The State, Religion, and Violence in Colonial and Postcolonial Malawi
Abstract
:1. Introduction and Contextualization
2. The Chilembwe Uprising of 1915: The Religious Aspects of Challenging the Colonial State
3. Eliminating “False Prophets” in Postcolonial Malawi: The State’s Operations against the Jehovah’s Witnesses
4. Conclusions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
1 | Wolfgang Huber (2011): pp. 1–2. |
2 | See Mohammed Usman (2013): pp. 41–51; John O. Voll (2015): pp. 1182–202; J. Peter Pham (2016): pp. 1–18; Ziya Meral (2018); Abiodun Alao (2022). |
3 | The country now called Malawi is a former British Protectorate (1891–1964) in southern Africa. From 1891–1897, the name of the protectorate was British Central Africa (BCA); from 1897–1907, the name was British Central Africa Protectorate (BCAP); and from 1907–1964, the name was the Nyasaland Protectorate. During those seven decades, there were 13 British governors. Immediately after independence in July 1964, the country degenerated into a dictatorship under the government of Dr. Hastings Kamuzu Banda, who ruled the country from 1964–1994, the period covered in this paper. See John McCracken (2012); Paul Chiudza Banda (2020). |
4 | In their recent study of causes of ‘religious-based violence’ in sub-Saharan Africa (using cases from Nigeria, Mali, and the Central African Republic), Ludovic Lado argued that the major sources of violence involving both Christians and Muslims emanated from complex cases of social, economic, and political exclusion and marginalization by the state. See Ludovic Lado (2014): pp. 1–8; Jon Abbink also makes the same claims and argues further that the grievances that marginalized citizens have against the state are then combined with religious ideologies. See Jon Abbink (2020): pp. 194–97. |
5 | Jon Abbink (2020) presents a case study of the clash between Muslims and Christians in Jos City in Plateau State, Nigeria. See Jon Abbink (2020): pp. 211–13; Abiodun Alao also discusses violence between Christians and Muslims in Nigeria, as Christians organized themselves to stop Boko Haram. See Abiodun Alao (2022), pp. 77–79; Palwasha Kakar and Melissa Nozell, have also discussed religious-based violence involving competing Islamic sects and their militias in “post-Muammar Gadaffi” Libya. See Kakar and Nozell (2016): pp. 59–84. |
6 | For instance, the reported atrocities by the Chinese government against Xinjiang’s Muslims. See Human Rights Watch (2018): pp. 1–125. |
7 | In African colonial history, scholars often demarcate three major phases, as follows: primary resistance (which took place before World War I); secondary resistance (which took place during the Inter-War Period); and modern mass nationalism (after World War II and led to the independence of African states). See, for instance, Michael Tidy (1981), p. 14. |
8 | Michael Tidy (1981), p. 14; Caroline Elkins has argued that ‘violence’ was ‘endemic to the structures and systems of British colonial rule. Violence was a means through which the empire maintained sovereign claims to overseas territories. See Caroline Elkins (2022), pp. 13–15. |
9 | In 1896, Joseph Booth published a book titled Africa for Africans. In it, he supported the return of Africans in the diaspora to Africa but also condemned European colonial rule in Africa. See George Shepperson (1958), pp. 109–12. |
10 | George Shepperson (1958), pp. 36–69, 79–81, 91–94, and 112–18. |
11 | See this work: A. Isaacman and J. Vansina, “African initiatives and resistance in Central Africa, 1880–1914”, in Adu Boahen (1985), pp. 167–93. |
12 | Paul Chiudza Banda, “Malawi: The Role of ‘Paramilitary’ Groups in Political Surveillance”, in Ryan Shaffer (2023), pp. 393–97; David T. Stuart-Mogg (2023): pp. 83–93. |
13 | George Shepperson (1958), pp. 187–320; Bridglal Pachai (1973), pp. 214–24; Joey Power (2010), pp. 13–28; John McCracken (2012), pp. 127–46. |
14 | Paul Chiudza Banda (2020), pp. 80–82. |
15 | The term “Ethiopianism” or “Ethiopian Movement”, was used to refer to “independent” African churches during the colonial period. Many began to operate in the last three decades of the 19th century. It later adopted notions of self-advancement and calls for nationalism or political independence. See George Shepperson (1953): pp. 9–18; Sylvia M. Jacobs, “Malawi: A Historical Study of Religion, Political Leadership, and State Power”, in Rolin G. Mainuddin (2002), pp. 52–56. |
16 | “The Chilembwe Trouble: All Quiet”, The Nyasaland Times, 4 February 1915. Source: Center for Research Libraries (CRL), microfilm collection; “The Chilembwe Trouble: The Debate in the Council”, The Nyasaland Times, 18 March 1915. Source: CRL. |
17 | David T. Stuart-Mogg (2023): pp. 83–93; Note that the Church of Scotland Mission, also known as “The Blantyre Mission”, also had ethnic-based and boundary-related conflicts with other Presbyterian churches in the country during the colonial period, namely, the Livingstonia Mission (LM) and the Dutch Reformed Church Mission (DRCM). See Dorothy Tembo (2024): pp. 262–76. |
18 | “The Chilembwe Trouble: All Quiet”, The Nyasaland Times, 4 February 1915. Source: CRL; “The Chilembwe Affair”, Nyasaland Times, 11 February 1915. Source: CRL; Paul Chiudza Banda (2020), pp. 395–97. ; On the application of the death penalty in British colonial Africa, including in Nyasaland, see Stacey Hynd (2008): pp. 403–18. |
19 | “Notice: List of Natives Still Wanted”, The Nyasaland Times, 4 March 1915. Source: CRL. |
20 | The British National Archives, Kew, hereafter, TNA CO 525/61: “Commission of Inquiry”, 8 May 1915; “Nyasaland Native Rising Commission”, The Nyasaland Times, 10 February 1916. Source: CRL; William Jervis Livingstone reportedly burnt down three of Chilembwe’s churches. See David T. Stuart-Mogg (1997): pp. 49–52; Note that in 1902, soldiers from Nyasaland and other British territories (belonging to the Kings African Rifles) were dispatched to British-ruled Somaliland to defeat an Islam-influenced and secessionist uprising led by the Mad Mullah (Muhammad Abdullah Hassan). See Paul Chiudza Banda (2020), pp. 34–40. |
21 | In February 1916, for example, the Nyasaland Executive Council (Exco) passed a resolution to strictly monitor and limit the operations and limit the spheres of influence of Christian missions and schools (both Western-led and African-led missions) as well as the so-called “Mohammedan mosques”. It also included banning the circulation of the so-called “Ethiopianism literature”. See TNA CO 626/2: “Minutes of the Exco meeting”, held at Zomba, 18 February 1916. |
22 | Note: The NAC was established in 1944. It was outlawed during the State of Emergency of March 1959–April 1960. In its place emerged the MCP, under the leadership of Dr. Hastings Kamuzu Banda. See Paul Chiudza Banda and Gift Wasambo Kayira (2012): pp. 1–19. |
23 | Matthew Schoffeleers (1999), pp. 17–38; “Beware of False Prophets”, Malawi News, 1 February 1962. Source: CRL; “Ngwazi warns politically-minded missionaries”, Malawi News, 28 June 1963. Source: CRL. |
24 | “Katsonga apologizes to Kamuzu: Stevens and Archbishop helped party”, Malawi News, 1 March 1962. Source: CRL. The archbishop donated £200 to the CDP, which the party used to purchase a Land Rover. Note that Mr. Stevens was General Manager of the Malawi Railways; In the pre-independence period, Dr. Banda threatened such businessmen with deportation. See Nyasaland Protectorate (1963), p. 1010. |
25 | Dr. Banda’s speech, 10th Republic Anniversary Celebrations, at Kamuzu Stadium, 6 July 1976. Source: CRL. |
26 | |
27 | See Nyasaland Protectorate (1914), pp. 1–9. |
28 | Paul Chiudza Banda (2020), pp. 47–48; “The British Central Africa Order-in-Council, 1902”, in The British Central Africa Gazette, 31 October 1902. See Sections 25–27; Note that Joseph Booth was deported from Nyasaland in August 1899 for his advocacy against British colonial rule. By November 1899, he had negotiated his way back into the protectorate. See Pedro Pinto (2005): pp. 64–65. |
29 | TNA CO 525/68: Governor George Smith to Secretary of State (SoS) for the Colonies, 26 August 1916. |
30 | TNA CO 525/72: Governor George Smith to SoS for the Colonies, 15 January 1915. |
31 | Jehovah’s Witnesses Yearbook for 1999: “Malawi”. Available online: https://www.jw.org/en/library/books/1999-Yearbook-of-Jehovahs-Witnesses/ (accessed on 14 March 2024). |
32 | |
33 | See note 31. |
34 | The Minority Rights Group, “Jehovah’s Witnesses in Africa”, Report no.29 (1985): p. 4. |
35 | The concept of “false prophets” was used to ridicule the JWs in Malawi, accusing the sect’s members of not wanting the MCP to lead Malawi to independence. See “Beware of False Prophets”, Malawi News, 1 February 1962. Source: CRL; Philip Short (1974), p. 171. |
36 | TNA FCO 141/14205: “Nyasaland Monthly Intelligence Report, August 1962.”; TNA DO 183/136: “Nyasaland Intelligence Committee Report (NICR), June 1963”, Part II, Section F.; TNA DO 183/136: “NICR, November 1963”, Part II, Section E.; TNA DO 183/136: “NICR, October 1963”, Part II, Section E.; TNA DO 183/137: “NICR, May 1964”, Part II, Section E. |
37 | TNA DO 183/136: “NICR, December 1963”, Part II, Section B. Note: The violent attacks on PIM members took place in Dedza district. Four PIM members were ‘arrested’ for failure to produce party (MCP) cards; six members were injured and taken to Lilongwe Hospital; and an elderly man died of his injuries. |
38 | “Shocking Religious Persecution in Malawi”, Pamphlet. Source: Hastings Kamuzu Banda Archive (HKBA, hereafter), Indiana University Library. |
39 | The Constitution of the Republic of Malawi, Chapter I, Section IV: “Malawi a One-Party State.” |
40 | “Jehovah’s Witnesses or Mboni, are ignorant fools”, Malawi News, 28 February 1964, Source: CRL; “Shocking Religious Persecution in Malawi”, Pamphlet. Source: HKBA. |
41 | Malawi National Archives, hereafter, MNA 2835: MCP Annual Convention Resolutions, 1965–1975 (Blantyre, Malawi: Dept. of Information, 1975), pp. 3–5. |
42 | Dr. Banda’s Broadcast to the Nation, 23 April 1967. Source: CRL; Klaus Fiedler has written elsewhere about cases where men, women, and their children were stripped naked and sexually abused by members of the MYP and MYL. See Klaus Fiedler, “Power at the Receiving End: The Jehovah’s Witnesses’ Experience in One Party Malawi”, in Kenneth R. Ross (1996), pp. 167–68. |
43 | Note that the LMW was affiliated to the MCP as the party’s youth branch. On the other hand, the MYP, as established in 1963, was set up to be a ‘developmental’ organ for Malawi’s youth. When Malawi gained independence, the MYP’s paramilitary branch was used to spy on real and perceived enemies of the regime. See TNA FCO 141/14186: “The Malawi Youth Movement is formally launched”, Nyasaland Government Press Release, no. 606/63, 11 August 1963; “MYP is under the MCP: Kamuzu reorganizes MYPs”, Malawi News, 6 December 1963. Source: CRL; Malawi Government Gazette Supplement, “The Young Pioneers Act, 1965”. 19 March 1965; TNA FCO 45/1034: “Malawi Young Pioneers”, 22 September 1971. |
44 | The Minority Rights Group, “Jehovah’s Witnesses in Africa”, Report no.29 (1985): pp. 4–5; Government of Malawi, “History and Hope in Malawi: Repression, Suffering, and Human Rights under Dr. Kamuzu Banda, 1964–1994”, (March 2005), pp. 15–16 and 40–42; “Malawi is said to detain 30,000 Jehovah’s Sect”, The New York Times, 10 December 1975. Available online: https://www.nytimes.com/1975/12/10/archives/malawi-is-said-to-detain-30000-in-jehovah-sect.html (accessed on 13 March 2024). |
45 | “Jehovah’s Witnesses Face Trials in Malawi”, The New York Times, 9 November 1967. Available online: https://www.nytimes.com/1967/11/09/archives/jehovahs-witnesses-face-trials-in-malawi.html (accessed on 13 March 2024). |
46 | TNA FCO 45/1227: “Handling of Civil Servants: Ex-Members of Jehovah’s Witnesses”, G.A. Jafu, Secretary to the President and Cabinet (SPC), to All Permanent Secretaries and Heads of Departments. Ref. no.: 49/01/26/111/26. |
47 | TNA FCO 45/1227: “Blantyre, Radio—10:30 GMT, 2 October 1972; The language that the JWs derailed political and economic development efforts in the country was also used at the MCP annual convention of September 1972. See MNA 2,385: MCP Annual Convention Resolutions, 1965–1975 (1975), pp. 15–17. |
48 | TNA FCO 45/1227: “Zambian High Commissioner”, Martin Reid, British High Commission (BHC), Malawi, to A.B. Moore, FCO, London, 22 November 1972; Dr. Banda accused ‘rich’ JWs in Malawi, Western diplomats in Malawi, and other funding agencies in the USA, Britain, and South Africa of ferrying the Witnesses from Malawi to Sinda Misale in Zambia. He denied the notion that the JWs were being persecuted in Malawi. See Dr. Banda’s speech, at State House, Zomba, 1 January 1973. Source: CRL. |
49 | TNA FCO 45/1227: “The Present Mood in Malawi”, BHC to FCO, November 8, 1972; “UN Group to Give $40,000 for Refugees from Malawi”, The New York Times, 24 October 1972. Available online: https://www.nytimes.com/1972/10/24/archives/un-group-to-give-40000-for-refugees-from-malawi.html (accessed on 13 March 2024). |
50 | “Jehovah’s Witnesses Fate in Zambia”, Malawi News, 18 March 1969. Source: CRL; TNA FCO 45/1649: “Jehovah’s Witnesses”, D.P. Small (Foreign and Commonwealth Office), to Mrs. G. Hackett (Home Office), 3 September 1974. Ref. no. CSY 1/3. |
51 | “Sect is Persecuted in Southern Africa”, The New York Times, 28 December 1975. Available online: https://www.nytimes.com/1975/12/28/archives/sect-is-persecuted-in-southern-africa.html (accessed on 13 March 2024); Klaus Fiedler in Ross (1996), pp. 161–64. |
52 | Sholto Cross, “Independent Churches and Independent States: Jehovah’s Witnesses in East and Central Africa”, in Edward Fashole-Luke et al. (1978), pp. 310–15; Note that the ideology of “Ujamaa”, was based on elements of African forms of socialism, which Nyerere introduced in postcolonial Tanzania. See Julius Nyerere (1987): pp. 4–11. |
53 | TNA FCO 106/2853: Amnesty International Report: “Malawi: Human Rights Violations 25 Years after Independence”, September 1989; TNA FCO 106/2238: Amnesty International Report: “Malawi: Imprisonment of Political Opponents”, November 1986; Africa Watch, “Where Silence Rules: The Suppression of Dissent in Malawi”, (October 1990), pp. 63–67. |
54 | “Shocking Religious Persecution in Malawi”, Pamphlet. Source: HKBA; On Dr. Banda’s life in exile, see Joey Power (2019): 1–24. |
55 | “All churches free and welcome in Malawi”, Malawi News, 15 December 1970. Source: CRL; “Churches are free to operate in Malawi, says Ngwazi”, Malawi News, 31 August 1973. Source: CRL. |
56 | As was the case in most parts of sub-Saharan Africa, the end of the Cold War in the early 1990s increased the likelihood that authoritarian governments would collapse. The pressure for political change emanated from both domestic and international forces. In Malawi, a national referendum was held in June 1993, which returned the country to multiparty democracy. In the general elections of May 1994, Bakili Muluzi of the United Democratic Front (UDF) defeated Dr. Banda. He ruled the country from 1994–2004. See Paul Chiudza Banda (2020), pp. 242–59. |
57 | “Good News from Malawi”, Pamphlet. HKBA. |
58 | See notes 31 above. |
59 | Constitution of the Republic of Malawi, 1994, Chapter IV: “Human Rights”—Section 33: Religion and Belief; US Department of State, “Malawi 2022 International Religious Freedom Report”, (2022), pp. 1–5. Available online: https://www.state.gov/reports/2022-report-on-international-religious-freedom/malawi (accessed on 21 March 2024). |
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Chiudza Banda, P. The State, Religion, and Violence in Colonial and Postcolonial Malawi. Religions 2024, 15, 853. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel15070853
Chiudza Banda P. The State, Religion, and Violence in Colonial and Postcolonial Malawi. Religions. 2024; 15(7):853. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel15070853
Chicago/Turabian StyleChiudza Banda, Paul. 2024. "The State, Religion, and Violence in Colonial and Postcolonial Malawi" Religions 15, no. 7: 853. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel15070853
APA StyleChiudza Banda, P. (2024). The State, Religion, and Violence in Colonial and Postcolonial Malawi. Religions, 15(7), 853. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel15070853