial nationalism of the 1950s must be traced to the elite intellectual
discourse of a generation before.
" The intelligentsia linked the transmission of religious expertise with the inheritance of Arab
status: see Jose Kagabo, "Reseaux d'ulama 'swahili' et liens de parente," in F, Le Guennec-Coppens
and P, Caplan, eds,, Les Swahili entre Afrique et Arabie (Paris, 1991), 59-72, For descriptions of
nineteenth and early twentieth-century Zanzibari intellectual life, see Abdallah Salih Farsy, The Shaf'i
Ulama of East Africa, Randall Pouwels, trans, and ed, (Madison, Wis,, 1989); Anne K, Bang, "Sufis and
Scholars of the Sea: The Sufi Family Networks of Ahmad ibn Sumayt and the Tariqa 'Alawiyya in East
Africa, c, 1860-1925" (Dr,Art, thesis. University of Bergen, 2000); Randall Pouwels, "Sh, Al-Amin b,
Aii Mazrui and Islamic Modernism in East Africa, 1875-1947," Intemational Journal of Middle East
Studies 13 (1981): 329-45, The elite character of these intellectual circles is implicit throughout the
descriptions in Aley, Zanzibar, in the Context, who states that "Shirazi" and "African" circles "were less
spectacular" than those dominated by Arabs and Comorians (58), Also see Muhsin, Conflicts and
Harmony, Shaaban Saleh Farsi, Zanzibar: Historical Accounts, 2d edn, (s,l,, 1995); Norman R, Bennett,
A History of the Arab State of Zanzibar (London, 1978),
" For example, W, H, Ingrams, Zanzibar: Its History and Its People (London, 1931), 125, 189-90,
Another historian, L, W, Hollingsworth, will figure prominently below,
^ For the mudirs' reports, see L H, D, Rolleston, Annual Report on the District of Zanzibar, 1935,
BA 30/5, Zanzibar National Archives (hereafter, ZNA), These and similar reports continued to be
written, and British officials often referred to them,
'*5 Fair, Pastimes and Politics, compare with Lofchie, Zanzibar.
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the significance of instrumentalist or structural factors; in Zanzibar, as elsewhere, state formation was central to
the context in which a discourse of race was created.^^ But the process of building
a racial state did not begin with European rule, as one would expect from most of
the instrumentalist literature. It can be traced at least to the actions of the Omani
sultans who conquered Zanzibar in the nineteenth century. The sultans also
sponsored the settlement of Arab planters and Indian financiers, as well as the
import of large numbers of plantation slaves from the mainland. Thus the
groundwork was laid for the major ethnic divisions of colonial Zanzibar: Arabs,
Indians, indigenous islanders, and African mainlanders. British rule accentuated
these divisions, in part through economic policies aimed at preserving the Omani
Arabs as a landlord caste (Indian creditors, for example, were discouraged from
foreclosing on mortgages) and administrative and educational policies that bolstered their position as a political caste. Although slavery was abolished, mainlanders continued to come to the islands to work as labor tenants ("squatters") on clove
and coconut estates.
NONE OF THE ABOVE SHOULD BE TAKEN AS DISMISSING
These ethnic divisions formed a widely recognized hierarchy, with Omani Arabs
perceived to be at the top and, at the bottom, slaves and people of slave descent
(real or presumed). In the middle were the bulk of the islands' indigenous
inhabitants, who often made vague claims of descent from distant Middle Eastern
ancestors. These lines of descent were usually fictive; in any case, they could rarely
be traced through precise genealogies. Islanders claimed ancestral origins in a
variety of exotic places, the most common being the Persian town of Shiraz, whence
came the legendary founders of several of the ancient city-states of the East African
coast. Such claims are recognizable as variants of a deep political tradition,
widespread among speakers of Bantu languages, whereby leading families preserved myths linking them to exogenous conqueror-heroes who had introduced the
technologies or forms of social organization by which civilized life was defined.''^
The more specific fashion of claiming Arab or Persian ancestry largely stemmed
from coastal Muslims' desire to distinguish themselves from their non-Muslim
neighbors and slaves. The fashion had long been present, but it became more
pronounced under the rule of the Omani sultans.^^
The existence of this hierarchy in the minds of most Zanzibaris implied a
widespread degree of Arab hegemony. Paradoxically, the persistence of the
hierarchy was ensured by the permeability of ethnic boundaries: people of mainland
origin (including descendants of slaves) might realistically aspire to become
accepted as Shirazi, and Shirazi might realistically aspire to become accepted as
'''' Alonso, "Politics of Space."
<>' Kopytoff, "Internal African Frontier." East African examples are described in Jean-Pierre
Chretien, The Great Lakes of Africa: Two Thousand Years of History (New York, 2003); Steven
Feierman, The Shambaa Kingdom (Madison, Wis., 1974).
'*'* For this and much of the following two paragraphs, see my book Feasts and Riot: Revelry,
Rebellion and Popular Consciousness on the Swahili Coast, 1856-1888 (Portsmouth, N.H., 1995). Abdul
Sheriff and Chizuko Tominaga believe that there was sometimes a kernel of truth to claims of Shirazi
descent: see "The Shirazi in the History and Politics of Zanzibar," paper presented at the International
Conference on the History and Culture of Zanzibar (Zanzibar, December 1992). For "Arabization"
before the Omani period, see Randall L. Pouwels, Horn and Crescent: Cultural Change and Traditional
Islam on the East African Coast, 800-1900 (Cambridge, 1987).
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>' Instrumentalist interpretations of the turn to Shirazi identity stress the material benefits that the
colonial regime supposedly bestowed on "non-natives": see, for instance, Fair, Pastimes and Politics, 51.
These interpretations are not always convincing: see Glassman, "Sorting Out the Tribes," 403-04.
Furthermore, they make too much of the specific ethnonym "Shirazi," neglecting to recognize that
admiration of Middle Eastern status could exist in the absence of that particular ethnonym. Evidence
collected before the accelerated turn to Shirazi identity in the 1920s, for example, indicates that
although indigenous islanders at that time called themselves "Tumbatu" and "Hadimu," they
nevertheless already considered themselves descendants of Persians and as such more civilized than the
barbarians of the mainland. F, B. Pearce, Zanzibar: The Island Metropolis of Eastern Africa (London,
1920), 248-52.
This ambivalence is described by Ariel Crozon, "Les Arabes a Zanzibar: Haine et fascination,"
in Le Guennec-Coppens and Caplan, Les Swahili, 179-93.
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and his Zanzibari colleagues encouraged such ideals, although they frequently felt
compelled to admonish Mazungumzo's readers not to yield to outright disdain.
(Some teachers were given to abusive language in the classroom, calling their pupils
washenzi, "barbarians.")*! The thinking of British educators reflected a mixture of
considerations. They saw it as their long-term job to help lay the foundations of a
modern nation (albeit one that would not assume self-government until well into
the future), making their charges "better Africans" rather than a species of
European. Their main strategy, encouraged by the Tuskegeeism prevalent in East
African educational circles, involved cultivating an indigenous elite that would lead
local communities in the building of modernity.*^
But British pedagogues were not the schoolteachers' only mentors. Many had
older relatives active in the Arab Association, which had been founded in 1911 in
a spirit of pan-Arab nationalism.*^ Many, too, were related to the islands' leading
ulamaa, who since before the turn of the century had been reading and debating
Islamic modernism. From those intertwined intellectual movements, perhaps more
than from British teachers, they learned of their unique responsibility to lead in
building a "modern civilization." Nineteenth-century intellectuals in Cairo and
Damascus had originally borrowed this concept from Europe (although one should
not ignore the rich intellectual legacy inherited from Arab thinkers like Ibn
Khaldun), but by the interwar years it had been elaborated to include elements
intended to challenge Western pretensions to represent the moral if not technological epitome of "civilization." Arabs must learn the history of their own
civilization, argued the pan-Arabists, and in this crucial nation-building task
schoolteachers were to play the leading role. The central figures in spreading this
message were pedagogues based in Baghdad, but their influence was felt among
educators throughout the Arab world, and it is no doubt significant that many of the
first generation of instructors in Zanzibar government schoolsthat is, the new
intelligentsia's own teacherswere recruited from Cairo, another center of interwar pan-Arabism.*'*
*' This assessment and much of what follows is based in part on a broad reading of Mazungumzo
from the 1920s and 1930s, as well as Arab Association journalism and files in the Zanzibar National
Archives. Fuller documentation can be found in Chapter 3 of my book manuscript under preparation
on the rise of racial thought in colonial Zanzibar.
82 The version of Tuskegeeism introduced to East Africa in the 1920s stressed schoolteachers' roles
as community leaders in "community development." See esp. Kenneth James King, Pan-Africanism and
Education: A Study of Race Philanthropy and Education in the Southern States ofAmerica and East Africa
(Oxford, 1971); also Lene Buchert, Education in the Development of Tanzania, 1919-90 (London, 1994).
Zanzibar's longtime acting director of education, G. B. Johnson, was an internationally prominent
advocate of Tuskegeeism, and his Swahili-language adaptation of Booker T. Washington's Up from
Slavery (1901) was a standard reader in Zanzibar schools: Maishaya Booker T. Washington, Mtu Mweusi
Maamfu (London, 1937).
8^ For the founding of the Arab Association, see "Mafveraky: Who Is V^hoV Al-Falaq, December
21, 1946; the context is described in AC 1/151, ZNA (thanks to Philip Sadgrove for directing my
attention to the latter source). Previous works have mistaken both date and context: see, for instance,
Alison Smith, "The End ofthe Arab Sultanate: Zanzibar 1945-1964," in D. A. Low and A. Smith eds
History of East Africa, Vol. 3 (Oxford, 1976), 199.
" Such themes can be found in the writings of pan-Arabists and Islamic modernists at least as early
as Jamal al-Din Afghani and the Egyptian nationalist Rifa'a Badawi al-Tahtawi: see Albert Hourani,
Arabic Thought in the Liberal Age (Cambridge, 1983). For interwar currents, see Reeva Simon, "The
Teaching of History in Iraq before the Rashid Ali Coup of 1941," Middle Eastem Studies 22 (1986):
37-51; Simon, "The Imposition of Nationalism on a Non-Nation State: The Case of Iraq during the
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Jonathon Glassman
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The primer paints its principal narrative, the progress from savagery to civilization,
in broad strokes, emphasizing how relatively small nations such as the Greeks and
Hebrews spread civilization to the rest of the world. Its definition of civilization
must have seemed familiar to its adult readers: proper government (meaning
obedience to a single monarch), literacy, and, implicitly, monotheism.*^
The implication was clear: the attributes of civilization had been introduced to
East Africa by outsiders. And to make it clearer still, whenever a foil was needed
to highlight the accomplishments of (say) the Greeks, the primer drew its example
from the foolish customs of pagan Africans.^^ Aside from such stray comments, only
one of Milango's thirty-eight chapters concerns Africa; the text flatly explains that
is because black Africans are barbarians who have never done anything of historical
significance. But the primer notes one exception: peoples living along Africa's
coasts are worthy of study because they had come under the influence of foreigners.
To demonstrate, it offers a condensed version of the story elaborated in Hollingsworth's other texts, telling how centuries of Arab presence had rendered East
Africa's coastal population more civilized than their upcountry neighbors.^"
Texts like Hollingsworth's thus flattered the schoolteachers by giving the
imprimatur of colonial modernity to their inherited ideas of ustaarabu and coastal
exceptionalism. It is hardly surprising, then, that such ideas were prominent in the
many essays on local history the schoolteachers wrote for Mazungumzo. The editors
solicited these essays as part of a nation-building project in which colonial, Arabist,
and inherited themes played out in an ironic counterpoint. The project was
launched in 1930, when Abdulla Ahmed Seif came across an essay by the Gold
Coast educator A. W. Norris that he decided to reprint in Mazungumzo. Norris's
the assistance of A. A. Seif, A. M. al-Hadhrami, and Mohamed Salim Hilal al-Barwani. Seif appears as
translator on the title page of Vol. 1; however, in a list of titles on the back cover of the Swahili edition
of another of Hollingsworth's works published by the same company (Macmillan), Seif is credited as
translator of all three volumes: Historia Fupiya Pwani ya Afrika ya Mashariki (London, 1966). Milango
ya Historia was at first used as a reader in Standards 4 through 8, and also urged as a text with which
teachers should prepare for teaching other classes; pupils in the upper standards were also assigned
Hollingsworth's Short History of the East Coast of Africa (London, 1929). G. B. Johnson, "Report on
Text-Books in the Swahili Language," Annual Report of the Education Department for the Year 1927,
27-31, CO 618/44/15, PRO; W. Hendry, "Memorandum," February 27, 1934, CO 618/60/15, PRO;
"Syllabus, 1944," AD 1/80, ZNA. Geography primers told similar stories of civilization and barbarism,
often in racial terms: B. M. Hart, Bara Afrika: Chanzo cha Jiografia ya Afrika (Nairobi, 1948); E. C.
Vrancis, Afnka (London, 1952; first pub. in English, 1933); G. W. Broomfield and D. V. Perrott, Habari
za Walimwengu, Book 3, Masimulizi ya Juma juu ya Waingereza (London, 1954).
*^ Explicit statements of these themes can be found in Milangoya Historia, 1: 15-27 (monarchy and
literate learning) and 1: 42-48 (the ancient Jews and monotheism). Given the exemplary importance
of the Greeks in Vol. 1, Hollingsworth could hardly insist on monotheism as part of his definition of
civilization (as he does the other attributes), but the entire work, particularly the last two volumes,
emphasizes the civilizing power of Judeo-Christian-Muslim values. Broomfield and Perrott's primer
was less equivocal in proclaiming religion "the foundation of all true civilization": Habari za
Walimwengu, Book 3: 101. Similar views of "civilization" were common in mainstream social science at
the time: see Charles Ellwood, The Psychology of Human Society: An Introduction to Sociological Theory
(New York, 1925); and other sources cited by Thomas Spira, Nationalism and Ethnicity Terminologies,
Vol. 1 (Gulf Breeze, Fla., 1999), 69.
*' For example, Milango ya Historia, 1: 93-94.
^ Milango ya Historia, 3: 87-94. Also see Hollingsworth, Short History; and the work of his close
colleague and collaborator, W. H. Ingrams, Zanzibar. These aspects of East African history figured
prominently in the Middle School exams in 1933 and the TTS exams in 1957: AB 1/184 and AD 1/213,
ZNA.
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Jonathon Glassman
refrain was the need for teachers to cultivate "PRIDE OF RACE"; this phrase, the
essay's title, recurs throughout, always in capital letters. Such pride, Norris
observed, has been necessaty to the success of "every known empire and nation";
without it, no nation can "rule itself or others." And the best strategy for cultivating
national pride, he argued, was to cultivate historical memory, which might be
learned by listening humbly to the tales of the elders.^^
Norris's essay impressed Seif not only for its emphasis on history and nationbuilding but also for how it chastised teachers who thought themselves superior to
those around them: as we have seen, Zanzibar educators harbored similar concerns.
But the message originally crafted for readers in Gold Coast had the opposite effect
in Zanzibar. Norris had urged teachers to seek pride not in their modern education
but in the history of their entire "race," alluding specifically to "the Akan race" (or
Akan "nation"), that is, the ethnic category that comprised the majority of the Gold
Coast population. He thus addressed a contradiction that beset most British
colonies, where the language of modernity threatened the "traditional" authority of
chiefs and elders on which colonial officials relied: by encouraging political
traditions built around metaphors of seniority and common descent, officials like
Norris hoped to cultivate "tribal" (or "racial") solidarity between chiefs and
commoners, including the educated "youngmen" who resented chiefly prerogatives.
But Zanzibar's very different traditions of ustaarabu and Arab hegemony ultimately
rested on metaphors of separate descent, thus shaping the schoolteachers' historical
narratives in ways that emphasized not unity but difference. Hence most of the
narratives published in Mazungumzo concerned the Arab or Persian figures whom
local lore remembered as having built the city-states that made the coast distinct.^^
The most prolific contributor of historical essays, M. Abdulrahman, wrote a series
that depicted the nineteenth century as the story of Arab heroes who explored the
mainland, contending with the depravity of African cannibals.^^
The authors of such narratives plainly drew from colonial texts; Abdulrahman
acknowledged as much. But he also relied on oral informants, and it is evident that
colonial sources only reinforced distinctions between Arab civilization and African
barbarism whose roots were deep and multiple. Some of these roots were revealed
in a 1938 debate about the history and meaning of the words ustaarabu (civilization)
and mstaarabu (civilized person). The authors all agreed that the terms were
derived from an Arabic form meaning to adopt Arab culture; in tracing the
etymology, some displayed a sophisticated knowledge of Semitic prehistory that
suggests the influence of the pan-Arabists. Their central dispute concerned whether
an African who had been educated only in the ways of Western civilization might
properly be described as mstaarabu or whether alternative words should be used.
One suspects that semantics were not the only source of such misgivings: Zanzibaris
" Norris, "Pride of Race." Seif explains the circumstances of the essay's publication in an editorial
note introducing it. It originally appeared in the Accra Teacher's Journal 6 (October 1929), a
publication that had been inaugurated one year later than Mazungumzo. Thanks to Cati Coe for sharing
the latter information.
'2 Examples include M. Abdulrahman, "Safari ya Kilwa," serialized in six parts, beginning in Maz.
12, no. 2 (February 1938): 24-26; Muhammad Othman, "Siku Kuu ya Mwaka," Normal Magazine 4, no.
9 (September 1930): 112-15.
"^^ M. Abdurrahaman [Abdulrahman], "Maisha ya Watu Wengine," Maz. 12, no. 11 (November
1938): 162-63; Maz. 12, no. 12 (December 1938); and following issues.
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were known to disdain upcountry people as barbarians even if the latter had
attained a Western educationa disdain that British educators, who put more stock
in Eurocentric ideals than Arabcentric ones, found amusing.^"* None of the authors
imagined an African model of civilization, and at least one assumed that all the
continent's ancient states and empires could be attributed to Arab influence.^^
Although the path to civilization was ostensibly open to anyone who wished to
travel it, the mstaarabu who completed the journey could be recognized only in
contrast to another left behind.
That "other," the African barbarian, was not, strictly speaking, defined racially;
after all, an mstaarabu, in the word's original (Arabic) sense, was one who became
Arab. But even though the concepts of Arab civilization conveyed in both colonial
and pan-Arabist texts focused on culture rather than blood, they also relied, to a
greater or lesser extent, on the metaphor of descent. The same is true of local
notions of ustaarabu and Arab and Shirazi identity.^e So, although Mazungumzo'^
historical narratives were multi-x&c\a\, in that they portrayed civilization being
shared by diverse peoples, they were not non-racial; in their focus on waves of
civilized peoples spreading to East Africa and elsewhere, sharing a common
ancestry and identity, which were kept intact over centuries or even millennia, they
reproduced many of the assumptions of racial thought. It is no surprise, then, that
at least one of the contributors to the debate on ustaarabu, having made the small
leap from civilization to descent, made the further leap from descent to the
bodyan association not universal to racial thought but not unique to raciology,
either.^'' After describing how the Arabs' introduction of Islam had prompted "the
natives of the coast to regard them as their leaders, and mimic them in every way,"
this author added that, as a mark of having become more civilized, the coast
population's skin became clearer and brighter than that of "barbarians" {washenzi),
"that is, the bush-people of the African interior. "^^
'* "Mshenzi, n. wa- a barbarian, savage, one of the aborigines, a person untouched by civilization.
Often used contemptuously by the coast native of those who come from the interior, although they are
frequently more cultured and refined than the coast native!" Frederick Johnson, Standard SwahiliEnglish Dictionary (Oxford, 1939), 419.
'5 Muhammad Othman, "Asili ya Neno 'Ustaarabu na Mstaarabu,'" Maz. 12, no. 4 (April 1938):
59-61; A. M. el-Hadhrami, " 'Ustaarabu,'" Maz. 12, no. 4 (April 1938): 61-62; AH Said el-Kharusy,
"Asili ya Waarabu," Maz. 12, nos. 6-7 (June-July 1938): 81-83, 99-101. Parts of this debate were
anticipated in the Dar es Salaam paper Mambo Leo of February and March 1923 (thanks to Katrin
Bromber for this reference).
<
' > The importance of the descent metaphor should be clear from all that has been said about
Shirazi identity; it is also apparent in all the standard ethnographic studies. For an explicit statement,
see Mohammed Shamte's careful consideration of how best to reckon ethnic identity, in "Mpemba,"
Maz. 11, no. 4 (April 1937): 52-54; Shamte opts for a strict reckoning based on descent.
^^ The literature still suffers from embarrassed silence about the degree to which Arab-centered
notions of skin color as status marker were and remain widespread on the coast. A good indication of
this is the furor raised among Lamu intellectuals by the publication of Abdul Hamid M. el Zein, The
Sacred Meadows: A Structural Analysis of Religious Symbolism in an East African Town (Evanston, 111.,
1974), which describes such notions. Also see Fair, Pastimes and Politics, 94-96; and, for nineteenthcentury material, Fred Morton, Children of Ham: Freed Slaves and Fugitive Slaves on the Kenya Coast,
1873 to 1907 (Boulder, Colo., 1990). For the Arab and Islamic world more generally, see John Hunwick,
"Islamic Law and Polemics over Race and Slavery in North and West Africa," Princeton Papers:
Interdisciplinary Joumal of Middle Eastern Studies 1 (1999): 43-68; Bernard Lewis, Race and Slavery in
the Middle East: An Historical Enquiry (New York, 1990); Powell, Different Shade.
'^ Othman, "Asili ya Neno." He reminds readers of the standard etymology, which traces mshenzi
to the Persian word zinj, meaning black, and the Swahili word he uses to describe coast peoples'
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Jonathon Glassman
supposedly lighter skin color is far from neutral; the color is cleaner, purified, brightened (takata).
Othman cites a book entitled History of Zanzibar, probably Ingrams and Hollingsworth's 1925 school
text. But his essay reflects a variety of influences, including local understandings of Islam,
^ For cultural nation-building in the Tuskegeeist principles favored by British educators, including
the preservation of "tribal customs," see King, Pan-Africanism, 167-70, 263,
'o" Examples include Zam Aii Abbas, "Kwenda kwingi kuona mambo," Normal Magazine 3, no, 6
(July 1929); Abdul Rahman Muhammad, "Sikukuu ya Mwaka," Normal Magazine 3, nos, 10-11
(November-December 1929): 148-49, 162-63; Saleh Muhammad, "Ubaya wa somo juu ya mwari
wake," Normal Magazine 4, no, 12 (December 1930): 147-48, The essays represent a debate between
those who wanted to reform and preserve such dances as symbols of national pride and others who
wanted simply to suppress them. By the 1930s, the reformist position had won the day, at least in the
pages of the teachers' journal. For festive dance and community identity in the previous century, see
Glassman, Feasts and Riot.
"" In theological terms, their concerns were with the dangers of bidaa or "innovation," forms of
worship sanctioned neither by God nor His prophets, and shirk, mixing worship of God with pagan
idolatry. For such concerns among East African ulamaa, see Pouwels, Horn and Crescent; Farsy, Shaf'i
Ulama; and Bang, "Sufis and Scholars of the Sea"; and, for Islamic modernists more generally,
Hourani,/iraWc Thought, 225, 231-32, (The latter source refers to Rashid Rida, whose paper al-Manar
was read in Zanzibar,) These concerns meshed with British officials' desire to discourage festive rites
they considered economically wasteful. But the ulamaa'?, independent theological motives were well
established; Islamic modernists had been criticizing such rituals for over a generation. See documents
from 1935-1936 in AB 30/22, ZNA, The ulamaa continued to condemn such customs well after the
campaigns: Muhammad Saleh Abdulla Farsy, Ada za Harusi katika Unguja (Nairobi, 1956), For the
ulamaa's leadership in similar campaigns on the mainland coast, see Sarah Mirza and Margaret Strobel,
eds, and trans,. Three Swahili Women: Life Histories from Mombasa, Kenya (Bloomington, Ind,, 1989);
Aii bin Hemedi el-Buhuriy, "Habari za Mrima," Mambo Leo, nos, 141-47 (1934-35),
102 Sheikh Tahir [Abubakr el-Amawi] (senior qadi), March 21, 1936, AB 30/22, ZNA, (The qadi of
the minority Ibadhi sect appended a postscript expressing his agreement,) For other ulamaa who took
similarly puritanical views, see Saidi Musa, Maisha ya al-Imam Sheikh Abdulla Saleh Earsy katika
Ulimwengu wa Kiislamu (Dar es Salaam, 1986), esp, 65 and following. But Musa's account must be
treated with caution, especially when he attributes such views to Abdullah Saleh Farsy, the subject of
his hagiography.
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message that the villagers' very Islam was tainted by barbarism and needed to be
corrected by Arabs.
Other objects of the intelligentsia's scorn were the village Koran schools, or
madarasa, and once again their preoccupations, inspired by modernist Islam,
converged with those of British educators. The latter regarded the madarasa as
obstacles to the spread of secular education in the countryside. The town ulamaa,
meanwhile, scorned the madarasa'?, pedagogical practices, particularly teaching
children to recite Koranic verses in Arabic, "like parrots," without understanding
their meaning. In the mid-1920s, a commission consisting of four eminent qadis and
the director of education recommended that both problems be tackled by integrating religion into the curriculum of the government schools, where selected verses
would be taught in Swahili. But villagers clung to the madarasa, resenting any
attempt to limit their children's ability to recite in the language of the Prophet.^^^
These tensions were still simmering ten years later, when they were captured in a
widely circulated report by Mohammed Abeid el-Haj, a local official and former
schoolteacher who would soon be among the most influential intellectuals in the
colonial administration. El-Haj described the madarasa teachers as ignorant and
avaricious, routinely mistreating their students and exploiting them for personal
gain. But, he asserted, such abuses were characteristic of "African teachers" only.
Arab teachers, in contrast, were expert and conscientious.^*^"
It is ironic that Islam, with its well-deserved reputation for condemning all
ethnic distinctions, should have provided some of the language with which the
intelligentsia constructed their chauvinist rhetoric; it is also a powerful index of the
breadth of sources on which racial thought can draw. Yet the irony is not unheard
of: like all universalizing creeds (including Enlightenment ideals of civilization and
progress), Islamic ideologies have often been used to express difference.'"^ In
Zanzibar, locally inherited concepts of Arab hegemony were compounded by the
teachings of Cairo-based modernists who made an exception for Arab ethnic
solidarity, arguing that it alone was sanctioned and even encouraged by Islam as
necessary for the well-being of the faith.lo^ In the societies where they originated,
such teachings gave religious support to calls for national unity. But in a place like
Zanzibar, they were divisive. They told islanders that, in order to be moral beings
according to the religious ideals they themselves held dear, they had to accept the
leadership of an ethnically distinct Arab elite.
Because the intelligentsia's interwar teachings on Arab superiority also stressed
the lesson of coastal exceptionalism, their impact on indigenous islanders was
103 Bennett, Arab State, 228-29; Furley and Watson, History of Education, 122-23; Teaching of
Koran and Arabic in Government Schools, 1924-1957, AB 1/390, ZNA. The comparison to parrots was
made by one of the qadis on the commission (Ingrams, Zanzibar, 230).
ic" M. A. el-Haj (Mudir, Koani), "The Koran Schools," 1936, AK 33/294, ZNA. For the report's
circulation within the Education Department, see AB 1/82, AB 1/390, ZNA.
'"5 Louis Brenner, "Muslim Representations of Unity and Difference in African Discourse," in
Brenner, ed., Muslim Identity and Social Change in Sub-Saharan Africa (Bloomington, Ind., 1993), 1-20.
Also see J. Glassman, "Stolen Knowledge: Struggles for Popular Islam on the Swahili Coast,
1870-1963," in Biancamaria Scarcia Amoretti, ed., Islam in East Africa: New Sources (Rome, 2001),
209-25.
'0* Hourani, Arabic Thought, 299-301 (for Rashid Rida); Gershoni, "Emergence of Pan-Nationalism," 76-77 (for Hasan al-Bana).
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Jonathon Glassman
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post-emancipation Zanzibar, compiemented by European concepts of labor-discipiine."^ It also shows the influence of pan-Arabist journalism, in which the contrast
between a supposedly benign "Arab slavery" and the cruelties of its Western
counterpart was a key point in the defense of national honor.i" Such apologies
grew out of two separate historical misunderstandings. First is the assumption that,
despite its long and varied history, an institution like slavery could be characterized
and labeled in fixed terms: even though slavery in the Arab Middle East (and
Islamic Africa) was indeed often "benign" relative to New World forms, the East
African experience shows that such relaxed relations of bondage could become
transformed over time.'^"* So the label "Arab slavery" in fact corresponded to no
single set of practices. Yet such labeling was central to nationalist understandings
of history, in which institutions were said to reflect discrete national spirits. In this
case, the history of Zanzibar slavery was said to demonstrate the humane
paternalism of Arab civilization.
Second, whatever slavery looked like in Zanzibar at any given moment, there
was nothing particularly "Arab" about it: contrary to conventional assumptions,
many masters were Africans. This misunderstanding stemmed not from imported
nationalist philosophies but from local usages, in which the claim of Arab status
connoted descent from the planter elite and the absence of slave ancestry.
Memories of slavery, in other words, were central to local understandings of Arab
identity, and that placed the intelligentsia in the uncomfortable position of having
to apologize for it. Given the bitterness with which ASP nationalists would later
accuse them of the inherited sin of slavery, it is ironic that the intelligentsia chose
to use slavery's history as a narrative tool in their construction of an Arabcentric
national identity. But the choice was virtually forced on them by past practices in
the construction of ethnic difference.
112 Frederick Cooper, From Slaves to Squatters: Plantation Labor and Agriculture in Zanzibar and
Coastal Kenya, 1890-1925 (New Haven, Conn., 1980), for British efforts to convince Zanzibari planters
of the merits of industrial work-discipline.
113 Eve Troutt-Powell and John Hunwick, papers presented to the Workshop on Slavery and the
African Diaspora in the Lands of Islam, Northwestern University, April/May 1999.
ii"* Frederick Cooper, Plantation Slavery on the East Coast of Africa (New Haven, Conn., 1977);
Glassman, Feasts and Riot, 79-114; and, for a comparative example, see Peter Wood, Black Majority:
Negroes in Colonial South Carolina from 1670 through the Stono Rebellion (New York, 1974).
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Jonathon Glassman
barbarians, they also implied that Arabs alone were in full command of the
civilizing arts. That condescension can be read obliquely in the tone of the few
Swahili items that Al-Falaq began to carry in 1946. (Before then, the paper had
published only in English and Arabic.)"^ It can be read more directly in the paper's
assumption that Arab leadership was the norm in all affairs, civil and political, and
that, unless Arabs are in charge, "any institution established . . . by Natives" was
doomed to fail."^
Given such rhetoric, it is easy to understand why the hegemony of Arabcentric
notions of ustaarabu did not translate into simple consent for Arab leadership but,
on the contrary, sometimes encouraged racial resentments against Arabs. This was
dramatically revealed by a wartime surge of Shirazi ethnic nationalism in southern
and eastern Zanzibar Island, a development that, as the outcome of several
converging intellectual trends, provides an excellent illustration of the diverse
sources of racial thought.
Before the war, villagers in these agriculturally marginal areas had commonly
called themselves "Hadimu," an ethnonym that reflected historical memories of
vassalage to the Omani sultans. It was derived from an Arabic word for "servant"
or "slave.""^ During the nineteenth century, Hadimu cultivators were pushed out
of the fertile central and western portions of the island by Arab settlers who
established large estates of clove and coconut trees. By World War II, their villages
had become reserves of seasonal plantation labor, in good years extruding the
majority of their male population to assist in the clove harvest.'^^ Not surprisingly,
the intelligentsia's historical narratives skirted the processes by which the expansion
of the Arab-dominated plantation sector had relegated the Hadimu to the island's
rockiest fringes. The most common ploy was simply to deny that tensions had ever
existed and to explain the Hadimu's present-day poverty in terms of their innate
fecklessness, typical of "natives.''''^
Within the Hadimu fringe itself, mounting generational conflicts in the 1930s
and 1940s had given rise to acute anxieties about the cohesion of village institutions
and to dreams of community renewal. Hadimu elders were convinced that the
seasonal outmigration of younger villagers had caused a loss of respect for village
traditions. In fact, much of the rancor arose when the migrants used their wages in
" ' I n a regular column, "Father Zanzibar" addressed his "children" in a patronizing tone unlike
anything in the English section ("Risala ya \Jng\i]dL," Al-Falaq, 1946). Otherwise, most Swahili-language
items consisted of advice on cooking, child-rearing, decorating, and other non-political matters directed
specially at women; again, such items did not appear in the English language section. By 1951, the paper
was publishing Swahili translations of leaders from its English and Arabic sections, but Swahili
continued to be its tertiary language.
iK^ "Itihad-el-Watani," ^/-fa/a?, February 11, 1939.
' " M o r e precisely, it reflected the villages' subjection to the island's most powerful indigenous
potentate, the Mwinyi Mkuu, who in turn became the sultans' direct vassal. John Gray, History of
Zanzibar from the Middle Ages to 1856 (London, 1962); Pearce, Zanzibar: The Island Metropolis;
Mohammed Abeid el-Haj, "Hadimu Land Tenure," May 1, 1940, AK 33/294, ZNA; Hemed Jabir
el-Farsy, "The Mwinyi Mkuu," Appendix C, Zanzibar District Annual Report, 1935, BA 30/5, ZNA.
"8 Charles Sacleux, Dictionnaire Swahili-Frangais, 2 vols. (Paris, 1939-41), 2: 622; R. H. W.
Pakenham, Land Tenure among the Wahadimu at Chwaka, Zanzibar Island (Zanzibar, 1947); John
Middleton, Land Tenure in Zanzibar (London, 1961); Abdul Sheriff, "The Peasantry under Imperialism," in Sheriff and Ferguson, Zanzibar under Colonial Rule.
' " Among the most telling examples is M. A. el-Haj, "Hadimu Land Tenure"; we have already
encountered the influential el-Haj's disdain for village madarasa teachers.
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749
efforts to intrude in village customs more forcefully than their elders deemed
proper, paying bridewealth or sponsoring other festive rites by which authority and
prestige were accrued. These rites were the very ones that the intelligentsia had
condemned as feckless and uncivilized (Mazungumzo's harshest critiques were
directed at Hadimu dances), yet for villagers they were central to how the local
community was imagined. Late in the war, when new labor regulations backed by
the Arab Association threatened migrants' ability to invest in these rites, they
seemed to many villagers part of the elite's overall assaults on indigenous culture.
So, when the young men who constituted the bulk of the Hadimu migrants launched
a boycott of clove labor in 1944, they won broad support from the elders with whom
they had only recently been at loggerheads. This newfound solidarity surprised
many observers and made the boycott total in the southern district of Makunduchi,
where it was concentrated.
The boycott's transformation from a labor action into a movement of communal
revival was completed by activists from the Shirazi Assocation (SA), The intellectuals of the SA's Zanzibar Island branch were decidedly different from the
sophisticates of the Arab Association and Mazungumzo; their president, Ameri
Tajo, was a madarasa teacher from Makunduchi who had little command of
English.'20 More to the point, they did not consider themselves members of the
Arab elite, and most of their activities, which focused on extending to indigenous
islanders the prerogatives enjoyed by Arabs, were vociferously opposed by the Arab
Association.'21 Nevertheless, much of their rhetoric was derived directly from the
Arab intelligentsia's own discourse, particularly the historical narratives of Arab
conquest. In 1944, asAl-Falaq thundered against the Hadimu clove pickers for their
laziness and disloyalty, the SA told them that the cause of their troubles was not the
labor reform per se but the entire history of Arab dispossession. They reminded
villagers of the servile origins of the ethnonym "Hadimu" and, cleverly making use
of some of the Arab Association's own propaganda, argued that the reforms were
but the latest move in the Arabs' efforts to enslave them. In that spirit, they urged
villagers to reject "Hadimu" identity and adopt instead that of "Shirazi." Their
success was remarkable. Virtually overnight, villagers throughout the region
embraced the SA's language, saying to the Arab elites, in effect: We are not slaves
or servants, not "Hadimu," but civilized people, "Shirazi," with an inheritance of
ustaarabu as deep as your own.122
The discourse of Shirazi ethnic revival, then, arose from an amalgam of sources,
'20 Lofchie, Zanzibar, 169, For Tajo's lack of English, see CO 822/1376, PRO; for the Shirazi
Association generally, AB 12/2, ZNA,
'2' This included the SA's advocacy for indigenous islanders in the ethnically structured rationing
schemes being discussed in the opening years of the war, as well as their demand that a non-Arab be
appointed mudir in the southern district of Makunduchi, See J, O'Brien, October 4, 1944, plus other
documents in AB 4/39, ZNA; R, Pakenham, Zanzibar District Monthly Report, December 1943, and
other documents in BA 30/7, ZNA; "Shirazi Association," AB 12/2, ZNA,
'22 I spell out this interpretation in a section of a forthcoming book; its sources include various
documents in AB 4/39, ZNA; District Reports in BA 30/5-8, ZNA; Timothy Welliver, "The Clove
Factor in Colonial Zanzibar" (PhD dissertation. Northwestern University, 1990), 380-84; Pakenham,
Land Tenure; Pascal Bacuez, "Une ethnographie dans son contexte: Administration coloniale et
formation identitaire," Cahiers d'etudes africaines 38, no, 149 (1998): 103-33, British officials
overestimated the SA's role in instigating the boycott; in fact, the evidence suggests that the SA largely
took advantage of a situation that had been initiated in the villages.
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some strictly local, such as the dreams of community revival, others borrowed from
the subaltern intellectuals of the SA, whose rhetoric in turn was derived from their
opponents among the intelligentsia. Yet, despite this diversity of origins, and
despite the anti-Arab resentments expressed by SA supporters in the Hadimu
fringe, Shirazi identity was founded on the same distinction between civilization and
barbarism that had been elaborated by the secular intelligentsia. And that meant
that the category most commonly excluded from the SA's vision of the nation were
not Arabs but mainlanders. This was most apparent in Pemba, the birthplace and
stronghold of the SA. Because ownership of clove estates was more evenly
distributed there than in Zanzibar Island, Pemba was not plagued by the economic
tensions that plagued the Hadimu fringe. Hence in Pemba, enmity toward Arabs
never overtook the hostility to mainlanders that had prompted creation of the
Shirazi Association in the first place. 123
By the end of the war, then, the intelligentsia had set many of the basic terms
of political discourse, including discourse used to express resentment of elite Arabs
themselves. Even the subaltern intellectuals of the African Association, who
claimed to speak for mainlanders, accepted the intelligentsia's teachings that the
nation must be built on the values of civilization and modernity, that those values
had been introduced to Africa from abroad, and that upcountry Africans had
received them late, from Europeans rather than Arabs.i^^ Historical narratives
written by African Association journalists differed from the intelligentsia's mainly
in their abolitionist perspectivetheir emphasis that the British had brought
Africans not only enlightenment but also redemption from Arab oppression. But
even this was not simply a matter of parroting British teachings. Colonial
historiography, in fact, more closely resembled the intelligentsia's whitewashing of
"Islamic slavery" and glorification of the civilizing effects of Arab rule. In contrast,
the racial nationalists of the African Association told the story of Arab rule almost
purely as one of conquest and enslavement, which tied mainlanders together in a
history of shared victimhood.i^s
African Association propagandists thus seized on elite historical narratives and
made their racial undertones explicit, complementing them with notions borrowed
in part from the rhetoric of pan-Africanism. (In a sad irony, though, instead of
following the pan-Africanists' quest for the African roots of "civilization," they
accepted a reactionary Eurocentric vision.)i26 This move enabled them to craft
'^3 My interpretation contrasts with others that read Shirazi ethnic revivalism only in terms of a
nationalist master narrative: either a divisive identity imposed by colonial rule or a unifying one crafted
to defy the British. The first of these interpretations, which accords with the official ASP view, is echoed
in Fair, Pastimes and Politics; for the second, see Sheriff and Tominaga, "The Shirazi." See Glassman,
"Sorting Out the Tribes," 404-05 n.
124 Even the fiercest anti-Arab nationalists believed, incorrectly, that Africans had never developed
their own systems of writing, and that they had always depended on Arabs and Europeans for
enlightenment and "true religion." This is apparent from a perusal of the African Association weekly
Afrika Kwetu; an explicit example is "Kale hata leo," January 13, 1955.
'^5 The discussion of African Association rhetoric in this and the next two paragraphs is based
mostly on Glassman, "Sorting Out the Tribes." For the British defense of "Islamic slavery" generally,
see Paul E. Lovejoy, Transformations in Slavery: A History of Slavery in Africa (Cambridge, 1983),
261-68; and Morton, Children of Ham; the views of several Zanzibari officials can be found in Sir
Arthur Henry Hardinge, A Diplomatist in the East (London, 1928).
'2 Jonathon Glassman, "Between Two Worlds: Diasporic Visions and Racial Politics in Colonial
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the spiral of reciprocal dehumanization that culminated in bloodshed.132 Of the two, only the subaltern intellectuals of the ASP
espoused a politics that was "racial" in the conventional sense, focusing on the
divinely ordained solidarities of common origin manifested by bodily markers; ZNP
propagandists, in contrast, remained more preoccupied with the intellectual
traditions that had shaped their youthful essays for Mazungumzo, stressing the
lessons of Islamic universalism and the distinctions between civilization and
barbarism. But in terms of their dehumanizing impact, it is difficult to discern
between these two rhetorics. And, no matter who was most to blame for the rising
intensity of racial politics, it is clear that the discourses of civilization and race
informed and fed off one another.
Tracing the precise etiology of racial thought therefore suggests the pitfalls of
posing a categorical distinction between race and other forms of ethnic thought.
Ultimately, the question is semantic: at what point do we want to use the word
"race" to describe a given current of ethnic thought? Few would object to using the
word to describe the rhetoric of the postwar African Association; such a description
might in fact be useful for historical analysis, since the association's propaganda
conveyed more straightforward messages of expulsion and extermination than were
initially apparent in the intelligentsia's ambiguous rhetoric of civilization. i33 But to
draw an absolute distinction between these two discourses would blind us to the
borrowings between them and the ways in which they grew from one another. The
subaltern ideologues operated within the same general intellectual milieu as the
intelligentsia; indeed, the intelligentsia taught them many of the fundamental
lessons of exclusionary ethnic nationalism. The debates and interconnections
between these very different groups of political thinkers were central to the
intellectual work involved in the creation of racial thought. Such work was not
THUS BOTH SIDES ENGAGED IN
'^o I spell out the history of this discourse in Chapter 6 of my forthcoming book; for a summary, see
"Gangsters, Thieves, and the Construction of Race in Colonial Zanzibar," a paper presented to the
African Studies Seminar, University of Wisconsin, Madison, April 10, 2002.
'3' Quotes from "Barua," by "Mzanzibari," Mwongozi, May 3, 1957; "Yepi Yaliyowaleta Pamoja
Wananchi na Wazalendo," Mwongozi, March 3, 1961; "Declaration from Lamu," Mwongozi, September
13, 1963. Similar rhetoric can be found in an official ZNP statement from October 1957, CO 822/1377,
PRO.
" 2 1 paraphrase Comaroff, "Of Totemism."
'^3 Glassman, "Sorting Out the Tribes."
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merely ancillary to the rise of racial identities but was constitutive of them, and to
ignore it is to accept that racial identities reflect inherent differencesit is to
accept, that is, that "racial groups" existed prior to their mobilization by ideologues,
who merely forged political allegiances from the facts of their existence.
In focusing on the elite intelligentsia who came of age between the wars, I have
told only a small part of the story, slighting the ASP demagoguery that contributed
most directly to the bloodshed of the early 1960s and omitting entirely the
processes, far from inevitable, by which racial thought was transformed into popular
conceptions capable of motivating transgressive violence.""* But because the
intelligentsia exerted such an overwhelming influence on Zanzibari political
culture, this focus is an essential starting point. It is pertinent in other ways as well.
Of all Zanzibaris, the intelligentsia experienced the most direct and sustained
influence of colonial education. Reconstructing the development of their thought
thus offers a pointed demonstration of the limits of colonial indoctrination. It also
demonstrates how even the most liberal and mainstream of nationalist rhetorics
might become racialized, not by the sinister workings of colonial mentors (throughout the postwar years, in fact, British officials strove to damp down ethnic conflicts,
not fan them), but by political actors responding to political opportunities. Neither
the convergence of African and European idioms of ranked difference nor the
interplay between them, as in the rich intellectual cross-fertilization that took place
between Teachers Training School graduates and their British mentors, is sufficient
to justify the assumption that African concepts of racial politics originated solely in
the European imagination."^
This emphasis on the limits of European indoctrination should not be taken to
imply that Zanzibar's racial clashes were manifestations of some ancient, inbred
enmity. That, in effect, is the false choice proposed in much of the instrumentalist
literature on African ethnicity: since it is plainly ahistorical to view tribalism as
primordial, one must therefore see it as a consequence of colonialism. "6 Yet, even
though the links between colonial rule and contemporary ethnic politics are
unmistakable, they alone are not sufficient for explaining the often profound
resonance of ethnic demagoguery, especially its ability to evoke ethnic violence. For
that, one needs a historical perspective that is both deeper and broader than a
simple focus on the colonial state. The racialization of Zanzibari ethnic thought was
indeed a modern process, accomplished by modern thinkers, Zanzibari as well as
British. But the modes of thought subjected to the process were neither invented
from whole cloth nor imported anew; many had been inherited from precolonial
intellectual traditions. At the same time (and contrary to primordialist assumptions), those traditions had always been given to innovation, adaptation, and
"'' The latter theme is explored in two chapters of my forthcoming book that draw on comparative
studies of contemporary ethnic violence in South Asia and Central Africa.
"5 Frank Dikotter draws similar conclusions in his critique of a different literature: "Racial
Discourse in China, Continuities and Permutations," in Dikotter, ed.. The Construction of Racial
Identities in China and Japan (London, 1997), 12-33.
'36 For a prominent example of such an argument, see Bill Berkeley, The Graves Are Not Yet Full:
Race, Tribe and Power in the Heart ofAfrica (New York, 2001). I hasten to add that, despite his emphasis
on colonialism's historical role, Berkeley refuses to absolve African politicians of responsibility for
pogroms and massacres; compare with the "academic sycophants" denounced by Lemarchand, Burundi.
And Berkeley fully recognizes the parallels between tribalism and race.
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change. So, for example, although distinctions between Shirazi and other islanders
were rooted in precolonial thought, their meanings had changed dramatically in the
nineteenth century, with the rise of the plantation sector and Omani rule, and again
in the twentieth, with the imposition of the colonial state and the rise of nationalist
politics. At the same time, memories of historical events placed limits on innovators' ability to invent new political traditions: this appears with particular clarity in
the dilemma faced by elite intellectuals who found themselves having to apologize
for "Arab slavery."
As in other parts of the colonial world, racial thought in Zanzibar was derived
from a multiplicity of sources, foreign and domestic, and the innovators who
rethought and combined them came from many walks of life. Such diversity implies
that we cannot universalize any one path toward racial thought. Yet many studies
of the non-Western world still reflect a tendency to universalize the experience of
the West, and, in particular, the United States, i^^ Hence the continued assumption
that ethnicity and race had separate origins, the latter arising from imported
European doctrines. Although it is undeniable that the divide between "race" and
"ethnicity" is fundamental to contemporary American political discourse, that
discourse is the product of a long and complex history, which we cannot assume to
have been replicated anywhere in identical terms. Abandoning such self-centered
assumptions is a necessary first step toward a precise understanding of how racial
thought developed elsewhere in the world. And that in turn may help us relinquish
the last vestiges of the racial thought in which we ourselves have been schooled: the
assumption that racial boundaries have any basis in phenomena that exist apart
from the subjective perceptions shaped by our several histories.
'3'' This tendency seems most pronounced in the sociological literature, perhaps because that
literature has been dominated by American scholars for most of the past century. Howard Winant,
"Race and Race Theory," Annual Review of Sociology, 2000.
Jonathon Glassman, ati associate professor of history at Northwestern University, studied with Steven Feierman and Jan Vansina at the University of
Wisconsin. This article is drawn from a book-length project on the racialization
of political thought in colonial Zanzibar, which will include an examination of
how racial identities were reproduced by the acts of violence that ended the
sultanate in the mid-twentieth century. In many ways, the project builds on
Glassman's first book. Feasts and Riot: Revelry, Rebellion artd Popular Consciousness on the Swahili Coast, 1856-1888, which traces how debates over the
structures of power and community in a provincial region of the Zanzibar
Sultanate yielded discourses of ethnic and racial identity in the pre-colonial
century. The book won the 1996 Herskovits Prize of the African Studies
Association, awarded annually for the best book on Africa in any discipline.
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