Imperial Reckoning: The Untold Story of Britain's Gulag in Kenya
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| Imperial Reckoning: The Untold Story of Britain's Gulag in Kenya | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Forty years after Kenyan independence from Britain, the words "Mau Mau" still conjure images of crazed savages hacking up hapless white settlers with machetes. The British Colonial Office, struggling to preserve its far-flung empire of dependencies after World War II, spread hysteria about Kenya's Mau Mau independence movement by depicting its supporters among the Kikuyu people as irrational terrorists and monsters. Caroline Elkins, a historian at Harvard University, has done a masterful job setting the record straight in her epic investigation, Imperial Reckoning. After years of research in London and Kenya, including interviews with hundreds of Kenyans, settlers, and former British officials, Elkins has written the first book about the eight-year British war against the Mau Mau.
She concludes that the war, one of the bloodiest and most protracted decolonization struggles of the past century, was anything but the "civilizing mission" portrayed by British propagandists and settlers. Instead, Britain engaged in an amazingly brutal campaign of ethnic cleansing that seemed to border on outright genocide. While only 32 white settlers were killed by Mau Mau insurgents, Elkins reports that tens of thousands of Kenyans were slaughtered, perhaps up to 300,000. The British also interned the entire 1.5 million population of Kikuyu, the colony's largest ethnic group, in barbed-wire villages, forced-labour reserves where famine and disease ran rampant, and prison camps that Elkins describes as the Kenyan "Gulag." The Kikuyu were subjected to unimaginable torture, or "screening," as British officials called it, which included being whipped, beaten, sodomized, castrated, burned, and forced to eat feces and drink urine. British officials later destroyed almost all official records of the campaign. Elkins infuses her account with the riveting stories of individual Kikuyu detainees, settlers, British officials, and soldiers. This is a stunning narrative that finally sheds light on a misunderstood war for which no one has yet been held officially accountable. --Alex Roslin |
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| 11-12-08 | 5 | 1\1 |
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What I find interested about the text is the time frame. Less than a decade after fight the Nazis, the british empire continued to impose it might against those that fought to liberate the so-called mother country. The author rightfully look at the history by presenting evidence about the British deaths at the hands of the Mau Mau fight for land reclamation which became a fight for national liberation.
What the Brutish fear the Nazis might do to them became a mean in Kenya. I am sure some readers might have an issue with the author presented facts instead of the long held british media frieindly slants that has been the standard for over half a century. It is good to get the views of the oppressed and liberation fighters who lived under british brutish rule. I thanks the author for writing this book. In fact, the author started her research with a pro-british view and by the end realized that the colonizers were the terrorists. (Review Data Last Updated: 2009-08-07 06:43:21 EST)
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