Introduction
‘Freedom is like a chameleon. It changes meaning according to the background. This is the reason it is so difficult to find.’ With these words, Rado,Footnote 1 a Malagasy former political activist who participated in the popular demonstrations of 1972 that ended the Tsiranana regime (Randriamaro Reference Randriamaro and Rakoto1997; Reference Randriamaro, Nativel and Rajaonah2009; Gardini Reference Gardini2015; Reference Gardini2021), resumed a very long conversation we had on the (unfulfilled) aspirations of young people of slave origin in Antananarivo, the capital of Madagascar, and the political role they played in those years. Like many others among my Malagasy interlocutors,Footnote 2 he found it easier to talk about the many forms of bondage, constraints and restrictions characterizing the life of those who were at the bottom of local social and economic hierarchies than about ‘freedom’ – something that he considered alternately as a relatively abstract concept, a rhetorical device, or a promise that could never be fulfilled entirely.
Indeed, Madagascar, like many other African contexts, has often been considered a place more suited to the study of slavery and personal dependence than the analysis of freedom, and probably for good reasons. Before colonial abolitions – and in many cases also after them – slavery had been a widespread institution that for centuries shaped the economies and the political and social structures of the many African societies that were connected to different degrees with the Atlantic, trans-Saharan and Indian Ocean slave trades (see, for instance, Lovejoy Reference Lovejoy2012; Medard et al. Reference Medard, Derat, Vernet and Ballarin2013). In many of these contexts, the honourable status of the ‘free’ was often defined in opposition to the conditions and dishonouring status of the enslaved and changed accordingly. Indeed, since slaves experienced very different social and economic conditions and slavery was a plural and changing institution that could involve different social relations between masters and slaves and different degrees of social inclusion, the contours and features of a ‘free status’ varied greatly. In general terms, however, and in contrast to concepts of freedom developed in the classical liberal tradition, a ‘free status’ was not framed in terms of a supposed autonomy of the individual rooted in some kind of ‘natural rights’ or ‘divine will’; rather, it was based on the nexus of specific and unequal rights that individuals – in different power positions on the axes of gender, age, religion, class and status – could enjoy as full members of given lineage groups. Scholars have shown how slavery in Africa (and elsewhere) was conceived as the antithesis of kinship (Meillassoux Reference Meillassoux1986; Miers and Kopytoff Reference Miers and Kopytoff1977), since slaves were stripped of their own ancestry, their kin networks and the possibility of being recognized as legal parents of their children. Consequently, a ‘free status’ (however defined or translated) emerged from the multiplicity of social and political relations, ideological frameworks and kin networks that protected individuals from enslavement and that people could activate to defend or increase their status and their economic and political circumstances and to be recognized as full members of their kin group (Viti Reference Viti2007; Nyamnjoh Reference Nyamnjoh and Werbner2002). While in some African contexts enslaved individuals – despite their differentiated conditions – were included in a legally defined and rigid category that separated them clearly from the ‘free’ part of the population, in others the ‘slave’ and the ‘free’ represented two ends of a spectrum of different but partially overlapping statuses that problematized a rigid dichotomy between freedom and slavery (Campbell Reference Campbell2003; xxx).Footnote 3
The study of slavery and its legacies provided a fertile ground for the analysis of its conceptual opposite(s), in ways that allowed an exploration of how notions of freedom, in all their plural historical and geographical variations, could not be considered only as a Western monopoly (cf. Patterson Reference Patterson1991) nor as a liberal ‘Robinsonade’ detaching individual freedom from the wider social and cultural landscapes that define its contents, meanings and values. Building on the pioneering works of Paul Riesman (Reference Riesman1977) and the wide literature on slavery, post-slavery and forms of personal dependence in Africa (see, for instance, Cooper Reference Cooper1980; Rossi Reference Rossi2009; Pelckmans Reference Pelckmans2011; Gaibazzi Reference Gaibazzi2012; Bellagamba et al. Reference Bellagamba, Greene and Klein2013; Hahonou and Lecocq Reference Hahonou and Lecocq2015; Rodet Reference Rodet2015), a growing number of scholars have tried to grasp what freedom meant practically and how it was conceived in different African historical and social contexts (Young Reference Young and Taylor2002; McDougall 2005; Hobson Reference Hobson2008; Rossi Reference Rossi2016; Reference Rossi2017; Bellagamba Reference Bellagamba2017). These efforts involved both an historical and an anthropological analysis of the vernacular terms used to define a ‘free’ condition in given historical contexts, as well as of the practices that unfree subjects activate in order to improve their status (Bidney Reference Bidney1963; Humphrey Reference Humphrey2007). As Benedetta Rossi has pointed out:
The unfree subjects … are undeniably trying to improve their circumstances, but they are often concerned more with safety from violence and economic stability than with ‘freedom’. It may be possible to argue that achieving safety or wealth corresponds to being or becoming free. But this conclusion begs the question of what ‘becoming free’ means in particular linguistic, cultural, and socio-economic contexts. (Rossi Reference Rossi2017: 186)
The abolition of slavery was a long, contested and ambiguous process, achieved under the political domination of European colonial powers that used the abolitionist rhetoric to justify their rights to rule, while, at the same time, enforcing forced labour and political subordination to better control and exploit their colonial subjects. Independence was achieved in a global political context marked by the Cold War, which fuelled dictatorships and civil wars that limited political and social rights and individual freedoms in many parts of the continent. Structural adjustments, the opening of African economies to neoliberal markets and greater competition over resources have increased the number of people who find themselves exposed to harsh forms of labour exploitation and violence on the continent (often labelled with the contested notion of ‘new forms of slavery’ used by neo-abolitionist movements and many international organizations).Footnote 4 What is certain is that, against a background of historically changing forms of unfreedom, meanings of freedom changed accordingly. In this trajectory, notions of freedom acquired new and wider meanings that pushed freedom to mean something more than the simple opposite of ‘slavery’ (Bellagamba Reference Bellagamba2017). And yet – as many scholars (Klein Reference Klein2005; Iliffe Reference Iliffe2004) have pointed out – it is also possible to find important continuities: as long as slavery was considered a dishonouring status and was built on systematic social exclusion, and since its legacies survived formal abolition, in many cases the quest for freedom has continued to assume the contours of a struggle for social inclusion, respectability and honour. I argue that this dynamic is also evident in the Highlands of Madagascar, where slave descendants often define freedom in very different terms compared with people of noble origin, and where class and gender play an important role in shaping the terms and conditions of this struggle.
By taking inspiration from the growing literature on slavery, post-slavery and labour exploitation in Africa and from Caroline Humphrey’s suggestions to explore ‘alternative freedoms’ (Humphrey Reference Humphrey2007), in this article I address the vernacular meanings of freedom (fahafahana) in the Highlands of Madagascar, a context where the legacies of past forms of slavery have left deep marks both in local memories and in the social and economic hierarchies that structure local political arenas. Rather than providing a universal or ‘culturally neutral’ definition of ‘freedom’ that could apply anywhere and at any time – but also avoiding a culturalist perspective that reifies differences and ultimately assigns a monopoly on the notion of freedom to the liberal West – I explore the vernacular genealogy of fahafahana as it unfolded at the intersection between specific historical trajectories and more globalized dynamics, and I stress how people have reshaped and renegotiated this notion according to their power position and political agenda. In particular, I focus on three main points. The first addresses how Malagasy notions of freedom have been elaborated against the background of the local history of slavery and emancipation. This allows for a better understanding of what freedom meant before and after the colonial abolition of slavery for people belonging to different status groups, and how the honourability of a ‘clean genealogy’ was crucial in vernacular definitions of freedom. The second point explores more deeply the concept of fahafahana: a word that is now considered the Malagasy translation of ‘freedom’ or ‘liberté’ and that is broad enough to include conceptually both negative freedoms (‘freedom from something’) and positive freedoms (‘freedom to do something’) (Berlin Reference Berlin2002). By considering the history and the limits of this translation, I show how this concept has been charged with different meanings in different periods of Malagasy history and how it became an arena for the elaboration of different political agendas. Then, in the third part of this article, I stress how people of different status, class, gender and age reframe the concept of fahafahana in their everyday life. In particular, I compare the points of view and stories of three people: a retired teacher of noble (andriana) origin living in the prestigious hauts quartiers of Antananarivo, a young woman of rural background who moved to Antananarivo to work as a domestic for a middle-class family, and a young man living in a historically marginalized area who, for a short period of his life, joined a group of cattle raiders.
If Patterson (Reference Patterson1991) is right and notions of freedom developed in the context of and in opposition to the institution of slavery, it could also be argued that, after the abolition of a legal slave status, vernacular concepts of freedom have acquired a certain degree of ‘independence’ and have been charged with new and plural meanings, to the point that concepts of ‘slavery’ that are now used in the public debate (in Madagascar as elsewhere) are elaborated in opposition to established ideas of (neoliberal) freedom, and not vice versa. In other terms, with the abolition of a clearly defined legal ‘slave status’, slavery tends to be used as a metaphor to address any kind of social or political constraint. And yet, the cases discussed in this article show that past meanings of slavery could resurface in often unexpected ways, linking local notions of freedom to issues related to purity, honour and past status distinctions. By considering ‘from below’ (Bellagamba Reference Bellagamba2017) the multiple meanings that people attach to the concept of fahafahana, I show how notions of freedom become part of the local political commentaries through which power positions are reframed, accepted or contested, and how they are interlaced with the legacies and memories of past forms of enslavement.
‘Freed’ does not mean free: slavery and its abolition in the Highlands of Madagascar
In the current official language of Madagascar, which is based on the Merina dialect, ‘freedom’ is generally translated with the word fahafahana. This term originates from the word afaka, whose primary meaning is ‘detached from’, but it can also be used to refer more broadly to ‘being able to do something’ (as in afaka mihira isika, we can sing/we are free to sing) or to something that is ‘freed’ from something else. In this latter sense, it was one of the words used before the colonial abolition of slavery of 1896 to denote the slave who was manumitted by his master (olona afaka), but not the ‘free man’ per se. Between the ‘freed’ and the ‘free’ there was a hiatus that could not be bridged easily, since the dishonoured and impure status of enslaved individuals could not be removed simply, and, when it was removed through specific rituals, it continued to resurface in social memories (Evers Reference Evers2002; Graeber Reference Graeber2007; Freeman Reference Freeman2013; Regnier and Somda Reference Regnier, Falola, Parrott and Porter Sanchez2019; Regnier Reference Regnier2020).
At the same time, the contents, meanings and contours of ‘freedom’ were socially and legally articulated in quite different terms from those that developed in the European liberal tradition. During the nineteenth century, in the Malagasy regions under the control of the Merina rule, people who were not enslaved were nevertheless exposed to the arbitrary power and will of the sovereign (Raison-Jourde Reference Raison-Jourde and Rakoto1997), who obliged the so-called free part of the population to perform forced labour (fanompoana) for the crown (Campbell Reference Campbell1988). Fanompoana included both compulsory military conscription and agricultural or administrative tasks and was the main royal instrument to capture labour during the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. In Imerina, individuals who were not enslaved belonged to three, generally endogamous, categories: the andriana (‘nobles’, i.e. people belonging to families with kinship ties with current or past sovereigns), the hova (the commoners), and the mainty (literally ‘black people’, who were ‘servants’ of the king and often enjoyed important political and economic positions). All these categories were equally exposed to fanompoana due to the sovereign, albeit often with different tasks according to their status. Slaves (andevo) belonged to a fourth statutory group that was excluded from fanompoana; they were legally considered to be the exclusive property of their masters, they were not recognized as legal parents of their children, and they were socially perceived as impure and dirty (maloto) and systematically infantilized (Bloch Reference Bloch and Watson1979; Rakoto Reference Rakoto1997; Larson Reference Larson2000). Ankizy (children) or zazahova (children of the hova) were terms often used to address them. They were ‘lost people’ (Graeber Reference Graeber2007) or ‘people without history’ (since their links to their ancestors were cut by enslavement) who – unlike other statutory groups – had no right to build family tombs for themselves or be buried in the family tombs of their masters. Mainly for this reason, in the Highlands of Madagascar, family tombs became a symbol of ‘free status’, testifying to the link between ‘free’ people and their ancestry and enshrining their rights over the land of their ancestors (Larson Reference Larson2001). People could be enslaved for crimes and debts, but the main sources of slave labour were raids against neighbouring political entities and the commercial networks that connected Madagascar with the East African coast, from where a large number of African slaves had been imported at least since the sixteenth century (Armstrong Reference Armstrong1984).
These four categories (andriana, hova, mainty and andevo) did not overlap perfectly with class distinctions, political power, economic conditions or the relative ‘freedom’ of individuals (Bloch Reference Bloch1977): rich families of hova and mainty origin could hold more important political positions and enjoy more power than rural families of andriana origin.Footnote 5 Certain slaves, such as those who were permitted to work autonomously as porters by their masters in exchange for part of their annual earnings, could enjoy better economic conditions and comparatively more ‘freedom’ than hova farmers with little land.Footnote 6 Slaves were concentrated in the hands of the Merina economic elite, and few families of rural origin held more than two slaves, even when the number of slaves was at its peak during the nineteenth century. Thanks to the agreements to abolish the external slave trade signed by the British and the Merina king Radama I in 1817–20, and to the conquest of two-thirds of Madagascar by the Merina rulers in the following years, the enslaved part of the population increased considerably in the Highlands of Madagascar, the heart of the Merina kingdom, during the nineteenth century, reaching between two-fifths and one-third of the total population in rural regions and half of the population in the capital, Antananarivo.
As well as olona afaka, freed slaves were known as hovavao (new hova), signalling that manumission was often not enough to reinsert people fully into the ‘free’ part of the population. This also held true for the slaves of African origin who were freed in 1877 by Queen Ranavalona II (Domenichini and Ramiaramanana Reference Domenichini, Ramiaramanana and Rakoto1997) in yet another attempt to discourage the slave trade in Madagascar, which had continued despite the 1817–20 Merina–British agreements (Campbell Reference Campbell1981). These freed slaves were named with terms such as makoa or mazombika that distinguished them from the rest of the ‘free’ population (Brown Reference Brown2004; Razafiarivony Reference Razafiarivony2005).
The French abolished slavery in 1896, a few months after the conquest of Antananarivo, but colonial policies did not create real paths of emancipation for former slaves: laws against vagrancy undermined the opportunity of former slaves to migrate in search of new job opportunities, colonial investments in cash crops benefited those who could claim ownership of land, thus excluding many former slaves, who were also more exposed to colonial forced labour, and – last but not least – colonial authorities ignored the many forms of labour exploitation that continued to link masters with their former slaves. And yet, former slaves tried their best to emancipate themselves from their subordinate positions. Some left their former masters, found new and unoccupied land to claim as their own, or settled on the main transport routes to work as porters (Rantoandro Reference Rantoandro and Rakoto1997). Others remained with their former masters and were able to renegotiate their position as sharecropper labourers. In some cases, masters gave them parcels of land for their own needs, in exchange for part of the crops or for days of work in their fields (Bloch Reference Bloch and Watson1979). Still others moved into urban contexts in search of new job opportunities. In Antananarivo, they became part of the growing lumpenproletariat living in the poor neighbourhoods called bas quartiers, unless they were recruited into the colonial army, the police, the lowest ranks of the administration or commercial companies (Gardini Reference Gardini2021). In all cases, they started to build their own family tombs in the hope of making people forget their slave origins, reinforcing their newly acquired land rights, and finally acquiring the social markers of honourability.
However, despite their best efforts, the stigma of slavery was not forgotten (Evers Reference Evers2002; Regnier and Somda Reference Regnier, Falola, Parrott and Porter Sanchez2019). By abolishing past processes and rituals of manumission together with slavery, colonial powers froze statutory distinctions and the descendants of former slaves continued to be called andevo by hova and andriana descendants who considered them impure, dirty and inferior.Footnote 7 Marriage between ‘free’ and slave descendants continued to be socially forbidden and slave descendants understood quickly that their ‘liberation’ by the colonial power was not considered legitimate by a significant part of the Merina elite. They might have achieved formal emancipation, but what mattered most was their inability to provide ‘clean’ genealogies and family histories (Razafindralambo Reference Razafindralambo2005; Reference Razafindralambo, Rakoto and Urfer2014; Graeber Reference Graeber2007; Regnier Reference Regnier2015; Reference Regnier2020; Regnier and Somda Reference Regnier, Falola, Parrott and Porter Sanchez2019; Gardini Reference Gardini2015; Reference Gardini2020; Reference Gardini2021).
Gerald’sFootnote 8 family history is a good example of the reproduction of the stigma attached to slave ancestry. Unlike people of ‘free’ or noble origin living in the hauts quartiers of Antananarivo, Gerald, a man in his sixties living in the bas quartiers, was unable to provide ‘a long genealogy’. He grew up with his mother and his sisters in the house of his maternal grandparents, not knowing who his father was or where he came from. During the colonial period, his maternal grandmother worked as a housemaid for a French family, while his maternal grandfather came from an unspecified village on the route to Ambatolampy, where his family worked as sharecroppers and where he never returned because ‘people there were bad against him and his family’. Due to his job as a bricklayer, and with the help of his wife, Gerald’s grandfather bought a small house in the bas quartiers and a small piece of land on the outskirts of Antananarivo where he built a family tomb where he and his offspring could later be buried. Gerald has spent much of his life trying to expand and renew both of them, these two little buildings being the material symbols of the ‘honour’ of his family. And yet, Gerald’s family history exposed them to still being considered as andevo, and Gerald could not marry the girl of hova origin he loved in his youth as her family strongly opposed the marriage. He later met and married a woman who shared with him a supposed slave origin and who lived in the same neighbourhood.
As in other post-slavery contexts (McDougall 2005; Pelckmans Reference Pelckmans2011; Gaibazzi Reference Gaibazzi2012; Rodet Reference Rodet2015; Becker Reference Becker2021), in the Highlands of Madagascar a lack of ‘genealogical freedom’ (Riesman Reference Riesman1977) can significantly affect individual trajectories of social and economic emancipation. This became particularly evident in the urban context of Antananarivo, where slave descendants have historically constituted the poorest part of the city (Fournet-Guérin Reference Fournet-Guérin, Sechet, Garat and Zeneide2008). This economic marginalization combined in Antananarivo with a progressive racialization of past status distinctions. The most commonly used dichotomy in the city today is between fotsy (‘white people’, i.e. people of hova and andriana origin who claim a Southeast Asian origin) and mainty (‘black people’, a category that – from being a privileged one in the past – slowly became a synonym of andevo and African origin).Footnote 9 A darker skin and frizzy hair are often considered proof of slave ancestry, despite the fact that most enslaved individuals were not of African origin and despite the fact that African slaves were freed twenty years before the andevo. But many of these processes are not known – or are systematically forgotten – by part of the fotsy population. As a fotsy public servant of hova originFootnote 10 told me:
The mainty will never be really free: their ancestors were our slaves; they came from Africa and therefore they are not pure Malagasy. They are traitors who sold themselves to the French instead of serving us. The French could have freed them, but you cannot be freed [afaka] by your history.
As Paul Ottino (Reference Ottino1998) and Sandra Evers (Reference Evers2002) have pointed out, in many rural Malagasy contexts the lack of a ‘clean’ ancestry exposes people to stigma and subordination, as it often translates to limited and more precarious land rights and, therefore, a reduced amount of the economic autonomy that characterizes the members of ‘free’ kin groups. Even where slave and free descendants enjoy similar rights to land ownership, the stigma attached to slave ancestry is enough to make marriages between the two groups very difficult (Graeber Reference Graeber2007; Regnier Reference Regnier2020). To quote a Malagasy proverb, the stigma attached to slave ancestry is even worse than ‘the plumage that the hen can get rid of only after her death’ (lamban’akohoka faty no isarahana, i.e. a feature that characterizes your very essence), since it is transferred to the following generations in a seemingly endless cycle.
Fahafahana … and its malcontents
Charles RavoajanaharyFootnote 11 is one of the few Malagasy intellectuals to have tried to reconstruct the genealogies of Malagasy notions of freedom (fahafahana). As he pointed out (Ravoajanahary Reference Ravoajanahary1968), the history of the term fahafahana is far from being simple or linear, and the process through which it became a direct translation of the Western notion of ‘freedom’ has been long and contested. According to him, fahafahana was a neologism first introduced by Christian missionaries in the nineteenth century in their translation of the Bible into Malagasy, a long and complex task that involved many discussions and the creative redefinition of local terms that could convey the appropriate meanings (cf. Meyer Reference Meyer1999). Ravoajanahary stressed that fahafahana was originally used to translate the Christian idea that faith would free Christians from following the imperfect laws of mankind, but also that it was not the only word used to translate ‘freedom’ and it was far from being uncontested. In the Malagasy translation of the Bible from the 1830s, for instance, the term hamotsotra also appeared to denote the act of freeing someone from slavery, and at the end of the nineteenth century and the beginning of the twentieth century many Christian intellectuals still preferred to use the English words ‘freedom’ or ‘liberty’ or the French word ‘liberté’, feeling that there was no Malagasy term able to overlap perfectly with the Western concept of freedom. A malagasization of the English term ‘liberty’ gave birth to the word miliba, meaning ‘acting following your desires’. Despite these multiple translations, however, the word fahafahana progressively replaced all the others in later editions of the Bible, and its meaning came to cover not only slave manumission but also the liberation of people or the absence of obstacles of any kind (Ravoajanahary Reference Ravoajanahary1968).
The use of fahafahana as a direct translation of ‘freedom’ became popular in the first decades of the twentieth century, as long as it overstepped the boundaries of Christian debates and assumed different meanings in the local political arena. On the one hand, it was used during the beginning of French colonial rule by liberal Malagasy intellectuals, known as libres penseurs, in their campaigns against religious obscurantism and in their explicit support of French colonization. On the other hand, since the 1920s, but increasingly after the 1930s, the word became synonymous with independence (fahaleovantena) and was the central notion around which several anti-colonial movements and intellectuals organized their political activities. Today, together with Tanindrazana (‘Ancestors’ Land’) and Fandrosoana (Progress), it is part of the Malagasy national motto (Tanindrazana, Fahafahana, Fandrosoana).
According to Ravoajanahary (Reference Ravoajanahary1968), the notion of fahafahana was rather obscure and abstract, a term that fell short of capturing Malagasy meanings of freedom and missed many of their historical and cultural nuances. He proposed instead a different – and almost forgotten today – Malagasy expression that, according to him, could have conveyed better what freedom meant practically in the rural contexts of the Merina Highlands: mahatsangy no ary. This formula was composed of tsangy (shelled rice) and ary (a lot) and was used during marriages to address the young couple as people who had become able to provide economically for themselves and to create a new domestic group. In a wider sense, the expression was used to indicate ‘those who are able to perpetuate the honour of the family’ or ‘those who can replace their father with dignity and enlarge the wealth of the family’. This concept had at least a couple of advantages: first, it was rooted in the Malagasy rural world and was not a neologism from abroad (or from above); and second, it pointed to a more ‘positive’ concept of freedom – not ‘freedom from’ but ‘freedom of’. It recognized the process of social promotion and progressive economic independence of young people vis-à-vis their respective families, without denying the network of social relations and belonging that was necessary to create this sort of emancipation. The difference between the slave and the free lay precisely here. Enslaved people could never achieve the status, rights and relative independence of a fully grown adult. They were condemned to be socially and economically considered as children (ankizy) forever, as they lacked control of the means of production as well as the material and symbolic resources that were necessary to build mahatsangy no ary.
It should be said, however, that, despite Ravoajanahary’s attempt to find a Malagasy translation of ‘freedom’ better related to Malagasy rural experiences, the expression mahatsangy no ary did not gain currency as a popular alternative to fahafahana. None of my Malagasy interlocutors in Ambositra or Antanananarivo knew this expression or related it to the concept of freedom. Despite – or probably because of – its abstract nature, the word fahafahana has somehow encompassed all the conceptual space and meanings of ‘freedom’ and, in many cases, it is framed as a desirable condition to achieve. Indeed, while in the years between World War Two and 1960 fahafahana was often a synonym of independence (fahaleovantena) from colonial power, after independence it became clear that these two notions could not be conflated. The First Republic (1960–72), led by Philibert Tsiranana, saw the consistent presence and insertion of the French in Malagasy affairs and policies, making it clear that formal independence did not mean complete freedom from former colonial powers.
Despite the popular protests that in 1972 brought to an end the Tsiranana regime (Althabe Reference Althabe1980; Randriamaro Reference Randriamaro and Rakoto1997; Reference Randriamaro, Nativel and Rajaonah2009; Gardini Reference Gardini2015) and the subsequent rise of the socialist government led by Ratsiraka (Gow Reference Gow1997; Randrianja Reference Randrianja2003), many of my interlocutors believed that ‘real freedom’ was something that needed more than formal declarations in order to be achieved. This point, for instance, was the central topic of a song that all my interlocutors knew by heart, written by the group Mahaleo in 1982 and titled ‘Rafahafahana’. In the song, freedom is depicted as someone who refuses the friendship of the poorest and as a racist who prefers to enter the houses of rich, white-skinned people rather than dwelling among the poor:
How I wish, how I wish … My dearest wish is that you be my friend
And that you take my hands
Alas! Alas! I’m asking for the sky.
Because you, Freedom, you always pass me by!
Here I am, so sad and lost, I’ll never have what I long for most
And yet my love will never run dry
It’s stubborn and wild, for no one but you
Sometimes, sometimes, words escape me
You flirt with those who couldn’t care
But turn your back on all our prayers
Why, oh why, do you put me down?
How do you choose your destination?
D’you prefer the skin of certain nations?Footnote 12
As the Mahaleo song notes, in its practical use fahafahana – as mahatsangy no ary – is often conceptualized by making reference to status and class. Only those who can prove a ‘clean, fotsy’ genealogy and can provide economically for themselves are considered – and consider themselves – ‘really free’. Freedom has much to do with how local hierarchies are constructed and imagined in a nexus of unequal power relations. For instance, many of the domestic workers I met in Antananarivo and Ambositra (Gardini Reference Gardini2019; Reference Gardini2020) stated that freedom depends ultimately on the number of dependants you have, since only by ‘pushing some other down’ is it possible to have free time, enjoy a good economic position, and build a privileged and superior status. Their points of view problematized the depoliticizing framework on which abstract notions of freedom rested and stressed how freedom is closely linked to power relations. Beside the issues of translation that were at the core of Ravoajanahary’s analysis, it is therefore crucial to understand how the practical meanings of fahafahana change according to individual positions along the axis of status, class, gender, age and political agendas. In other words, the meaning of freedom is always relational and closely linked to local values, social position and political aspirations.
Freedom, in practice
When I met him in 2018, Olivier was a retired man in his late sixties, living in the hauts quartiers of Antananarivo, the neighbourhoods at the top of the central hills that form the capital’s centre and that are generally inhabited by the descendants of the Merina elite of the past. Olivier was proud of his origins and never missed an opportunity to emphasize the importance of his family history. He belonged to a family of ancient andriana origin, whose genealogy he was able to trace back to King Ralambo (sixteenth century). His nineteenth-century ancestors were all important functionaries or generals of the Merina kingdoms, many of whom had early access to Protestant missionary schools as part of their fanompoana and who sent their own children to school. Thanks to their literacy, their descendants enjoyed important public or economic positions during the colonial period. Olivier’s father also spent some time in France as a student, and, after World War Two, he became a keen activist in anti-colonial movements. First, he served in the MDRM (Mouvement Démocratique de la Rénovation Malgache or Democratic Movement of Malagasy Renovation), an anti-colonial party that was banned by the colonial authorities in 1947; then he joined AFKM (Antoko’ny Kongresi’ny Fahaleovantenan’i Madagasikara or Party of the Independence Congress of Madagascar), which was the MDRM’s successor politically. Both parties were the expression of a Merina educated elite flirting with Marxism, and both were considered with hostility both by the French colonial power, which supported parties that could guarantee a less radical transition, and by slave descendants and people from other regions of Madagascar (often known by the slightly derogatory colonial term côtiers), who feared that obtaining independence under the banner of the former Merina elite would mean a return of the Merina kingdom.
The political alliance between mainty and côtiers constituted the main foundation of the political parties that came to rule the country after independence, during both the First Republic (1960–72) and the Ratsiraka regime. Being nine years old in 1960, Olivier grew up in a political context in which the role of the Merina nobility was constantly under threat from new and emerging administrative and political elites. Of course, as Didier Galibert (Reference Galibert2011) has pointed out, a process of mutual assimilation among the elites took place and members of the Merina elite continued to play important political and administrative roles. However, the spectre of a return of the Merina hegemony was often raised to gain the support of the non-Merina majority on the island (Cole Reference Cole2006). Olivier had to wait until 2002 to finally see a fotsy Merina becoming president of Madagascar, and yet he believed that the only way to make Madagascar a country free (afaka) from external influences and to solve its many economic and social problems was for royalty to return. Olivier cultivated a nostalgic view of the Merina kingdom and believed that ‘freedom’ had been definitively lost with colonial conquest, independence being just smoke and mirrors:
We [the andriana] have to take back the dignity we lost after the French colonization. The Kingdom of Madagascar was a free and strong country before that, then we left strangers to take control. But the Malagasy people are to blame. The côtiers and the andevo preferred to serve the French than to stay with us, and the French gave them power over us. Look what they have done to this country. We are among the poorest countries of the world. That happened because they were not entitled to rule. They have no autonomy, since they have no hasina. They are always the slaves of someone else.
By using the notion of hasina, Olivier was referring to a central concept of the Malagasy theory of power and was connecting it to a particular notion of freedom. Before colonial conquest, hasina was the name given to the silver pieces given as tribute to the sovereign, and also to the sacred power that flowed from the realm of the ancestors to the living, and from the top of the social hierarchy towards the bottom (Raison Reference Raison, Guillaud, Seysset and Walte1998). The Merina sovereign was conceived as the person with the greatest concentration of hasina, the andriana as having more hasina than the hova, and the slaves as having less hasina than anyone else. Hasina was connected to notions of purity and honour, to fertility and the ability to create wealth, and to the supernatural forces that gave power to particular individuals. From Olivier’s point of view, only those who possess hasina thanks to their genealogy are entitled to rule, since they are the only ones who can create prosperity and have enough power to be ‘really’ free from external influences. In his ideas of freedom converged notions of genealogical purity, the rhetoric of anti-colonial struggle, the stigmatization of slave origin, and the political agenda of a Merina nobility that has seen the slow decline of its former political influence.
Unlike hova or andriana families, slave descendants are often unable to provide lengthy genealogies and even their most ancient family tombs were built only after colonial abolition. Genealogical purity is rarely included in the meanings they attach to fahafahana. Malala, for example, was a nineteen-year-old woman, born in a rural area forty kilometres east of Antananarivo, who moved into the capital when she was twelve to work as a domestic for a relatively rich family of hova origin. As she told me, her grandparents were sharecroppers who, fifty years before, had been obliged to move to a new village – the one where she was born – because their previous landowners accused them of stealing part of the crop. In the new village, they found work again as sharecroppers, and in due time they bought a small parcel of land to build their own family tomb. Malala did not know where her great-grandparents were buried, nor if there was a tomb predating the one her grandparents built. Since she knew the implications of that in terms of status distinctions, she was ashamed to go further into the topic during our conversations and preferred to focus on the forms of exploitation she experienced as a domestic worker. After the death of her grandparents, Malala’s father and uncle took their place as sharecroppers. Malala was sent by her parents to work in Antananarivo after the end of primary school, since they needed money to send her younger brothers to school. Like many other young domestic workers I met (Gardini Reference Gardini2019; Reference Gardini2020), she never received her salary (it was sent directly to her family), she was often the object of insults and physical violence, and her employers denied her any free time with the excuse that they were responsible for her and wanted to avoid her getting pregnant. These points recurred in her definition of ‘freedom’:
For me, freedom [fahafahana] is to have control of my own salary and have the power to negotiate it, to live in my own house and have a family and children, to work for myself. My masters treat me as their own slave. They insult me, they beat me, they make me work all day long without rest, but if I don’t find a better job, I’m stuck here, because my parents need my money to send my younger brothers to school. If I protest, my masters say that they can find someone else easily.
According to Hannah Arendt (Reference Arendt1961), freedom is deeply rooted in action, and particularly in that kind of (political) action that is able to start something new and do the unexpected. For Malala, freedom was strongly related to economic independence and working conditions that could protect her from the dishonouring status of ‘being the servant of someone else’: a difficult goal to achieve for someone, like her, who was trapped within the intersectionality of different forms of subordination. As she remarked:
In Madagascar, if you are a young woman, poor, without land and coming from the countryside, your only possibility to be free [afaka] is to marry someone with a better economic condition and have an independent job. If you are trapped in the house of your employer, it is difficult to find a good husband, and often men consider you as trash if you are a domestic worker. They think you are a slave.
Beyond class and status, Malala stressed the gendered dimension of freedom, a dimension whose importance emerges clearly if we compare her case with the life trajectory of Njaro, a twenty-two-year-old man I met in a mountain village fifty kilometres east of Ambositra who had spent three years with a group of cattle-raiding ‘bandits’ (dahalo). Because of its very difficult access, the valley where he was born had been a place of refuge for runaway slaves and people escaping the control, first, of the Merina kingdom and, later, of colonial power. During the colonial period, former slaves found new land to cultivate there and a place where they could hide their origins. Among them were Njaro’s great-grandparents. Like many other young boys living in rural regions, Njaro spent his childhood as a cattle guardian, working for a richer family from Ambositra who had moved to the valley in the 1990s. Like Malala, the small amount of money he earned was given directly to his parents. Tired of this situation, however, at the age of sixteen he helped a group of young men to steal his employers’ cattle. A few months later, he joined them, spending the next three years raiding cattle within a radius of fifty kilometres. Cattle raiding has a long history in Madagascar and, for poor young men of rural origin, it has represented a way not only to accumulate wealth but also to construct their own masculinity (see, for instance, Rasamoelina Reference Rasamoelina2007). The group comprised about fifteen young men, approximately between sixteen and twenty-five years old, from different parts of the Highlands. After their raids, they sold the cattle to intermediaries who took the animals to urban slaughterhouses or, occasionally, sold them to international buyers. As Njaro remembered: ‘These were the more adventurous years of my life. We were really free [afaka]. We shared the loot equally, and no one could tell us what to do. We never killed anyone. We simply stole the cattle to sell them. I have never been so free in my life. It was fun.’ Njaro left the group when one of the leaders proposed buying weapons and starting to attack private houses and taxi brousse (‘bush taxi’): ‘You know, that was something else … I disagreed. It was dangerous. You cannot be free if you are dead or your hands are stained with blood.’ Thus, Njaro returned to the valley and started to work as a middleman and porter in the illegal trade of rum that connects the valley with neighbouring regions. When I met him, he had collected enough money to marry and to start to enlarge his parents’ house. Meanwhile, his former bandit group dismantled, with some members joining a more structured group that works in the illegal smuggling of rosewood for international traders. ‘They are not free any more,’ commented Njaro, ‘just exploited by some Chinese trader who leaves them the leftovers.’
While, for Olivier (an old man of noble origin), a talk about ‘freedom’ became an opportunity to discuss issues related to genealogical purity and to the political trajectory of the country, for two young people of slave origin, such as Malala and Njaro, talking about ‘freedom’ was a way to stress the importance of creating a space of autonomy from parental obligations and labour exploitation – a space that could help them achieve the social markers of adulthood and find the economic means to build their own families. Of course, the gendered dimension of these aspirations mattered. While Malala saw in a ‘good marriage’ her only way of emancipation and was scared that the stigma attached to domestic work could jeopardize her chances, Njaro could profit from job opportunities – albeit illegal – from which Malagasy women were generally excluded and saw his past cattle-raiding activities as a useful step in becoming an ‘adult and independent’ man. And yet, despite their different social positions, life trajectories and ideas, Olivier, Malala and Njaro did not frame their concepts of freedom in abstract terms but used them to criticize the practical and social circumstances that limited their chances of achieving honourability, as socially and culturally defined in the Highlands of Madagascar. It could be argued that, with the abolition of a clearly defined and legally sanctioned ‘slave status’, the concept of freedom has been detached in some ways by its conceptual opposite. However, even if the institution of slavery has disappeared, the quest for freedom continues to be related to social inclusion and the everyday efforts to be recognized as people who can ‘replace their father with dignity and enlarge the wealth of the family’, as the notion of mahatsangy no ary proposed by Ravoajanahary implied.
Conclusions
Whether forms of personal dependence in Africa fostered individual ‘freedoms’ or rather reproduced ‘unfreedoms’ is part of a growing debate. James Ferguson (Reference Ferguson2013), for instance, has argued that his South African interlocutors preferred the social security guaranteed by forms of personal dependence to the risks and precarity connected to the neoliberal restructuring of local economies, and that notions of autonomy and ‘independence’ are not values per se, as liberal ideologies tend to assume. Others, in contrast, have stressed the profound ambiguities of personal dependence in other African contexts and the ways in which individuals have tried to overcome the power structures associated with it (Diggins Reference Diggins2015; Rossi Reference Rossi2016; Gardini Reference Gardini2020). As John Christman (Reference Christman2017: 164) has pointed out: ‘Standard notions of freedom in the liberal democratic tradition have been defined to describe the condition of those who enjoy it, and have not paid sufficient attention to the aspirations of those to whom it is denied.’ An approach ‘from below’, as proposed by post-slavery scholars working in Africa (Bellagamba Reference Bellagamba2017), opens up the opportunity to explore alternative meanings of freedom as they are used by people in their ordinary lives, based on their different positions along the axes of social differentiation. This approach allows us to avoid both the universalizing assumptions that liberal notions of freedom often imply and the risk of considering the notion of freedom simply as a Western monopoly.
After the abolition of slavery, Malagasy concepts of freedom acquired new meanings that reflected the economic, cultural and political changes affecting the colonial and postcolonial trajectory of the country. Confronted with new forms of unfreedom and inequalities, people developed new ideas of what freedom could practically mean, in a process that saw vernacular concepts being reshaped in order to adapt to – and more deeply affect – changing political scenarios. The notion of fahafahana emerged as abstract enough not only to translate Western ideas of freedom, but also to coalesce different aspirations and different trajectories of social and economic emancipation. At the same time, however, the idea that freedom was somehow related to issues of genealogical purity and honour and to the ability to maintain and improve the wealth and dignity of the family continued to shape local understandings and representations of this concept, signalling that the legacies of what it meant to be ‘free’ when slavery was still a legal institution have continued to inform and shape current power structures and local social commentaries.
Local meanings and practices of freedom should be understood within this ambivalent tension between deep social continuities and strong political discontinuities, between notions that circulate on a global scale and the constant efforts of people to translate them locally, between the structural forces that strengthen inequalities and individual aspirations for a possible social change (cf. Arendt Reference Arendt1961). Rather than being an insurmountable relativistic conundrum, the fact that local notions or practices of ‘freedom’ are not easily translatable from one context to another and the plurality of different meanings attached to them by people in different power positions (not only in Madagascar) offer an opportunity to better understand what is politically at stake in specific historical and social contexts. The chameleonic nature of freedom and its dialectic relations with past forms of slavery and their legacies make this concept a political catalyst and an arena of power negotiations, which is something that my Malagasy interlocutors – despite their different social positions – always emphasized.
Acknowledgements
Fieldwork was conducted thanks to the project SWAB (‘Shadows of Slavery in West Africa and Beyond’ – European Research Council under the EU’s Seventh Framework Programme (FP7/2007–13)/ERC grant agreement 313737). The writing of this article was realized under the framework of the Research Project of National Interest (PRIN 2017) ‘Genealogies of African Freedom’ (code KFW5RJ–004), at the Research Unit of the University of Pavia. Besides my Malagasy interlocutors and friends, I thank Pierluigi Valsecchi, Alice Bellagamba, Bruno Riccio, Francesca Declich, Massimo Zaccaria, Valentina Fusari, Ettore Morelli, Anna Ferrando and the anonymous reviewers for their useful comments and suggestions.
Competing interests
The author declares none.
Marco Gardini is Assistant Professor in Social and Cultural Anthropology at the University of Pavia. He has conducted research in Togo, where he worked on land conflicts and witchcraft accusations, and in Madagascar, where he explored issues related to the legacies of slavery, current forms of exploitation of domestic workers and banditry.