Sunday, September 13, 2009

Lars' Impressions #4: Race and Colonialism (edited considerably by Molly)


    I started writing this entry in my head when I was sitting in the bank at noon on September 3, watching the Branch Manager try to figure out what was happening with the account I was trying to open there. Except for me, it was an all-African scene – bank manager, tellers, customers. It was something so ordinary and it was also something that absolutely would not have been observed 40 years ago. So should the theme of this blog be how much less racialized Tanzanian society now is, or should it be how abnormal the post-colonial Africa I knew 40 years ago was, or should it be the end of Tanzanian difference?
    When I came to Tanzania in 1968, it was seven years after Independence in 1961, but the marks of colonialism were deep and were everywhere to be seen. For a naïve kid from the racially and economically homogeneous suburbs of Canada, where everyone looked (and was) much the same, it was a shock to encounter extreme racial stratification and blatant inequality – the colour-coded layers of privilege that sat on top of the shocking poverty of most people. In post-colonial Africa, whites were on the top, browns were in the middle and blacks were on the bottom. Although Independence had meant that top politicians and the heads of the major bureaucracies were African, few of the faces just below them were black.
    The reason was simple. If you want doctors, city planners, electrical engineers, school teachers, or economists or any of the other specialized occupations that make modern societies function, they have to go to school first. During the 1950s, the British built four high schools for Africans in Tanganyika, each with 2 classes of 30 students per grade. This meant that a country of  (then) 14 million graduated 240 local people from high school each year, not all of whom would go on to university – so it is easy to understand why professional and technical jobs could not be filled with Africans in the 1960s. Africanization was a priority for Tanzania, as it was for all the new governments, but it could not happen right away.
    But it was not until I moved to Tanga and started work in the sisal industry that I really discovered racism. On the sisal plantations, the managers were Europeans, the accountants and office clerks were Asians, and the field labourers were one hundred percent black African. The managers lived in palatial houses on the tops of the hills and were paid salaries measured in thousands of shillings per month (plus home leave and perks). The clerks got bungalows part way down the hill and wages which were counted in hundreds. The workers lived in rows of shacks in the valleys and were paid piece rate – they were lucky if they made eighty or ninety shillings in a month.
     The sisal estates recruited their managers from England on three year contracts. Sisal is not a crop that can be grown in the UK, so on arrival all new managers initially had to be shown (by the African lead hands who had been on the plantations for decades) what it actually was and how it was grown and processed. Many managers quickly learned to depend heavily on a few trusted older African workers for advice on virtually everything and for supervision of the estates when they weren’t there.
     With large houses, many servants and little direct supervision from Head Office, life was easy for most estate managers. Most of them probably did not start in the plantations with much more than the general level of class snobbery, casual racism and xenophobia typical of lower middle class Brits at the time – but their objective situation soon turned it to something much deeper. Racism was an easy way to explain away the recalcitrance of their workforce, to justify their own privileges and to insulate themselves psychologically from the poverty of the people that worked for them. Like anybody else, anywhere, they needed some sort of explanation to rationalize their lives. Racism was an easily available ideology, and it was pervasive – labour productivity statistics were, for example, reported in “boy days” per ton of production, despite the fact that all the workers on the estates were clearly adult men.
Although many sisal estate managers initially came thinking they would only stay for a few years, they soon realized that the luxuries and the indolence that they enjoyed on the sisal plantations would be beyond their wildest dreams back in the UK. Being white, at the right time and in the right place, had an enormous economic value. For many managers, their choice was between a cold council flat in England and a mansion with many servants in Tanganyika, between being just another insignificant face in the English crowd and being the Big Man – the  “Bwana Mkubwa” who ruled over hundreds of workers and thousands of hectares – so it’s not surprising that most stayed.
    African workers got wages that were kept artificially low by collusion among all the estates through a common hiring agency (SILABU). The estates paid their workers partly in maize (to maintain their nutrition and labour productivity, because if wages were paid entirely in cash, workers would send the money home to their families) and alternative crops were discouraged in the region, so that the estates could buy their maize rations more cheaply.  But the profits remitted to share-holders in Europe, although huge in the boom years, did not fully reflect these subsidies to the estates, because the managers sat between the workers and the owners.
     In the sisal industry in colonial days, nothing could be allowed to threaten the cash value of the racial privilege of the estate managers. Sisal had been grown for over 70 years in Tanga region by the time I arrived but no African was ever promoted to manager before nationalization. It would have been far cheaper to promote local people to Estate Manager than to import people from England who had no clue about tropical agriculture, but to do so would have been to allow Africans to demonstrate competence – and then what would happen to the jobs and the privileges of the expatriates?. Racism was the binding glue of the social cohesion of the cartel of white estate managers, and it quickly became a deep part of their self-conception and identity.
     I worked in the sisal industry after its nationalization, so I came after the most egregiously incompetent and most overtly racist managers had been fired. But some of the old managers had had to be retained, of necessity. Although they had to keep their opinions under wraps while Africans were around, their automatic assumption was that all other whites shared them. So when, for example, German investors came to visit, and the English Chief Engineer and I were detailed to show them around, as we were driven around the estates he would regale them with jokes whose inevitable punch line was some variant of “Africans as monkeys”. I always wondered if our driver understood enough English to get the drift, but his face never gave any indication.
     People who grew up in Tanzania in colonial days were inevitably marked by their experiences of being on the receiving end of a racist structure. The General Manager of the nationalized estates was a very capable guy from Moshi who had done Agricultural Economics on a scholarship in Australia.. Under his administration, many estates had African managers, and they became significantly more efficient than under their previous owners. But he told me once how as a teenager he had been called over at the railway station, told to turn around and have his back used as an impromptu human desk by some European who wanted to write somebody else a note.
     When I worked in Tanzania from 1968 to 1970, there were relatively few cars, but they were overwhelmingly driven by (or for) Europeans or Asians. Dar es Salaam today has awful traffic jams, and almost all the drivers are Africans. As in any city of 3 million, there is a white population – of diplomats, aid workers and business people – and locales which they frequent. But even at the modern supermarket complexes with the security guards at the gates of the parking lot, the vast majority of the shoppers are upper middle class Africans. In the suburb we live in, the monster homes of the new elite sit beside hovels tacked together out of scrap corrugated iron, and the air-conditioned Toyota Land Cruisers of the new upper class accelerate up the hill past sweating water carriers pushing their laden bicycles – but the inequality of Tanzania today is overwhelmingly among Africans.
     Today, walking in the Kariakoo market of Dar es Salaam, some shops deal in obscure types of bolts, some specialize  in weird types of furniture and some trade electrical goods or bales of recycled clothes – and all the faces in them are African. The all-African bank scene that prompted this reflection, fits with much else – capitalism now has an African face in Tanzania, which is a fundamental difference from 40 years ago.
    This did not, of course, just “happen”. The Asian commercial minorities were pushed out and the expatriate bureaucrats were replaced. The rhetoric, if not the reality, of the Tanzania of the 1960s was that the new post-independence society would be egalitarian – that Tanzania would build on African traditions of community and joint production and produce a new sort of society, one which avoided both the totalitarianism of Soviet Communism and the structured inequality of Western Capitalism. In those days, there was a quite conscious attempt to be different from western capitalism, there was an emphasis on building the nation in a political sense (for example, by making Swahili the national language) and there were “codes of conduct” that tried to ensure that political leaders were not simultaneously building business empires. Nobody talked about corruption – to my eye, Tanzanian corruption was not very different from that in Ontario (i.e. there was some, but it was essentially very rare).There were relatively few police in evidence, little inequality among Africans and Tanzania aspired to being a different sort of nation.
    But today, although portraits of Kikwete, the current president, on the walls of public and commercial buildings (including my bank) are always accompanied by photos of the first president (the  “father of the nation”, Julius Nyerere), there are only traces of “Mwalimu” (Teacher) Nyerere’s principles. From the new stock market to street vendors, Capitalism has come to Tanzania, police check-points dot the highways, everyone wears a shirt and tie to the office and official corruption competes with traffic jams as a subject of conversation. 
     The irony is that in the years just after Independence, Nyerere’s government had to accept the continuation of a racial hierarchy of inequalty – even while trying to build something new – because there simply were not enough educated African Tanzanians to staff the positions of the newly independent nation. Today that is no longer true. There is a cosmopolitan, educated elite and in 2006-07, there were 75,346 Tanzanians enrolled in tertiary education – still too few for a country of (now) nearly 40 million, but light years different from the 1950s. However,  while growth in GDP has been strong in recent years (about 7% per year) little or none of it has filtered down to the bottom (about 40% of children under five are stunted, an indicator of chronic malnutrition) and the aspiration to building something different seems to be gone.
     So if Tanzania was then a racial hierarchy of post-colonial privilege, whose political leaders aspired nonetheless to build a new sort of non-exploitive society, and if it is now a largely ‘normal’ capitalist hierarchy of African wealth and power, whose main aspiration is economic growth, which part of this story matters more? 

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