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This article is getting rather unwieldy. To help sort this out can I suggest that a dependent article on the Detention Camps is created, as per the guidelines Wikipedia:Summary style, and the article reverts to the one someone has recommended below - http://en.wikipedia.org/?title=Mau_Mau_Uprising&oldid=106465905 which, like most Wikipedia articles, could be improved. For those interested in the Mau Mau Uprisings the anthropologist Louis Leakey (LSB Leakey) is a primary source. He wrote two books on the Mau Mau: Mau Mau and the Kikuyu, (Methuen, 1952) and Defeating Mau Mau (Methuen, 1954). Leakey was a native Kikuyu speaker, a member of the Mukanda Kikuyu age group and an intitiated first-grade elder (Muthuri wa mburi imwe). ixo ( talk) 11:40, 18 August 2011 (UTC)
I am working on a major revamp of this article to bring it up to Wikipedia standards. If you can help please feel free to do so. Thanks! ScottPAnderson ( talk) 12:53, 19 May 2010 (UTC)
More to come... ScottPAnderson ( talk) 01:34, 21 May 2010 (UTC)
If this article was on the Jewish Holocaust, its author would be the Nazis. Just goes to show how relying on Wikipedia for history on developing countries will yield some laughable results. If you start by calling people fighting against an invading force that steals their land and herds them in a concentration camp as "rebels" then you have to be part of the government. —Preceding unsigned comment added by Popq ( talk • contribs) 17:47, 8 June 2009 (UTC)
Damn! Who WROTE this stuff? There seems to be an overemphasis on the violence and brutality of the Mau-Mau -- and, indeed, they were violent and brutal. Yet, there is virtually no information provided on what prompted such violence. What about the deprivation and degradation of the Kikuyu under British rule? What about how the British mistreated Kenyans, seized their land, causing desperate deprivation -- and the scandal that ensued when the government tried to cover up reports that British soldiers had castrated Kikuyu men using pliers? Hey, how's that for brutal?
Like it or not, the Mau-Mau were freedom fighters (at least initially), trying to free themselves from British rule. But, gee, you sure wouldn't really know that from reading this. This article definitely needs a major rewrite. There needs to be some balance. deeceevoice 17:32, 16 Sep 2004 (UTC)
Frankly, I don't know how much of all the garbage about cannibalism, bestiality, etc., is true. It sounds like a lot of racist propaganda. In some of the reading I've done, it seems a lot of this was simply rubbish cooked up by white colonialists. There is absolutely no real explanation in this piece WHY the Kikuyu rebelled, what their grievances were. White settlers hardly lived "alongside" Kenyans. Kenyans were robbed of their land, forced to the brink of starvation, conscripted into military service and then subsequently discriminated against and denied even the most basic human rights in their own country. There is no attempt to put the Mau-Mau in the context of a struggle for national liberation from a brutal, oppressive, white, minority, colonial regime. Theirs was a righteous struggle -- that ultimately resulted in Kenyan independence and the ascension of Jomo Kenyatta (originally arrested with others accused of having dealings with the Mau-Mau and convicted in a British kangaroo court and then imprisoned). Kenya was very much like apartheid-era South Africa and Rhodesia in terms of the power relationships under British colonial rule: black oppression and deprivation, white privilege and prosperty.
The Mau-Mau were the vanguard in the struggle against such injustice. And this entry does them a grave disservice. It should be trashed and begun again. deeceevoice 22:22, 23 Sep 2004 (UTC)
I have completed an extensive edit of the article. Comments would be appreciated. Unless someone speaks up, I'll take down the biased view marker. I don't know if I'm the only one who has noticed this, but the entire page also needs to be moved to "Mau Mau Uprising" and "Mau Mau" should be a redirect. BanyanTree 12:48, 20 Nov 2004 (UTC)
(from WP:RM)
The Economist highlights these two books that discuss this conflict:
-- Confuzion 21:48, 30 Dec 2004 (UTC)
I, too, think you need to take into account Elkins and Anderson's work mentioned above, and not just leave them as a reference. Elkins, for instance, mentions that almost 1 million persons were interned in concentration camps and the euphemistically named "enclosed villages"- why does your article not mention this? This review of her book mentions that aspect: http://www.harvardmagazine.com/on-line/030572.html
This review of both books reports in further detail on Anderson's investigation into British policy and the name contemporary British officials gave the tortures, the gestapo. All of this is extremely significant in that it happened very shortly after WWII, yet very few are aware of its magnitude.
http://www.lrb.co.uk/v27/n05/port01_.html
Why does Deeceevoice automatically brand an article that is critical of black people is 'racist crap'. I have lived in Kenya and I can comment on the basis of some knowledge, rather than solely on the basis of a shared ethnicity. It is clear that both sides in this 'Uprising' used tactics and methods they do not bear scrutiny. However, it is important to realise that a solitary incident does note make an habitual practice. Furthermore, we should be wary of some stories that may well have been promulgated as the result of propaganda (by either side). I am concerened that a recent revision states that the British got most of their information by torture, that they used torture chambers in Nairobi, that the white settlers tortured their black workers for information and sport. Where is the evidence for this, other than apocryphal stories. There was mistreatment of Mau Mau detainees by the British. That is a matter of record, but the only torture chambers I know of in Nairobi are the ones built after independence. Robert 56
I don't know if the article has been updated since the comments made by deeceevoice, but the article I read on Jan 3 was a perfectly balanced description of the Mau Mau Revolt. I spent a few months in Kenya; in the Aberdares and Mt. Kenya region I researched the Mau Mau Revolt. It is true that not all the information is included in the article (i.e. Africans fighting in WWI and WWII were promised land and other rights) but you must remember this is only an encyclopedia giving a basic description of the entire event. A book with multiple volumes could be written about the Mau Mau Revolt and still miss important details, this is why the reader is expected to do research if they want more information. This article is accurate, the Mau Mau acted very much like savages, and many accounts talk about this. I personally have seen what Africans can do to a goat before they eat it, or while they eat it. I'm sure bestiality is uncommon in Kenya but I can guarantee it happens. Deeceevoice, please do not tell other people they are wrong, especially when you don't know what you are talking about.
It's easy enough to find out the state of the article when I first disparaged it by checking the article's edit history. It was a miserable piece of abjectly racist crap in September, but has been greatly improved by BanyanTree in the months since. And you want to talk about "savages"? And I suppose the British castrating the Kikuyu with pliers was "civilized"? deeceevoice 12:01, 9 Feb 2005 (UTC)
By 1953, almost half of all Kikuyus had no land claims at all. The results were worsening poverty, starvation, unemployment and overpopulation.
How did having no land claims lead to overpopulation?
I know I thanked you on your talk page a long time ago, but I recently crossed this article again, Banyan, and impressed by how far it's come -- head and shoulders above the previous, racist crap. Thanks again. Well done. :-D deeceevoice 11:57, 9 Feb 2005 (UTC)
Your a nutcase! Take some valium ok! The article was good originally! Too bad your mau mau's lost! ( 68.227.211.175 00:44, 12 January 2006 (UTC))
I am right. The british empire didn't 'collapse'. Not from war anyway. Hello?! ( 68.227.211.175 02:29, 6 April 2006 (UTC)) (Romanyankee)
The nature of the Mau Ma uprising was not necessarily anti-colonial in nature guys.... it was mainly the result of economic grievances, whilst the political sphere of the uprising was generally limited. The Mau Mau fighters did commit atrocities to their opponents, this should be in no doubt, but the British actions were on occassion equally barbaric, just with the guise of legitimate, civilised behaviour. As a result of such events at Hola Camp, the Empire became embarrassing and in part, this can be seen to lead to Kenya's independence... (unsigned)
But the economic situation was a DIRECT result of colonisation - white land grabs, stupid laws prohibiting Africans from growing coffee, restrictive "pass" system... Bonfire elefantti ( talk) 02:38, 28 September 2008 (UTC)
There is a likelyhood someone could come across a report written by a dutch socialist immediately after Lari massacre. If someone could find her work, it would form a good bases to those who would want to write about the Lari stuff. I haven't however found her name, but this is a good begining
I highly recommend the book "Something of Value" by Robert Ruark (1955). It is a fabulously written novel which paints the Mau Mau Uprising exactly as it was; a response of a variety of different interest groups to colonisation. It is neither here nor there; the book demonstrates clear understanding of the situation from someone who, clearly, experienced the events themselves. It is a novel, but is so rich that it feels perfectly true. 203.173.151.51 09:36, 13 December 2005
An article in the Guardian by George Monbiot ( The Turks haven't learned the British way of denying past atrocities) compares the way the Turkish government deals with its past with the way the British deal with their past genocides. Quote:
But the average British subject has no idea that such atrocities ever happened, while in Turkey everybody knows what has happened to the Armenians. — Babelfisch 08:09, 27 December 2005 (UTC)
You're absolutely right about that- though I think it as much stems from a confused and problematic sense of identity as a deliberate attempt to forget on the part of everyday people. 'Britain' in some ways is ceasing to exist, and the history of the state of Britain- including Scotland and Wales, not just England- along with it. Regional identities such as with the growing expressions of Scottishness or Englishness are taking over and people (perhaps would like to) forget the whole empire ever happened. I don't think they have any monopoly over selective interpretation of their periods of shameful behaviour, isn't 'Thanksgiving' called 'The National Day of mourning' by native americans because of the Metacomet/wampanoag massacres? That might not be an appropriate example so I apologise if I've got my facts wrong, but you take my point. The Mau Mau's activities will inevitably be positive for some and negative for others, and both sides will pick the aspects that reinforce their opinion whilst ignoring inconvenient truths. I think more African history should be taught in Britain to reflect the rounded historical facts of British empire. Atillashardermate 12:04, 30 April 2007 (UTC)
PS- I agree that people should be taught more about things like the Hola massacre- and crucially what the reaction was at home, not to condemn their nation as some kind of pantomime villain; to see the whole picture of the past
" Mau Mau " is an adverbial phrase in the Kikuyu language meaning "to eat ravenously, like a hyena". It was the name of a gang of Kikuyu thugs who terrorised the Kiambu area in about 1890.
It occurs in a Kikuyu- English dictionary, possibly published by the Oxford University Press. In about 1970. Native speakers will probably say the same.
No it isn't. I'm a native Kikuyu born and bred. There is no such word in the Kikuyu language. Doesn't matter what dictionaries written by the English say, though I don't know where the word came from. 196.216.68.146 11:22, 14 May 2007 (UTC) Ken T.G.Benson had the help of several native speakers of Kikuyu when compiling his Dictionary. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 87.194.4.21 ( talk) 10:00, August 30, 2007 (UTC) Those writing in 2007 are unlikely to remember Kiambu in 1890. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 86.139.209.191 ( talk) 11:24, August 30, 2007 (UTC)
Obviously this issue creates great passion, but a more obviously NPOV needs to be regained. The use of Elkins and Anderson is commendable, so long as it is understood that their research is not from a NPOV. The use of words such as "concentration camp" as a description of a detention camp is not neutral. Dismissing the atavistic elements of mau mau practice as preposterous is not neutral either. This whole article needs to be be re-worked and a lot more firm historical referencing done. Pabailie 15:13, 19 January 2007 (UTC)
The figure of 60 government casualty figures is so obviously wrong that I have removed it. The figures are well known and available from a host of sources.
The oathing practices of the Mau Mau are widely attested from many sources as well, although those sources tend to be pro-government. Nevertheless, the section on oathing is very weak and needs revising. —The preceding unsigned comment was added by Pabailie ( talk • contribs) 13:09, 25 January 2007 (UTC).
I did and someone removed them. I shall try to put them on again, along with estimates for the numbers of security forces, although no-one seems to have kept reliable figures of the numbers of Army deployed; and it has recently emerged that Army casualty figures were not centrally recorded and may be inaccurate. Can I also caution people against a simplistic repetition of Caroline Elkins' figures - they are entirely conjectural, bases upon her own idiosyncratic reading of the census figures and her decision to include in her estimates all of those living in fortifies villages as political prisoners; a position that her critics have pointed out is simply incorrect. Pabailie 19:00, 29 January 2007 (UTC)
Ok, the figures are added in, so are the footnote references; I haved edited out most of the emotive, non neautral language of this article, and will to add in a number of citations / footnotes, when i get some time. Pabailie 01:45, 8 February 2007 (UTC)
John Blacker reckons that the excess death toll is approx. 50, 000. I've added a reference to that effect. The figure from the Corfield report is inadequate even on its own terms; it does not include deaths in detention camps, nor the 1,090 executions during the Emergency.
The use of fortifed villages in the article is weasel wording. Elkins and others rightly distingush the punitive camps which were, quite simply, large prisons, from the emergency villages into which the Kikuyu civilian population was herded. The emergency villages were often new settlements, purpose-built for detention and supervision. The confinement of the Kikuyu civilian population in these villages restricted their access to farmland and clean water, which led to massive malnutrition. Elkins points this out, and Blacker's figures suggest that most of the victims were children. If, as the wikipedia article on concentration camps says, a concentration camp is a 'large detention center created for political opponents, aliens, specific ethnic [my emphasis] or religious groups, civilians of a critical war-zone, or other groups of people, often during a war', the Emergency villages were concentration camps.
You do realize that Elkins is a biased partisan, and cannot be treated as a neutral source?
::Really? Where is the proof that Elkins is biased? Thanks. ScottPAnderson ( talk) 15:56, 18 May 2010 (UTC)
About John Blacker: Fact: John Blacker is former senior colonial demographic officer (1961-65) - directly implicated in the events. Fact: There was indeed a coverup of Britain's Nazi-style operations and Mass Murders (I have multiple sources from both sides). Given his personal interest in the colonial Government, how neutral can Blacker be? ScottPAnderson ( talk) 15:56, 18 May 2010 (UTC)
The main article needs a section on both the Emergency villages and the detention camps. The detention camps are vital to the story, since this is where most of the atrocities were committed; the Emergency villages are essential because this is almost certainly where most civilian deaths occurred. ( Hythlodayeus 20:01, 16 June 2007 (UTC))
The article just mentioned British atrocities. I felt this was betraying a NPOV so I also added some stuff about Mau Mau atrocities. Led125
Someone has added some stuff on the retaliation for the Lari Massacre. Please add that elesewhere. It has nothing to do with MAU MAU atrocities. (Add it in BRITISH atrocities).
It is important to note that the British atrocities were unsanctioned acts by individual solders or settlers, who may have had a personal grudge against the mau mau (e.g. a buddy being killed) and commited their acts completely of their own accord. In fact, the brass had issued stern warnings to the soldiers about this, and the U.K. cannot be held responsible for these people's actions.
Hi, I take it you undid my edit of the Lari massacre.
I reverted your edit for the following reasons: the second Lari massacre is directly relevant to the first, since it was a direct response to it; since the second massacre was an immediate reaction to the first, the events are best explained and understood by considering them together (most books handle them together, see Anderson 2005, for example); finally, because the paragraph as, it read , implied that the total number of casualties of the massacre was 120 (the official figure -released by the colonial administration- was 74; admittedly this could be wrong). Readers of wikipedia will presumably realise that the second Lari massacre was not a Mau Mau atrocity, since it is explicitly stated to be the work of colonial forces.
I note that you did not transfer the material on the second Lari massacre to 'British Atrocities', so it is easy to wonder if you meant it to disappear altogether.
Hythlodayeus 00:44, 28 July 2007 (UTC)
I didn't remove it. Someone else did that. I have now transfered it to the British atrocities section (I also added European settlers and black loyalists because they fought for the British but were not actually British). I hope this solves any disagreements. Led125
I think this section has been edited incorrectly, I am wondering for instance why the last sentence reads the way it does the Mau Mau were Kikuyu so why would they be rounding them up into buildings and setting them ablaze...-- 76.117.194.57 ( talk) 23:36, 23 September 2008 (UTC)
A largely unreported and unacknowledged part of the Emergency - due to the ongoing internal colonization of Kenya - is the fight of Kenya's first peoples (mostly Ogiek) against the Mau-Mau. They understandly experienced Mau-Mau guerrilleros as - frequently brutal - intruders into their ancestral territorites, and thus easily sided with the British, especially with Kenya Regiment and pseudo-gangs. The contribution of Ogiek trackers and scouts, who knew their forest much better than any Mau-Mau fighhters, was crucial for the clean-up after Erskine's new strategy ("Operation Anvil") had vanquished the main forces of Mau-Mau. 8th December 2008 —Preceding unsigned comment added by 91.19.150.122 ( talk) 09:34, 8 December 2008 (UTC)
I altered some stuff on the article, and a person essentially undid it, completely ignoring why I had made the changes. The virtual undo was made on the basis of a one line explanation of POV - yet none of the changes I made are substantial with that respect. I merely cite scholarly sources like historians Mark Curtis, Caroline Elkins and David Anderson. The person has also completely ignored my reasons for making one particular change, an important one, namely the removal of the Pumwani 'shallow graves' in the section on Mau Mau atrocities. The reason for my removing that, as I thought was perfectly clear from my comment when I made the edit, was becuase on the cited page of Anderson's book, p.185, THERE IS NO MENTION OF SHALLOW GRAVES WHATSOEVER. I didn't simply correct the page number because when I went to the index to look up all mentions of Pumwani, ON NONE OF THE PAGES REFERENCED WITH RESPECT TO PUMWANI WAS ANY MENTION WHATSOEVER. According to the index of Anderson's book, Pumwani gets a mention on pages 39, 220 and 352; ON NONE OF THESE PAGES IS THERE ANY MENTION WHATSOEVER OF SHALLOW GRAVES. Maybe it is somewhere else in the book, perhaps someone can find the correct page. For the moment, as far as I am concerned, the quote has just been made up. The person has also changed back some things only to introduce grammatical errors. I just can't see what's going on here: I've made no controversial changes, merely made the text less disjointed to read, and added some new citations from Mark Curtis, Caroline Elkins and David Anderson - all respected historians. I'm going to undo the undo, please can someone explain what I am supposed to have done wrong. Regards, User: 217.43.43.145 11:15, 10 October 2007
I removed the picture for the movie The Oath, since it was the wrong one, of a 2005 movie about the war in Chechnya by Khassan Baiev. Couldnt find any accurate picture. Scratchy —Preceding unsigned comment added by 83.253.62.253 ( talk) 19:51, 15 November 2007 (UTC)
This was at the top of the article page but makes more sense here. Lisiate ( talk) 00:35, 7 March 2008 (UTC)
Imperial War Museum sound archive #30268.
Key words: Africa history/20th Century conflicts/Kenya/Mau Mau/terrorism/freedom fighters/colonial rule/Mt Kenya White Highlands/Mt Kenya Crown Forest.
In the hope it is of interest to historical research, The Imperial War Museum (London) recently recorded my recollections of 18 months in the Mt Kenya forest back in 1955/56 as a 17-year-old fighting the Mau Mau gangs above Nanyuki, Meru and Embu. I had been farming at around 8,900 feet on the edge of that forest when the request came from the Kenya authorities to report to Nairobi and collect my jungle outfit, Bren gun and Patchett machine carbines. I was then named Tracker Team Leader 12 (later Tracker 6 and finally Tracker 1) and given about 20 non-Mau Mau tribe askaris, mostly Kipsigis and Samburu and Kamba for continuous forest patrols.
The recordings extend over about 6 hours on 5 CDs archived as #30268. The Sound Archive telephone number at the Imperial War Museum is +44 20 7416 5365. Best contact would be Richard McDonough on rmcdonough@iwm.org.uk
With kind regards.
Tim Symonds [email removed to avoid spam - Lisiate ( talk)]
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Didn't the Luo also take part? They're not mentioned at all at present. Badagnani ( talk) 06:10, 4 December 2008 (UTC)
The role of the Jaluo for the and in the Emergency has been comparatively sparsely researched, but William Ochieng' did some good work on the topic, e.g. in the Studies in Memory of Gideon Were. 8th December 2008 —Preceding unsigned comment added by 91.19.150.122 ( talk) 09:37, 8 December 2008 (UTC)
The London Telephraph [2] is reporting that President Barack Obama is returning the bust of Winston Churchill, in part because his grandfather Hussein Onyango Obama, was alledgely tortured during the Mau Mau uprising. Is that worthy to be incorporated or noteable enough? StreamingRadioGuide ( talk) 06:51, 18 February 2009 (UTC)
I'm going to move the long etymology section to the end of the article. People who come hear to read about the uprising want to know what happened first - the origins of the word are secondary. —Preceding unsigned comment added by Ackees ( talk • contribs) 13:49, 22 April 2009 (UTC)
When I read about wales and other European nations they talk about the Welch people, the Welch Nation, etc. When it comes to Africa you hear about tribes. The Youruba Tribe, not you have 100 Million poeple in this group so why are they tribes? The people in Kenya are ethnic groups. not tribes.-- 196.207.35.246 ( talk) 12:45, 23 June 2009 (UTC)
You make a really good point and I have noticed it too. Sometimes it makes some sense (e.g. highly related subgroups of an ethnic group) but usually it does not. And they should reference certain groups in the UK as tribes (such as Liverpudlians) if they use it for African groups. Nakamura Mondo ( talk) 11:59, 18 November 2010 (UTC)
I don’t know if this has already been discussed, but the use of the word "insurgency" for Kenya revolutionaries gives the content of this article a rather dogmatic appeal. Considering the historical context of European colonialism, I don't believe whether a revolt of the colonized against European civil authority was legitimate or not is matter of fact, and using such a word for description does not aide in the article's factual objectivity. —Preceding unsigned comment added by Mdmjames ( talk • contribs) 07:19, 18 December 2009 (UTC)
I think more should be told about the conflicts between the mau mau and other african peoples, because this is far more pertinent to Kenya's present day troubles (such as the post-election violence a couple of years ago) than the conflict between the mau mau and the British.
Certainly, all the written accounts, and all that I can remember people who were around in East Africa at the time saying to me, gave me an impression of the mau mau being feared by a very large proportion of their own people, and by just about all of the other African peoples in what's now known as "Kenya" and the countries around it.
Americans like to see British colonialism as an overweaning evil, but British rule did not lead to conflicts of this kind everywhere, not even in Africa, and one suspects that any causes to the conflict pre-dating British rule, are being studiously ignored. Probably, nobody outside Kenya would have a clue in any case.
This wasn't really about whether or not the British would cease to rule Kenya, from 1945 onwards it was long-term policy to get out of everywhere that could rule itself, as soon as it was possible (far too early in the case of Burma, as it turned out). What the mau-mau conflict was really all about, was who would rule Kenya after the British had gone.
That may be the most pertinent of the issues which this article, and this discussion, ignore.
Much depended on the timing of any independence process: In Burma, it was obvious to experts that rapid independence would lead to domination by the Burman minority, and thence to genocide amongst many, if not all, of Burma's other 36 races. The timing was determined by US Pressure on the Atlee government, experts, such as George Orwell were ignored, the Burmans dominated, they still do, and thanks to the predicted genocide, which has indeed happened, they are probably not an ethnic minority anymore.
Had Kenya become independent in the early fifties, or at any other time with the mau-mau still intact, would the outcome have been: peace, harmony and justice? Or an agonising, decades-long hell like Burma? You may get different answers from different African peoples within Kenya.
And what would the USA look like today if it had become independent AFTER us wicked British abolished slavery? —Preceding unsigned comment added by 83.67.221.189 ( talk) 17:13, 31 December 2009 (UTC)
User:ScottPAnderson has changed the numbers of involved persons very substantially, without changing the citation. He has also changed the tone (with terms like 'freedom fighter' and 'heroic', which aren't NPOV). The large scale nature of the changes to the article make it hard to discuss. I am going to revert again, please introduce new changes slowly, one at a time, after providing sources. Saying 'Kenya Natl Archives' in an edit summary is not good enough, other editors need to be able to check them. Thanks. Squiddy | (squirt ink?) 13:02, 13 May 2010 (UTC)
I have investigated the figures, and their appears to be a discrepancy between those used in the article and those in the reference. The author states in ref 1 (below), the numbers interned were up to 50000, not 1-3 million. Ref 2 (below) quotes directly from the source used in the wikipedia page, and quotes a number of figures which contradict the edits by Scott, including 'up to 20,000' dead. This information is from the author Caroline Elkins, and so I dont see why it can possibly be so different from the figures quoted. Clovis Sangrail ( talk) 14:59, 14 May 2010 (UTC)
Nation 2/21/2005, Vol. 280 Issue 7, p30-34
The result of the move request was: page moved. TFOWR propaganda 11:59, 26 May 2010 (UTC)
Kenya Emergency (1952) →
Mau Mau Uprising — There have been two three page moves in quick succession recently. I'd like there to be a discussion, and a
consensus for any change, before this devolves into
chaos. My opinion on any page move is: neutral.
TFOWR
propaganda 13:00, 23 May 2010 (UTC)
TFOWR
propaganda
15:25, 23 May 2010 (UTC)
Copy, paste and edit the following:
* '''Example, e.g. oppose/support'''. Example text explaining why you agree/disagree with the move. ~~~~
Oppose because:
The result of the move request was: page moved (casting vote). Anthony Appleyard ( talk) 10:39, 4 June 2010 (UTC)
Mau Mau Uprising → Kenya Emergency (1952) — I relisted this such that the long-standing name of the article is kept for now and the newly proposed name is requested. Personally, I do not support the move, since the term "Mau Mau" is ubiquitous and should be kept. Nevertheless, I'd like to have a discussion on the issue Julius Sahara ( talk) 16:13, 23 May 2010 (UTC)
I support the move because, in addition to the other reasons I stated above:
Thanks.
ScottPAnderson (
talk)
17:52, 23 May 2010 (UTC)
ScottPAnderson has a legitimate point - in the official UK government records the situation was then and subsequently always referred to as "The Emergency" or "The Kenyan Emergency" (cf [4] - note this record will only be available for a few days due to the terms of the National Archive, but if anyone cares to search the UK National Archives most of the papers are available free to download). At the same time, this terminology can reasonably be described as weasel words. 'Mau Mau uprising' implies a lot of things that 'Kenyan Emergency' simply does not, and I would agree with anyone who says that there was a Colonial subtext to the favoured term (not implying this as a motive for the current change at all). The name is less significant in terms of usability given the existence of redirects, but even so, I would prefer to see the popular name remain. Elen of the Roads ( talk) 20:31, 23 May 2010 (UTC)
I didn't deliberately remove it. I have other examples of the Mediawiki software occasionally achieving this effect in an edit conflict - we did ec and your post ought to have posted, but just occasionally the software will show the post as posted, but it will be removed when the other editor reposts their edit conflict. Apologies - I've reposted it below. Elen of the Roads ( talk) 20:58, 23 May 2010 (UTC)
Oppose This page is linked to from Ernest Hemingway's True at First Light, a book based on his account of a visit to Kenya during the uprisings. The book refers to the event as the Mau Mau Uprising; the introduction to the book, written by his son Patrick Hemingway who lived in Africa, uses the term Mau Mau Uprising; all the criticism I read on the event referred to the Mau Mau Uprising. A compromise would be to add the alternate description to the lead and to have a page with the alternate redirect to Mau Mau Uprising. I'm uninvolved, and have this page watched because I read it whilst working on the Hemingway piece. Truthkeeper88 ( talk) 20:36, 23 May 2010 (UTC)
My dearest Scott:
You can pick any decent source to combat your outrageous claims, but let's stick to one which you yourself find acceptable: 'What better source of Quality than [archives] and historians like David Anderson who specifically use the term "Kenya Emergency"?' Not a good start, Scott - Anderson does not 'use the term "Kenya Emergency"' in any blanket sense. To give other editors some examples, I'll stick simply to the first nine pages of this four-hundred-page book.
As for the other chapter headings and subheadings: 'Making a Rebellion'; 'Going to War'; 'General China's War: Freedom Fighters in the Forest'; 'Spoils of War'
You see that Scott likes his term 'freedom fighter': this is again ludicrous, and runs against the characterisation Anderson gives of the Mau Mau rebellion. In a couple of contexts—on one occasion seemingly sarcastically—Anderson refers to members of Mau Mau as 'freedom fighters' (see above chapter title; for sarcasm: 'Heroes' Acre, that little slice of Uhuru Park set aside as a memorial to the war, presents at opportunity to deepen division these divisions, or to try to heal them. The advocates of Heroes' Acre want to create a memorial to the 'freedom fighters', most obviously those who led the fight in the forest; but what about all of those others buried at Kamiti, in the unmarked pits reserved for the unclaimed bodies of the hanged? They surely belong in Heroes' Acre too. And what about the Loyalist dead, left to rot in shallow graves after Mau Mau's assassins had done their work?'); throughout the book, Anderson uses less loaded terms like 'rebels' and 'fighters' to characterise Mau Mau's militant members.
Anderson regards Mau Mau as a primarily a civil war within the Kikuyu - again, in complete contradiction to Scott's pathetic attempts to characterise Mau Mau as 'freedom fighters' whose violence led 'directly' to Kenyan independence.
Do I need to go on? Long and short, contrary to Scott's assertion that Anderson 'uses the term "Kenya Emergency"', he does not settle on any single term to characterise the conflict in 1950's Kenya, but rather seems to have a preference for terms such as 'rebellion', 'war' and 'revolt'. Scott should be banned from editing this page. Sh33pl0re ( talk) 13:28, 24 May 2010 (UTC)
How much more discussion do we need? How many more times does this guy have to be exposed? Sh33pl0re ( talk) 15:51, 24 May 2010 (UTC)
Now, let's see what Anderson has to say about Scott's beloved Kariuki memoir. Whilst noting that Kariuki's account 'set the benchmark' (p. 314), Anderson goes on to note that other personal accounts 'take a less ideological view' and that Karuiki's account is an 'idealised notion of "suffering for the nation"' (p. 315). So far from Kariuki's account being the standard 'scholarly' Kenyan study of Mau Mau (as Scott alledges), it is but one of a number of victims' accounts of British bruatlity - and an 'ideological' and 'idealised' account at that, according to Anderson.
To back up his desperate desire to have this article classify the Mau Mau uprising as 'ending the colonial invasion of Kenya', he cites some random website (historywiz.com - truly a scholarly source!!) and page 303 of an enyclopaedia 'available on Google Books'. Conveniently, when I went to Google Books, 'Pages 303 and 304 are not shown in this preview.' Unfortunately, pages 302 and 305 are shown, which enables us to see that SCOTT'S CITED PAGE PAGE IS NOT EVEN REFERRING TO KENYA, BUT TALKING ABOUT CONGO (BRAZZAVILLE). How on earth can anybody take this guy seriously with such utterly, utterly pathetic and crude attempts at propaganda? Sh33pl0re ( talk) 15:27, 24 May 2010 (UTC)
My hunch is that you are correct regarding the article issue, but I'm completely disinclined from taking your side. You might want to think about that. Respect earns respect. - GTBacchus( talk) 17:14, 31 May 2010 (UTC)
I have move protected the article for a week due to the move war that has occurred today. Per WP:PROTECT, this does not constitute an endorsement of the current title. Black Kite (t) (c) 16:38, 23 May 2010 (UTC)
To save you flipping back and forth between here and the article, I'll post it in entirety:
————
The origin of the word "Mau Mau" is not known and its meaning is much debated. Depending on a person's point of view, the Mau Mau are either seen as a disorganized bunch of violent, troublesome, tribal savages, who refused to give up their land and freedom in exchange for Britain's gift of civilisation, and who were crushed by the British Army (a colonial apologist viewpoint); or, a determined, well organized, but ill-equipped Army of valiant heroes, who successfully resisted an invading empire, under harsh survival conditions, and without any foreign support (a predominantly African viewpoint).[3]
The KLFA soldiers never referred to themselves as the "Mau Mau" - preferring the Millitary title: "Kenya Land and Freedom Army" instead.[16][17]
- - -
[3] Wunyabari O. Maloba, Mau Mau and Kenya, An Analysis of a Peasant Revolt (Indiana University Press),December 1993
[16] Kabogo, Tabitha. Dedan Kimathi: A Biography. (East African Educational Publishers, Nairobi: 1992) p.23-25.
[17] Kariuki, J.M. “Mau Mau” Detainee: The Account by a Kenya African of his Experiences in Detention Camps 1953-1960. (London, Oxford: 1963) p.24.
————
This article is intolerable since Scott showed up, but this section in particular sheds light on his entire agenda. Firstly, Scott sets up a dichotomy regarding opinion about Mau Mau: either Mau Mau is a disorganized bunch of violent, troublesome, tribal savages, who refused to give up their land and freedom in exchange for Britain's gift of civilisation, and who were crushed by the British Army (a colonial apologist viewpoint), or it's a determined, well organized, but ill-equipped Army of valiant heroes, who successfully resisted an invading empire, under harsh survival conditions, and without any foreign support (a predominantly African viewpoint).
That's it according to Scott: you either agree with what he states without evidence is a predominantly African viewpoint, else you are an apologist for the brutality of British colonialism. Such a dichotomy is hopelessly simplistic (see below); you can draw your own conclusion as to why he might want to limit the field so drastically.
Note, too, Scott's sarcasm (Britain's gift of civilisation...) and his terminology (valiant heroes).
Let me introduce the third option mentioned by Nicolas van de Walle in his review of Elkins' and Anderson's books in Foreign Affairs, an option which Scott has closed down: Anderson's more sociological approach puts greater emphasis on intra-Kikuyu conflict. Recent scholarship agrees with Anderson's sociological approach. For example, you can check a recent study published by Cambridge University press: it's author is Professor Daniel Branch, and here is what he has to say (quoting from the book; see the pdf):
“ | Lacking a clearly defined nationalist ideology and restricted to the hills of the Kikuyu-dominated Central Province, the Mau Mau insurgents were not explicitly national in either intellectual or operational scope.
The war did not simply pit oppressive British forces against noble Kenyan nationalist rebels. Instead, it took the form of a civil war within Kikuyu society as so-called loyalists from among that community forged alliances with the colonial government and turned on their fellow Kikuyu Mau Mau within the ranks of the insurgency. As many Kikuyu fought with the colonial government as did those against it. |
” |
Editors around when Scott first showed up will be able to notice that one of the first things Scott did when he started editing here was minimise any reference to Kikuyu-on-Kikuyu violence, e.g. the first Lari massacre. As the article currently stands, the first Lari massacre is baldly introduced like this: Immediately after the discovery of the first Lari massacre... There is zero explicit discussion of the fact that this first massacre was carried out by Mau Mau against their fellow Kikuyu, let alone any detail of the unspeakable brutality of their attack. It is simply noted that Mau Mau militants were also guilty of human rights violations. There is no way for anyone unacquainted with the Mau Mau rebellion to know that the next sentence is the first Lari massacre: At Lari, on the night of March 25–26, 1953, Mau Mau forces herded 120 Kikuyu into huts and set fire to them.
What I am trying to say is that in his efforts to portray Mau Mau as a nationalistic, freedom-fighting force, Scott has—and has needed to—remove the possibility that far from the Mau Mau rebellion being an pouring of latent Kenyan nationalism, the conflict was in large part a civil war within Kikuyu society. The idea that all Kikuyu supported the Mau Mau and their violent methods is simply untenable in light of current scholarship. —Preceding unsigned comment added by Sh33pl0re ( talk • contribs) 21:12, 24 May 2010 (UTC)
“ | While the Home Guard patrol had hurried to the scene of the murder earlier that evening, some several hundred attackers had gathered at pre-arranged meeting places throughout the Lari location. In five or six separate gangs, each numbering one hundred or more persons, the attackers descended upon their targets. Their heads swathed to disguise their identities, armed with pangas, swords, spears, knives and axes, and with some carrying burning torches, they swarmed over the unprotected homesteads. They carried with them ropes, which they tied around the huts to prevent the occupants from opening the doors before the set the thatch alight. As the occupants struggled to clamber through the windows to escape, they were savagely cut down. Most of those caught in the attack were women and children, but they were shown no mercy by the attackers, who seemed intent on killing every person in the homesteads. As the bodies were cut down and viciously hacked, the attackers threw them back into the blazing huts. | ” |
The whole History of Kenya reads like colonial propaganda. Example, the Mau Mau section: "A key watershed came from 1952 to 1956, during the " Mau Mau Uprising", a terrorist movement directed principally against the colonial government and the European settlers."
ScottPAnderson ( talk) 21:58, 24 May 2010 (UTC)
Please add the ISBNs to the book references, and if possible add convenience links. Please post here, if there are questions how to do so. Once done, I'll check the sources. Thanks. Truthkeeper88 ( talk) 12:54, 25 May 2010 (UTC)
Currently, this article doesn't describe what occurred during the "uprising" or the "war". It has a Leading up to the Uprising section, and a "Reaction to the Uprising" section. There is almost no mention of warfare, just reference to British reactions to it, and to atrocities. Where in the country was the guerilla campaign kicked off, where was it strongest, what strategy did each side use as violence intensified? Where the insurgents organized by a central command or locally? How many loyalists fought against the Mau Mau? Where there other organized or impromptue militan Kenyan groups? Compared to the Algerian War, this article comes up way short.
"At no other time or place in the British empire was capital punishment meted out so liberally—the total is more than double the number executed by the French in Algeria"
This claim is not true, unless it refers solely to officially recorded executions in the 20th century. Ireland 1798 and India 1857 are two obvious examples. I see this is one of the few facts sourced, but that doesn't mean it wasn't stated accurately.
Just a few observations. The first half of the article is superb, minus the lack of citations. Just from 1952-1960 it seemed to be sorely lacking, IMO. —Preceding unsigned comment added by Phi O'Byrne ( talk • contribs) 21:44, 7 July 2010 (UTC)
During the 1954-60 Mau-Mau uprising in Kenya, camps were established to hold suspected rebels. It is unclear how many were held but estimates range up to 1.5 million - or practically the entire Kikuyu population. Between 130,000 and 300,000 are thought to have died as a result.[citation needed] Maltreatment is said to have included torture and summary executions. In addition as many as a million members of the Kikuyu tribe were subjected to ethnic cleansing. (Sources: . R. Edgerton, Mau Mau: An African Crucible, London 1990 page 180; C. Elkins,"Detention, Rehabilitation & the Destruction of Kikuyu Society" in Mau Mau and Nationhood, Editors Odhiambo and Lonsdale, Oxford 2003 pages 205-7; C. Elkins, "Britain's Gulag: The Brutal End Of Empire In Kenya", 2005). —Preceding unsigned comment added by 84.215.58.231 ( talk) 17:49, 10 August 2010 (UTC)
This article is a long rant against the British throwing accusation after damnation, all the while praising the mau mau as saints/freedom fighters/heroes. The mau mau mutilated, raped, murdered, tortured and maimed untold thousands. The article is massively reliant on a handful of hugely controversial books, the worst of which I see is Caroline Elkins, a much maligned and heavily criticised author of muck slinging anti-British sentiment.
Compare the article as it stands with that of 2 years ago. HERE: http://en.wikipedia.org/?title=Mau_Mau_Uprising&oldid=106465905
It used to be a reasonably clear and balanced attempt at explaining the conflict. It is clear that the article was long since subjected to sustained sabotage and has become the disastrous, and near incomprehensible mess that it now is. This is a disgrace.
As it is so far gone, any attempt to clean it up will be met with auto revisions. I suggest massive help is needed to save this article ASAP. 87.112.23.249 ( talk) 00:07, 11 November 2010 (UTC)
This article is in dire need of a full rewrite. It reads like the mau mau were freedom fighting democrats. But not only this, the article is near unreadable.
This is unacceptable.
The Elkins book is cited by this article some 17 times and used as a holy spring of 'facts', despite the vast disagreement from historians to the majority of the claims in the book.
Many of the Elkins 'facts' were utterly demolished in 2007 by the demographer John Blacker, in the Journal of African Affairs. Which you can see here (to get the full text download the PDF file at the bottom): http://afraf.oxfordjournals.org/content/106/423/205.abstract
A damningly critical account of the apparent agenda of the Elkins book, which is cited by this article some 17 times, is by the Kenyan historian Bethwell Ogot (himself very critical of the British) in Journal of African History 46, 2005, page 502.
He says that the Mau Mau fighters:
Contrary to African customs and values, assaulted old people, women and children. The horrors they practiced included the following: decapitation and general mutilation of civilians, torture before murder, bodies bound up in sacks and dropped in wells, burning the victims alive, gouging out of eyes, splitting open the stomachs of pregnant women. No war can justify such gruesome actions. In man’s inhumanity to man there is no race distinction. The Africans were practising it on themselves. There was no reason and no restraint on both sides, although Elkins sees no atrocities on the part of Mau Mau.
Where is the balance in this article? It is an atrocity.
Gaius Octavius Princeps ( talk) 20:16, 11 November 2010 (UTC)
---If no one has anything to add in defence of this mess, I intend to rectify this myself. Anyone? Gaius Octavius Princeps ( talk) 22:52, 17 November 2010 (UTC)
Can we agree that the Elkins study, an expansion around her PhD thesis, is good for the detention camps? Blacker's criticism pertains only to her assertion that up to 300,000 people died—a criticism which is agreed to be correct by all relevant experts—and others have criticised her use of survivor testimony. HOWEVER, we don't want to throw the baby out with the bath water: whole chapters of the book are built around the historical record of our detention camps. I've not seen any decent criticisms of her account of the Pipeline or the 'dilution' method, for example, both of which are solidly built on archival documents and interviews with the people responsible for them. Anyway, unless I hear otherwise, I'm happy to use the sections of her book dealing with the camps and screening and which rely on the historical record. Iloveandrea ( talk) 16:33, 14 April 2011 (UTC)
I posted this on another user's talkpage, but it's pertinent so I'm posting here too.
Many, many people were all too happy to draw the line there, however—that is to say, whilst there were some fair criticisms of Elkins' book, they were desperate to throw the baby out with the bath water. I've highlighted this myself; indeed, I've not seen a single person who rightly criticised parts of her book raise their voice against her outstanding analysis of our detention and interrogation systems. Most of those parts of the book are relentlessly poured straight out of the archives and the mouths of the people responsible. Again: at this point in time, there is no basis for any complaint whatsoever with those parts of her book. It's worth mentioning again that Elkins' PhD thesis was actually on the detention and interrogation systems, so the book has obviously been expanded around her doctorate. It's also worth a significant mention that David Anderson happily cited Elkin's PhD thesis in his book Histories of the Hanged. Iloveandrea ( talk) 14:20, 22 April 2011 (UTC)
Not that I can prove this, but here is some correspondence with Prof. Anderson:
Chiefs were given quotas for Carrier Corp recruitment, and powers to enforce recruitment by coercion. Those holding a labour ticket as farm employees were exempt from such forced recruitment.
The second statement is more obscure, I will concede, as I think I've implicitly assumed a few things as being established. Carrier Corp mortality was very high,. and over the longer run it is generally agreed that it had a negative impact upon African labour recruitment for other knids of wage employment through until at least 1923.
Farm labour at this time included some who were engaged only a waged labourers, but these weere a very small number, and they were generally only employed seasonally. The vast majority of those holding a farm labour ticket were in fact 'squatters', who were resident on the farm permanently and who took their reward in kind (use of land and (pasture, housing, etc) and not as a wage.
The impact of Carrier Corp death rates thus put a brake on recruitment of wage laboutr into govt employment, but it did not have a negative impact on squatter contracts.
He was replying to my question regarding something I'd read in Masters, Servants and Magistrates:
Dear Professor Anderson,
Just a very quick e-mail.
Was reading something of yours in Masters, Servants and Magistrates and was confused about something therein.
On page 505 I read, "Only those employed by Europeans were exempt from [forced] recruitment [e.g. for the detested Carrier Corps]... As a direct consequence, recruitment of farm workers increased markedly during the war"; however, on page 514 you write, "the high mortality of labor recruited for service in the Carrier Corps during the 1914-18 war... did little to encourage Africans into waged employment."
Where does my misunderstanding lay?
Anyway, you will see from the article in due course that I have incorporated his explanation and clarification into the article. — Preceding unsigned comment added by Iloveandrea ( talk • contribs) 20:03, 28 December 2010 (UTC)
In the same section there is a clear case of bias:
then the next sentence says
So those at Lari were not murdered but killed? Also "After the discovery of the Lari massacre (between 10 pm and dawn that night), colonial security services retaliated on Kikyu suspected of being Mau Mau. These were shot, and later denied burial. ... Thirty-two British civilians were murdered by Mau Mau militants." It is inevitable that most of the primary sources of that time will talk about the killing of Mau Mau and their supporters and the murder of British civilians and their supporters. But there is a bias in this article that is reflecting those primary sources. I would suggest that all references to murder are replaced with killed. We could go the other way and replace all killings with murder, but clearly some killings will have been lawful and so not murder under the law, and so it will be easier to use killed in place of murder to remove the systemic but unintentional racist bias in the article. -- PBS ( talk) 20:21, 29 December 2010 (UTC)
A bunch of thugs kill civilians its murder. The government executes people for crimes then its a execution. Nothing racist involved, its just the way English works, many of the British soldiers were African. -- 90.217.99.40 ( talk) 10:28, 1 February 2011 (UTC)
My addition of the torture of President Obama's grandfather in the concentration camps was undone by User:Outofsinc under the edit summary "Speculation and about how the president feels can't really be considered an legacy of the Mau Mau uprising". I feel legacy could be one of may appropriate titles for this content but I am open to put it under any other section. Outofsinc, please feel free to suggest where it should go. Zuggernaut ( talk) 16:15, 20 February 2011 (UTC)
It may deserve mention that the president's granfather's third wife, claims her husband was tortured by the british, but as he was arrested in 49 and sentenced for two years, it's difficult to claim it was without charge, and wrong to claim Chruchill was prime minister at the time. It was Clement Atlee. Outofsinc ( talk) 07:30, 21 February 2011 (UTC)
One thing I do agree with, Zug, is that there should be a Legacy section. The status of Mau Mau in Kenya, belongs in this. If it is to be reduced to trivia about returning a loaned item that was decorating the oval office, it belittles what was and remains a very important topic in Kenyan and British history Outofsinc ( talk) 08:32, 21 February 2011 (UTC)
Let's be clear about this, the allegation that Obama's grandfather was tortured is not from The Telegraph or the The Daily Mail. They both state that the allegations stem from Obama's grandfather's third wife. The text introduced into the article unlike the references used, did not state this. The allegation that president Obahma returned Churchill's bust, loaned by the british government to his predesesor because, his grandfather was mistreated by the british is completely unsupported. The Mau-mau rebellion covers the period of Atlee, Churchills second term, Eden and Macmillan. The allegation from Obamas grandfather's third wife of the mistreatment of her husband covers the years 1949-51 when Atlee was Prime Minister.
DBaba, you don't know my politics and likely never will, but you can't sentance someone to a term of imprisonment without charge. The source stated that obamas granfather was arrested in 1949 and sentanced to two years. The Mau-mau rebellion is indeed vital to medern Kenyan politics, the return of marble head is less so. Outofsinc ( talk) 16:55, 21 February 2011 (UTC)
Can get the personal comments out of the way first please, I have not edit warred: I have reverted you zug once as per BRD, Dbaba reverted me once with no discussion, I reverted him with discussion and he reverted me again. The current version is your bold one, which either you or Dbaba should revert until the discussion reaches consensus. My editing history is no business of this discussion, and no business of yours. It is not the business of an encyclopedia to doubt anyones truthfulness, I myself have no opinion of the matter, but we should report what the sources say.
We should not question the root of the story but we should report where the story comes from. Should we say Obama's paternal grandfather's third wife is lying? no. Should we say Obama's paternal grandfather's third wife made the allegation yes. Should we say it is proven fact? not without a source. Including the sentance about the president returning the bust in the article is bound to lead readers to assume to two events are connected, therefore we need a source to categorically state they are (from I imagine either the president or some official from the white house) or state in the article who belives they are related (the author of the New York Times opinion piece perhaps). Outofsinc ( talk) 18:54, 21 February 2011 (UTC)
Second sentence (optional) – Barak Obama mentions in his memoirs that his grandfather was imprisoned for more that six months before being found innocent. (Also covered in the first reference and allows a second voice, arguably more noteworthy than his step grandmother. However if you prefer I’m happy to leave this sentence out.) Third Sentence – Several British journalists have speculated that the return of a bust of Winston Churchill, loaned by the British government to George W Bush, is related to his grandfather’s mistreatment. Churchill’s second term of office from 1951-55 occurred during the Mau Mau uprising. (The qualifier British journalist may be contentious, but angst over the “special relationship” does seem to be a strangely British preoccupation. If we can find a non-British journalist making the same speculation we can remove the qualifier.)
Barak Obama's grandmother told him that her husband was imprisoned without trial and tortured by the British during the Mau Mau uprising. [1] [2] President Obama mentions in his memoirs that the British imprisoned his grandfather for six months leading The Times to suggest that his antipathy towards British Colonialism may be strengthened due to this. [3] He was tried in a British court but no documentation of this can be found since the British destroyed court records older than six years. [1] Several prominent media organizations suggest that the return of a bust of Winston Churchill from the White House by Barak Obama, loaned by the British government to his predecessor, is related to his grandfather’s mistreatment. [4] [5] [6]
Granny Sarah told Barak that his grandfather's arrest and imprisonment were due to a denunciation by an African whom Onyango had offended. He was detained for six months without trial. He was tried in a British court, but the records of his trial cannot be found, as the British destroyed all their colonial courts records that were over six years old. Onyango was tortured by the British and their Kenyan police. He returned home from prison skinny, dirty, and lousy and felt deeply humiliated. Onyango's helpless rage was boundless (Obama, 1995, pp. 417 - 418).
The first few sentences now seem dislocated and repetitious, do you agree that:
Sorry I am late to this, but I have to disagree with the "suggests" lines. First, the statement that "The Times suggest that his antipathy to British Colonialism may be increased due this." Where is that stated in the text? Zuggernaut writes above that the "first paragraph from The Times addresses" it. But the first paragraph is:
Barack Obama’s grandfather was imprisoned and brutally tortured by the British during the violent struggle for Kenyan independence, according to the Kenyan family of the US President-elect.
The article goes on to discuss the different accounts of the involvement of Barack Obama's grandfather and father in "the fight for Kenyan independence", but it never makes any references to Barack Obama's views about England or the British Empire.
Second, the sentence regarding Churchill's bust is pure speculation and should be removed. President George W. Bush was an admirer of Winston Churchill and had a bust of him put into the oval office. Here is how President Bush described Churchill when accepting the bust: "He knew what he believed, and he really kind of went after it in a way that seemed like a Texan to me." [7] It is unsurprising that President Obama would not identify with that sentiment and so it is unremarkable that he would replace the bust of his political opponent's hero with one of his own hero, Abraham Lincoln (who, coincidentally, was also from Illinois). This article in the Daily Mail also talks about how President Obama has changed the furniture, wall paper, and even the presidential seal in the Oval Office. This is all very routine when changing presidential administrations, there is no need to create theories about how Barack Obama may or may not feel about British imperialism 60 years ago to explain his actions. N8 f ( talk) 09:14, 8 March 2011 (UTC)
A lot of the artical is out of order according to the date. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 67.164.134.54 ( talk) 23:49, 23 May 2011 (UTC)
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help)The vast majority of sources state that the rebellion ended in 1956. ( 92.7.27.57 ( talk) 22:20, 12 June 2011 (UTC))
The military campaign, known as the Kenyan Emergency, ended on 21 October 1956 according to all reliable sources. It's important the article mentions the fact that the terrorists were defeated by the end of 1956. ( 92.7.29.234 ( talk) 11:16, 16 June 2011 (UTC))
They were terrorists by any definition, which is another reason why they were unable to capture widespread native support. I would also strongly question whether the terrorist campaign set the stage for Kenya's independence as the introduction states. This did not happen until December 1963, more than seven years after the rebellion had been completely defeated. ( 92.7.19.101 ( talk) 11:06, 23 June 2011 (UTC))
The article itself says historians are divided on whether the uprising had any affect on Kenya leaving the Empire in 1963, so this should be reflected in the introduction. ( 92.7.24.253 ( talk) 10:40, 3 July 2011 (UTC))
The link to Enough Is Enough points to a disambiguation page. Said page does not have an entry for the film mentioned in the link.
95.149.91.98 ( talk) 08:49, 28 June 2011 (UTC)
Hi - I moved this from the article its all uncited. IMO its trivia and such a lot of it demeans the focus of the article. I wouldn't replace it but if anyone thinks its valuable then feel free to cite it and replace it. Off2riorob ( talk) 17:31, 14 July 2011 (UTC)
Is quoted here as if she were the only person to have any say on the matter. She is quoted here some twenty-five times despite being called "highly sensationalist", having a "pro-mau mau bias" and "not letting the facts in the way of a rant" by her peers. Not a universally acknowledged authority in any way, quite the opposite, how about some balance and less elkins reliance? — Preceding unsigned comment added by 91.125.169.29 ( talk) 05:54, 26 September 2011 (UTC)
Sort of surprised there is no mention of the use of "mau mau" as a verb, meaning to terrorize or menace. Is this a result of the Mau Mau Uprising or the later American Gang? I definitely feel this is part of legacy of the group and is a part of the definition in Wikitionary. Stardude82 ( talk) 19:51, 27 September 2011 (UTC)
As a serviceman I was told by a couple of hard bitten vetrens who'd fought in the Mau Mau campaign that the leaders of the Mau Mau were officially known as "Leopard Men" who specialised in atrocities.
There was also an official award of 15 pounds sterling awarded to any British trooper bringing in the head of a known Mau Mau Man. AT Kunene ( talk) 09:52, 1 October 2011 (UTC)
The return of the bust of Winston Churchill may well have a simpler explanation. Roosevelt frequently referred to Churchill as "that drunken bum" with his delusions of Britain as a major partner in WW2.
Churchill must have been an acute embarassment to Roosevelt and to others in post war years. Some forty years after Churchills death, now is the time to be rid of an embarassing reminder. AT Kunene ( talk) 09:59, 1 October 2011 (UTC)
In the infobox, what does the sentence "a total of 50,000 from all sides" - particularly the "from all sides" refer to? At best this is unclear. VolunteerMarek 20:52, 7 March 2012 (UTC)
Looking through the article, it appears that there are some pretty serious POV problems. For example in the "Deaths" section it says:
The colonial government believed the number of Kenyans killed from all instances to be 11,503,[5] but David Anderson believes that the true figure is likely more than 20,000.[11] Elkins claims it is as high as 70,000 or that they could be in the hundreds of thousands.
From what I understand Elkins number concerns those killed by the British not "from all instances" (in fact this phrase appears to be used repeatedly to purposefully confuse the issue).
And then
Elkins' numbers, however, have been solidly rebutted by the British demographer John Blacker
"Solidly" rebutted? Oh really? According to who? Blacker? That's the source given, I don't see an independent source saying "solidly rebutted". This is classic POV pushing.
Likewise in the atrocities section, which, as an aside is horribly written and very confusing, the first line is "Atrocities were inflicted by all sides." and then very quickly "Mau Mau militants were guilty of widespread atrocities." More classic POV pushing.
Clean this mess up please. VolunteerMarek 21:00, 7 March 2012 (UTC)
Uploading documents to scribd and linking to them is almost never acceptable. First off, scribd is not a reliable source: we have no assurance that the uploader did not modify the document prior to uploading. Second, most valid reference material on scribd is uploaded in violation of copyright. In particular, two reports linked are clearly marked Crown Copyright, 1925 and 1934 respectively. If you read the article on Crown Copyright, you will find that while they may be protected for as few as 50 years, depending on circumstance they could be protected for as long as 70 years after the death of the last contributor. The burden of showing that these particular documents are in the public domain falls on the editor wanting to link to them, and the link needs to be to a reliable site, not scribd. Yworo ( talk) 16:25, 10 March 2012 (UTC)
Include a section on Mau Mau dress. And photos. There are no photos. In the Southern United States, Mau Mau Halloween costumes are on sale. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 186.58.161.37 ( talk) 13:16, 15 March 2012 (UTC)
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This article is getting rather unwieldy. To help sort this out can I suggest that a dependent article on the Detention Camps is created, as per the guidelines Wikipedia:Summary style, and the article reverts to the one someone has recommended below - http://en.wikipedia.org/?title=Mau_Mau_Uprising&oldid=106465905 which, like most Wikipedia articles, could be improved. For those interested in the Mau Mau Uprisings the anthropologist Louis Leakey (LSB Leakey) is a primary source. He wrote two books on the Mau Mau: Mau Mau and the Kikuyu, (Methuen, 1952) and Defeating Mau Mau (Methuen, 1954). Leakey was a native Kikuyu speaker, a member of the Mukanda Kikuyu age group and an intitiated first-grade elder (Muthuri wa mburi imwe). ixo ( talk) 11:40, 18 August 2011 (UTC)
I am working on a major revamp of this article to bring it up to Wikipedia standards. If you can help please feel free to do so. Thanks! ScottPAnderson ( talk) 12:53, 19 May 2010 (UTC)
More to come... ScottPAnderson ( talk) 01:34, 21 May 2010 (UTC)
If this article was on the Jewish Holocaust, its author would be the Nazis. Just goes to show how relying on Wikipedia for history on developing countries will yield some laughable results. If you start by calling people fighting against an invading force that steals their land and herds them in a concentration camp as "rebels" then you have to be part of the government. —Preceding unsigned comment added by Popq ( talk • contribs) 17:47, 8 June 2009 (UTC)
Damn! Who WROTE this stuff? There seems to be an overemphasis on the violence and brutality of the Mau-Mau -- and, indeed, they were violent and brutal. Yet, there is virtually no information provided on what prompted such violence. What about the deprivation and degradation of the Kikuyu under British rule? What about how the British mistreated Kenyans, seized their land, causing desperate deprivation -- and the scandal that ensued when the government tried to cover up reports that British soldiers had castrated Kikuyu men using pliers? Hey, how's that for brutal?
Like it or not, the Mau-Mau were freedom fighters (at least initially), trying to free themselves from British rule. But, gee, you sure wouldn't really know that from reading this. This article definitely needs a major rewrite. There needs to be some balance. deeceevoice 17:32, 16 Sep 2004 (UTC)
Frankly, I don't know how much of all the garbage about cannibalism, bestiality, etc., is true. It sounds like a lot of racist propaganda. In some of the reading I've done, it seems a lot of this was simply rubbish cooked up by white colonialists. There is absolutely no real explanation in this piece WHY the Kikuyu rebelled, what their grievances were. White settlers hardly lived "alongside" Kenyans. Kenyans were robbed of their land, forced to the brink of starvation, conscripted into military service and then subsequently discriminated against and denied even the most basic human rights in their own country. There is no attempt to put the Mau-Mau in the context of a struggle for national liberation from a brutal, oppressive, white, minority, colonial regime. Theirs was a righteous struggle -- that ultimately resulted in Kenyan independence and the ascension of Jomo Kenyatta (originally arrested with others accused of having dealings with the Mau-Mau and convicted in a British kangaroo court and then imprisoned). Kenya was very much like apartheid-era South Africa and Rhodesia in terms of the power relationships under British colonial rule: black oppression and deprivation, white privilege and prosperty.
The Mau-Mau were the vanguard in the struggle against such injustice. And this entry does them a grave disservice. It should be trashed and begun again. deeceevoice 22:22, 23 Sep 2004 (UTC)
I have completed an extensive edit of the article. Comments would be appreciated. Unless someone speaks up, I'll take down the biased view marker. I don't know if I'm the only one who has noticed this, but the entire page also needs to be moved to "Mau Mau Uprising" and "Mau Mau" should be a redirect. BanyanTree 12:48, 20 Nov 2004 (UTC)
(from WP:RM)
The Economist highlights these two books that discuss this conflict:
-- Confuzion 21:48, 30 Dec 2004 (UTC)
I, too, think you need to take into account Elkins and Anderson's work mentioned above, and not just leave them as a reference. Elkins, for instance, mentions that almost 1 million persons were interned in concentration camps and the euphemistically named "enclosed villages"- why does your article not mention this? This review of her book mentions that aspect: http://www.harvardmagazine.com/on-line/030572.html
This review of both books reports in further detail on Anderson's investigation into British policy and the name contemporary British officials gave the tortures, the gestapo. All of this is extremely significant in that it happened very shortly after WWII, yet very few are aware of its magnitude.
http://www.lrb.co.uk/v27/n05/port01_.html
Why does Deeceevoice automatically brand an article that is critical of black people is 'racist crap'. I have lived in Kenya and I can comment on the basis of some knowledge, rather than solely on the basis of a shared ethnicity. It is clear that both sides in this 'Uprising' used tactics and methods they do not bear scrutiny. However, it is important to realise that a solitary incident does note make an habitual practice. Furthermore, we should be wary of some stories that may well have been promulgated as the result of propaganda (by either side). I am concerened that a recent revision states that the British got most of their information by torture, that they used torture chambers in Nairobi, that the white settlers tortured their black workers for information and sport. Where is the evidence for this, other than apocryphal stories. There was mistreatment of Mau Mau detainees by the British. That is a matter of record, but the only torture chambers I know of in Nairobi are the ones built after independence. Robert 56
I don't know if the article has been updated since the comments made by deeceevoice, but the article I read on Jan 3 was a perfectly balanced description of the Mau Mau Revolt. I spent a few months in Kenya; in the Aberdares and Mt. Kenya region I researched the Mau Mau Revolt. It is true that not all the information is included in the article (i.e. Africans fighting in WWI and WWII were promised land and other rights) but you must remember this is only an encyclopedia giving a basic description of the entire event. A book with multiple volumes could be written about the Mau Mau Revolt and still miss important details, this is why the reader is expected to do research if they want more information. This article is accurate, the Mau Mau acted very much like savages, and many accounts talk about this. I personally have seen what Africans can do to a goat before they eat it, or while they eat it. I'm sure bestiality is uncommon in Kenya but I can guarantee it happens. Deeceevoice, please do not tell other people they are wrong, especially when you don't know what you are talking about.
It's easy enough to find out the state of the article when I first disparaged it by checking the article's edit history. It was a miserable piece of abjectly racist crap in September, but has been greatly improved by BanyanTree in the months since. And you want to talk about "savages"? And I suppose the British castrating the Kikuyu with pliers was "civilized"? deeceevoice 12:01, 9 Feb 2005 (UTC)
By 1953, almost half of all Kikuyus had no land claims at all. The results were worsening poverty, starvation, unemployment and overpopulation.
How did having no land claims lead to overpopulation?
I know I thanked you on your talk page a long time ago, but I recently crossed this article again, Banyan, and impressed by how far it's come -- head and shoulders above the previous, racist crap. Thanks again. Well done. :-D deeceevoice 11:57, 9 Feb 2005 (UTC)
Your a nutcase! Take some valium ok! The article was good originally! Too bad your mau mau's lost! ( 68.227.211.175 00:44, 12 January 2006 (UTC))
I am right. The british empire didn't 'collapse'. Not from war anyway. Hello?! ( 68.227.211.175 02:29, 6 April 2006 (UTC)) (Romanyankee)
The nature of the Mau Ma uprising was not necessarily anti-colonial in nature guys.... it was mainly the result of economic grievances, whilst the political sphere of the uprising was generally limited. The Mau Mau fighters did commit atrocities to their opponents, this should be in no doubt, but the British actions were on occassion equally barbaric, just with the guise of legitimate, civilised behaviour. As a result of such events at Hola Camp, the Empire became embarrassing and in part, this can be seen to lead to Kenya's independence... (unsigned)
But the economic situation was a DIRECT result of colonisation - white land grabs, stupid laws prohibiting Africans from growing coffee, restrictive "pass" system... Bonfire elefantti ( talk) 02:38, 28 September 2008 (UTC)
There is a likelyhood someone could come across a report written by a dutch socialist immediately after Lari massacre. If someone could find her work, it would form a good bases to those who would want to write about the Lari stuff. I haven't however found her name, but this is a good begining
I highly recommend the book "Something of Value" by Robert Ruark (1955). It is a fabulously written novel which paints the Mau Mau Uprising exactly as it was; a response of a variety of different interest groups to colonisation. It is neither here nor there; the book demonstrates clear understanding of the situation from someone who, clearly, experienced the events themselves. It is a novel, but is so rich that it feels perfectly true. 203.173.151.51 09:36, 13 December 2005
An article in the Guardian by George Monbiot ( The Turks haven't learned the British way of denying past atrocities) compares the way the Turkish government deals with its past with the way the British deal with their past genocides. Quote:
But the average British subject has no idea that such atrocities ever happened, while in Turkey everybody knows what has happened to the Armenians. — Babelfisch 08:09, 27 December 2005 (UTC)
You're absolutely right about that- though I think it as much stems from a confused and problematic sense of identity as a deliberate attempt to forget on the part of everyday people. 'Britain' in some ways is ceasing to exist, and the history of the state of Britain- including Scotland and Wales, not just England- along with it. Regional identities such as with the growing expressions of Scottishness or Englishness are taking over and people (perhaps would like to) forget the whole empire ever happened. I don't think they have any monopoly over selective interpretation of their periods of shameful behaviour, isn't 'Thanksgiving' called 'The National Day of mourning' by native americans because of the Metacomet/wampanoag massacres? That might not be an appropriate example so I apologise if I've got my facts wrong, but you take my point. The Mau Mau's activities will inevitably be positive for some and negative for others, and both sides will pick the aspects that reinforce their opinion whilst ignoring inconvenient truths. I think more African history should be taught in Britain to reflect the rounded historical facts of British empire. Atillashardermate 12:04, 30 April 2007 (UTC)
PS- I agree that people should be taught more about things like the Hola massacre- and crucially what the reaction was at home, not to condemn their nation as some kind of pantomime villain; to see the whole picture of the past
" Mau Mau " is an adverbial phrase in the Kikuyu language meaning "to eat ravenously, like a hyena". It was the name of a gang of Kikuyu thugs who terrorised the Kiambu area in about 1890.
It occurs in a Kikuyu- English dictionary, possibly published by the Oxford University Press. In about 1970. Native speakers will probably say the same.
No it isn't. I'm a native Kikuyu born and bred. There is no such word in the Kikuyu language. Doesn't matter what dictionaries written by the English say, though I don't know where the word came from. 196.216.68.146 11:22, 14 May 2007 (UTC) Ken T.G.Benson had the help of several native speakers of Kikuyu when compiling his Dictionary. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 87.194.4.21 ( talk) 10:00, August 30, 2007 (UTC) Those writing in 2007 are unlikely to remember Kiambu in 1890. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 86.139.209.191 ( talk) 11:24, August 30, 2007 (UTC)
Obviously this issue creates great passion, but a more obviously NPOV needs to be regained. The use of Elkins and Anderson is commendable, so long as it is understood that their research is not from a NPOV. The use of words such as "concentration camp" as a description of a detention camp is not neutral. Dismissing the atavistic elements of mau mau practice as preposterous is not neutral either. This whole article needs to be be re-worked and a lot more firm historical referencing done. Pabailie 15:13, 19 January 2007 (UTC)
The figure of 60 government casualty figures is so obviously wrong that I have removed it. The figures are well known and available from a host of sources.
The oathing practices of the Mau Mau are widely attested from many sources as well, although those sources tend to be pro-government. Nevertheless, the section on oathing is very weak and needs revising. —The preceding unsigned comment was added by Pabailie ( talk • contribs) 13:09, 25 January 2007 (UTC).
I did and someone removed them. I shall try to put them on again, along with estimates for the numbers of security forces, although no-one seems to have kept reliable figures of the numbers of Army deployed; and it has recently emerged that Army casualty figures were not centrally recorded and may be inaccurate. Can I also caution people against a simplistic repetition of Caroline Elkins' figures - they are entirely conjectural, bases upon her own idiosyncratic reading of the census figures and her decision to include in her estimates all of those living in fortifies villages as political prisoners; a position that her critics have pointed out is simply incorrect. Pabailie 19:00, 29 January 2007 (UTC)
Ok, the figures are added in, so are the footnote references; I haved edited out most of the emotive, non neautral language of this article, and will to add in a number of citations / footnotes, when i get some time. Pabailie 01:45, 8 February 2007 (UTC)
John Blacker reckons that the excess death toll is approx. 50, 000. I've added a reference to that effect. The figure from the Corfield report is inadequate even on its own terms; it does not include deaths in detention camps, nor the 1,090 executions during the Emergency.
The use of fortifed villages in the article is weasel wording. Elkins and others rightly distingush the punitive camps which were, quite simply, large prisons, from the emergency villages into which the Kikuyu civilian population was herded. The emergency villages were often new settlements, purpose-built for detention and supervision. The confinement of the Kikuyu civilian population in these villages restricted their access to farmland and clean water, which led to massive malnutrition. Elkins points this out, and Blacker's figures suggest that most of the victims were children. If, as the wikipedia article on concentration camps says, a concentration camp is a 'large detention center created for political opponents, aliens, specific ethnic [my emphasis] or religious groups, civilians of a critical war-zone, or other groups of people, often during a war', the Emergency villages were concentration camps.
You do realize that Elkins is a biased partisan, and cannot be treated as a neutral source?
::Really? Where is the proof that Elkins is biased? Thanks. ScottPAnderson ( talk) 15:56, 18 May 2010 (UTC)
About John Blacker: Fact: John Blacker is former senior colonial demographic officer (1961-65) - directly implicated in the events. Fact: There was indeed a coverup of Britain's Nazi-style operations and Mass Murders (I have multiple sources from both sides). Given his personal interest in the colonial Government, how neutral can Blacker be? ScottPAnderson ( talk) 15:56, 18 May 2010 (UTC)
The main article needs a section on both the Emergency villages and the detention camps. The detention camps are vital to the story, since this is where most of the atrocities were committed; the Emergency villages are essential because this is almost certainly where most civilian deaths occurred. ( Hythlodayeus 20:01, 16 June 2007 (UTC))
The article just mentioned British atrocities. I felt this was betraying a NPOV so I also added some stuff about Mau Mau atrocities. Led125
Someone has added some stuff on the retaliation for the Lari Massacre. Please add that elesewhere. It has nothing to do with MAU MAU atrocities. (Add it in BRITISH atrocities).
It is important to note that the British atrocities were unsanctioned acts by individual solders or settlers, who may have had a personal grudge against the mau mau (e.g. a buddy being killed) and commited their acts completely of their own accord. In fact, the brass had issued stern warnings to the soldiers about this, and the U.K. cannot be held responsible for these people's actions.
Hi, I take it you undid my edit of the Lari massacre.
I reverted your edit for the following reasons: the second Lari massacre is directly relevant to the first, since it was a direct response to it; since the second massacre was an immediate reaction to the first, the events are best explained and understood by considering them together (most books handle them together, see Anderson 2005, for example); finally, because the paragraph as, it read , implied that the total number of casualties of the massacre was 120 (the official figure -released by the colonial administration- was 74; admittedly this could be wrong). Readers of wikipedia will presumably realise that the second Lari massacre was not a Mau Mau atrocity, since it is explicitly stated to be the work of colonial forces.
I note that you did not transfer the material on the second Lari massacre to 'British Atrocities', so it is easy to wonder if you meant it to disappear altogether.
Hythlodayeus 00:44, 28 July 2007 (UTC)
I didn't remove it. Someone else did that. I have now transfered it to the British atrocities section (I also added European settlers and black loyalists because they fought for the British but were not actually British). I hope this solves any disagreements. Led125
I think this section has been edited incorrectly, I am wondering for instance why the last sentence reads the way it does the Mau Mau were Kikuyu so why would they be rounding them up into buildings and setting them ablaze...-- 76.117.194.57 ( talk) 23:36, 23 September 2008 (UTC)
A largely unreported and unacknowledged part of the Emergency - due to the ongoing internal colonization of Kenya - is the fight of Kenya's first peoples (mostly Ogiek) against the Mau-Mau. They understandly experienced Mau-Mau guerrilleros as - frequently brutal - intruders into their ancestral territorites, and thus easily sided with the British, especially with Kenya Regiment and pseudo-gangs. The contribution of Ogiek trackers and scouts, who knew their forest much better than any Mau-Mau fighhters, was crucial for the clean-up after Erskine's new strategy ("Operation Anvil") had vanquished the main forces of Mau-Mau. 8th December 2008 —Preceding unsigned comment added by 91.19.150.122 ( talk) 09:34, 8 December 2008 (UTC)
I altered some stuff on the article, and a person essentially undid it, completely ignoring why I had made the changes. The virtual undo was made on the basis of a one line explanation of POV - yet none of the changes I made are substantial with that respect. I merely cite scholarly sources like historians Mark Curtis, Caroline Elkins and David Anderson. The person has also completely ignored my reasons for making one particular change, an important one, namely the removal of the Pumwani 'shallow graves' in the section on Mau Mau atrocities. The reason for my removing that, as I thought was perfectly clear from my comment when I made the edit, was becuase on the cited page of Anderson's book, p.185, THERE IS NO MENTION OF SHALLOW GRAVES WHATSOEVER. I didn't simply correct the page number because when I went to the index to look up all mentions of Pumwani, ON NONE OF THE PAGES REFERENCED WITH RESPECT TO PUMWANI WAS ANY MENTION WHATSOEVER. According to the index of Anderson's book, Pumwani gets a mention on pages 39, 220 and 352; ON NONE OF THESE PAGES IS THERE ANY MENTION WHATSOEVER OF SHALLOW GRAVES. Maybe it is somewhere else in the book, perhaps someone can find the correct page. For the moment, as far as I am concerned, the quote has just been made up. The person has also changed back some things only to introduce grammatical errors. I just can't see what's going on here: I've made no controversial changes, merely made the text less disjointed to read, and added some new citations from Mark Curtis, Caroline Elkins and David Anderson - all respected historians. I'm going to undo the undo, please can someone explain what I am supposed to have done wrong. Regards, User: 217.43.43.145 11:15, 10 October 2007
I removed the picture for the movie The Oath, since it was the wrong one, of a 2005 movie about the war in Chechnya by Khassan Baiev. Couldnt find any accurate picture. Scratchy —Preceding unsigned comment added by 83.253.62.253 ( talk) 19:51, 15 November 2007 (UTC)
This was at the top of the article page but makes more sense here. Lisiate ( talk) 00:35, 7 March 2008 (UTC)
Imperial War Museum sound archive #30268.
Key words: Africa history/20th Century conflicts/Kenya/Mau Mau/terrorism/freedom fighters/colonial rule/Mt Kenya White Highlands/Mt Kenya Crown Forest.
In the hope it is of interest to historical research, The Imperial War Museum (London) recently recorded my recollections of 18 months in the Mt Kenya forest back in 1955/56 as a 17-year-old fighting the Mau Mau gangs above Nanyuki, Meru and Embu. I had been farming at around 8,900 feet on the edge of that forest when the request came from the Kenya authorities to report to Nairobi and collect my jungle outfit, Bren gun and Patchett machine carbines. I was then named Tracker Team Leader 12 (later Tracker 6 and finally Tracker 1) and given about 20 non-Mau Mau tribe askaris, mostly Kipsigis and Samburu and Kamba for continuous forest patrols.
The recordings extend over about 6 hours on 5 CDs archived as #30268. The Sound Archive telephone number at the Imperial War Museum is +44 20 7416 5365. Best contact would be Richard McDonough on rmcdonough@iwm.org.uk
With kind regards.
Tim Symonds [email removed to avoid spam - Lisiate ( talk)]
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Didn't the Luo also take part? They're not mentioned at all at present. Badagnani ( talk) 06:10, 4 December 2008 (UTC)
The role of the Jaluo for the and in the Emergency has been comparatively sparsely researched, but William Ochieng' did some good work on the topic, e.g. in the Studies in Memory of Gideon Were. 8th December 2008 —Preceding unsigned comment added by 91.19.150.122 ( talk) 09:37, 8 December 2008 (UTC)
The London Telephraph [2] is reporting that President Barack Obama is returning the bust of Winston Churchill, in part because his grandfather Hussein Onyango Obama, was alledgely tortured during the Mau Mau uprising. Is that worthy to be incorporated or noteable enough? StreamingRadioGuide ( talk) 06:51, 18 February 2009 (UTC)
I'm going to move the long etymology section to the end of the article. People who come hear to read about the uprising want to know what happened first - the origins of the word are secondary. —Preceding unsigned comment added by Ackees ( talk • contribs) 13:49, 22 April 2009 (UTC)
When I read about wales and other European nations they talk about the Welch people, the Welch Nation, etc. When it comes to Africa you hear about tribes. The Youruba Tribe, not you have 100 Million poeple in this group so why are they tribes? The people in Kenya are ethnic groups. not tribes.-- 196.207.35.246 ( talk) 12:45, 23 June 2009 (UTC)
You make a really good point and I have noticed it too. Sometimes it makes some sense (e.g. highly related subgroups of an ethnic group) but usually it does not. And they should reference certain groups in the UK as tribes (such as Liverpudlians) if they use it for African groups. Nakamura Mondo ( talk) 11:59, 18 November 2010 (UTC)
I don’t know if this has already been discussed, but the use of the word "insurgency" for Kenya revolutionaries gives the content of this article a rather dogmatic appeal. Considering the historical context of European colonialism, I don't believe whether a revolt of the colonized against European civil authority was legitimate or not is matter of fact, and using such a word for description does not aide in the article's factual objectivity. —Preceding unsigned comment added by Mdmjames ( talk • contribs) 07:19, 18 December 2009 (UTC)
I think more should be told about the conflicts between the mau mau and other african peoples, because this is far more pertinent to Kenya's present day troubles (such as the post-election violence a couple of years ago) than the conflict between the mau mau and the British.
Certainly, all the written accounts, and all that I can remember people who were around in East Africa at the time saying to me, gave me an impression of the mau mau being feared by a very large proportion of their own people, and by just about all of the other African peoples in what's now known as "Kenya" and the countries around it.
Americans like to see British colonialism as an overweaning evil, but British rule did not lead to conflicts of this kind everywhere, not even in Africa, and one suspects that any causes to the conflict pre-dating British rule, are being studiously ignored. Probably, nobody outside Kenya would have a clue in any case.
This wasn't really about whether or not the British would cease to rule Kenya, from 1945 onwards it was long-term policy to get out of everywhere that could rule itself, as soon as it was possible (far too early in the case of Burma, as it turned out). What the mau-mau conflict was really all about, was who would rule Kenya after the British had gone.
That may be the most pertinent of the issues which this article, and this discussion, ignore.
Much depended on the timing of any independence process: In Burma, it was obvious to experts that rapid independence would lead to domination by the Burman minority, and thence to genocide amongst many, if not all, of Burma's other 36 races. The timing was determined by US Pressure on the Atlee government, experts, such as George Orwell were ignored, the Burmans dominated, they still do, and thanks to the predicted genocide, which has indeed happened, they are probably not an ethnic minority anymore.
Had Kenya become independent in the early fifties, or at any other time with the mau-mau still intact, would the outcome have been: peace, harmony and justice? Or an agonising, decades-long hell like Burma? You may get different answers from different African peoples within Kenya.
And what would the USA look like today if it had become independent AFTER us wicked British abolished slavery? —Preceding unsigned comment added by 83.67.221.189 ( talk) 17:13, 31 December 2009 (UTC)
User:ScottPAnderson has changed the numbers of involved persons very substantially, without changing the citation. He has also changed the tone (with terms like 'freedom fighter' and 'heroic', which aren't NPOV). The large scale nature of the changes to the article make it hard to discuss. I am going to revert again, please introduce new changes slowly, one at a time, after providing sources. Saying 'Kenya Natl Archives' in an edit summary is not good enough, other editors need to be able to check them. Thanks. Squiddy | (squirt ink?) 13:02, 13 May 2010 (UTC)
I have investigated the figures, and their appears to be a discrepancy between those used in the article and those in the reference. The author states in ref 1 (below), the numbers interned were up to 50000, not 1-3 million. Ref 2 (below) quotes directly from the source used in the wikipedia page, and quotes a number of figures which contradict the edits by Scott, including 'up to 20,000' dead. This information is from the author Caroline Elkins, and so I dont see why it can possibly be so different from the figures quoted. Clovis Sangrail ( talk) 14:59, 14 May 2010 (UTC)
Nation 2/21/2005, Vol. 280 Issue 7, p30-34
The result of the move request was: page moved. TFOWR propaganda 11:59, 26 May 2010 (UTC)
Kenya Emergency (1952) →
Mau Mau Uprising — There have been two three page moves in quick succession recently. I'd like there to be a discussion, and a
consensus for any change, before this devolves into
chaos. My opinion on any page move is: neutral.
TFOWR
propaganda 13:00, 23 May 2010 (UTC)
TFOWR
propaganda
15:25, 23 May 2010 (UTC)
Copy, paste and edit the following:
* '''Example, e.g. oppose/support'''. Example text explaining why you agree/disagree with the move. ~~~~
Oppose because:
The result of the move request was: page moved (casting vote). Anthony Appleyard ( talk) 10:39, 4 June 2010 (UTC)
Mau Mau Uprising → Kenya Emergency (1952) — I relisted this such that the long-standing name of the article is kept for now and the newly proposed name is requested. Personally, I do not support the move, since the term "Mau Mau" is ubiquitous and should be kept. Nevertheless, I'd like to have a discussion on the issue Julius Sahara ( talk) 16:13, 23 May 2010 (UTC)
I support the move because, in addition to the other reasons I stated above:
Thanks.
ScottPAnderson (
talk)
17:52, 23 May 2010 (UTC)
ScottPAnderson has a legitimate point - in the official UK government records the situation was then and subsequently always referred to as "The Emergency" or "The Kenyan Emergency" (cf [4] - note this record will only be available for a few days due to the terms of the National Archive, but if anyone cares to search the UK National Archives most of the papers are available free to download). At the same time, this terminology can reasonably be described as weasel words. 'Mau Mau uprising' implies a lot of things that 'Kenyan Emergency' simply does not, and I would agree with anyone who says that there was a Colonial subtext to the favoured term (not implying this as a motive for the current change at all). The name is less significant in terms of usability given the existence of redirects, but even so, I would prefer to see the popular name remain. Elen of the Roads ( talk) 20:31, 23 May 2010 (UTC)
I didn't deliberately remove it. I have other examples of the Mediawiki software occasionally achieving this effect in an edit conflict - we did ec and your post ought to have posted, but just occasionally the software will show the post as posted, but it will be removed when the other editor reposts their edit conflict. Apologies - I've reposted it below. Elen of the Roads ( talk) 20:58, 23 May 2010 (UTC)
Oppose This page is linked to from Ernest Hemingway's True at First Light, a book based on his account of a visit to Kenya during the uprisings. The book refers to the event as the Mau Mau Uprising; the introduction to the book, written by his son Patrick Hemingway who lived in Africa, uses the term Mau Mau Uprising; all the criticism I read on the event referred to the Mau Mau Uprising. A compromise would be to add the alternate description to the lead and to have a page with the alternate redirect to Mau Mau Uprising. I'm uninvolved, and have this page watched because I read it whilst working on the Hemingway piece. Truthkeeper88 ( talk) 20:36, 23 May 2010 (UTC)
My dearest Scott:
You can pick any decent source to combat your outrageous claims, but let's stick to one which you yourself find acceptable: 'What better source of Quality than [archives] and historians like David Anderson who specifically use the term "Kenya Emergency"?' Not a good start, Scott - Anderson does not 'use the term "Kenya Emergency"' in any blanket sense. To give other editors some examples, I'll stick simply to the first nine pages of this four-hundred-page book.
As for the other chapter headings and subheadings: 'Making a Rebellion'; 'Going to War'; 'General China's War: Freedom Fighters in the Forest'; 'Spoils of War'
You see that Scott likes his term 'freedom fighter': this is again ludicrous, and runs against the characterisation Anderson gives of the Mau Mau rebellion. In a couple of contexts—on one occasion seemingly sarcastically—Anderson refers to members of Mau Mau as 'freedom fighters' (see above chapter title; for sarcasm: 'Heroes' Acre, that little slice of Uhuru Park set aside as a memorial to the war, presents at opportunity to deepen division these divisions, or to try to heal them. The advocates of Heroes' Acre want to create a memorial to the 'freedom fighters', most obviously those who led the fight in the forest; but what about all of those others buried at Kamiti, in the unmarked pits reserved for the unclaimed bodies of the hanged? They surely belong in Heroes' Acre too. And what about the Loyalist dead, left to rot in shallow graves after Mau Mau's assassins had done their work?'); throughout the book, Anderson uses less loaded terms like 'rebels' and 'fighters' to characterise Mau Mau's militant members.
Anderson regards Mau Mau as a primarily a civil war within the Kikuyu - again, in complete contradiction to Scott's pathetic attempts to characterise Mau Mau as 'freedom fighters' whose violence led 'directly' to Kenyan independence.
Do I need to go on? Long and short, contrary to Scott's assertion that Anderson 'uses the term "Kenya Emergency"', he does not settle on any single term to characterise the conflict in 1950's Kenya, but rather seems to have a preference for terms such as 'rebellion', 'war' and 'revolt'. Scott should be banned from editing this page. Sh33pl0re ( talk) 13:28, 24 May 2010 (UTC)
How much more discussion do we need? How many more times does this guy have to be exposed? Sh33pl0re ( talk) 15:51, 24 May 2010 (UTC)
Now, let's see what Anderson has to say about Scott's beloved Kariuki memoir. Whilst noting that Kariuki's account 'set the benchmark' (p. 314), Anderson goes on to note that other personal accounts 'take a less ideological view' and that Karuiki's account is an 'idealised notion of "suffering for the nation"' (p. 315). So far from Kariuki's account being the standard 'scholarly' Kenyan study of Mau Mau (as Scott alledges), it is but one of a number of victims' accounts of British bruatlity - and an 'ideological' and 'idealised' account at that, according to Anderson.
To back up his desperate desire to have this article classify the Mau Mau uprising as 'ending the colonial invasion of Kenya', he cites some random website (historywiz.com - truly a scholarly source!!) and page 303 of an enyclopaedia 'available on Google Books'. Conveniently, when I went to Google Books, 'Pages 303 and 304 are not shown in this preview.' Unfortunately, pages 302 and 305 are shown, which enables us to see that SCOTT'S CITED PAGE PAGE IS NOT EVEN REFERRING TO KENYA, BUT TALKING ABOUT CONGO (BRAZZAVILLE). How on earth can anybody take this guy seriously with such utterly, utterly pathetic and crude attempts at propaganda? Sh33pl0re ( talk) 15:27, 24 May 2010 (UTC)
My hunch is that you are correct regarding the article issue, but I'm completely disinclined from taking your side. You might want to think about that. Respect earns respect. - GTBacchus( talk) 17:14, 31 May 2010 (UTC)
I have move protected the article for a week due to the move war that has occurred today. Per WP:PROTECT, this does not constitute an endorsement of the current title. Black Kite (t) (c) 16:38, 23 May 2010 (UTC)
To save you flipping back and forth between here and the article, I'll post it in entirety:
————
The origin of the word "Mau Mau" is not known and its meaning is much debated. Depending on a person's point of view, the Mau Mau are either seen as a disorganized bunch of violent, troublesome, tribal savages, who refused to give up their land and freedom in exchange for Britain's gift of civilisation, and who were crushed by the British Army (a colonial apologist viewpoint); or, a determined, well organized, but ill-equipped Army of valiant heroes, who successfully resisted an invading empire, under harsh survival conditions, and without any foreign support (a predominantly African viewpoint).[3]
The KLFA soldiers never referred to themselves as the "Mau Mau" - preferring the Millitary title: "Kenya Land and Freedom Army" instead.[16][17]
- - -
[3] Wunyabari O. Maloba, Mau Mau and Kenya, An Analysis of a Peasant Revolt (Indiana University Press),December 1993
[16] Kabogo, Tabitha. Dedan Kimathi: A Biography. (East African Educational Publishers, Nairobi: 1992) p.23-25.
[17] Kariuki, J.M. “Mau Mau” Detainee: The Account by a Kenya African of his Experiences in Detention Camps 1953-1960. (London, Oxford: 1963) p.24.
————
This article is intolerable since Scott showed up, but this section in particular sheds light on his entire agenda. Firstly, Scott sets up a dichotomy regarding opinion about Mau Mau: either Mau Mau is a disorganized bunch of violent, troublesome, tribal savages, who refused to give up their land and freedom in exchange for Britain's gift of civilisation, and who were crushed by the British Army (a colonial apologist viewpoint), or it's a determined, well organized, but ill-equipped Army of valiant heroes, who successfully resisted an invading empire, under harsh survival conditions, and without any foreign support (a predominantly African viewpoint).
That's it according to Scott: you either agree with what he states without evidence is a predominantly African viewpoint, else you are an apologist for the brutality of British colonialism. Such a dichotomy is hopelessly simplistic (see below); you can draw your own conclusion as to why he might want to limit the field so drastically.
Note, too, Scott's sarcasm (Britain's gift of civilisation...) and his terminology (valiant heroes).
Let me introduce the third option mentioned by Nicolas van de Walle in his review of Elkins' and Anderson's books in Foreign Affairs, an option which Scott has closed down: Anderson's more sociological approach puts greater emphasis on intra-Kikuyu conflict. Recent scholarship agrees with Anderson's sociological approach. For example, you can check a recent study published by Cambridge University press: it's author is Professor Daniel Branch, and here is what he has to say (quoting from the book; see the pdf):
“ | Lacking a clearly defined nationalist ideology and restricted to the hills of the Kikuyu-dominated Central Province, the Mau Mau insurgents were not explicitly national in either intellectual or operational scope.
The war did not simply pit oppressive British forces against noble Kenyan nationalist rebels. Instead, it took the form of a civil war within Kikuyu society as so-called loyalists from among that community forged alliances with the colonial government and turned on their fellow Kikuyu Mau Mau within the ranks of the insurgency. As many Kikuyu fought with the colonial government as did those against it. |
” |
Editors around when Scott first showed up will be able to notice that one of the first things Scott did when he started editing here was minimise any reference to Kikuyu-on-Kikuyu violence, e.g. the first Lari massacre. As the article currently stands, the first Lari massacre is baldly introduced like this: Immediately after the discovery of the first Lari massacre... There is zero explicit discussion of the fact that this first massacre was carried out by Mau Mau against their fellow Kikuyu, let alone any detail of the unspeakable brutality of their attack. It is simply noted that Mau Mau militants were also guilty of human rights violations. There is no way for anyone unacquainted with the Mau Mau rebellion to know that the next sentence is the first Lari massacre: At Lari, on the night of March 25–26, 1953, Mau Mau forces herded 120 Kikuyu into huts and set fire to them.
What I am trying to say is that in his efforts to portray Mau Mau as a nationalistic, freedom-fighting force, Scott has—and has needed to—remove the possibility that far from the Mau Mau rebellion being an pouring of latent Kenyan nationalism, the conflict was in large part a civil war within Kikuyu society. The idea that all Kikuyu supported the Mau Mau and their violent methods is simply untenable in light of current scholarship. —Preceding unsigned comment added by Sh33pl0re ( talk • contribs) 21:12, 24 May 2010 (UTC)
“ | While the Home Guard patrol had hurried to the scene of the murder earlier that evening, some several hundred attackers had gathered at pre-arranged meeting places throughout the Lari location. In five or six separate gangs, each numbering one hundred or more persons, the attackers descended upon their targets. Their heads swathed to disguise their identities, armed with pangas, swords, spears, knives and axes, and with some carrying burning torches, they swarmed over the unprotected homesteads. They carried with them ropes, which they tied around the huts to prevent the occupants from opening the doors before the set the thatch alight. As the occupants struggled to clamber through the windows to escape, they were savagely cut down. Most of those caught in the attack were women and children, but they were shown no mercy by the attackers, who seemed intent on killing every person in the homesteads. As the bodies were cut down and viciously hacked, the attackers threw them back into the blazing huts. | ” |
The whole History of Kenya reads like colonial propaganda. Example, the Mau Mau section: "A key watershed came from 1952 to 1956, during the " Mau Mau Uprising", a terrorist movement directed principally against the colonial government and the European settlers."
ScottPAnderson ( talk) 21:58, 24 May 2010 (UTC)
Please add the ISBNs to the book references, and if possible add convenience links. Please post here, if there are questions how to do so. Once done, I'll check the sources. Thanks. Truthkeeper88 ( talk) 12:54, 25 May 2010 (UTC)
Currently, this article doesn't describe what occurred during the "uprising" or the "war". It has a Leading up to the Uprising section, and a "Reaction to the Uprising" section. There is almost no mention of warfare, just reference to British reactions to it, and to atrocities. Where in the country was the guerilla campaign kicked off, where was it strongest, what strategy did each side use as violence intensified? Where the insurgents organized by a central command or locally? How many loyalists fought against the Mau Mau? Where there other organized or impromptue militan Kenyan groups? Compared to the Algerian War, this article comes up way short.
"At no other time or place in the British empire was capital punishment meted out so liberally—the total is more than double the number executed by the French in Algeria"
This claim is not true, unless it refers solely to officially recorded executions in the 20th century. Ireland 1798 and India 1857 are two obvious examples. I see this is one of the few facts sourced, but that doesn't mean it wasn't stated accurately.
Just a few observations. The first half of the article is superb, minus the lack of citations. Just from 1952-1960 it seemed to be sorely lacking, IMO. —Preceding unsigned comment added by Phi O'Byrne ( talk • contribs) 21:44, 7 July 2010 (UTC)
During the 1954-60 Mau-Mau uprising in Kenya, camps were established to hold suspected rebels. It is unclear how many were held but estimates range up to 1.5 million - or practically the entire Kikuyu population. Between 130,000 and 300,000 are thought to have died as a result.[citation needed] Maltreatment is said to have included torture and summary executions. In addition as many as a million members of the Kikuyu tribe were subjected to ethnic cleansing. (Sources: . R. Edgerton, Mau Mau: An African Crucible, London 1990 page 180; C. Elkins,"Detention, Rehabilitation & the Destruction of Kikuyu Society" in Mau Mau and Nationhood, Editors Odhiambo and Lonsdale, Oxford 2003 pages 205-7; C. Elkins, "Britain's Gulag: The Brutal End Of Empire In Kenya", 2005). —Preceding unsigned comment added by 84.215.58.231 ( talk) 17:49, 10 August 2010 (UTC)
This article is a long rant against the British throwing accusation after damnation, all the while praising the mau mau as saints/freedom fighters/heroes. The mau mau mutilated, raped, murdered, tortured and maimed untold thousands. The article is massively reliant on a handful of hugely controversial books, the worst of which I see is Caroline Elkins, a much maligned and heavily criticised author of muck slinging anti-British sentiment.
Compare the article as it stands with that of 2 years ago. HERE: http://en.wikipedia.org/?title=Mau_Mau_Uprising&oldid=106465905
It used to be a reasonably clear and balanced attempt at explaining the conflict. It is clear that the article was long since subjected to sustained sabotage and has become the disastrous, and near incomprehensible mess that it now is. This is a disgrace.
As it is so far gone, any attempt to clean it up will be met with auto revisions. I suggest massive help is needed to save this article ASAP. 87.112.23.249 ( talk) 00:07, 11 November 2010 (UTC)
This article is in dire need of a full rewrite. It reads like the mau mau were freedom fighting democrats. But not only this, the article is near unreadable.
This is unacceptable.
The Elkins book is cited by this article some 17 times and used as a holy spring of 'facts', despite the vast disagreement from historians to the majority of the claims in the book.
Many of the Elkins 'facts' were utterly demolished in 2007 by the demographer John Blacker, in the Journal of African Affairs. Which you can see here (to get the full text download the PDF file at the bottom): http://afraf.oxfordjournals.org/content/106/423/205.abstract
A damningly critical account of the apparent agenda of the Elkins book, which is cited by this article some 17 times, is by the Kenyan historian Bethwell Ogot (himself very critical of the British) in Journal of African History 46, 2005, page 502.
He says that the Mau Mau fighters:
Contrary to African customs and values, assaulted old people, women and children. The horrors they practiced included the following: decapitation and general mutilation of civilians, torture before murder, bodies bound up in sacks and dropped in wells, burning the victims alive, gouging out of eyes, splitting open the stomachs of pregnant women. No war can justify such gruesome actions. In man’s inhumanity to man there is no race distinction. The Africans were practising it on themselves. There was no reason and no restraint on both sides, although Elkins sees no atrocities on the part of Mau Mau.
Where is the balance in this article? It is an atrocity.
Gaius Octavius Princeps ( talk) 20:16, 11 November 2010 (UTC)
---If no one has anything to add in defence of this mess, I intend to rectify this myself. Anyone? Gaius Octavius Princeps ( talk) 22:52, 17 November 2010 (UTC)
Can we agree that the Elkins study, an expansion around her PhD thesis, is good for the detention camps? Blacker's criticism pertains only to her assertion that up to 300,000 people died—a criticism which is agreed to be correct by all relevant experts—and others have criticised her use of survivor testimony. HOWEVER, we don't want to throw the baby out with the bath water: whole chapters of the book are built around the historical record of our detention camps. I've not seen any decent criticisms of her account of the Pipeline or the 'dilution' method, for example, both of which are solidly built on archival documents and interviews with the people responsible for them. Anyway, unless I hear otherwise, I'm happy to use the sections of her book dealing with the camps and screening and which rely on the historical record. Iloveandrea ( talk) 16:33, 14 April 2011 (UTC)
I posted this on another user's talkpage, but it's pertinent so I'm posting here too.
Many, many people were all too happy to draw the line there, however—that is to say, whilst there were some fair criticisms of Elkins' book, they were desperate to throw the baby out with the bath water. I've highlighted this myself; indeed, I've not seen a single person who rightly criticised parts of her book raise their voice against her outstanding analysis of our detention and interrogation systems. Most of those parts of the book are relentlessly poured straight out of the archives and the mouths of the people responsible. Again: at this point in time, there is no basis for any complaint whatsoever with those parts of her book. It's worth mentioning again that Elkins' PhD thesis was actually on the detention and interrogation systems, so the book has obviously been expanded around her doctorate. It's also worth a significant mention that David Anderson happily cited Elkin's PhD thesis in his book Histories of the Hanged. Iloveandrea ( talk) 14:20, 22 April 2011 (UTC)
Not that I can prove this, but here is some correspondence with Prof. Anderson:
Chiefs were given quotas for Carrier Corp recruitment, and powers to enforce recruitment by coercion. Those holding a labour ticket as farm employees were exempt from such forced recruitment.
The second statement is more obscure, I will concede, as I think I've implicitly assumed a few things as being established. Carrier Corp mortality was very high,. and over the longer run it is generally agreed that it had a negative impact upon African labour recruitment for other knids of wage employment through until at least 1923.
Farm labour at this time included some who were engaged only a waged labourers, but these weere a very small number, and they were generally only employed seasonally. The vast majority of those holding a farm labour ticket were in fact 'squatters', who were resident on the farm permanently and who took their reward in kind (use of land and (pasture, housing, etc) and not as a wage.
The impact of Carrier Corp death rates thus put a brake on recruitment of wage laboutr into govt employment, but it did not have a negative impact on squatter contracts.
He was replying to my question regarding something I'd read in Masters, Servants and Magistrates:
Dear Professor Anderson,
Just a very quick e-mail.
Was reading something of yours in Masters, Servants and Magistrates and was confused about something therein.
On page 505 I read, "Only those employed by Europeans were exempt from [forced] recruitment [e.g. for the detested Carrier Corps]... As a direct consequence, recruitment of farm workers increased markedly during the war"; however, on page 514 you write, "the high mortality of labor recruited for service in the Carrier Corps during the 1914-18 war... did little to encourage Africans into waged employment."
Where does my misunderstanding lay?
Anyway, you will see from the article in due course that I have incorporated his explanation and clarification into the article. — Preceding unsigned comment added by Iloveandrea ( talk • contribs) 20:03, 28 December 2010 (UTC)
In the same section there is a clear case of bias:
then the next sentence says
So those at Lari were not murdered but killed? Also "After the discovery of the Lari massacre (between 10 pm and dawn that night), colonial security services retaliated on Kikyu suspected of being Mau Mau. These were shot, and later denied burial. ... Thirty-two British civilians were murdered by Mau Mau militants." It is inevitable that most of the primary sources of that time will talk about the killing of Mau Mau and their supporters and the murder of British civilians and their supporters. But there is a bias in this article that is reflecting those primary sources. I would suggest that all references to murder are replaced with killed. We could go the other way and replace all killings with murder, but clearly some killings will have been lawful and so not murder under the law, and so it will be easier to use killed in place of murder to remove the systemic but unintentional racist bias in the article. -- PBS ( talk) 20:21, 29 December 2010 (UTC)
A bunch of thugs kill civilians its murder. The government executes people for crimes then its a execution. Nothing racist involved, its just the way English works, many of the British soldiers were African. -- 90.217.99.40 ( talk) 10:28, 1 February 2011 (UTC)
My addition of the torture of President Obama's grandfather in the concentration camps was undone by User:Outofsinc under the edit summary "Speculation and about how the president feels can't really be considered an legacy of the Mau Mau uprising". I feel legacy could be one of may appropriate titles for this content but I am open to put it under any other section. Outofsinc, please feel free to suggest where it should go. Zuggernaut ( talk) 16:15, 20 February 2011 (UTC)
It may deserve mention that the president's granfather's third wife, claims her husband was tortured by the british, but as he was arrested in 49 and sentenced for two years, it's difficult to claim it was without charge, and wrong to claim Chruchill was prime minister at the time. It was Clement Atlee. Outofsinc ( talk) 07:30, 21 February 2011 (UTC)
One thing I do agree with, Zug, is that there should be a Legacy section. The status of Mau Mau in Kenya, belongs in this. If it is to be reduced to trivia about returning a loaned item that was decorating the oval office, it belittles what was and remains a very important topic in Kenyan and British history Outofsinc ( talk) 08:32, 21 February 2011 (UTC)
Let's be clear about this, the allegation that Obama's grandfather was tortured is not from The Telegraph or the The Daily Mail. They both state that the allegations stem from Obama's grandfather's third wife. The text introduced into the article unlike the references used, did not state this. The allegation that president Obahma returned Churchill's bust, loaned by the british government to his predesesor because, his grandfather was mistreated by the british is completely unsupported. The Mau-mau rebellion covers the period of Atlee, Churchills second term, Eden and Macmillan. The allegation from Obamas grandfather's third wife of the mistreatment of her husband covers the years 1949-51 when Atlee was Prime Minister.
DBaba, you don't know my politics and likely never will, but you can't sentance someone to a term of imprisonment without charge. The source stated that obamas granfather was arrested in 1949 and sentanced to two years. The Mau-mau rebellion is indeed vital to medern Kenyan politics, the return of marble head is less so. Outofsinc ( talk) 16:55, 21 February 2011 (UTC)
Can get the personal comments out of the way first please, I have not edit warred: I have reverted you zug once as per BRD, Dbaba reverted me once with no discussion, I reverted him with discussion and he reverted me again. The current version is your bold one, which either you or Dbaba should revert until the discussion reaches consensus. My editing history is no business of this discussion, and no business of yours. It is not the business of an encyclopedia to doubt anyones truthfulness, I myself have no opinion of the matter, but we should report what the sources say.
We should not question the root of the story but we should report where the story comes from. Should we say Obama's paternal grandfather's third wife is lying? no. Should we say Obama's paternal grandfather's third wife made the allegation yes. Should we say it is proven fact? not without a source. Including the sentance about the president returning the bust in the article is bound to lead readers to assume to two events are connected, therefore we need a source to categorically state they are (from I imagine either the president or some official from the white house) or state in the article who belives they are related (the author of the New York Times opinion piece perhaps). Outofsinc ( talk) 18:54, 21 February 2011 (UTC)
Second sentence (optional) – Barak Obama mentions in his memoirs that his grandfather was imprisoned for more that six months before being found innocent. (Also covered in the first reference and allows a second voice, arguably more noteworthy than his step grandmother. However if you prefer I’m happy to leave this sentence out.) Third Sentence – Several British journalists have speculated that the return of a bust of Winston Churchill, loaned by the British government to George W Bush, is related to his grandfather’s mistreatment. Churchill’s second term of office from 1951-55 occurred during the Mau Mau uprising. (The qualifier British journalist may be contentious, but angst over the “special relationship” does seem to be a strangely British preoccupation. If we can find a non-British journalist making the same speculation we can remove the qualifier.)
Barak Obama's grandmother told him that her husband was imprisoned without trial and tortured by the British during the Mau Mau uprising. [1] [2] President Obama mentions in his memoirs that the British imprisoned his grandfather for six months leading The Times to suggest that his antipathy towards British Colonialism may be strengthened due to this. [3] He was tried in a British court but no documentation of this can be found since the British destroyed court records older than six years. [1] Several prominent media organizations suggest that the return of a bust of Winston Churchill from the White House by Barak Obama, loaned by the British government to his predecessor, is related to his grandfather’s mistreatment. [4] [5] [6]
Granny Sarah told Barak that his grandfather's arrest and imprisonment were due to a denunciation by an African whom Onyango had offended. He was detained for six months without trial. He was tried in a British court, but the records of his trial cannot be found, as the British destroyed all their colonial courts records that were over six years old. Onyango was tortured by the British and their Kenyan police. He returned home from prison skinny, dirty, and lousy and felt deeply humiliated. Onyango's helpless rage was boundless (Obama, 1995, pp. 417 - 418).
The first few sentences now seem dislocated and repetitious, do you agree that:
Sorry I am late to this, but I have to disagree with the "suggests" lines. First, the statement that "The Times suggest that his antipathy to British Colonialism may be increased due this." Where is that stated in the text? Zuggernaut writes above that the "first paragraph from The Times addresses" it. But the first paragraph is:
Barack Obama’s grandfather was imprisoned and brutally tortured by the British during the violent struggle for Kenyan independence, according to the Kenyan family of the US President-elect.
The article goes on to discuss the different accounts of the involvement of Barack Obama's grandfather and father in "the fight for Kenyan independence", but it never makes any references to Barack Obama's views about England or the British Empire.
Second, the sentence regarding Churchill's bust is pure speculation and should be removed. President George W. Bush was an admirer of Winston Churchill and had a bust of him put into the oval office. Here is how President Bush described Churchill when accepting the bust: "He knew what he believed, and he really kind of went after it in a way that seemed like a Texan to me." [7] It is unsurprising that President Obama would not identify with that sentiment and so it is unremarkable that he would replace the bust of his political opponent's hero with one of his own hero, Abraham Lincoln (who, coincidentally, was also from Illinois). This article in the Daily Mail also talks about how President Obama has changed the furniture, wall paper, and even the presidential seal in the Oval Office. This is all very routine when changing presidential administrations, there is no need to create theories about how Barack Obama may or may not feel about British imperialism 60 years ago to explain his actions. N8 f ( talk) 09:14, 8 March 2011 (UTC)
A lot of the artical is out of order according to the date. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 67.164.134.54 ( talk) 23:49, 23 May 2011 (UTC)
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help)The vast majority of sources state that the rebellion ended in 1956. ( 92.7.27.57 ( talk) 22:20, 12 June 2011 (UTC))
The military campaign, known as the Kenyan Emergency, ended on 21 October 1956 according to all reliable sources. It's important the article mentions the fact that the terrorists were defeated by the end of 1956. ( 92.7.29.234 ( talk) 11:16, 16 June 2011 (UTC))
They were terrorists by any definition, which is another reason why they were unable to capture widespread native support. I would also strongly question whether the terrorist campaign set the stage for Kenya's independence as the introduction states. This did not happen until December 1963, more than seven years after the rebellion had been completely defeated. ( 92.7.19.101 ( talk) 11:06, 23 June 2011 (UTC))
The article itself says historians are divided on whether the uprising had any affect on Kenya leaving the Empire in 1963, so this should be reflected in the introduction. ( 92.7.24.253 ( talk) 10:40, 3 July 2011 (UTC))
The link to Enough Is Enough points to a disambiguation page. Said page does not have an entry for the film mentioned in the link.
95.149.91.98 ( talk) 08:49, 28 June 2011 (UTC)
Hi - I moved this from the article its all uncited. IMO its trivia and such a lot of it demeans the focus of the article. I wouldn't replace it but if anyone thinks its valuable then feel free to cite it and replace it. Off2riorob ( talk) 17:31, 14 July 2011 (UTC)
Is quoted here as if she were the only person to have any say on the matter. She is quoted here some twenty-five times despite being called "highly sensationalist", having a "pro-mau mau bias" and "not letting the facts in the way of a rant" by her peers. Not a universally acknowledged authority in any way, quite the opposite, how about some balance and less elkins reliance? — Preceding unsigned comment added by 91.125.169.29 ( talk) 05:54, 26 September 2011 (UTC)
Sort of surprised there is no mention of the use of "mau mau" as a verb, meaning to terrorize or menace. Is this a result of the Mau Mau Uprising or the later American Gang? I definitely feel this is part of legacy of the group and is a part of the definition in Wikitionary. Stardude82 ( talk) 19:51, 27 September 2011 (UTC)
As a serviceman I was told by a couple of hard bitten vetrens who'd fought in the Mau Mau campaign that the leaders of the Mau Mau were officially known as "Leopard Men" who specialised in atrocities.
There was also an official award of 15 pounds sterling awarded to any British trooper bringing in the head of a known Mau Mau Man. AT Kunene ( talk) 09:52, 1 October 2011 (UTC)
The return of the bust of Winston Churchill may well have a simpler explanation. Roosevelt frequently referred to Churchill as "that drunken bum" with his delusions of Britain as a major partner in WW2.
Churchill must have been an acute embarassment to Roosevelt and to others in post war years. Some forty years after Churchills death, now is the time to be rid of an embarassing reminder. AT Kunene ( talk) 09:59, 1 October 2011 (UTC)
In the infobox, what does the sentence "a total of 50,000 from all sides" - particularly the "from all sides" refer to? At best this is unclear. VolunteerMarek 20:52, 7 March 2012 (UTC)
Looking through the article, it appears that there are some pretty serious POV problems. For example in the "Deaths" section it says:
The colonial government believed the number of Kenyans killed from all instances to be 11,503,[5] but David Anderson believes that the true figure is likely more than 20,000.[11] Elkins claims it is as high as 70,000 or that they could be in the hundreds of thousands.
From what I understand Elkins number concerns those killed by the British not "from all instances" (in fact this phrase appears to be used repeatedly to purposefully confuse the issue).
And then
Elkins' numbers, however, have been solidly rebutted by the British demographer John Blacker
"Solidly" rebutted? Oh really? According to who? Blacker? That's the source given, I don't see an independent source saying "solidly rebutted". This is classic POV pushing.
Likewise in the atrocities section, which, as an aside is horribly written and very confusing, the first line is "Atrocities were inflicted by all sides." and then very quickly "Mau Mau militants were guilty of widespread atrocities." More classic POV pushing.
Clean this mess up please. VolunteerMarek 21:00, 7 March 2012 (UTC)
Uploading documents to scribd and linking to them is almost never acceptable. First off, scribd is not a reliable source: we have no assurance that the uploader did not modify the document prior to uploading. Second, most valid reference material on scribd is uploaded in violation of copyright. In particular, two reports linked are clearly marked Crown Copyright, 1925 and 1934 respectively. If you read the article on Crown Copyright, you will find that while they may be protected for as few as 50 years, depending on circumstance they could be protected for as long as 70 years after the death of the last contributor. The burden of showing that these particular documents are in the public domain falls on the editor wanting to link to them, and the link needs to be to a reliable site, not scribd. Yworo ( talk) 16:25, 10 March 2012 (UTC)
Include a section on Mau Mau dress. And photos. There are no photos. In the Southern United States, Mau Mau Halloween costumes are on sale. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 186.58.161.37 ( talk) 13:16, 15 March 2012 (UTC)
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