Misinformation in the Rhodes Campaign

Misinformation in the Rhodes Campaign

Madeline Briggs

 

Martin Luther King once said “Hate cannot drive out hate- only love can do that”.

On 9 April, 2015, the statue of Cecil Rhodes was removed from the University of Cape Town following a vote of approval by the University Council.  The statue’s removal was a victory for the “Rhodes Must Fall” (RMF) movement which asserted that the statue was a symbol of colonial aggression and oppression and that it served as a prominent reminder of the horrors inflicted by colonial imperialism.

Ever since their victory in Cape Town, the RMF movement has gained traction and momentum at Oxford University.  RMF is again demanding the removal of a statue of Rhodes, this time the one located on property owned by Oriel College. In a petition, RMF states that by refusing to remove the statue “Oriel College and Oxford University continue to tacitly identify with Rhodes’s values, and to maintain a toxic culture of domination and oppression.”

As evidence for their position, they cite an abhorrent statement by Rhodes.  Their petition states that “Rhodes is the same apartheid colonialist who said: ‘I prefer land to n****s…the natives are like children. They are just emerging from barbarism…one should kill as many n****s as possible.’”  The quotation reveals Rhodes not just as a colonial racist, but as a man advocating genocide.  A statement this damning makes one pause.

So when exactly and in what context did Rhodes make these statements?  That is where the story gets interesting.

Although the source for the quotation is not cited in the petition, with a little digging one can find it in the form above, complete with ellipses, in a book review by Adekeye Adebajo of Paul Maylam’s “The Cult of Rhodes” (Times Literary Review, 2006).  Adebajo, himself a former Rhodes scholar, subscribes fully to Maylam’s disparaging treatment of Rhodes. Reached for comment, he repeated  that the quote is directly from Maylam, and confirmed the attribution to Rhodes. A careful search of Maylam’s text reveals the seeds of the quotation on page 14. However, the three phrases indicated by ellipses are indicated by Maylam to have been said by Rhodes at different times, and in different contexts. The single sentence quoted by RMF does not exist in Maylam’s book.

But each of three phrases is incriminating in its own right, so it is worth digging deeper into Maylam’s sources.  The first phrase is cited from a 1957 biography by Felix Gross, titled “Rhodes of Africa.”   Gross did not present his biography as a work of serious scholarship.  He notes in the introduction that “The thoughts and soliloquies of Cecil Rhodes are derived from his speeches, letters and reported conversations. So as not to interrupt the continuity of the story I have refrained from giving references in footnotes.”  On page 242, cited by Maylam, he attributes the quote directly to Rhodes, but, on page 395, he expands that Rhodes made the statement to Olive Schreiner during a dinner.

Yet, in 1897, after writing and days before publishing her novel, Trooper Peter Halket of Mashonaland, Schreiner wrote to William Hay asking him to provide evidence for a quote used in the book. “It is most necessary,” she wrote, “that we have some exact quotations from… a speech which I heard [Mr Rhodes] make [to Cape Parliament] about four or five years, some valuable remarks as showing his attitude on the native-question, “I prefer land to n****s””. Schreiner appears to have mis-remembered Rhodes’s 1892 speech to the Cape House, regarding taxation and governance, in which he said “You want to annex land rather than natives. Hitherto we have been annexing natives instead of land.” No evidence of a reply from Hay exists, and Schreiner proceeded with using her memory of the quote on page 37 of her novel.

The second quotation is from Rhodes’ 1894 speech to Cape Town Parliament on the Second Rereading of the Glen Grey Act. The full paragraph reads: “Now, I say the natives are children. They are just emerging from barbarism. They have human minds, and I would like them to devote themselves wholly to the local matters that surround them and appeal to them. I would let them tax themselves, and give them the funds to spend on these matters — the building of roads and bridges, the making of plantations, and other such works. I propose that the House shall allow these people to tax themselves, and that the proceeds of their taxation shall be spent by them on the development of themselves and of their districts.”

The final quotation – “one should kill as many n****s as possible” – is the most abhorrent. But this wording actually does not come from the Maylam biography; it was introduced in Adebajo’s review, and no other source has been located or provided by the author. Maylam presents the quote as “You should kill as many as you can”, and cites Gordon Le Sueur’s book “Cecil Rhodes: The Man and his Work”, published in 1913.  On page 159, Le Sueur references a conversation recounted to him by ‘an unnamed officer’. This unidentified man reported hearing Rhodes say, following a deadly and bloody battle against rebels, “Well you should not spare them. You should kill all you can, as it serves as a lesson to them when they talk things over at their fires at night. They count up the killed, and say So-and-so is dead and So-and-so is no longer here, and they begin to fear you.”

In summary:  in making its case against the character and legacy of Cecil Rhodes, RMF presents and seems persuaded by a single damning quotation.  But a modestly careful analysis of the quotation and source should cause us to pause and then recognise its insubstantiality.  The quotation fractures into three parts.  The first is, in all evidence, an avowedly fictional attribution. The second, in full, speaks more for the African people than against them. The third, finally, appears to have been fabricated.

The disintegration of this quotation is not an argument for the character and legacy of Rhodes.  Rhodes, and the British nation as a whole, were engaged in colonialism in ways that are impossible to disconnect from racism.  Grave abuses made by preceding generations cannot simply be set aside or dismissed.

It is fair to dig deep into history and vindicate those who have been oppressed and marginalised.  It often takes time and perspective to see things clearly.  But it does not help or make things better to misrepresent the evidence to score a victory today.  It merely perpetuates the conflict.  One cannot defeat lies with more lies or hate with more hate.

22 thoughts on “Misinformation in the Rhodes Campaign

  1. Gordon Le Sueur was one of Rhodes’s private and confidential secretaries, he was closely at Rhodes’s side in the 1890s. You move rather glibly in dismissing this source.

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    1. It is true that le Sueur was one of Rhodes’ private secretaries. However, le Sueur does not claim to quote Rhodes directly; instead he states that he heard the statement repeated by an officer who had known Rhodes. Le Sueur neglects to name the officer, and he references the quote nine years after Rhodes’ death. It is reasonable to question, given the time frame, if he ever would have confirmed the officer’s statement with Rhodes himself.

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  2. Le Sueur is a contemporary ear-witness source. It is an act of willful denial on your part to attempt to remove its value as evidence. You are allowed to say “we only have one source for this”, but it is however a historical source of impeccable provenance and, given that he was Rhodes’s close and constant companion, of high value.

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    1. Please note that le Sueur did not claim to have heard this from Rhodes himself. If he had, we could certainly take it as a source of impeccable provenance, due to their relationship. The relevant point is that he is not quoting Rhodes, but rather another source.

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      1. We do not depend on Le Sueur for an account of the extraordinary brutality with which Matabeland was taken and with which the Chimurenga was crushed. Rhodes presided over mass murder, not once, but in three cycles. There is ground for you to hold on the question of whether or not the statue should be removed, but you should abandon this kind of defence of Rhodes, whose record does not rise or fall on the basis of what he said but of what he did.

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      2. Please allow me to direct your attention to the final three paragraphs of the paper. This paper is not intended as either a defence or indictment of Rhodes. It is an examination of a quotation.

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  3. May I ask Ms Briggs if you have ever done a PhD in history, or been trained in measuring historical sources? I suspect the answer, reading what you have written, is no. Perhaps you should be a little more measured when issuing misinformation about accusing others of “misinformation”.

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  4. Ah after a google I see you are in the midst of your DPhil. I think Steven would prefer you were working on your dissertation rather than wasting time on a blog on matters which lie very very far away from the furnishing of Tudor country houses.

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    1. Heaven forbid an intelligent student might get engaged in affairs existing outside her degree!!!
      I read the paper this morning
      Should probably get back to work before my tutors find out

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    2. You question the authors credentials but offer none of your own. All we know is that you’re an arm chair internet warrior, attacking people’s blog posts. Why should we take your views seriously? Do YOU have an PhD in history?

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      1. My credentials are given on the ‘About’ page of this site, and all sources used are given in another post, along with online editions where available. You are quite welcome to examine them yourself.

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  5. I’m surprised that the commenter could suggest Le Sueur’s work was being ‘glibly’ dismissed, when he is actually quoted *in support* of the argument that the ‘one should kill as many…’ quote is not historically accurate.

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  6. After reading the main blog and all the comments I think I agree with Gordon. I also think the article is a bit complicated for me and needs to sound a bit less wordy if you know what I mean. That would make it better.

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  7. To the Grahame Le Sueur character I would say: it is noted that once ‘youngenoughtosay’ had answered your questions succinctly, because you did not appear to agree with the replies, you changed tack and attacked her credibility. An easy way to loose yours in the eyes of other observers.

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  8. This is an old argument, but a crucial one. The same quotation (regarding “kill all you can” attributed to Rhodes is quoted less extensively by Rotberg in his biography “The Founder” on p. 557. His footnote 7, referencing p. 741 of his notes, attributes the quotation to a letter from Arthur Weston Jarvis to his mother, dated June 17th 1896. The original is in the National Archives of Zimbabwe, with a microfilm reproduction in the Cullen Library at the University of the Witwatersrand. Who knows how le Sueur got hold of it.

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