The recent hideous selective slaughter of ethnic Kikuyu in Mpeketoni in Lamu County is not unique in human history.
History
is replete with such outbreaks of inter-ethnic violence on a massive
scale: against the Jews in Europe, the Chinese minority in Southeast
Asia, against Ibos in Nigeria, against the Lebanese in Sierra Leone, the
Japanese in Peru, Indians in Burma and Armenians in the Ottoman Empire
ages ago.
But what do all these groups have in common and why are they hated so much?
According
to Dr Thomas Sowell, a Senior Fellow at the Hoover Institute, Stanford
University, who is considered America’s foremost public intellectual,
these victims are often generically “middleman minorities” who can be of
any racial or ethnic background.
The perverse hatred
of these people is founded on the economic role they play in their
disparate circumstances. This role, which we shall outline briefly, even
when played by people not ethnically different from those around them,
has nonetheless produced explosive mixtures.
The hated groups are thus not defined by ethnicity, race, colour, religion or national origin.
Under
this thinking, the Kikuyu in Lamu were not attacked merely because they
were Kikuyu, nor were Jews persecuted in Europe merely because they
were Jewish. They were killed because of resentment over their role as
“middleman minorities” in evolving economic circumstances.
Middleman
minorities are intermediaries between producers and consumers, whether
in the role of retailers or money lenders. Retailing ranges from the
modest level of street hawkers and peddlers to that of grand merchants
owning chains of stores.
OWNING VIRTUALLY NOTHING
In
Kenya, the term “broker” is very well understood to define the
“middleman” who does not actually own the goods, services or products he
or she sells. They merely link the buyer to the seller but in so doing,
they are routinely resented because they are deemed to be making money
“from nothing”.
There is a deep-seated belief in human
nature, arising from the imperative of hard physical manual labour for
survival in our primitive past, that only those who handle tangible
physical production objects “really” work.
And so
middlemen who physically produce nothing are merely parasites who insert
themselves gratuitously between the “real” producers and consumers.
This
crude misconception of economic theory is at the core of centuries of
hostility and violence against many innocent beings, but it is also
buttressed by other issues.
In the wider context, as
distinguished from an individual “broker”, if a particular ethnic group
is to become dominant in the economic role of retailing, money lending
or such other middleman activity, it implies that certain social
patterns of intrinsic behaviour in the group are fundamentally different
from that of the surrounding population. Otherwise, the majority
population would supply the majority of middlemen in their society.
This
crucial difference cannot be simply that the middleman minority has
more money. Again and again in different ages and in various countries,
the middleman minority has arrived on the scene as destitute immigrants,
owning virtually nothing and barely able to speak a few words of the
local language.
VALUES, DISCIPLINE, CULTURE
This
was the situation of the vast majority of Eastern European Jews who
arrived in the United States of America in the 19th and early 20th
centuries. In the same era, Chinese immigrants typically arrived in
Southeast countries in similar rock-bottom poverty.
It
was much the same story with Lebanese immigrants to colonial Sierra
Leone and, much later, the Kikuyu immigrants to Lamu and elsewhere in
the country.
But how could such people eventually rise
above the native born population around them? Clearly, their values,
their discipline, and their culture had to remain different. This has
the effect of further alienating them from those around them, hence
raising even more potential for resentment.
Yet, if the
middleman minorities do not remain different, they would lose their
competitive edge and not be of any use to those around them.
This fact has important implications in our debate on ethnicity and economic development.
But
whatever economic progress Kikuyu people have made in Lamu or elsewhere
as is the case for all other middleman minorities, it has come slowly
and as a result of a long uphill struggle and hard work. Killing them
will not stop it.
Mr Ngugi is a consultant on public affairs and policy (kirirowangugi@gmail.com)
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