Transcript feb_26

WWII and Post-War Struggles
“… Nationalism was a way to become less
poor, to send their children to school, benefit
from better roads, prices, public services. They
[the majority of the people] looked to
nationalism for social gains, while the
educated few mostly had their eyes on
political gains.”
[From B. Davidson, Modern Africa, p.130]
“Voices of discontent”
 Eve of WWII:
- ‘voices of discontent’ multiplying, more
radical in tone:
“Voices of discontent”
Enlist today!
Your country needs you!
Not for learning how to shoot the big howitzers
Or how to rat tat tat the machine guns
Or how to fly o'er peaceful countries
Dropping bombs on harmless people
Or how to fix a bayonet and charge at
The harmless workers of another clime .
Your country needs you!
For the rebuilding of your shattered homeland Your homeland ruined by exploitation
By the tyrants of foreign nations
Who would use you as their catspaw
While they starved you to subjection .
[African Standard, 28 July 1939
http://www.bbc.co.uk/worldservice/specials/1624_story_of_africa/page20.shtml]
“Voices of discontent”
- 1930s political parties less accommodating
- urbanization: new class of workers
- Great Depression: lower prices for
agricultural produce, higher prices for
imported goods -- disaster
- long-term cash cropping impacting
environment, food-supplies
-long-term labour migration undermining
sustainability rural areas
- urban areas in crisis
“Life in the Towns”
[British Commission report, 1953. Reference is
Nairobi but it described the crises arising in most
African cities:]
“The wages of the majority of African workers
are too low to enable them to obtain
accommodation which is adequate to any
standard. The high cost of housing relative to
wages is, in itself a cause of overcrowding,
because housing is shared to lighten the cost.
This, with the high cost of food in towns, makes
family life impossible for the majority.”
[from B Davidson, Modern Africa, p.89]
World War II and Africa
 General discontent worsened with impact
WWII:
-forced labour
-lack of imported goods,
-‘war effort priorities’ exacerbated problems
- Audio: (from BBC Story of Africa):
Pathe news report of African troops in action
World War II and Africa
- Atlantic Charter 1941: inflated expectations
- new generation servicemen returned home to
promises, expectations of changed life
- major colonial powers weakened both
economically and politically by costs of war:
affected attitudes towards colonies
View from the War
[1945, Nigerian serviceman writing to Nigerian
Nationalist leader Herbert Macaulay:]
“We all overseas soldiers are coming back
home with new ideas. We have been told what
we fought for. That is ‘freedom’.
We want freedom. Nothing but freedom”
[B Davidson, Modern Africa, p.66]
View from the War (cont.)
“The European merchant is my shepherd,
And I am in want;
He maketh me to lie down in cocoa farms,
He leadeth me beside the waters of great need;
The general managers & profiteers frighten me.
Thou preparedst a reduction in my salary
In the presence of my creditors.
Thou anointest my income with taxes;
My expense runs over my income
And I will dwell in a rented house forever!”
[ ‘African Morning Post’ Accra, as submitted by Gold Coast serviceman, c.1944 B.
Davidson, Modern Africa, p.66]
WWII and the French
 French Colonies in unique situation:
-France (and Belgium) fell to Axis powers in
1940
- France in hands of German puppet regime
based in Vichy
- France’s colonies (like Belgian Congo)
virtually without ‘colonial master’
WWII and the French
-‘government in exile’ established under
WWII war hero, General de Gaulle
- known as the ‘Free French’
- French West Africa remained part of
collaborative Vichy regime until 1942
- then joined “Free French”
- French Equatorial Africa supported
‘government in exile’ from outset.
WWII and the French (cont.)
 Importance of FEA:
-Felix Eboue (Chad) helped prevent
establishment of Axis base in Africa
- FEA became base for ‘Free French’
- important in generating Brazzaville
Conference, 1944
WWII and the French (cont.)
 Brazzaville:
-promised several ‘improvements’ to situation
- but key passage read:
-“the colonizing work of France makes it
impossible to accept any idea of autonomy for
the colonies, or any possibility of
development outside of the French empire.
Even at a distant date, there will be no selfgovernment in the colonies.”
WWII and the French (cont.)
Video Excerpt:
“The Rise of Nationalism”
[from Basil Davidson’s Africa]