Published online by Cambridge University Press: 22 January 2009
This article explores the imaginative meanings of Mau Mau which white and black protagonists invented out of their fearful ambitions for the future of Kenya. Within the general assumptions of white superiority and the need to destroy Mau Mau savagery, four mutually incompatible European myths can be picked out. Conservatives argued that Mau Mau revealed the latent terror-laden primitivism in all Africans, the Kikuyu especially. This reversion had been stimulated by the dangerous freedoms offered by too liberal a colonialism in the post-war world. The answer must be an unapologetic reimposition of white power. Liberals blamed Mau Mau on the bewildering psychological effects of rapid social change and the collapse of orderly tribal values. Africans must be brought more decisively through the period of transition from tribal conformity to competitive society, to play a full part in a multi-racial future dominated by western culture; this would entail radical economic reforms. Christian fundamentalists saw Mau Mau as collective sin, to be overcome by individual confession and conversion. More has been read into their rehabilitating mission in the detention camps than is warranted, since they had no theology of power. The whites with decisive power were the British military. They saw the emergency as a political war which needed political solutions, for which repression, social improvement and spiritual revival were no substitute. They, and the ‘hard-core’ Mau Mau detainees at Hola camp who thought like them, cleared the way for the peace. This was won not by any of the white constructions of the rising but by Kenyatta's Kikuyu political thought, which inspired yet criminalised Mau Mau.
2 I was unable to give a satisfactory answer when John Dunn put this question at a Cambridge University African Studies Centre seminar; this essay is a second attempt. But I end with the same question, put to me in 1988 by Justus Ndung'u Thiong'o. Much of the impact of ‘Mau Mau’ on the mind lay in its name; many different origins have been proposed for it. The most plausible comes from Thomas Colchester, lately of the Kenya administration: in Swahili ka is a diminutive prefix, ma an amplifying one, enhanced by repetition. Mau would thus connote something larger than Kau (the colloquial form of the Kenya African Union). The beauty of this explanation is that it needs no originator, merely a common play on words.
3 Kanogo, , Squatters, 129–37Google Scholar; Furedi, Frank, The Mau Mau War in Perspective (London, 1989), chapters 3 and 4.Google Scholar
4 Willoughby (‘Tommy’) Thompson, Kandara division (Fort Hall) handing over report, 1 March 1955: Rhodes House, Oxford, [RH] Mss. Afr. s. 839 (1); Kenyatta, Jomo, Facing Mount Kenya (London, 1938), 304.Google Scholar
5 For a brief outline of the war, see Clayton, Anthony, Counter-insurgency in Kenya 1952–60 (Nairobi, 1976).Google Scholar My research student Mr Randall W. Heather, whose Ph.D. thesis on the intelligence war is nearing completion, has been generous with material and ideas.
6 Bennett, George and Rosberg, Carl, The Kenyatta Election: Kenya 1960–1961 (London, 1961), 22.Google Scholar
7 SirBlundell, Michael, So Rough a Wind (London, 1964), 283Google Scholar; similar symbolism was used by white demonstrators in Pretoria on 10 February 1990, the day before the release of Nelson Mandela.
8 W. S., and Routledge, K., With a Prehistoric People (London, 1910), 195.Google Scholar
9 From his upcountry retirement, former governor Mitchell warned settlers that ‘loyalists’ would expect fundamental change after the war: SirMitchell, Philip, African Afterthoughts (London, 1954), 268.Google Scholar
10 ‘Report on the sociological causes underlying Mau Mau with some proposals on the means of ending it’ (mimeograph, 21 April 1954, seen by courtesy of Greet Kershaw), paras. 2 and 34.
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13 Figures seen by courtesy of Greet Kershaw; full discussion must await her own publication, but some of her evidence suggests that many joined Mau Mau during Kenyatta's trial in late 1952 and early 1953. They both wished to support Kenyatta and were reassured that Mau Mau could not have been as dreadful as they imagined if he had, after all, been in charge of it.
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19 This point is briefly developed at the end of the essay, with reference to the komerera.
20 To use the language of Beecher, Bishop L. J., ‘Christian counter-revolution to Mau Mau’, in Joelson, F. S. (ed.), Rhodesia and East Africa (London, 1958), 82.Google Scholar
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28 All this is to be found not only in white narratives and Mau Mau memoirs but also in a scholarly Kikuyu account: Githige, R. M., ‘The religious factor in Mau Mau with particular reference to Mau Mau oaths’ (M.A. thesis, University of Nairobi, 1978).Google Scholar The attitude of most Europeans to the oaths can conveniently be found in Corfield report, 163–70.
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34 KNA, Rift Valley Province annual report (1953), 2, 16, reporting the systematic screening of the remaining Kikuyu farmworkers after large-scale repatriation to the reserve in early 1953: while 95 per cent were shown to have been oathed, no less than 80 per cent were allowed to remain at work. Much evidence could be cited which casts doubt on the factual details of the ‘advanced’ oaths other than in the minds of some interrogators. But there is no reason to doubt the public masturbation (mentioned also by Frank Kitson, below). See, Leakey, L. S. B., The Southern Kikuyu before 1903 (London, 1977). vol. 1, 24Google Scholar; vol. 2. 691–2; and Lambert, H. E., Kikuyu Social and Political Institutions (London, 1956), 53–4Google Scholar, for the ceremonial group rape-cum-masturbation performed by circumcision initiates in the past, to symbolise the ending of adolescent restrictions. Leakey's material was collected in 1937, Lambert's in the 1930s and '40s.
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50 Kikuyu politicians must have distrusted Kenyatta as much as whites; before his departure for England they had sworn him against going with white women. Conversely, it seems that Kenyatta was more terrified by Moscow than inspired; see, Cohen, Robin, editor's ‘Introduction’ to Nzula, A. T. et al. , Forced Labour in Colonial Africa ([Moscow 1933] London, 1979), 15.Google Scholar I owe this reference to David Throup.
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52 Murray-Brown, Jeremy, Kenyatta (London, 1972), 45Google Scholar, reports how the young Kenyatta was nursed through phthisis by Scots missionaries in 1910; by 1951 phthisis had become ‘some spine disease’, an operation for which saved his life: see W. O. Tait, memorandum, May 1951, in press cutting file on Kenyatta with The Standard, Nairobi.
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56 Carothers, Psychology, 16, is cautious on this point; Beecher ‘Christian counter-revolution’, 82, much less so, comparing him with Marx and Engels in the British Museum. This accusation lingered long after it was understood that there was nothing exotic about the oaths, which merely reworked Kikuyu symbols of dangerous power: the strongest white attack on Kenyatta on this point was also the last; see, Corfield report, 169–70.
57 Baring, top secret telegram to Lyttelton, 10 Oct. 1952: PRO, CO 822/443, and reproduced in Douglas-Home, Charles, Evelyn Baring, the Last Proconsul (London, 1978), 227–8.Google Scholar That a beer boycott and Mau Mau should be thought to be of equal existential weight is an extraordinary indication of the assumption of African malleability. See also, Kingsley Martin's reports in New Statesman, 22 November 1952, ‘The case against Jomo Kenyatta’; and 6 December 1952, ‘The African point of view’.
58 I am grateful to Malcolm Ruel for urging me to clarify my thoughts at this juncture.
59 (James) Ngugi (wa Thiong'o), London, 1965.
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68 Pictured on the blood-red dustcover of Wilson, Kenya's Warning.
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79 Lyttelton, radio broadcast from Nairobi, 4 November 1952 (transcript in KNA, CD. 5/73); and repeated in his statement to parliament: House of Commons Debates, 5th series, vol. 507 (7 November 1952), col. 459.
80 W. Gorell Barnes to Baring, 10 September 1952; note of a meeting with Baring, 23 September 1952: PRO, CO 822/544. The KAU was already split; official belief in its unity, in thrall to Mau Mau, caused it to be banned early in 1953.
81 I have adopted Kingsley Martin's reading of the situation: New Statesman, 8 November 1952.
82 For instance, official press handout no. 70 of 19 April 1953, purporting to show a Mau Mau central committee circular, omitted all its reference to ‘peace’ and ‘freedom’; Baring to Lyttelton, 19 April 1953: PRO, CO 822/440. Wilson, Kenya's Warning, 63, made much play with what was made public, including threats to drink the blood of enemies and to castrate and decapitate anybody who helped the government.
83 Rogers, minute to Gorell Barnes, 24 October 1952; Rogers, minute to Sir Charles Jeffries, 16 February 1953; Lyttelton to Baring, 5 March 1953: PRO, CO.822/440.
84 Jeffries, minute to Lloyd, 17 February 1953 (original emphasis): CO.822/440.
85 T. G. Askwith, typescript memoirs, chapter on ‘Mau Mau’ p. 8, seen by courtesy of the author.
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91 Carothers, Psychology, 22–4; a message to which I have been alerted by the work of Luise White.
92 The best summary statement of the district commissioner's view is in Perham, Margery, ‘Struggle against Mau Mau II: seeking the causes and the remedies’, The Times (London), 23 April 1953Google Scholar; while reprinted in her Colonial Sequence 1949 to 1969 (London, 1970), 112–15Google Scholar, it has been given the disastrously wrong date of 1955.
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100 Which may not be sufficiently clear from the brief treatment in Rosberg and Nottingham, Myth, 340.
101 CPK, Annual Report of the Department of Community Development 1954, 26.
102 The one notable exception to Christian pacifism was shown by the independent Africa Christian Church in Murang'a, whose headquarters at Kinyona was so bellicose that Mau Mau fighters christened it ‘Berlin’: ‘A book of forest history’ recovered by Willougby Thompson in December 1953: RH.Mss.Afr.s.1534. See also, Sandgren, David P., Christianity and the Kikuyu: Religious Divisions and Social Conflict (New York, 1989), 158.Google Scholar
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115 Erskine's despatch, 2 May 1955, paras. 15, 17, 40, 74.
116 For settler outrage see, Blundell, Wind, 189–92, but discussion of the surrender offers must await Mr Heather's findings.
117 ‘Interrogation of “General China”’, para. 14.
118 ‘Flash Report No. 1—Interrogation of Kaleba’, Special Branch headquarters, 28 Oct. 1954, para. 37: KNA, DC/NYK.3/12/24 (by courtesy of Mr Heather). This statement accurately summarises two themes of guerrilla doctrine. They called their movement ‘ithaka na wiathi’, which is better rendered as ‘land and moral responsibility’ or ‘freedom through land’, the highest civic virtue of Kikuyu elderhood, rather than the more common ‘land and freedom’ which invites the retrospective connotation of ‘land and national independence’. The ‘power of self-determination’ by which wiathi is rather well translated in this police report was essentially moral and individual. Secondly they called themselves itungati, a reserve of seasoned warriors who neither commanded nor attacked on raids but acted as bodyguard to the leaders and then beat off counter-attacks as a successful raiding party withdrew. For these former military tactics see, Kenyatta, Jomo, Facing Mount Kenya (London, 1938), 206Google Scholar; Lambert, , Kikuyu Institutions, 70f.Google Scholar; Leakey, , Southern Kikuyu, vol. 3, 1051–3.Google Scholar
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121 As argued by Darwin, John, Britain and Decolonisation: the Retreat from Empire in the Post-war World (London, 1988), 244–69.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
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123 As Governor Mitchell almost said in retirement: Afterthoughts, 268.
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127 Kingsley Martin studied extracts of the vernacular press and found there only liberal nationalism, not Marxism: ‘Kenya report’, New Statesman, 15 November 1952. The most likely source for any Mau Mau class ideology would be Kaggia, Roots of Freedom 1921–63 (Nairobi, 1975)Google Scholar, but the nearest he comes to that is syndicalism; no memoir of Mau Mau initiation suggests that the political education given to recruits referred to class struggle; conversely, a ‘typical notice’ of a Mau Mau initiation contained, as its sole programmatic statement, a threat to ‘all those who try to stop us selling our goods where and when we want’: Corfield report, 164. Kinyatti, Maina wa (ed.), Thunder from the Mountains, Mau Mau Patriotic Songs (London, 1980)Google Scholar, gives a retrospective, socialist, twist to insurgent thought.
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131 KNA: Edward Windley, Central Province annual report (1952). This was certainly true of at least one future forest leader: see, Barnett, and Njama, , Mau Mau from Within, 73–80.Google Scholar
132 Corfield report, 305.
133 I assume that Kenyatta spoke Kikuyu at this point, as remembered by Henderson a few months later at his trial (Slater, Trial, 93), and as recalled for me by one who was there as a schoolboy, Professor Godfrey Muriuki (in a letter of 7 February 1990); elsewhere, Kenyatta's Swahili was translated into Kikuyu by the KCA leader Jesse Kariuki.
134 For these and other translations I depend on Benson, T. G. (ed.), Kikuyu-English Dictionary (Oxford, 1964)Google Scholar, and on help from friends, especially John Karanja, Tabitha Kanogo, Mungai Mbayah, Henry Muoria Mwaniki, Godfrey Muriuki (both of whom advised Benson), and George K. Waruhiu. Both ngero and umaramari have Maasai forms, on which Richard Waller has advised.
135 Wamweya, Joram, Freedom Fighter (Nairobi, 1971), 52.Google Scholar
136 Mutonyi, Eliud, ‘Mau Mau chairman’, undated typescript, copy in author's possession.Google Scholar
137 This Kikuyu political logic is strong ground for thinking that Kenyatta was sincere in his denunciations of Mau Mau; if he did equivocate, he had good reason to do so in the threats made on his life by the Nairobi militants: evidence of Fred Kubai for Granada Television's ‘End of Empire’, screened 1 July 1985. While Wilson (Kenya's Warning, 54) made much of the mass Nyeri meeting of 26 July 1952, quoting long extracts from the East African Standard's record of the other speakers, he passed over Kenyatta in half a sentence, as if his pieties were indeed difficult to square with his demonic reputation.
138 Barnett, and Njama, , Mau Mau from Within, 180.Google Scholar
139 Ibid. 213, 221, 293–5, 376, 390, 397, 479, 498; Waruhiu Itote (General China), Mau Mau General (Nairobi, 1967), 139–41.Google Scholar
140 Barnett, and Njama, , Mau Mau from Within, 471–8Google Scholar; Itote, , Mau Mau General, 78, 127–38.Google Scholar White, ‘Separating the men from the boys’, has much more on all this.
141 The full title of Gakaara wa Wanjau's 1952 pamphlet was ‘The spirit of manhood and perseverance for Africans’, as translated in an appendix in Mau Mau Author, 227–43.
142 Kenyatta, Jomo, Suffering without Bitterness (Nairobi, 1968), 124, 146, 147, 154, 159, 161, 163–8, 183, 189, 204.Google Scholar My view of Kenyatta's attitude to Mau Mau at this time is thus entirely different to that proposed by Buijtenhuijs, Mau Mau Twenty Years After, 49–61, and is supported by the picture facing page 57 in this book, showing ex-Mau Mau in 1971 with the slogan ‘Mau Mau is still alive: we don't want revolution in Kenya’.