Histories of the Hanged: The Dirty War in Kenya and the End of Empire
rty War in Kenya and the End of Empire” width=”199″ height=”300″ class=”alignleft size-medium wp-image-64″ />This expose of the
English colonial history of Kenya does a good job setting the record straight on some key issues, and brings to light the suppressed shadow side of the endgame during the period of the Mau Mau.
The infamous reputation of the Mau
Mau always deflected attention from the totally inept and repressive nature of the last hurrah of the colonialists in the sunset of the British Empire.
The colonization of Kenya was ill-conceived and predatory from the start,
and the whole history was a riddled with a set of contradictions, such as the artificial creation of the exploitative white settler culture dooming Kenyan development from the first. You cannot let loose such a gang of people such as the white settler crowd, poor white trash in a true sense, without the rapid appearance of a malignant culture and infrastructure.
This account brings to light what was quickly downplayed, the massive repression of the Kikuyu during the Emergency, with the creation of actual Gulags. The depiction of many of the judicial processes of the period, including the trial of Jomo Kenyatta, is of a mockery of justice. The Kenyan style colony was really an instance of the Empire in decline from its nineteenth century peak and at least the British had the sense after Suez not to prolong the inevitable.
The submissions are cleosd. A panel of judges goes through all the blogs submitted and selects 3 nominees per category. The public then vote for the best per category. Voting is open now at