Page 24 - Afrika Must Unite
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C H A P T E R   TWO

                 T H E   C O L O N I A L  I M P R I N T




     T h e   t e r m   ‘colony’  originally  m eant  a  settlement  of immi­
     grants in a foreign land.  In the political sense, a colony is either
     a settlement of the subjects of a nation or state beyond its own
     frontiers;  or a territorial unit geographically separated from it,
     but owing allegiance to it. In modern colonial history, two types
     of colonies have  grown up,  owing in the  main to  climatic  con­
     ditions.  There  is  the  ‘settlement5  colony  in which  climate  and
     geographical  environment  have  favoured  the  establishment  of
     sizeable  European  communities;  while  the  others,  regarded
     formerly,  before  the  discovery  of prophylactic  drugs  and  the
     clearance  of jungles,  as  inimical  to  the  health  of Europeans,
     usually  gathered  relatively  small  groups  of  business  men,
     administrators, soldiers and missionaries, all of whom lived in an
     environment  quite  different from  that of the ‘m other’  country.
       These two different forms of colony have been responsible for
     the evolution of different systems of government.  In fact,  there
     has  been  no  uniform system  of colonial  government  in Africa.
     The pattern has varied according to the policy and traditions of
     the different colonial powers, as well as to the existence and size
     of a settler community.
       France,  the colonial power which ruled over the largest area
     of territory in Africa, followed a policy of assimilation aimed at
     producing an elite  class.  She  hoped  by introducing a favoured
     class of Africans  to  French  culture  and civilization  and raising
     them   to  the  status  of Frenchmen,  to  avoid  the  rise  of African
     nationalism in the territories under her rule. The class of elites,
     however,  always  remained  relatively  small,  and  outside  it  the
     bulk  of the  Africans  rem ained  ‘subjects’,  to  be  exploited  and
     m altreated at the will of on-the-spot Frenchmen, both high and
     low.
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