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It’s Time To Tell The Truth About Colonialism In Africa: Many historical narratives surrounding Africa are motivated by politics, not facts.
The Federalist ^ | 12/23/2022 | Casey Chalk

Posted on 12/23/2022 7:14:59 AM PST by SeekAndFind

America is inundated with narratives about the nobility of pre-colonial Africa. Hollywood’s “The Woman Queen,” is about an all-female warrior unit that protected the West African kingdom of Dahomey, has elicited lavish praise from corporate media this past summer. High school curricula such as that peddled by the 1619 Project or the Southern Poverty Law Center’s “Teaching Hard History” excoriate the West for disrupting (and terrorizing) supposedly peaceful traditionalist African societies. And thousands of African American U.S. citizens have abandoned the nation of their birth by moving to countries such as Ghana in search of a better life — and a connection to their own ancestry.

These trends are perhaps unsurprising given what most Americans for generations have been learning about European colonialism. When I taught high-school history about 15 years ago, the Virginia public school curriculum portrayed European colonialism in Africa as nothing but exploitative and capricious brutality. In college, one of my history courses offered Joseph Conrad’s “Heart of Darkness” as an exemplar of the dystopian terror of the colonial experience. My own public high-school English and history courses more than 20 years ago taught much the same. Yet is that actually true? And what effect, if any, do these narratives have not only on the American understanding of the West’s relationship with Africa, but our own self-understanding as a nation?

Portland State University professor of political science Bruce Gilley has invested quite a bit of energy in trying to answer such questions. He has argued, quite controversially, that European colonialism was objectively beneficial and subjectively legitimate. Publisher Rowman & Littlefield withdrew his book “The Last Imperialist: Sir Alan Burns’s Epic Defense of the British Empire,” after a petition of more than 1,000 signatories accused Gilley of promoting “pro-colonial” and “white nationalist” views (it was later published by Regnery). His latest book, provocatively titled “In Defense of German Colonialism: And How Its Critics Empowered Nazis, Communists, and the Enemies of the West,” pushes the envelope still further.

An Unexpected History

I confess I was quite skeptical about Gilley’s book, given the needlessly incendiary title. Defending German colonialism, given that any story of late 19th and early-20th century German history will inevitably be wrapped up in that country’s condemnable behavior in two world wars, seems a curious intellectual enterprise for a professional academic (and for readers with more liberal sensitivities, it’s likely to be downright offensive). Not only that, but in a time when America’s post-Cold War foreign policy has been defined by constant overreach that has exacerbated various crises (e.g. regional political instability, anti-American Islamic extremism, migration), it seems a bit tone-deaf to be arguing that Western intervention around the world — especially when the West’s power is diminishing — is something to be encouraged.

Nevertheless, regardless of the strength of Gilley’s defense of German colonialism, the story he tells, substantiated by extensive historical documentation, does quite a bit to undermine popular narratives in America about pre-colonial Africa and the African colonial experience. For starters, the peoples inhabiting what would become Germany’s African colonies were far from innocent peoples living in harmony with each other and nature. Human sacrifice was common among at least one of the tribes of Cameroon. Slavery was common across both Namibia (southwest Africa) and what would become the colony of German East Africa (present-day Tanzania, Rwanda, Burundi, and part of Mozambique).

The Nama and Herero peoples, both of whom had migrated to Namibia only a generation before the Germans (and displaced other indigenous African tribes such as the Damara people in the process), were engaged in bloody, genocidal warfare. In 1850, the Nama massacred a fifth of the Herero population in a single day. The Herero raided native Damara and Saan villages, killing all but the young and strong, whom they exploited as slaves. Many escaped to the Germans. Writes Gilley: “Even if left to their own devices, the Herero and Nama would not have lived in idyllic bliss tending healthy herds of cattle and hosting multiethnic community barbecues.”

German Colonialism Brought Benefits

Our anti-Western conceptions of colonial Africa are equally misinformed. In 1904, a policy in German East Africa decreed that all children born to slaves beginning in 1906 were free. Moreover, between 1891 and 1912, more than 50,000 slaves in the colony were freed by legal, social, and financial means. By 1920, slavery had virtually been eradicated from the region.

German East Africa was also environmentally conscious, codifying laws prohibiting unlicensed elephant hunting and creating the first game reserves. It promoted education by natives: By 1910, there were more than 4,000 students in state schools. “The Germans have accomplished marvels,” noted a 1924 British report on local education initiatives. The education system in German colonies provided instruction in local histories, cultures, and geographies, as well as technical subjects common in German curricula. Because of this, local language media prospered. “German transformed Swahili from a coastal language of Muslim elites to the lingua franca for the future country of Tanzania,” writes Gilley.

The Germans provided free and accessible medical care for many Africans. They engaged in extensive agricultural and infrastructure projects in Namibia, including roads, railways, water holes, and port facilities. A German scientist developed a vaccine that saved native cattle from a catastrophic illness. The Germans built a 1,250-kilometer railway linking Lake Tanganyika to Dar es Salaam, which to this day “remains the lifeblood of Tanzania’s economy and of Zambia’s trans-shipment traffic.” Economies previously based on slavery transitioned to coffee.

Repudiating Common Narratives

“A final quirk of German colonialism was that it did not have much support at home,” writes Gilley. Bismarck had little interest in colonial enterprises, and German officials and capitalists viewed colonial acquisitions as a waste of time. It was not a centralized strategic plan but happenstance that led to Germany’s first colony: A failed tobacco merchant from Bremen set up the German flag on a thin strip of land on the coast of southwestern Africa in the early 1880s, and the German government offered the small colony its official protection. Even Hitler, who came to power after Germany had lost all of its colonies during World War I, had no real interest in the colonies. So much for “white supremacy” explaining the origins of German colonialism.

Even the damnable German actions against the Herero uprising were triggered by the Herero killing 120 German settlers. Indeed, the Herero battle cry was “Kill all Germans!” Although anti-colonial academics accuse the Germans of genocide, both the Herero and the tribes allied with the Germans suffered population loss during that period, due to migration away from conflict zones, falls in female fertility, epidemics, and reduced food supply. In other words, the population losses suffered by the Herero have less to do with German atrocities than other factors having to do with political and economic instability.

What Does This Have to Do with America?

Of course, German colonialism, which ended more than a century ago, may seem pretty far removed from the debates and issues of 21st-century America. Yet as our public school curricula, Hollywood stories, and media narratives prove, how we understand the West’s interaction with the wider world — including the brief German colonial experience (totaling only 30 years) — is directly related to how we view ourselves and our own history. We are a civilization increasingly antagonistic toward our forefathers and how they interacted with indigenous peoples, whether in Africa or the Americas.

Nevertheless, narratives that seek to portray indigenous populations as innocent — or “enlightened” in comparison to villainous Western settlers — have little basis in history. As Gilley’s book demonstrates, native peoples were capable of great cruelties toward each other, and European intervention often curbed such evils as human sacrifice, misogyny, and slavery.

That doesn’t necessarily mean colonialism was an ideal political and economic venture or that Western patronage of the developing world should be reinvigorated (I have deep doubts about that). But it does mean we should be suspicious of simplistic, Manichean narratives that present the West as evil and exploitative, and indigenous populations as noble and innocent. Africa is not, and was never, a utopia. Indeed, as Americans now jettisoning their wonderful intellectual, spiritual, cultural, and economic inheritance will learn, historical narratives motivated by contemporary politics often prove illusory.


Casey Chalk is a senior contributor at The Federalist and an editor and columnist at The New Oxford Review. He has a bachelor’s in history and master’s in teaching from the University of Virginia and a master’s in theology from Christendom College. He is the author of The Persecuted: True Stories of Courageous Christians Living Their Faith in Muslim Lands.


TOPICS: Education; History; Society
KEYWORDS: africa; colonialism
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1 posted on 12/23/2022 7:14:59 AM PST by SeekAndFind
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To: SeekAndFind
The Germans provided free and accessible medical care for many Africans. They engaged in extensive agricultural and infrastructure projects in Namibia, including roads, railways, water holes, and port facilities. A German scientist developed a vaccine that saved native cattle from a catastrophic illness. The Germans built a 1,250-kilometer railway linking Lake Tanganyika to Dar es Salaam, which to this day “remains the lifeblood of Tanzania’s economy and of Zambia’s trans-shipment traffic.” Economies previously based on slavery transitioned to coffee.

Ok, but apart from the medical care, agricultural, roads, railways, water holes, and port facilities, what have the Germans ever done for us?

2 posted on 12/23/2022 7:16:58 AM PST by dfwgator (Endut! Hoch Hech!)
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To: SeekAndFind

How many Oscars will this movie get ?


3 posted on 12/23/2022 7:17:30 AM PST by butlerweave
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To: butlerweave

Oh I’m sure it’ll do well despite probably having a net negative at the box office


4 posted on 12/23/2022 7:19:40 AM PST by V_TWIN (America...so great even the people that hate it refuse to leave!)
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To: dfwgator

you left off ending slavery and stopping genocides


5 posted on 12/23/2022 7:25:17 AM PST by TexasFreeper2009
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To: SeekAndFind
About that new film...from Larry Elder:

Take the 2022 movie “The Woman King,” starring Viola Davis, about African female warriors. It portrays white slavers as villains and the female warriors as antislavery avengers, and the film claims it is “Inspired by true events.”

The movie has been set-up as a having a historical basis, telling the story of the real-life Kingdom of Dahomey in the 18th and 19th centuries.… In reality, Dahomey was a notorious slave kingdom, and not the Pan-African freedom fighters as the movie presents them. They enslaved and murdered hundreds of thousands from other tribes and sold them into the slave trade.

Dahomey was renowned as the “Black Sparta,” and was a fiercely militaristic society bent on domination and conquest. Their soldiers struck fear into other tribes all along what is still known as the Slave Coast, as they captured tribespeople from enemy tribes and sold them as slaves.

https://thenewamerican.com/reparations-blackwashing-slavery/

6 posted on 12/23/2022 7:26:14 AM PST by Bon of Babble (Rigged Elections have Consequences)
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To: SeekAndFind

bump


7 posted on 12/23/2022 7:26:52 AM PST by Bratch
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To: TexasFreeper2009

“Oh, Peace.....SHUT UP!”


8 posted on 12/23/2022 7:27:41 AM PST by dfwgator (Endut! Hoch Hech!)
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To: SeekAndFind
And thousands of African American U.S. citizens have abandoned the nation of their birth by moving to countries such as Ghana in search of a better life — and a connection to their own ancestry.

I support this sort of thing. America is a horrible, racist place that is built on the oppression of Persons of Color. They absolutely SHOULD leave ...

9 posted on 12/23/2022 7:28:14 AM PST by NorthMountain (... the right of the peopIe to keep and bear arms shall not be infringed)
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To: SeekAndFind

The population of Africa grew exponentially once Western agricultural and medicine especially vaccinations were introduced.


10 posted on 12/23/2022 7:29:54 AM PST by allendale
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To: SeekAndFind

bmp


11 posted on 12/23/2022 7:31:47 AM PST by gattaca (Either you will control your government, or government will control you. Ronald Reagan)
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To: dfwgator

< golf clap>

Well played!


12 posted on 12/23/2022 7:32:42 AM PST by FreedomPoster (Islam delenda est)
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To: SeekAndFind

Three Questions

1: Name one successful Sub-Saharan nation
2: Name one pre-colonial invention from Sub-Saharan
Africa.
3: Name one pre-colonial philosopher from Sub-Saharan Africa.


13 posted on 12/23/2022 7:42:06 AM PST by Tupelo (A House Divided Against Itself Cannot Stand)
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To: allendale

The same occurred in Asia, and in both cases (though more so in Africa) independence meant now the indigenous leaders had to provide for their populations. Most former colonies in Africa are devolving back to what they were 10,000 years ago.


14 posted on 12/23/2022 7:43:57 AM PST by kearnyirish2 (Affirmative action is economic warfare against white males (and therefore white families).)
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To: dfwgator

“Ok, but apart from the medical care, agricultural, roads, railways, water holes, and port facilities, what have the Germans ever done for us?”

Nothing!
~Monty Python and The Holy Grail~


15 posted on 12/23/2022 7:45:05 AM PST by Four of Six
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To: SeekAndFind

“Thank God my granddaddy got on that boat.” ~Mohammed Ali.


16 posted on 12/23/2022 7:45:05 AM PST by Redcitizen
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To: Tupelo

Wakanda?


17 posted on 12/23/2022 7:45:58 AM PST by dfwgator (Endut! Hoch Hech!)
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To: SeekAndFind
For anyone interested...

Black Rednecks and White Liberals, by Thomas Sowell

See the essay “The Real History of Slavery”.

18 posted on 12/23/2022 7:49:18 AM PST by mewzilla (We will never restore the republic if we don't first secure the ballot box.)
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To: SeekAndFind

Colonialism in Africa was conducted by the European powers, not the USA.


19 posted on 12/23/2022 7:51:36 AM PST by DownInFlames (P)
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To: dfwgator

“Wakanda?”

In the anointed’s fevered dreams


20 posted on 12/23/2022 7:53:58 AM PST by Tupelo (A House Divided Against Itself Cannot Stand)
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