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Quiz about Kenya The Road to Independence 20
Quiz about Kenya The Road to Independence 20

Kenya: The Road to Independence 2.0 Quiz


A quiz on Kenyan history through the colonial period into the time of national consciousness and the cusp of violent revolution.

A multiple-choice quiz by stuthehistoryguy. Estimated time: 6 mins.
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Time
6 mins
Type
Multiple Choice
Quiz #
325,792
Updated
Dec 03 21
# Qns
10
Difficulty
Average
Avg Score
7 / 10
Plays
4014
Awards
Top 10% Quiz
Last 3 plays: bernie73 (8/10), Guest 107 (5/10), DeepHistory (8/10).
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Question 1 of 10
1. One of the hallmarks of any colonial economy is the imperial power's monopolization of production, and British East Africa (the colonial precursor to Kenya) was no exception. In 1932, the average British farm was over 2,400 acres in size, and even on the cusp of independence in 1960, British farms produced 83% of the colony's agricultural exports.


Question 2 of 10
2. Most social historians of Kenya have taken special notice of the British settlers' work ethic. In contrast to the leisured country life of their homeland, most of the British in Kenya were widely acclaimed for their disciplined attention to duty, their long work hours, and their near-ascetic devotion to church and family values.


Question 3 of 10
3. The history of Kenya leading up to the effort for independence is rife with the dispossession of tens of thousands of square miles of prime land in violation of numerous formal agreements; indeed, this is highly reminiscent of Euro-Americans' incursions into the lands of the Indians. Less well-known are Kenyan labor practices of the time, details of which are nigh-unbelievable to twenty-first century eyes. Which of these is true about African labor under the 1938 Kenya ordinance? Hint


Question 4 of 10
4. The Kikuyu Central Association was founded in the mid-1920s from the ashes of the banned East Africa Association. It became the predominant organization for African rights during the interwar period in Kenya. Who became its first general secretary in 1927? Hint


Question 5 of 10
5. African service in World War II went beyond the Carrier Corps that has characterized participation in World War I. Over 47,000 Africans enlisted for active duty - a number which would have been larger had the British settlers not blocked further recruitment because of the resulting labor shortage. Which of these was the most significant contribution of East African troops in this conflict? Hint


Question 6 of 10
6. In response to popular pressure, an African was finally seated on the Kenya Legislative Council in 1944. Who was the first African to hold this seat? Hint


Question 7 of 10
7. With the advent of World War II, the Kikuyu Central Association (KCA) was banned by the colonial government. It continued clandestinely until being replaced by a new organization in 1944: KAU. What does this acronym stand for? Hint


Question 8 of 10
8. In the years following World War II, African nationalism, and particularly Pan-African unity, became a powerful political force throughout the continent. What Swahili term meaning "freedom" came to represent this general sentiment that independence must come soon? Hint


Question 9 of 10
9. Prior to World War II, many African subsistence farmers without formal land rights, known in Kikuyu as "ahoi", worked excess land on informal agreements -- initially with African leaders, but increasingly with white settlers. In the postwar years, these "squatters" were increasingly evicted and driven into the landless bulk of the African populace or repatriated to African reserves. What motivated these mass evictions? Hint


Question 10 of 10
10. While in Britain, Kenyan expatriate Jomo Kenyatta helped organize the Fifth Pan-African Congress, a 1945 meeting of African leaders that served as something of an incubator for growing anti-imperialist sentiment. One participant, Kwame Nkrumah, would soon after become leader of the Convention People's Party (CPP). After years of activism, Nkrumah would become president of the first British colony in Africa to be granted independence, setting a pattern that would be followed by many other emerging African states, including Kenya. What country did Nkrumah lead to independence through agitation and diplomacy? Hint



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Most Recent Scores
Apr 11 2024 : bernie73: 8/10
Mar 24 2024 : Guest 107: 5/10
Mar 17 2024 : DeepHistory: 8/10
Mar 13 2024 : Guest 71: 6/10

Score Distribution

quiz
Quiz Answer Key and Fun Facts
1. One of the hallmarks of any colonial economy is the imperial power's monopolization of production, and British East Africa (the colonial precursor to Kenya) was no exception. In 1932, the average British farm was over 2,400 acres in size, and even on the cusp of independence in 1960, British farms produced 83% of the colony's agricultural exports.

Answer: True

This dominance of a relatively few Europeans (60,000 in 1960, as opposed to 7,800,000 Africans) made the coercion of African labor absolutely imperative for the colony's success. The hut tax and kipande were instituted specifically to engender dependence on European cash that could only be earned by service on British farms as a matter of course.

As British Governor Percy Girouard put it: "Taxation is the only possible method of compelling the native to leave his reserve for the purpose of seeking work...It is on this that the supply of labour and the price of labour demands."
2. Most social historians of Kenya have taken special notice of the British settlers' work ethic. In contrast to the leisured country life of their homeland, most of the British in Kenya were widely acclaimed for their disciplined attention to duty, their long work hours, and their near-ascetic devotion to church and family values.

Answer: False

I will dodge the question of slandering the families of some who may be reading this by quoting directly from Pulitzer Prize winner and Harvard professor Caroline Elkins: "These wealthy families did not come to Kenya to work, but rather to take advantage of the British government's offer of land, labor and capital...Beyond such gentrified leisure, these privileged men and women lived an absolutely hedonistic lifestyle, filled with sex, drugs, drink, and dance, followed by more of the same...They drank champagne and pink gin for breakfast, played cards, danced through the night, and generally woke up with someone else's spouse...The running joke in Britain became, 'Are you married or do you live in Kenya?'" Individuals may take issue with Elkins' characterization, but I will say that it is the prevalent one in 21st-century historiography.
3. The history of Kenya leading up to the effort for independence is rife with the dispossession of tens of thousands of square miles of prime land in violation of numerous formal agreements; indeed, this is highly reminiscent of Euro-Americans' incursions into the lands of the Indians. Less well-known are Kenyan labor practices of the time, details of which are nigh-unbelievable to twenty-first century eyes. Which of these is true about African labor under the 1938 Kenya ordinance?

Answer: All of these

Most of these restrictions, which most historians today equate to a form of de facto slavery in that they bound workers to their employers with little opportunity for choice or redress, would be easily disposed of by restraint of trade laws in most developed countries today.

In imperial Kenya, however, these strictures WERE the law. In fairness, the wages cited above do not include the room and board typically provided - though this concession is also similar to descriptions of American chattel slavery of the century previous.

These labor provisions could apply to children as young as twelve.
4. The Kikuyu Central Association was founded in the mid-1920s from the ashes of the banned East Africa Association. It became the predominant organization for African rights during the interwar period in Kenya. Who became its first general secretary in 1927?

Answer: Jomo Kenyatta

As pointed out in part 1.0 of these quizzes, Kenyatta was an eloquent writer and the preeminent voice for African rights in the colony. The KCA sent him to London in 1929 to present the African case to the British people. Though he garnered negligible support from official channels, he caught the interest of several left-wing intellectuals, and would go abroad again in 1931, studying for a time with the Communist International in Moscow.

He would spend most of the 1930s informally gathering leftist British support while continuing his academic work at the London School of Economics.

He would remain in Britain through World War II. The KCA would expand through the 1930s, with branches in Thika, Fort Hall, Limuru, Nyeri, and Laikipia. Though the KCA would lead movements against the destocking of livestock in favor of coffee cultivation (from which Africans were banned), the organization would have little success expanding its appeal into other tribes like the Luo and Maasai.
5. African service in World War II went beyond the Carrier Corps that has characterized participation in World War I. Over 47,000 Africans enlisted for active duty - a number which would have been larger had the British settlers not blocked further recruitment because of the resulting labor shortage. Which of these was the most significant contribution of East African troops in this conflict?

Answer: The liberation of Ethiopia from Italian occupation

The final defeat of the Italians in 1941 came with the capture of Gondar, carried out largely by East Africans. African troops from Kenya also distinguished themselves against the Japanese in Burma and the Vichy French in Madagascar.
6. In response to popular pressure, an African was finally seated on the Kenya Legislative Council in 1944. Who was the first African to hold this seat?

Answer: Eliud Wambu Mathu

A teacher with a degree from Oxford University, Mathu enjoyed a reputation as a fiery speaker. Even with his public office, however, Mathu was still subject to onerous limitations on free speech--including being barred from speaking publicly without the permission of the District Commissioner (DC). Though this treatment may suggest that Mathu was a radical, he was in many instances very much in favor of a gradual approach to constitutional government.

Indeed, one of his more well-known slogans was: "Half a loaf is better than none."
7. With the advent of World War II, the Kikuyu Central Association (KCA) was banned by the colonial government. It continued clandestinely until being replaced by a new organization in 1944: KAU. What does this acronym stand for?

Answer: Kenya African Union

Originally named the Kenya African Study Union, KAU was co-founded by Eliud Wambu Mathu, charter president James Samuel Gichuru, and a host of other activists. The Union quickly assembled a cohesive correspondence network in several communities, and was able to organize substantial gatherings and rallies throughout the country. On at least one occasion, the DC of the Northern Kikuyu District expressed great surprise at how the KAU was able to draw a large group for a Mathu speech with less than two weeks' lead time.
8. In the years following World War II, African nationalism, and particularly Pan-African unity, became a powerful political force throughout the continent. What Swahili term meaning "freedom" came to represent this general sentiment that independence must come soon?

Answer: Uhuru

Though Swahili has limited prevalence as a mother tongue, it is a close analog of many East African languages, and it was widely used as a common language under German and English colonial rule. In 1928, the German-sponsored Mombasa Conference codified a standard orthography and grammar; these remain customary today.
9. Prior to World War II, many African subsistence farmers without formal land rights, known in Kikuyu as "ahoi", worked excess land on informal agreements -- initially with African leaders, but increasingly with white settlers. In the postwar years, these "squatters" were increasingly evicted and driven into the landless bulk of the African populace or repatriated to African reserves. What motivated these mass evictions?

Answer: Modernized agriculture, which rendered the squatters' hoe-and-oxen technology obsolete.

The increased mechanization and profit motive in Kenyan agriculture effectively curtailed demand for small-scale sharecropping. Rather, there was a demand for labor to work in mechanized agriculture on a wage basis. Therefore, in place of the traditional land-use culture, the prevailing system became increasingly capitalist and wage-based. Many pastoral squatters were required to limit the size of their herds and increase the number of days worked. These trends extended to squatters on government land, including the Tugen people of the Lembus Forest who had claimed rights to that land under agreements made in the 1920s. The transformation of these small farmers (whose worldview was intimately tied to their relationship to the land they farmed) into dispossessed drifters fueled the increasing destabilization of Kenyan society.

In regard the wrong answers: most Africans were mustered out of the British forces after World War II, and factory production was never a major concern in Kenya during the colonial period.
10. While in Britain, Kenyan expatriate Jomo Kenyatta helped organize the Fifth Pan-African Congress, a 1945 meeting of African leaders that served as something of an incubator for growing anti-imperialist sentiment. One participant, Kwame Nkrumah, would soon after become leader of the Convention People's Party (CPP). After years of activism, Nkrumah would become president of the first British colony in Africa to be granted independence, setting a pattern that would be followed by many other emerging African states, including Kenya. What country did Nkrumah lead to independence through agitation and diplomacy?

Answer: Ghana

After the Pan-African Congress (which was co-organized by the great American scholar and activist W. E. B. Dubois), Nkrumah was hired as an organizer by a moneyed consortium called the United Gold Coast Convention, which lent its name to the CPP. Using tools well known in leftist circles (including rallies, banners, and popular slogans), Nkrumah's organization eventually prevailed in winning a national vote for independence, and Ghana became independent in 1957.

In 1958, Nkrumah hosted a far-ranging All-African People's Conference, chaired by Kenyan activist Tom Mboya.
Source: Author stuthehistoryguy

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