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Not much oral tradition has survived about the area now called
Tanzania
before the colonizing powers settled. The
Arab traders penetrated the mainland as far as
Lake Tanganyika
, where they had stations in Ujiji and
Tabora. The main purpose was ivory and slaves, and these trade routes still
exist today, now tarmac and railways. The Arabs left a trail of Muslim villages
and local leaders and associated traders. Besides warfare, pure commerce was the
reason for gaining slaves. It was easy to buy slaves in those early days,
villagers would raid their neighbours and sell them.
The Masai in the north were, in those days, the only tribe that successfully
fought off the Arab slave raiders. They were a war-minded nomadic tribe, who
were more difficult to attack and raid than a small village as found in the
south.
With the coming of the European powers, colonisation gained scale and speed. The
British signed a treaty with the Sultan of Zanzibar
in the hope of stopping Napoleon from gaining access to east
Africa
and endagering the British jewels in the
Far east
. The British were the first to set up a
consulate in Zanzibar when Sayyid moved
there.
The British interest was twofold; to stop and ban slavery and to gain
commercial rights in East
Africa
. The hunt for the search of the
Nile
, and the exploration of the inland, was
partly a romantic ideal but was also fuelled heavily by the enormous economic
power to be gained from this knowledge (or so they thought).
The Brits were not the only one interested, the Germans were also working their
schemes. They started the “ German east Africa Company”, which set up
treaties with unsuspecting local chiefs to hand over their land and rights. This
“company” sphere of influence was mainly concentrated in the coastal strip,
and somewhat inland towards Kilimanjaro, Arusha and Moshi. Smoothly, the
“company” was given the status of a Protectorate by the German Government; a
treaty was signed with
Britain
(to keep out the French) and German
Tanganyika was born.
Kenya
,
Rwanda
and
Burundi
were given to the British.
The Germans set about building schools, hospitals and roads to turn their
new colony into a profit making place, but cattle husbandry was a disappointment;
the tsetse fly, found all over the north, was a serious threat. Agriculture was
hampered by the dry and unfavorable climate of the interior, and was only
profitable in the north, around the mountains.
The Germans held on till the end of World War 1, when they were made to
give up all colonies in
Africa
. Their grand scheme, to eventually unite
South West Africa
(now
Namibia
) and German Tanganyika (
Tanzania
) had finally failed. A bitter fight was
fought between the Germans and the British in
East Africa
. The famous “
Konigsberg
” and “Pegasus” battle ships sank
many British ships around
Zanzibar
and the mainland deltas, and exercised
the “fastest war in history” (45 minutes, see Wilbur Smith and K. Patience).
The Brits were given the mandate over
Tanganyika
, who neglected the colony because of the
unsuitability for agriculture. The only export crop by then was sisal, and
besides, the British had
Kenya
, a much more profitable area.
Slowly farmers in
Tanganyika
formed co-operations, and their union was
the Tanganyika Africa Association. In 1953, Julius Nyerere took over the
Union
, and quickly transformed it into a
political organization, merging with other parties to form the TANU
and taking the slogan ´Uhuru na Umojaa” (Freedom
and Unity).
Tanganyika
gained independence in 1961 in a smooth,
bloodless way, and Julius Nyerere was the first president.
Zanzibar
(and
Pemba
) had a rougher ride to Independence. The
Afro-Shirazi Party was established in 1957, who gave the main push for independence.
The two opposing parties were favoured by the Brits. In 1963, after three
elections, the two winning minority parties were given leadership, and formed
the first independent government, supported by the British. This enraged the
Afro-Shirazi Party (led by Abeid Amaan Karume), and with the support of the
mainland TANU Party, a bloody revolution was initiated. The Arabs were the
focus, and most were expelled or massacred. The Sultan was replaced by a
Revolutionary Council, and
Zanzibar
(and therefore
Pemba
) was made to merge with the mainland,
forming the United Republic of Tanzania. Till this day, opposition disputes the
outcome of all elections, and independence from the mainland is a central theme
for the contemporary opposition parties, claiming the
Union
was forced on them by the Afro-Shirazi
party.
In 1977, the ASP and the TANU formed the CCM, the Chama
Cha Mapinduzi, still in power today.
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