from FOUR - RACE, GENDER, AND SOCIAL CHANGE IN A TIME OF WAR
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 May 2015
When defeat and colonial rule fragmented African notions of honour, elements were absorbed not only into the ethics of colonial armies and respectable Christians but also into a working-class ethic designed to ensure survival and dignity in towns and workplaces.
John Iliffe, Honour in African History, 281Then Isiah [sic] started to laugh so I told him that it was not a laughing matter, he persisted on laughing so I warned him a second time that he need not laugh about it. He still laughed so I slapped him across the mouth with the back of my hand. He laughed again so I slapped him again, then he seemed to go mad at the thought that he had been struck and went and called two hewers to witness the fact that I had severely flogged him when all the time the only witness was my cloth boy.
Thomas Yates, Underground Manager, August 21, 1945Introduction
Late summer 1945, in the twilight of empire, an incident occurred in the Enugu Government Colliery, southeastern Nigeria, which was emblematic of the new ways that the changing political context of the war encouraged African workers to contest imperial power. Thomas Yates, one of the British underground managers, twice slapped Isaiah Ojiyi, general secretary of the Colliery Workers Union (CWU), for refusing his orders and laughing at him. From Yates' description, it appears that Ojiyi goaded him into this performance to provide an opportunity for him to demonstrate his defiance of white managerial power. What followed, however, was unusual. Rather than fight back, Ojiyi took Yates to court and won. The slap itself was not unusual, as such assaults were customary in the colonial workplace, but Ojiyi was manipulating the situation to display his defiance and heroism in challenging a figure of white power who exerted such extreme control over the miners.
Ojiyi, a rather flamboyant orator and iconoclastic leader, was the type of Nigerian trade unionist who relished the opportunity to “display defiance” against racial insult and draw upon the “heroic honor” traditions of his people, the Igbo, by his willingness to push the boundaries of the state's timid attempts to eliminate racial insults.
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