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Zanzibaris
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Journal Article
Monsoon (2023) 1 (2): 75–91.
Published: 01 November 2023
... the ruling Omani elite and other Arabs in Unguja (the main island of the archipelago). The attack lasted for nine hours and destroyed centuries of Zanzibari-Omani power. The pogroms that followed convulsed the communities of Omani descent, 3 and displacement, dispossession, and death at the hands...
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Journal Article
Monsoon (2024) 2 (2): 50–68.
Published: 01 November 2024
...Preben Kaarsholm Abstract This article gives a detailed account of the history of the Durban Zanzibari Amakhuwa community, which developed around the descendants of freed slaves brought to Natal by the Royal Navy as “liberated Africans” in the 1870s. It discusses some of the methodological...
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in The History of the Zanzibari Amakhuwa: Uprooting, Registration, and Inventions of Home in a Community of Liberated Africans
> Monsoon: Journal of the Indian Ocean Rim
Published: 01 November 2024
Figure 3 Zanzibari elders Yussuf Abdul Rehman and Salim Rapentha visiting Zanzibar with the Amakhuwa Research Committee. Photograph by Preben Kaarsholm, May 2011.
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Journal Article
Monsoon (2023) 1 (2): 92–105.
Published: 01 November 2023
...G. Thomas Burgess Abstract For most of the 1960s, Kweupe served as the official printed mouthpiece of the Zanzibari Revolution. Appearing in Swahili, the newspaper repeatedly claimed the revolution would only succeed if islanders were willing to transform their thoughts, values, and routines...
Journal Article
Monsoon (2024) 2 (2): 5–9.
Published: 01 November 2024
... the perspective of the so-called Zanzibaris of Durban, South Africa, and connects these important questions to calls for reparations. He begins with a close reading of the 1877 “Return of Liberated Africans” that is now located in the KwaZulu-Natal Archives in Pietermaritzburg, which covers a four-year period...
Journal Article
Monsoon (2024) 2 (2): 10–16.
Published: 01 November 2024
... suggest that that tension may be conceptualized as the gap between a reduced notion of the plural society as formulated by Furnivall, and an expansive sense of the plural society Sheriff experienced in his Zanzibari childhood. I imagine a range of questions would be thrown up by such a consequential gap...
Journal Article
Monsoon (2023) 1 (1): 119–136.
Published: 01 May 2023
... for Zanzibari students, but also assistance to foreign researchers.” That was our proposal. The very practical German secretary said, “So, who is going to fund it?” I said, “Oh, we haven't thought about that yet.” He said, “No, no, you can't do it that way. You have to have something.” Right there, he offered...
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Journal Article
Monsoon (2023) 1 (2): 46–59.
Published: 01 November 2023
... the Indian Ocean World. In East Africa, this is perhaps best exemplified in the violence of the 1964 Zanzibar Revolution, where Zanzibaris who identified as Africans attacked symbols of the “foreign” ruling elite supported by British rule—Omani Arabs—by attacking symbols of Arab rule and both Arab and South...
Journal Article
Monsoon (2024) 2 (2): 74–87.
Published: 01 November 2024
... the genre conventions of the chroniclers of South Asia and Arabia, who frequently omitted naming even free informants and sources. 56 He also might have implicitly included enslaved individuals when he wrote, “some of Zanzibaris have said.” 57 Nonetheless, the anonymization of interlocutors...
Journal Article
Monsoon (2023) 1 (2): 2–25.
Published: 01 November 2023
..., Kelly and Romain-Desfossés opened fire on Tamatave fort ( fig. 4 ). 118 The Malagasy responded with surprising accuracy. Subsequently, 238 European troops disembarked only to encounter an unexpectedly robust Merina defense, due largely to the strength of the fort, which two Zanzibari Arabs had...
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