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Uganda : An Indian Colony, 1897-1972

By: Material type: TextLanguage: English Publication details: Uganda : The African Studies Bookstore, 2021Description: 250p., illustrated, 15cmx20cmISBN:
  • 9789913623070
DDC classification:
  • HS2021/01
Summary: The long and short of this book is that it puts the spotlight on Indians in east Africa narrating them as deputy imperialists, sub-imperialists, privileged workers of the colonialists. The core argument is that the dominant status Indians came to enjoy in Uganda's economy (and East Africa more generally) was only possible because the British colonialists - those who had brought them privileged them, and practically and violently crushed local investors and their initiatives. The Indians on their part, embraced their privileged positions, and with a touch of racism, exploited Natives in ways that sometimes shocked the British - especially newer administrators from London. With impeccable reading of the archive, this book shows that before Indians/Asians were expelled from all East Africa (1965-1972), Natives in this region had received no independence. In fact as Mamdani(1995) put it, only the Indians had received independence from the British in the 1960s. With the British departure, Indians/Asians now dominated East Africa's economy with no restriction, profiting both for themselves, and their benefactors now confined to London.
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Cover image Item type Current library Home library Collection Shelving location Call number Materials specified Vol info URL Copy number Status Notes Date due Barcode Item holds Item hold queue priority Course reserves
History/Health/Science (HS) Goethe Zentrum - Kampala Library HS2010/01 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available 2025-1363

The long and short of this book is that it puts the spotlight on Indians in east Africa narrating them as deputy imperialists, sub-imperialists, privileged workers of the colonialists. The core argument is that the dominant status Indians came to enjoy in Uganda's economy (and East Africa more generally) was only possible because the British colonialists - those who had brought them privileged them, and practically and violently crushed local investors and their initiatives. The Indians on their part, embraced their privileged positions, and with a touch of racism, exploited Natives in ways that sometimes shocked the British - especially newer administrators from London. With impeccable reading of the archive, this book shows that before Indians/Asians were expelled from all East Africa (1965-1972), Natives in this region had received no independence. In fact as Mamdani(1995) put it, only the Indians had received independence from the British in the 1960s. With the British departure, Indians/Asians now dominated East Africa's economy with no restriction, profiting both for themselves, and their benefactors now confined to London.

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