Mauritius - Cyclones, Race and Ethnicity

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“ESSENTIALLY CYCLONIC:”

RACE, GENDER, AND DISASTER IN MODERN MAURITIUS

BY

ROBERT M. ROUPHAIL

DISSERTATION

Submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements


for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in History
in the Graduate College of the
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 2019

Urbana, Illinois

Doctoral Committee:

Associate Professor James Brennan, chair


Professor Antoinette Burton, co-chair
Associate Professor Teresa Barnes
Assistant Professor Roderick Wilson
Professor Richard Allen, Framingham State University
ABSTRACT

“Essentially Cyclonic” argues that tropical cyclones were a constituent and proportional force
for historical change in twentieth century Mauritius. Whether as moments of acute
catastrophe and as specters of future destruction, this dissertation shows that landfalling
storms, the months of reconstruction efforts that followed, and the policies meant to
mitigate cyclones’ effects were moments and processes that shaped ideas about racial
belonging, gendered personhood, and diasporic community. Drawing upon French, English,
and Mauritian Creole-language sources ranging from meteorological and soil studies, to oral
histories collected in Mauritius, popular newspapers, songs, and the papers of state
bureaucracies, this dissertation shows that these storms transformed the lives of everyday
Mauritians: they changed how small Indo-Mauritian agriculturalists planted sugar, where
Afro-descendant Mauritians lived, and how the late-colonial state surveilled women’s bodies
in response to Malthusian anxieties over population control and ecological stability.

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ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

I have incurred many debts in my time as a graduate student at the University of Illinois and
in the course of researching and writing this dissertation. My committee—Jim Brennan,
Antoinette Burton, Terri Barnes, Rod Wilson, and Richard Allen—have all guided this
project from a scattered set of questions to its current state. I became an Africanist under
Jim Brennan’s guidance. His thorough and patient readings of drafts and his critical
engagement with my ideas have modeled how to read and write clearly. Terri Barnes
supported me in times of confusion and has modeled how to do rigorous and politically-
engaged scholarship. Rod Wilson ushered me into the world of environmental history and
has been supportive of me in my research, writing, and teaching. Richard Allen’s guidance in
Indian Ocean history has been invaluable, as has his support my work as an external member
of my committee. Without Antoinette Burton this dissertation would simply not exist.
Whether it be how to read for gender and race in the colonial archive or how to think
through the Indian Ocean World “as method,” the mentorship she offers at every scale—
institutional, intellectual, and personal—is invaluable.
At the University of Illinois, I’ve benefitted from the entirety of the history
department. Thank you in particular to Ken Cuno, Dana Rabin, Bob Morrissey, Jerry Dávila,
Ikuko Asaka, Kristin Hoganson, Mauro Nobili, Tariq Ali, and David Sepkoski. I also want to
thank Shannon Croft, Tom Bedwell, and the team of people that keep the department
running and students afloat. Thank you to Chris Lee. It was under his guidance at the
University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill that I developed an interest in African history. At
North Carolina State I was fortunate to work under the guidance Owen Kalinga, a great
scholar and friend. From my time at NCSU, thank you also to Akram and Jodie Khater, the
late Jonathon Ocko, Steven Vincent, Judy Kertesz, David Ambaras, David Zonderman, Ken
Vickery, Mike Mortimer, Chris Blakely, and Kelsey Zavelo.
In Mauritius, I relied on a number of people both personally and professionally over
the years. Thank you in particular to Vijaya Teelock and Ramola Ramtohul for their support
of my research, conversations across time zones, and their own pathbreaking work in
Mauritius. I very much stand on their shoulders. Thank you also to Jimmy Harmon, Leo
Couacaud, Stephanie Tamby. The work done on my behalf by the staff at the Mauritius
National Library is incalculable. Thank you to Keemah Ganga, Shanti Hurree, Andrew

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Rocues, Ramesh Mohabeer, Arjoon Balakrishna, and Ms. Farheen. At the Mauritius National
Archives, thank you Ms. Mohun and the entire staff at the manuscript collection. At the
Mauritius Sugarcane Research Institute (MSIRI), thank you to Jugdish Sonaton and the staff
for answering my many questions about sugarcane and for allowing me access to their
library. Beyond the libraries and archives, I owe much to Sophie Le Chartier who was
generous with her time and her ideas. Thanks to her, Pamela Melisse, and the entire group at
the Kolektif Rivier Nwar for arranging my interviews. A deep thanks to the residents of Cité
La Mivoie who agreed to speak with me.
Thank you to the Ramchurn family, Dana and Mala, and to the extended family for
caring for me during my long stay in Mauritius. Thank you also to the Roy family. Gulshan
and Ashoke Roy were important guides through Mauritian history as well as generous hosts
and cooks. Thank you also to Roshni Mooneeram for her generosity of time and for sharing
her expertise in Mauritian history, literature, and politics. Thank you also to Navin
Nuckchady for becoming a friend and guide in Quatre Bornes. A special thanks to Yoshina
Hurgobin and her family. I’m lucky to have Yoshina as a friend and as a colleague in the
United States and her family as friends in Quatre Bornes.
I would not have emerged intact from this process without the support of friends
and colleagues. At the University of Illinois, thank you to Peggy Brennan, Peter Wright,
Catherine Corr, Marília Corrêa, Marcelo Kuyumjian, Beth Eby, Mona Ghadiri, Nate Tye,
Saniya Ghanoui, Devin Smart, Ian Toller Clark, Liz Matsushita, Beth Ann Williams, Nate
Putnam, Lydia Crafts, Adam LoBue, Jenny Peruski, Chris Garcia, Steve Sherman, Brian
Campbell, Megan White, and Srinidhi Ramamurthy. Thank you also to Brian Hicks who has
heard about this project for years now. A special thank you to Anthony Dest who has been a
fellow graduate student, editor, travel partner, and confidant.
Thank you to Michel and Valerie Brotman, to Adam Brotman, Jason Brotman, Andy
Inthavong, Jackson Brotman, and Hartley Brotman for their support and encouragement
over the last nearly ten years. Thank you also to Susan and the late Jeff Brotman.
This dissertation is dedicated to my family: to my mom, dad, and brother. I have had
the luxury of a family who could guide me through the ups and downs of academia. They
have unflinchingly supported me at every turn.
Lastly, Samantha Brotman. Sam and I came to central Illinois as boyfriend and
girlfriend and we leave as husband and wife. In the interim, we’ve moved three times,

iv
adopted two cats, and traveled the world. Without her support of me when the pressures of
the PhD overwhelmed, her financial support, her sense of humor, and her modeling of what
it means to be committed to social justice, I would not have finished. This degree and this
dissertation are as much hers as they are mine.

Champaign, Illinois
March 2019

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TABLE OF CONTENTS

INTRODUCTION: “ESSENTIALY CYCLONIC”………………………………………1

CHAPTER 1: THE MANY LIVES OF UBA: NATURAL DISASTER,


FAMILY, AND COMMUNITY IN THE EARLY TWENTIETH
CENTURY……………………………………………………………………………….24

CHAPTER 2: CYCLONES AND CALORIES: DEVELOPMENT IN


MIDCENTURY, 1940s-1950s……………………………………………………………56

CHAPTER 3: CITÉ LIFE: RACE, DECOLONIZATION, AND


CYCLONE CAROL…………………………………………………………………..….97

CHAPTER 4: MAKING THE CYCLONE-PROOF FAMILY:


OVERPOPULATION, CYCLONE RESCONSTRUCTION, AND
CONJUGALITY, 1950s-1970s………………………………………………………155

CONCLUSION: “A WEREWOLF IN THE HOUSE OF ELEPHANTS”….……..221

BIBLIOGRAPHY…………………………………………………………………. 229

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INTRODUCTION

“ESSENTIALLY CYCLONIC”

It is a country invented by colonization. Perhaps this fact makes for extremes, in that
there is not the moderating influence of a millennial history. Or maybe it is cyclones,
those visitations that build and build and then wreak havoc, from time to time…

South African — Mauritian novelist and activist, Lindsay Colleen1

On March 16, 1960, Jay Narain Roy, a Mauritian writer, politician, and intellectual, penned
an article in the daily Le Mauricien in which he mourned the state of his country after yet
another catastrophic cyclone, Cyclone Carol. Carol, which had made landfall about two and
half weeks earlier was, and continues to be, the strongest storm to have made landfall in
Mauritius. With winds exceeding 160 mph, it was the equivalent of a category five storm on
the Saffir-Simpson scaled used in the Atlantic and Caribbean hurricane basin.2 The
destruction to lives, homes, and the economy was deep and enduring. Roy was struck by the
severity and totality of the damaged caused by Carol and expressed surprise that a country
like Mauritius, “which is essentially cyclonic,” could, in 1960, be brought to its knees.3
More than fifty years later, Lindsay Colleen, a South African — Mauritian novelist and
prominent cultural activist noted that Mauritius is defined by both its colonial past and its
frequent cyclones. For Colleen, the regular “visitation” of cyclones that “wreak havoc,” are
just as central to the making of modern Mauritius as is its history of colonialism. Both, she
suggests, wreaked havoc. Colleen, like many other literary figures throughout Mauritian
history—Marcel Cabon, Dev Virashwamy, Ananda Devi, amongst others—places cyclones
at the center of her work, a strategy that Srilata Ravi has argued evidences a “grammar of

1 Lindsay Colleen, “Mauritius,” The New Internationalist, 1 April 2013


2 Throughout this dissertation, I switch between the common term for cyclones in the Atlantic basin,

hurricane, with tropical cyclone, as they are known in the Indian Ocean. In the Pacific, these storms go by the
term typhoon. There is no meaningful meteorological difference between the three. In the Atlantic, the
National Hurricane Center uses the Saffir Simpson Scale, where categories 1-5 reflect the power of the storms
based on wind speed.

3 JN Roy, “The Average House Owner,” Le Mauricien, 16 March 1960.

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Mauritian cyclone aesthetics” amongst the country’s authors.4 Alongside Roy, then, it
appears that if Mauritian authors also agree in the fundamental cyclonic nature of Mauritian
life.
From a meteorological standpoint, it would be accurate to describe Mauritius as
“cyclonic.” It lays around five hundred miles east of Madagascar, alongside the French
department of Réunion. Between Mauritius in the east and Mozambique in the west, this
corner of the southwest Indian Ocean experiences powerful tropical cyclones yearly (see
Map 2). The season spans roughly from December to April, the warm season. While
cyclonic weather, ranging from tropical depressions to intense cyclones, are a yearly
occurrence on the island, one study has shown that the frequency of “intense” and “very
intense” cyclones striking the island once every eight years, and once very fifteen years,
respectively.5 The most recent “very intense” storm, Hollanda, struck the island in 1994.
Hollanda killed two people, caused widespread damage throughout the island, and is
estimated to have slowed the island’s GDP growth by anywhere between five and seven
percent that year.6 Winds are not the only threats that cyclone hold. The mountainous terrain
poses a particular risk for torrential rainfall flooding and riparian flooding.7 Port Louis, the
capital city of Mauritius, is also particularly prone to torrential rain flooding. The island’s
coastal regions, particularly in the north which are the first to be exposed to oncoming
storms, suffer greatly from storm surge, the mass of water that is pulled upwards by winds
and low pressure at the center of cyclones. The island’s outlying territories, Agalega and
Rodrigues are also particularly vulnerable to cyclones due to their small size and generally flat
topography.

4 Marcel Cabon, Namaste (Editions De L'Ocean Indien; 2nd Revised Edition, 1981); Dev Virashwamy, Toufann

(Border Crossings Theatre Company, 1999); Ananda Devi, Eve Out of Her Ruins (Dallas: Deep Velum
Publishing, 2016) Sriliata Revi, “Tropical Cyclones in Mauritian Literature” in Anne Collette, Russell
McDougall, and Sue Thomas Tracking the Literature of Tropical Weather: Typhoons, Hurricanes, and Cyclones (Cham,
Switzerland: Palgrave MacMillan, 2017), p. 26.
5 “Very intense” is a categorization that changes from ocean to ocean, but in the Indian Ocean is usually

considered a storm with a central atmospheric pressure of below 920hPa (hectopascals-the French
meteorological unit for measuring atmospheric pressure) or lower. The strongest cyclone in the history of the
southwest Indian Ocean was Fantala, which dissipated in late April, 2016 without any significant landfall.
6 BM Padya. The Cyclones of the Mauritius Region (Port Louis, Mauritius: Mauritius Publishing, 1975).
7 Dennis Parker. “Criteria for Evaluating the Condition of a Tropical Cyclone Warning System” Disasters.

September 1999. Vol. 23 Issue 3, p 193-216.

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Figure 1: Map of Indian Ocean with Mauritius indicated. Inset map of Mauritius with major cities and villages.

Figure 2: Tropical Cyclone tracks in the southwest Indian Ocean between 1980 and 2005.

Of course, Roy and Collen’s observations were not merely meteorological, but also
social. Imbedded in their descriptions of nature and society in Mauritius is a claim about its

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history: that any understanding of Mauritius must attend to the regular visitations of
cyclones. This dissertation takes up this task. It argues that that cyclones are constituent and
proportional forces for historical change in twentieth century Mauritius. It shows how both
popular and official ideas about racial belonging, gendered personhood, and diasporic
community transformed in relation to and as a consequence of efforts by subaltern and state
actors to mitigate the risks posed by the tropical cyclones. Cyclonic winds, like the monsoon
winds which moved dhows between Asia and Africa, brought together communities in
unexpected ways. They also destroyed, quite literally, the façades of colonial rule, ruptured
narratives of possession, mobility, and loss, and produced a shared, though often fraught,
discursive commitment to building an ecologically resilient and productive multi-racial
nation. The following chapters draw from French, English, and Mauritian Creole-language
sources: meteorological and soil studies, oral histories collected in Mauritius, popular
newspapers, songs, and the papers of state bureaucracies. Woven together through
chronological case studies, this project shows that these storms transformed the lives of
everyday Mauritians: they changed how small Indo-Mauritian agriculturalists planted sugar,
where Afro-descendant Mauritians lived, and how the late-colonial state surveilled women’s
bodies in response to Malthusian anxieties over population control and ecological stability.

Environmental Historiographies of Indian Ocean Africa and Global Natural Disaster

How do people construct lives in a space perennially disrupted and transformed by tropical
cyclones? What are the effects of state-driven attempts at mitigating the dangers of the
natural world? How does public policy mobilized to confront these dangers translate into the
realm of the social? These questions lay at the heart of both this dissertation and of the
current moment when political institutions, social justice movements, and everyday people
from across the world have turned their attention to questions of environmental change.
Rising oceans, increasingly violent natural phenomena, and the human institutions that have
attempted to confront these changes all constitute a growing political and scholarly effort
that seeks to understand these changes. Environmental historians have taken up the task of
analyzing how changes in the natural world shape the histories of peoples who live through
those changes. They reconstruct the natural world in multiple ways: as a canvas on to which
historical actors project power, as a geographical binding agent, and, alternatively, as a

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determinative force in human history, forever exerting superior power over human historical
agency.
The natural world has, for decades, lay at the heart of social, political, and cultural
change in the historiography of Indian Ocean Africa. The annual monsoons are foundational
components in the building of transregional networks and communities between South Asia,
East Africa, and the Persian Gulf, with dhows the technology that harnessed the power of
nature to the build of these networks.8 The monsoons inform early Indian Ocean
historiography because they allow for scholars to argue for Braudelian “deep structures” of
connectivity across the ocean and overlapping elements of cultural continuity between the
littoral zones of the Swahili Coast, the Persian Gulf, and the Kutch and Malabar coasts.9
Beyond this foundational element of the monsoons, however, there has been a wide variety
of environmental histories of the western Indian Ocean. Richard Grove has shown, for
example, that from the savannahs of East Africa, to the Cape, and to the tropical forests of
the Indian Ocean islands, “conservation” was an intellectual and political project that
expanded colonial power. Ed Alpers, Gwynn Campbell, and, more recently, Jane Hooper
have shown how the Mozambique channel has been a site for the exchange of food stuffs
between continental and island Africa and that the environmental history of the southwest
Indian Ocean shaped the growth of early modern empires.10
There has also been, of late, a turn towards climate in Indian Ocean World
historiography. Krish Seetah’s and Yoshina Hurhobin have both recently examined climate
and disease in Mauritius while Greg Bankoff’s and Joseph Christen’s 2016 Natural Hazards

8Gilbert, Erik. Dhows and the Colonial Economy in Zanzibar, 1860–1970. Athens: Ohio University Press, 2005.;
Sheriff, Abdul. Dhow Cultures of the Indian Ocean: cosmopolitanism, commerce, and Islam. New York: Columbia
University Press, 2010.; Hall, Richard. Empires of the Monsoon: A History of the Indian Ocean and Its Invaders. London:
HarperCollins, 1996.
9Michael N. Pearson, The Indian Ocean (London: Routledge, 2003). Michael N Pearson. “Littoral Society: The
Concept and the Problems.” Journal of World History Vol. 17, No. 4 (2006): 353–373. Michael N Pearson,
“Studying the Indian Ocean World: Problems and Opportunities.” in H. P. Ray and E. A. Alpers Cross Currents
and Community Networks: The History of the Indian Ocean World (New York: Oxford University Press, 2007) 15–33..
Michael Pearson “The Idea of the Indian Ocean.” in Pamila Gupta, Isabel Hofmeyr, and Michael Pearson, eds.
Eyes Across the Water: Navigating the Indian Ocean, (Pretoria: Unisa Press, 2010) 7–14.; K.N. Chaudhuri, Asia Before
Europe: Economy and Civilisation of the Indian Ocean from the Rise of Islam to 1750. (Cambridge: Cambridge University
Press, 1991); Markus Vink. “Indian Ocean Studies and the ‘New Thalassology’” Journal of Global History, 2007.
10 Jane Hooper, Feeding Globalization: Madagascar and the Provisioning Trade 1600-1800 (Ohio University Press,

2017).

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and Peoples in the Indian Ocean World has taken up the question of various forms of natural
“disaster” from East Africa to the Philippines, and have centered cyclones, droughts, and
tsunamis as forces of historical significance throughout the Indian Ocean.11 This turn
towards climate and “hazard” has mirrored similar work on the Caribbean and Atlantic basin
on hurricanes that has argued that early modern empires were forced to contend with the
limitations that the potential catastrophic forces of hurricane and how later empires—
European and American alike—built infrastructures of scientific knowledge to predict those
storms and formalize their power in the region.12 In large part, however, in the Indian Ocean
these studies have focused most explicitly on the nineteenth century, a characteristic of the
historiography which produces an assumption that with the development of mechanized
mobility in the nineteenth century, Indian Ocean communities became unhooked from the
winds and waters of the ocean itself.13 Implicit in this assumption is that the twentieth
century history of the Indian Ocean is divorced from the materiality of the ocean, and that
the ocean serves either only as a metaphor for connectivity or an arena where human
societies exert technological expertise. That the natural world ceased to be a central
component in the historical development of the western Indian Ocean in the twentieth
century is where this dissertation makes one of its primary interventions by arguing the
inverse: that environmental factors continued, and still continue, to shape the region of
Indian Ocean Africa.
More specifically, this dissertation argues that tropical cyclones operated not only as
structural limitations for change in Mauritius, but also as generative forces in the production
of political, cultural, and social identities, and in particular both popular and official notions
of race and gender. This is a departure from the very limited historiography of twentieth

11 Krish Seetah, “Climate and Disease in the Indian Ocean: An Interdisciplinary Study from Mauritius) in

Connecting Continents: Archaeology and History in the Indian Ocean World (Ohio University Press, 2018); Yoshina
Hurgobin, “Making Medical Ideologies: Indentured Labour in Mauritius” in Anna Winterbottom and Facil
Tesfaye, eds. Histories of Medicine and Healing in the Indian Ocean World, Volume 2 (Palgrave Series on the Indian
Ocean World, 2015).

12 Matthew Mulcachy, Hurricanes and Society in the British Greater Caribbean, 1624–1783 (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins

Univ. Press, 2006), pp. 83–85; 50 Sherry Johnson, “The History and Science of Hurricanes in the Greater
Caribbean,” in Oxford Research Encyclopedia: Latin American History (New York: Oxford Univ. Press, published
online September 2015); Stewart Schwartz, Sea of Storms: A History of Hurricanes in the Greater Caribbean from
Columbus to Katrina (Princeton, N.J.: Princeton Univ. Press, 2015).

Jeremy Prestholdt “Locating the Indian Ocean: Notes on the Postcolonial Reconstitution of Space” Journal of
13

Eastern African Studies, Vol. 9, No . 3, 2015, pp. 440-467.

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century Mauritius, which almost exclusively emphasizes the political transformation of the
island from agricultural colony to post-colonial nation state. Indeed, this dissertation not
only argues for the natural world to be considered as part of political change, but as a
transformative force in and of itself. It shows that in Mauritius tropical cyclones were not
merely points of inflection but ones of social change. Cyclones exacerbated already-existing
class and racial divides, to be sure, but the following chapters show that the politics
surrounding preparing for, enduring, and rebuilding after storms produced new social,
political, and economic relationships; they prompted new forms of articulating culture, of
imagining a communal past, and of articulating future change. What it meant to be Indo-
Mauritian or Afro-Mauritian, man or woman, in twentieth century Mauritius is
incomprehensible, the following pages argue, without attending to how these categories
transformed in relation to natural disaster. Mauritius is “essentially cyclonic” not merely
because of its geographical position in the southwest Indian Ocean, but also because the
fabric of its society developed in response to the seasonal threat of these storms.
This argument positions tropical cyclones as both historical and methodological
objects. Historically, they operate as both acute moments of inflection and destruction:
inequalities are exposed in dramatic ways, initial response schemes reveal the priorities of the
state, the needs of its subjects, and the terms of the discussion in which claims are made.
They also serve as catalytic events for understanding long-term change like housing and
family planning schemes that mark the social and political history of the country.
Methodologically, cyclones effect historical convergences. They bring together what are
often (at least archivally) disparate threads of debate and of change and bring those threads
into conversation with each other, compelling historical actors to contend with the ways in
which priorities are decided upon and strategies of survival are employed. Cyclones are
themselves archival assemblages.
This project speaks to an audience beyond Mauritius. While cyclones are a regional
phenomenon across southeastern Africa (they often do effect more than one country at a
time, for example), a fine-grained analysis of their effects necessitates a closer look at the
history of the places they impact. While much scholarship has been done to emphasize the
regional integration of the Indian Ocean as a coherent historical space, this dissertation
makes a methodological choice to emphasize the specificities of a circumscribed geography
in order to fully understand the relationship between the natural and social. The conceptual

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argument here, then, is not re-capitulate histories of Indian Ocean connectivity. Rather, it is
to unspool the specificities of Mauritius’ own Indian Ocean World, one where cyclones have
shaped historical change.
This locally-understood “Indian Oceanness” and efforts to situate notions of “place”
within larger, region-wide networks is a hallmark of scholarship on Indian Ocean Africa.14 It
mirrors David Armitage’s “cis-Atlantic” analytical model that “studies particular places as
unique locations within an Atlantic world and seeks to define that uniqueness as the result of
the interaction between local particularity and a wider web of connections (and
comparisons).”15 Place is also a particularly salient analytical category when studying
archipelagos because, as Jennifer Gaynor has argued, they should be considered as
geographic spaces worthy of analysis in and of themselves that offer entry point to broader
oceanic histories; they are not merely “in between,” as it were.16 The scholarly literature on
Indian Ocean Africa has productively shown how a “cis-oceanic” and an archipelagic
approach can attend to analytical tensions inherent in the up-scaling needed to conceive of
the Indian Ocean as a historical space with the assemblage of circumscribed specificities
which constitute it.17 This literature has shown that places like Dar es Salaam, Cape Town,
Mombasa, Port Louis, or Antsiranana were not merely nodes in networks but fully-

James R. Brennan, Taifa: Making Nation and Race in Urban Tanzania (Ohio, 2012), Jeremy Prestholdt.
14

Domesticating the World: African Consumerism and the Genealogies of Globalization. (California, 2008).

15 David Armitage and Michael J. Braddick, eds. The British Atlantic World, 1500-1800 (Basingstoke and New

York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2002), p. 18.


16Jennifer Gaynor, “Ages of Sail, Ocean Basins, and Southeast Asia” Journal of World History, Vol. 24, No. 2,
2013, pp. 309-333.

17 For an example of a study of diaspora in Reunion/Mauritius/Seychelles see the subsection on “Island-ness”

in Hofmeyr Eyes Across the Water; See also: Edward Alpers East Africa and the Indian Ocean (Princeton, NJ :
Markus Wiener Publishers, 2009.); Edward Alpers, “A Complex Relationship: Mozambique and the Comoro
Islands in the 19th and 20th Centuries.” Cahiers d’Etudies Africaines, no. 161, 2001 pp. 73-95; Pier Larson. Ocean of
Letters: Language and Creolization in an Indian Ocean Diaspora, (Cambridge, UK ; New York: Cambridge University
Press, 2009), Richard B. Allen, Slaves, Freedmen, and Indentured Laborers in Colonial Mauritius. (Cambridge, 1999)
Richard B. Allen, “Capital, Illegal Slaves, Indentured Labourers and the Creation of a Sugar Plantation
Economy in Mauritius, 1810-60,” Journal of Imperial & Commonwealth History Vol. 36, no. 2 (June 2008): 151–70,
Richard B. Allen, “The Slender, Sweet Thread: Sugar, Capital and Dependency in Mauritius, 1860-1936,” Journal
of Imperial & Commonwealth History 16, no. 2 (January 1988): 177–200.See also here: Jeremy Prestholdt,
Domesticating the World: African Consumerism and the Genealogies of Globalization: University of California Press,
2008,, particularly chapters 1 and 3; Clare Anderson, Subaltern Lives: Biographies of Colonialism in the Indian Ocean
World, 1790-1920, 1 edition (London: Cambridge University Press, 2012); Campbell, Gwyn. An Economic
History of Imperial Madagascar, 1750-1895: Gwyn Campbell, The Rise and Fall of an Island Empire (Cambridge,
2005).

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constituted “places” in and of themselves. The work of Edward Alpers on the mobility of
religious ideas and foodstuffs across the Mozambique Channel between mainland Africa and
the Comoros shows the local connections between race, discourses of civilization, and diet.
Pier Larson’s study of letters between Madagascar, Mauritius, and mainland Africa shows the
ways in which a political economy of reading and religious faith took shape in various places
in the southwest Indian Ocean. Richard Allen’s work on race and plantation labor in
Mauritius has shown not only how connected the island was to global networks of
commodity capitalism, but how those connections shaped notions of power and race in
Mauritius. In this tradition, this dissertation engages with the material and intellectual
connections that bind Mauritius to Africa and Asia while emphasizing that those
connections took on historically-specific meaning in Mauritius in relation to the natural
world. In this sense, this dissertation sees no formal distinction between what Alison Games
has marked as “places around the ocean” with “places of the ocean.”18

Race, Gender, and Disaster in Mauritius

In 1948, R.C. Wilkinson, the Public Assistance Commissioner and head of the Department
of Labour of colonial Mauritius, was tasked with writing an introduction to a government
report on a series of three cyclones that struck Mauritius between January to March three
years earlier, in 1945. The report was intended “to be a source of reference, a memorial of a
great and disastrous event.”19 These storms, examined more closely in chapter two, were
worth remembering: the most powerful of the three had made landfall on the island in
January, destroying much of the sugar crop, leaving thousands homeless, and unleashing a
polio outbreak on the island. The massive rebuilding efforts undertaken by the colonial state
were unprecedented, and this report was compiled to enumerate what needed to be done in
the immediate aftermath of the storm and to outline contingencies in the event of future
storms. In Wilkinson’s opinion, however, Mauritius was particularly vulnerable to the
dangers of cyclones not only because of the island’s position within an active cyclone belt,

18 Allison Games, “Atlantic History: Definitions, Challenges, and Opportunities,” The American Historical Review,

Volume 111, Issue 3, June 2006, Pages 741–757.


19 Hazareesingh, K. The Story of the 1945 Cyclones (Port Louis, Mauritius. JE Felix, Gov’t Printer, 1948).

9
but also because of its social landscape, and more specifically its racial diversity. In his
estimation Mauritius had two difficulties that it had to confront: “a population that is not yet
homogenous and periodical visits from cyclones.” He went on: “when the presence of a
cyclone in the near vicinity is signaled, when it is screaming over the island, or when the
disaster it has left behind is revealed, the population is no longer heterogeneous, each person
is simply a human being. If we could remember…that each year [cyclones] threaten us with
common ruin, it might be that the difficulties arising from a diversity of races could easily be
solved.”20 For Wilkinson, and for many other functionaries within the colonial government,
the prospect of a landfalling tropical cyclone was not merely a potential threat to the
economic stability of the island, reliant almost completely on the production of sugar cane,
but also one to the delicately balanced racial landscape of the island, where peoples of
African, Asia, and European descent lived alongside each other.
Race was the conceptual category through which colonial officials conceived of and
enacted natural disaster response, preparation, and analysis in twentieth century Mauritius;
gender was the point of intervention. These interventions mapped onto already-existing
ideas regarding gender and difference specific to each community in Mauritius, and they
sparked conversations both colony-wide and within communities about identity, belonging,
and the future in relation to both natural and political change. What Mauritians ate, where
they lived, how their families shared the burdens of raising children, and how they planned
those families became the foundational questions that informed how purportedly distinct
racial communities—Mauritians of Indian descent (Indo-Mauritians) and those of African
descent (Afro-Mauritian Creoles, as distinct from elite and mixed-race Creoles)—could
survive the economic and social traumas brought by natural disasters. Cyclones brought
about fears—both real and, at times, contrived—of scarcity that could only be collectively
endured if families also accepted specific visions of austerity. Building an ecologically
resilient Mauritius often took place in the domestic spaces of the home.
As the above sections have stated, cyclonic events in Mauritius operate both as
historical moments of change and as archival artifacts in and of themselves. As archival
moments, they bring together multiple strands of historical debate. The debates that I
highlight here, ones over the viability of cyclone-proofing agriculture, of colonial

20 Ibid, Introduction.

10
“development,” over public housing, and over Malthusian anxieties over resource
management, amongst others, show that both British and Mauritian actors inside and outside
of the colonial state saw race—a bundle of cultural habits social expectations identifiable
physical appearance and biometric difference—as a defining social structure in modern
Mauritius alongside religion and language. Gender emerged as an arrangement of social
positions and behavioral predilections identified by both British and Mauritians policy
makers as an arena to reshape race. They believed that that modifying the gendered space of
the family could change how Mauritians viewed themselves as members of racial
communities. It was up to women, quite often, to change how families ate, where they lived,
and how many children they would have: all characteristics colonial officials and many
Mauritian intellectuals and politicians attributed to the racial communities, and ones that
hampered the nation’s preparation for and recovery from violent tropical cyclones. Gender
was in Mauritius, as Paul Gilroy has argued, a modality for living race.21
That cyclones triggered explicitly social and political concerns was not always the
case. In the decades proceeding the nineteenth century, tropical cyclones were rarely seen as
social events but rather as economic ones. Then, the language of disaster was a sterile one of
calculation, risk, profit, and loss. But this dissertation shows that what is unique about these
storms in twentieth century Mauritius is that they were forces that shaped all aspects of
Mauritian life as the purview of the colonial state shifted from one oriented towards the
cultivation and export of sugar to one where the attendant social question of this specific
political economy also received attention. Catastrophic events like cyclones threw into the
stark relief the social, political, and cultural cleavages that centuries of commodity
production had produced.
These cleavages are often points of analysis within Mauritian historiography, albeit
that of the centuries preceding the twentieth. The relatively thin work on the twentieth
century tends, with recent exception, to focus exclusively on the political history of
decolonization. Both Adele Smith Simmons’ and Larry Bowman’s important studies on the
transition from colony to nation shed light on political institutional change and, in
Bowman’s case, attend to questions of “society” and macro-economic phenomena as
underlying considerations predicate to the political machinations of decolonization. But in

21 Paul Gilroy, Black Atlantic: Modernity and Double Consciousness (Harvard University Press, 1995) p. 86.

11
large part both take high politics as the foundational historical process in the making of
Mauritius.22 For these works and others like them, the twentieth century is a denouement of
processes catalyzed in the ninetieth, where demographic changes that saw the rise of a South
Asian diasporic community culminate with the formalization of the election of Seewosagur
Ramgoolam as the first prime minister in March of 1968.
Studies on the cultural and social history, particularly ones on race and gender, of the
twentieth century in Mauritius are rare, but not nonexistent. Early work by Benjamin
Mouotu, in particular his book Les Chretiens de L’ile Maurice —ostensibly a text on
Christians—pointed to the immediate pre-independence era as one of racial strife, in effect
conceding that race existed as a functional part of group self-identification amongst working
class Christians in mid-century.23 More recently, Tijo Salverda’s recent study of Franco-
Mauritians has sought to integrate this white racial minority into a more global analytical
field of settler societies.24 Beyond these, however, the most salient work being done on race
and gender in twentieth century Mauritius is ethnographic. But even in this work, as Suzanne
Chazan- Gillig has argued, “the terms ‘racial’ and ‘ethnic’ have almost become a social
taboo.”25
This dissertation therefore expands the scope of analysis of twentieth century
Mauritius. Employing cyclones as both historical markers and as a methodology reconfigures
a number of historiographical conventions and analytical categories. Firstly, a history of
cyclones in Mauritius offers a re-periodization of the island’s late-colonial and early-post
colonial history. The following chapters take the all-important agricultural riots of 1937,
largely believed to be the genesis of modern Mauritian politics, and finds its origins in the
deeper environmental and social history of the rural poor after a cyclone in 1892. They
evaluate colonial “development” projects of mid-century in relation to a series of storms in

22Adele Smith Simmons, Modern Mauritius: Politics of Decolonization (Bloomington: Indiana University Press,
1982); Larry Bowman, Mauritius: Democracy and Development in the Indian Ocean (London: Dartmouth, 1991); K.
Hazareesingh, History of Indians in Mauritius (Macmillan, 1975); Sydney Selvon, A New Comprehensive History of
Mauritius: From British Mauritius to the 21st Century (Sydney Selvon, 2012).; Vijaya Teelock, Mauritian History: From
Its Beginnings to Modern Times (Moka, Mauritius: Mahatma Gandhi Institute, 2001).
23 Benjamin Moutou, Les Chretiens de L’ile Maurice (Port Louis: Compo Center, 1996).
24 Tijo Salvedra, The Franco-Mauritians: Power and Anxiety in the Face of Change (New York: Berghahn, 2005).
25Suzanne Chazan- Gillig, “The Roots of Mauritian Multi-Culturalism and the Birth of a New Social Contract:
Being Autochtone, Being Creole” Journal of Mauritian Studies Vol. 1, No. 1, 2001.

12
1945 and the ecological trauma caused by the Second World War. They expand the terrain of
the history of decolonization by evaluating how popular and official notions of race, gender,
and belonging changes in response to a major storm, Carol, in the years preceding the formal
end of empire. These historiographical recalibrations emerge from a focus on natural
disaster, the preparation for it and responses to it, and they bring to the fore new
stakeholders, new actors, and new debates to the history of modern Mauritius by placing the
histories and voices of the rural poor, Afro-Mauritians, and women at the fore of its analysis.
As later chapters in this dissertation will show, local understandings of race, and the
politics of race, often derided as “communalism” in the middle of the twentieth century,
emerged as a salient way of articulating cultural and political difference in twentieth century
Mauritius. Debates over racial belonging emerged front and center as the colony moved
towards independence in 1968. These debates, while similar to those ongoing in
decolonizing Kenya, Tanzania, South Africa and other Indian Ocean spaces, were, in
Mauritius, marked by the fact that there is no indigenous population. The “first” people may
well have been Swahili fisherman or European or Arab traders. The first inhabitants of
Mauritians, however, were Dutch traders, followed later by French planters and the enslaved
Africans who worked the cane fields. With the arrival of the British after the Napoleonic
Wars and with the abolition of slavery in the western Indian Ocean in the 1830s began what
Mauritians refer to as “the Great Experiment:” the indentured labor trade which saw
hundreds of thousands of South Asia’s poor brought to Mauritius (and to Fiji, Trinidad,
Ceylon, Malaya, and southern and eastern Africa). The arrival of Indian indentured labor and
the development of the growth of the Indo-Mauritian ethno-racial category from agricultural
underclass to post-colonial political elite has been a powerful historical thread running from
the end of slavery to political independence in 1968.
Unlike other parts of Indian Ocean Africa, race in Mauritius is not the product of
lineage, blood, or descent.26 As these chapters will show, race was understood as a

26 Jonathon Glassman “Slower than a massacre: the multiple sources of racial thought in colonial Africa,” The

American Historical Review 109:3 (June 2004), 720-754 and Jonathon Glassman, “Creole nationalists and the
search for nativist authenticity in twentieth-century Zanzibar: the limits of cosmopolitanism,” Journal of
African History, 55:2 (2014), 229-47; James R. Brennan, “Destroying Mumiani: cause, context and violence in
late colonial Dar es Salaam,” Journal of Eastern African Studies2 1 2008, p. 95-111; and James R Brennan, “Blood
enemies: exploitation and urban citizenship in the nationalist political thought of Tanzania, 1958-1975” Journal
of African History 47 3 2006, p. 387-41.

13
historically-produced category and a category tied to the landscape of Mauritius through land
ownership and a sense of physical permanence. Diasporic narratives, particularly amongst
Mauritians of Indian descent and African descent—Indo-Mauritians and Afro-Mauritians,
respectively—lay at the heart of what it meant to belong to those groups. Aspects of these
narratives like the shared memories of home, a trip across the kala pani (the dark waters of
the Indian Ocean), life on the sugar cane field, and, in particular amongst Afro-Mauritians,
the seasonal rhythms of cyclonic storms, were all important discursive touchpoints in the
production of communal identities.
Communalism, however, has largely been understood as a potential threat to the
sustainability of the Mauritian state, in particular in the post-colonial era. As such,
scholarship on race in Mauritius has tended to focus on questions of creolization and
multiracial co-habitation. Mauritius often stands in as a ready-made laboratory for
understanding race and globalization in the Global South. Studies of creolization have
focused on language as the primary terrain for contesting belonging in Mauritius.
Multilingual today, with English, French, and a handful of South Asian languages spoken, it
is the vernacular Mauritian Creole which has emerged as an analytical entry point for
understanding the formation of a national identity.27 Language has been an important and
effective conceptual tool for laying claim to specific form of Mauritianess, and Creole has
been emblematic in the post-colonial era as a mode of self-styled Mauritianisme, that is to say
the idea of Mauritius as fundamentally creole: as neither purely African or Asian, but rather
the product of centuries of history that spans the Indian Ocean.28

27For work on black life and “creolization” in Mauritius and the broader southwest Indian Ocean World:
Roseabell Boswell, Le Malaise Creole: Ethnic Identity in Mauritius. (New York and Oxford: Berghahn Books, 2006.
Roseabell Boswell. “Unraveling Le Malaise Creole: Hybridity and Marginalization in Mauritius.” Identities, Vol. 12,
Issue 2. 195-221; Rosabell Boswell. “Challenges to Creolization in Mauritius and Madagascar” Diaspora, 17, 1,
2008. Srilata Ravi, “Cultivating Indianness: The Indian Laborer in the Mauritian Imaginary” L’iciet l’allieurs:
Postcolonial Literatures of the Francophone Indian Ocean: E-France, and Online Journal of French Studies. Vol. 2, 2008.
Maya Boutaghou, “’Défense et Illustracion’ d’un Universel Mauricien.” International Journal of Francophone Studies.
Vol. 13., 2010. William F. Miles “The Creole Malaise in Mauritius” in African Affairs, 98, 211-228, 1999. Megan
Vaughn, Creating the Creole Island: Slavery in Eighteenth Century Mauritius (Duke, 2005); Jimmy Harmon, Heritage
Language and Identity Construction: A Study of Kreol Morisien (Port Louis: Nelson Mandela Center, 2017).

28 See, most recently, Roshni Mooneram’s editorial in the Mauritius Times: “Language Politics and the
Pragmatics of World Economic Trends” Mauritius Times, December 15, 2015. Work by the organization Lalit
also works to advance Creole as a national language and a tool of identity building in contemporary Mauritius.
As Patrick Eisenlohr has argued, however, the continued emphasis within some sections of the broader Indo-
Mauritian community on the learning and speaking of Hindi and the resilience of cultural ties to India signals
dissent to this post-colonial project. Eisenlohr posits: “Many Indo-Mauritians, In particular Hindus, who base
their bid for symbolic dominance over the nation by legitimizing powers of diasporic ancestral have resisted

14
However, centering race as a structuring force in Mauritian society can both
illuminate and obscure. The categories Indo-Mauritian and Afro-Mauritian shed light on
Mauritian society by emphasizing the power of physical and historical difference. But, of
course, a term like Indo-Mauritian obscures class, religious, and linguistic differences
amongst the vast array of peoples who trace their ancestry to South Asia. Afro-Mauritian less
so as it is historically subsumed into the broader category of “Creole;” Afro-Mauritian,
however, usually connotes phenotypical difference, shared history of slavery, and a shared
class identity.
While race often emerged as an explanatory model for understanding natural disaster
and its effects, it was gender that both British and Mauritian actors saw at the most
productive territory for building a more ecologically-resilient Mauritius. Gender as a category
of analysis figures prominently in Mauritian historiography. Marina Carter, Megan Vaughn,
Vijaya Teelock, and Ramola Ramtohul point to an array of intersecting historical trajectories
that produced a distinct vision of gendered difference in Mauritius and the Indian Ocean
more broadly.29 In many cases, systems of labor emerge as a necessary predicate for the
formation of specific gender identities. But labor is rarely a singular causal agent. These
authors have disaggregated, in part, labor and gender by showing how deeply held
commitments to identities that have spanned the Indian Ocean—from caste, to religion, to
imperial citizenship—also inform how communities produce difference.
With the exception of the third chapter which focuses exclusively on race, the
following chapters track how the material changes brought by tropical cyclones, discourses
of ecological resilience, processes of rebuilding, and ideas of race and gender became
entwined. They show that gender was often understood as the territory where race was
more saliently articulated. British colonial officials, Mauritian intellectuals, and everyday men
and women all saw gender as a space for debate over racial belonging and ecological

claims for Mauritian Creole linguistic nationalism…” See: Patrick Eisenlohr, Little India: Diaspora, Time, and
Ethnolinguistic Belonging in Mauritius (Berkeley, CA: University of California Press, 2006).

29 Vijaya Teelock, Mauritian History: From Its Beginnings to Modern Times (Moka, Mauritius: Mahatma Gandhi

Institute, 2001); Vijaya Teelock, Bitter Sugar: Sugar and Slavery in 19th Century Mauritius (Moka, Mauritius: Mahatma
Gandhi Institute, , 1998); Martina Carter, Lakshmi’s Legacy: Testimonies of Indian Women in 19th Century
Mauritius(Moka, Mauritius: Editions de L’ocean Indien, 1995); Marina Carter, Servants Sirdars and Settlers: Indians
in Mauritius: 1834-1874 (Oxford Univeristy Press, 1995) Megan Vaughn, Creating the Creole Island: Slavery in 18th
Century Mauritius) Ramola Ramtohul, “Contested Terrain: Identity and Women’s Suffrage in Mauritius” Journal
of Southern African Studies Vol. 24, Issue 6, 2016.

15
resilience. In similar fashion to Lata Mani’s analysis of sati in her 1998 work Contentious
Traditions, debates at the intersection of gendered labor and social power, race, and natural
disaster became “alibis for the civilizing mission and…a significant occasion for indigenous
[or what approximates it in Mauritius] autocritique.”30 Women, their bodies, and their roles
within the family and Mauritian society more broadly was the space for modifying the social
worlds of the colony.

Nature, Labor, and Settlement 15th-19th Centuries

This dissertation’s focus is on the twentieth-century history of natural disaster in Mauritius.


But the history it aims to show has much deeper roots in the islands long colonial history.
The pre-conditions for what disaster social scientists conceived of as “vulnerability” were
laid in the original settling of the colony and its transformation into a space directed
primarily towards the efficient production of a lucrative global commodity: sugar.
Between 1638 and 1710 Mauritius was a Dutch colony. Established initially as a way
point for the Dutch East India Company between the Cape of Good Hope and the East
Indies, Mauritius quickly emerged as a potentially lucrative site for long-term colonization,
not merely as a stopping point between Asia and Africa. But despite initial Dutch attempts at
establishing a permanent site for settlement, challenges posed by the natural world proved to
be formidable barriers to Dutch efforts. Cyclones were a particular challenge, as any
attempts to establish a permanent base were destroyed. A powerful storm in 1695 effectively
foreclosed on any long-term projects the Dutch. They eventually abandoned the island in the
early 18th century.

30 Lala Mati, Contentious Traditions: The Debate on Sati in Colonial India (University of California Press,) 1998; This
is a critique that draws from a broader critical empire/feminist historiography: See: Catherine Hall; "The Rule
of Difference: Gender, Class and Empire in the Making of the 1832 Reform Act," in Ida Blom, Karen
Hagemann, Catherine Hall, eds., Gendered Nations: Nationalisms and Gender Order in the Long Nineteenth Century
(New York: Oxford/Berg 2000), pp. 107-35. Madavhi Kale, Fragments of Empire: Capital, Slavery, and Indian
Indentured Labor in the British Caribbean (Philadelphia, PA: University Pennsylvania Press, 1998); Antoinette M.
Burton, Burdens of History : British Feminists, Indian Women, and Imperial Culture, 1865-1915 (Chapel Hill: University
of North Carolina Press, 1994). Durba Ghosh, Sex and the Family in Colonial India: The Making of Empire
(Cambridge, 2008); Ann McClintock. Imperial Leather: Race, Gender, and Sexuality in the Colonial Contest. (New
York: Routledge, 1995).

16
As Vijaya Teelock has argued, one of the most enduring legacies of Dutch rule in
Mauritius was the wanton neglect of the environment. The introduction of alien
domesticated animals—dogs and pigs in particular—emerged as dangerous nuisances to the
establishment of commercial livestock and of the deer population on the island. This
resulted in the first legislation that restricted the importation and ownership of animals on
the island. But the introduction of alien species harkened a broader process of
environmental destruction, embodied above all by the extinction of the dodo, indigenous to
Mauritius. The Dutch effectively eradicated the dodo, either by hunting it directly for meat
or through the systematic destruction of its ecosystem.
Not long after the Dutch abandoned Mauritius, the French came. In July of 1715,
Dufrense d’Arsel arrived in Mauritius on the direction of the French king, naming it Ile de
France. There are two major eras of French rule in Mauritius. The first, beginning in 1721
and continuing until the middle of the 1760 was that of French East India Company rule.
The second, from around 1767 until the 1810s, was that of the French crown. French rule
lay the cultural, social, and economic foundations of modern Mauritius. It established the
beginnings of a political elite, French-descendent Creole population, the Franco-Mauritians,
and it gave the island a Francophone cultural and linguistic heritage that marks it today. But
above all, French rule established Mauritius as a colony oriented towards agriculture. But like
the Dutch the threat of rats and, in particular, cyclones left the initial French mission in
Mauritius, then known as Île de France, unclear. Was it to be a self-sustaining colony or
merely a stop to refresh ships moving through the Indian Ocean.
Under the leadership of administrator of the French East India Company and
governor of Mauritius beginning in 1735, Bertrand-Françoise Mahé de Labourdonnais,
however, the economy of the island began to flourish. With an eye towards maintaining
Mauritius as a provisioning station, he sought to direct the development of the colony along
agricultural lines. He saw the development of Mauritius as complementary with its French
neighbor, Réunion (Île de Bourbon). Initially he saw Mauritius as a potential naval station
that would be supplied with timber from the island’s forests and Réunion as the “granary,”
with the two islands working in union to build a connected singular economic unit. Under
Labourdonnais’ leadership, Mauritius emerged, alongside Reunion, as a node of French
political power throughout the Indian Ocean. The transition to company rule also produced
new ecological relationships between residents of Île de France, capital, and the natural

17
world. Under company rule, the island had undergone dramatic deforestation. The wanton
use of fire to clear land for spice or indigo cultivation rendered the soil unable to support
new tree growth.
After 1767 Mauritius ceased to be governed by the French East India Company and
became a Royal Colony. The end of company rule brought about a transformation in the
ways in which governing officials managed the natural resources of the island. Pierre Poivre,
the first “intendant” appointed in Mauritius after the French East India Company, sent
increasingly alarmed reports back to Franc about the crumbling ecology of the island that
had resulted from company rule. Poivre’s role as an administrator and as a manager of the
island’s multiple biomes was regards to the economic development of the island and the
French stewardship of the natural world, perhaps no other figure is more significant during
French rule that Pierre Poivre. During his brief stint as an administrator in Mauritius, 1767-
1772, Poivre sought to transform the colony into one that could both produce a cash crop
on an industrial scale—spices—as well as one that could employ sustainable farming
practices and regime of conservation. Perhaps most famously, he also founded the world-
renown botanical gardens at Pampelmousses.31
Despite Poivre’s attempts at a less rapacious approach to the natural world and to
institute a more sustainable approach to building an agriculturally-based economy, by the
end of the eighteenth century, the economy of Île de France was struggling. Failed attempts
at a spice economy and indigo production existed alongside sugar, but never found their
footing as a durable component of the colonial economy. Auguste Toussaint has argued that
in addition to a stagnant economy, the French also incurred heavy losses from piracy was an
encouragement for the French dispose of the colony, the British saw Mauritius as a colony
that could potential cement their foothold on the Indian Ocean, a region increasingly
attractive to both the British crown and to business interests working throughout South and
East Asia. With a military defeat of the French in 1810 and the formalization of political rule
in 1814, the British assumed control of Mauritius.
One of the most dramatic changes pursued by the newly established British
government was to put an end to the illegal slave trade in the southwest Indian Ocean. While
officially outlawed in 1810, an illegal trade still flourished in this part of the world, as French

See, in particular, Richard Grove Green Imperialism: Colonial Expansion, Tropical Island Edens and the Origins of
31

Environmentalism (Cambridge University Press, 1995).

18
agriculturalists still relied heavily on unfree labor, and slavery was only officially abolished in
early 1835, after which planters were compensated for their losses. Enslaved peoples were
increasingly the foundational component of a growing sugar industry on the island
throughout the late French period. The outlawing of slavery would have profound effects on
the historical development of the island. In the years following its ending, the the colonial
government embarked on what contemporary Mauritians refer to as the “Great
Experiment,” the mass importation of South Asian indentured laborers to work the sugar
cane fields of Mauritius, the vast majority of which came from the region of Bihar in north-
central India.
The arrival of South Asian laborers would swing the demographic numbers of the
island dramatically. By the turn of the twentieth century, Indo-Mauritians would make up the
vast majority of the island’s population. Like the enslaved Africans that worked the fields
before them, Indians formed new communities in diaspora, relationships that were initially
mediated by labor practices and the exigencies of the sugar economy. Alongside religious
traditions, cultural practices, and languages that originated in India came new forms of
articulating group inclusion or exclusions, practices of caste, diet, and, importantly, language,
as mentioned in earlier parts of this introduction. As Vijaya Teelock has argued, processes of
“morcellement,” the subdivision of large estates into smaller plots for small, mostly Indian
farmers, catalyzed the development of a distinct “Indo-Mauritian culture, as new villages,
communal centers, and social relationships developed off-site from the sugar fields where
those communities had worked for decades prior. This process of community building is
further interrogated in the first chapter of this dissertation.
British rule in Mauritius also ushered in a new relationship with the natural world.
While emphasizing the productive capacity the island had for sugar, Mauritius also emerged
as a kind of ecological Eden, a place with rare flora and fauna existed without. Although
initially neglected for the first thirty years of British rule, Poivre’s Pampelmousses gardens
emerged as an antipodean Kew in mid-century, a place where botanical research was carried
out on tropical flora. By the late nineteenth century, however, sugar emerged as the primary
vector that determined the relationship between statecraft and stewardship of the natural
world. Alongside the mitigation of disease, it is the tropical cyclone that emerged most
dramatically as the central natural threat within the broader political economy of the island.

19
In Mauritius, the first efforts to build an infrastructure of scientific inquiry into
tropical cyclones began in the middle of the nineteenth century. In 1832 the colonial
government commissioned an observatory on the Port Louis wharf. At this fairly
rudimentary station, meteorological observations were only part of its mission; officials who
manned the station were instructed to track time and “magnetic elements” critical for
nautical navigation, in addition to taking wind, barometric pressure, and temperature
records.32 By 1860 the responsibilities of the observatory were such that the location at the
wharf proved to be unsuitable, guarded as Port Louis was by mountains that would warp the
readings.33 A new, more sophisticated observatory was needed.
Walter Meldrum, a Scottish mathematician who arrived in Mauritius in 1846 from
Bombay to teach at the Royal College of Mauritius, was one of the loudest voices in the
colony calling for a new observatory. Meldrum, who had founded a “meteorology society”
shortly after his arrival in Mauritius, quickly noted the significance Mauritius could hold in
developing an institutionally-supported research agenda into tropical cyclones. In his plea to
the colonial state to abandon the wharf meteorological station in favor of a much larger and
well-supported observatory, he noted that “the colony is admirably adapted
for…meteorological observations” and especially well placed to study the formations of
cyclones, “being situated in the very track of the rotary storms of this hemisphere.”34 From
the outset, then, cyclones were front and center of the concerns Mauritian colonial officials
tasked with understanding the natural world.
In response to the limitations and possibilities highlighted by Meldrum, and with the
enthusiastic endorsement of the then governor of the colony, Henry Barkley, the colonial
government commissioned a new observatory to be built near the botanic gardens at
Pampelmousses, to the north of Port Louis. In the period between the establishment of this
new observatory and the closing of the older one in Port Louis, Meldrum was named
“observer general” of the colony. Shortly after he traveled to Kew with the support of the

32 B.M. Padya, Meteorology in Mauritius:1774-1974 (Port Louis: The Mauritius Printing Company, 1974).
33For More on the centrality of map making to British histories of meteorology, see Chapter 5: “Maps,
Instruments, and Weather Wisdom” in Katherine Anderson, Predicting the Weather: Victorians and the Science of
Meteorology (University of Chicago Press, 2005), pp. 171-233.
34 Meldrum quoted in Padya, Meteorology in Mauritius, 4.

20
president of the Royal Society and the British Meteorological Office, where he sought to
familiarize himself with the working of an observatory and to acquire the instruments
necessary for its functioning. In 1874, the Royal Alfred Observatory (RAO) opened, with
Meldrum as its first director, where he would remain until 1895.
In the late nineteenth and early twentieth century, the scientific study of tropical
cyclones in Mauritius, a then-British island colony in the southwest Indian Ocean, changed
from a search for causes to an analysis of effects. In particular, this shift sought to
understand how those effects shaped the sugar industry of the island, the backbone of the
island’s economy. This was a transformation that inaugurated the field of “agro-
meteorology.” In the wake of a catastrophic and unpredicted 1892 storm, “cyclonology,” as
the study of these storms was then known, moved away from producing models of cyclone
generation, movement, and prediction in favor of better understanding how these storms
were part of both a natural and political ecology oriented at maximizing the production of
sugar. This shift corresponded with the tenure of two prominent meteorologists on the
island—Charles Meldrum and Albert Walter—both erstwhile directors of the Royal Albert
Observatory (RAO) in Mauritius, one of the most prestigious meteorological research
centers in the nineteenth century Indian Ocean World. For both Meldrum and Walter, much
of their time in Mauritius was devoted to better understanding cyclones in Mauritius and the
Indian Ocean World more broadly. Meldrum’s work on the formation and behavior of
cyclones, while groundbreaking in the questions it asked, was transformed by his eventual
successor, Walter, whose work focused more pointedly on the meteorological effects
cyclones had on the sugar economy of the island. He wanted to know how cyclone winds,
rains, temperature variations, and humidity fluctuations affected the health of the island’s
sugarcane, firmly situating new research questions on cyclones as a constitutive part of the
political ecology of the island, where the interests of sugar scientists and meteorologists met
in the service of the sugar industry and the sustainability of the British colonial state. To this
end, agro-meteorology refigured popular and scientific ideas of the cyclone in Mauritius. No
longer were they disastrous events, but rather familiar meteorological phenomena that could,
if properly understood, even benefit the efficient production of sugar.
Looking back on the historical significance of the 1892 storm, Albert Walter noted
that as “Terrible as the privations were [here he is referencing the disastrous storms of the
nineteenth century, and in particular the 1892 storm], they mark the commencement of a

21
new era in the history of Mauritius, an era of progress and industrial development such as
the island has never seen before.” Walter’s historical observation is quite accurate. The 1892
storm heralded a new era in the colony where tropical cyclones shaped how the colonial
state managed its economy, its subjects, and its natural environment It is in the aftermath of
the cyclone of 1892 where this dissertation begins.

Chapter Outlines

The first chapter examines the intersecting histories of crop science, cyclone science, and the
small agricultural family in early twentieth century Mauritius. It centers around a colony-
wide work disruption in 1937, where both field workers and small Indo-Mauritian planters
revolted against a rise in prices that sugar mills paid for Uba, a “cyclone-proof” sugar cane
variety which was popular amongst small planters. It explicitly links the 1892 cyclone with
the political and social conditions that lay at the center of peasant critiques that defined this
disruption, an event is largely understood to be a turning point in modern Mauritian history,
when the political aspirations of Indo-Mauritian and portions of the Creole population
congealed through the work of the newly-formed Labour Party. What this chapter shows is
that the history of the so-called Uba Riots has deeper roots in a history that links sugar
biologic, cyclone science, and gender, and subaltern strategies of ecological resilience. It
reconsiders the 1937 storms by showing that they were less an equal and opposite reaction
to a cut in the prices paid for Uba, and more the continent outcome of multiple threads of
environmental and social change in Mauritius.
The second chapter picks up after the 1937 riots to examine the ways in which a
shift towards “development” as an operative ideology of colonial rule intersected with
natural disaster, ecological management, and public health. Specifically, it looks at the ways
in which women emerged as constituent elements of a broader effort to mitigate the effects
of disease and disaster in mid-century Mauritius. The chapter shows how women emerged
as the biological intermediaries between the natural world and the social as stewards of
children and makers of food. It focuses particularly on dramatic state-led intervention into
the biological lives of Mauritians. It concludes by examing how Indo-Mauritian intellectuals,
ascendant in the public sphere in the 1940s and 1950s, mobilized questions of biological and
ecological health in service of early forms of racial and communal solidarity.

22
The third chapter examines race and the aftermath of the catastrophic 1960 cyclone
Carol, the most powerful storm in Mauritius’ history. One of the most dramatic
consequences of Carol was the establishment of a publicly-funded cyclone-proof housing
scheme, which saw the construction of thousands of single-family housing units constructed
throughout the island. In a handful of years, cités, as the cyclone-proof estates became
known, had flourished all over the island. Increasingly, they became home to hundreds of
thousands of Afro-Mauritian Creoles. This chapter examines the ways in which popular
conceptions of racial community and national belonging transformed as a consequence of
the spatial transformations sparked by the cités, changes which occurred at the cusp of
national independence in 1968.
Lastly, the final chapter outlines the ways in which cyclone Carol and the
construction of the cités brought to a head nearly a decade of official anxiety over
overpopulation. Gripped by fears that Mauritius’ national economy was laid vulnerable by a
potent mix of overpopulation and economic ruin brought by cyclones, late-colonial and early
post-colonial officials set out to “modernize” the Mauritian family in the wake of Carol, to
adapt conjugal life to the meteorological and economic realities that Mauritians faced. As this
logic went, the smaller the family and the deeper they were invested in owning a cyclone-
proof home, the less catastrophic a future landfalling storm would be. This chapter examines
how women’s bodies again became the central territory where future debates over the
sustainability of the country were to be made. It also tracks how the conjugal worlds of the
subaltern became pathologized and woven into discourses of development and nation
building at a time of political transition.

23
CHAPTER 1

THE MANY LIVES OF UBA:


NATURAL DISASTER, FAMILY, AND COMMUNITY IN THE EARLY
TWENTIETH CENTURY

Introduction

In July of 1937 a Mauritian sugar cane laborer named Francis staged a protest: he stayed
home from work. His action was in response to a rumor had begun to filter through the
Indo-Mauritian rural poor, many of whom worked on the island’s large sugar estates and also
owned small plots of land where they grew some cane of their own. The rumor, which
would eventually be revealed as truth, was that the island’s sugar mills would cut the price
they paid for the popular Uba variety cane by fifteen percent. For many small Indo-
Mauritian farming families, Uba was their preferred cane, and as such the decision to
unilaterally pay eighty five percent of normal was met with widespread anger. Francis, who
worked at the large Beau Champ sugar estate in the eastern region of Flacq, decided that the
price cut in Uba, coupled with the meager salary he earned as a field laborer, was a step too
far. According to a testimony provided by a fellow laborer, Ramnarain Beedah, Francis
decided to stay home from the fields. Why work, he observed, if the decrease in price in Uba
would effectively make any labor he did meaningless?35
Francis was not alone in protesting. In late July and August of 1937, the cane fields
of Mauritius were aflame. Small Indo-Mauritian planters and laborers, sparked by the cut to
the price paid for Uba had, with the encouragement and organization of new political actors
in the colony, in particular the nascent Mauritius Labor Party (Parti Travailliste), showed for
the first time a collective dissatisfaction with a decision made by powerful Franco-Mauritian
planters. Hundreds of workers descended on the sugar fields of Union Flacq estate in anger.
Brandishing sticks and threatening violence, the owners of the estate shot recklessly into the
air, and in so doing ignited waves of violence that would see tens of laborers killed, riots

35 Déposition de Ramnarain Beedah. 8 September, 1937. Le Radical, Port Louis, Mauritius.

24
spread from the fields to Port Louis, the capital city, and the colony become embroiled by
political questions over the dignity, practicality, and economic longevity of field labor.
This chapter examines the context and causes of this anger that manifested in
political violence in 1937. Rather than narrate a series of events that produced a spark of
violence, it offers an environmental history “from below” by framing this moment as the
intersection of multiple social, scientific, and environmental processes. It argues that the
riots were not only an outcome of a set of economic policies that pushed the Indo-Mauritian
rural poor to the margins of the colonial economy or the top-down political machinations of
the Labour Party as is most often suggested36, but also the contingent outcome of the
intersection of two distinct histories: an environmental history of cyclone science, sugar
expertise, and scientific exclusion and a social and cultural history of an emergent Indo-
Mauritian Hindu identity.
Just as the broader dissertation argues for a proportional role for natural catastrophe
in modern Mauritian history, this chapter begins by arguing that the 1937 Uba Riots, an
event largely understood to be the inaugural moment of the contemporary political history
of modern Mauritius, has its roots, in part, in the history cyclone science. It shows how the
institutional responses to a major cyclone in 1892 produced an economic and scientific
environment that sought to produce a “cyclone-proof cane.” Uba was an outcome of these
efforts. The second argument, and the one the chapter devotes most of its time to, is that
the ecological resilience and steady income provided by Uba sustained, in part, the social
worlds of small planters and estate workers. Drawing on the testimonies of small planters
and the publications of the Hindu revivalist organization the Arya Samaj, the second half of
this chapter shows that notions of gendered difference that mark the testimonies of striking
planters emerged in early twentieth century Mauritius in relation to cane labor, family, and
religious community. The cut to the price of Uba was not merely an additional indignity
heaped upon small planters, therefore (although it most surely was), but also an existential
threat to their social worlds.
The chapter begins by tracking the political history of the small planter. It then
analyses the scientific history of Uba, a history embedded in Indian Ocean networks of

36 Simmons, Modern Mauritius; Hazareesingh, History of Indians in Mauritius; Selvon, A New Comprehensive History of

Mauritius. Vijaya Teelock , Mauritian History: From its Beginnings to Modern Times (Moka: Mahatma Gandhi
Institute, 2001); MD Noorth Coombes, “Struggles in the Canefields: Small Growers in Mauritus 1921-1937” in
The World Sugar Economy in War and Depression (New York and London: Routledge, 1988).

25
exchange of biomaterial and meteorological expertise and born of efforts to produce a
“cyclone-proof” sugar cane variety. From then, it shows how the much-celebrated
ecological resilience of Uba to the winds and rains of cyclones sustained the precarious lives
of small planters. To access this story, I examine the testimonies of planters who engaged in
the 1937 riots. These were interviews with a factfinding body, the Hooper Commission,
created by the colonial state, but that were never included in the final report. The interviews
were published at the times they were collected, however, in the colony’s newspapers. These
testimonies of the small planters speak to the urgency of the fall in the price of Uba by
engaging in a discursive strategy that emphasized the critical role that Uba played in the
social world of the family. Almost uniformly, the interviewed strikers, all of whom were men
with one exception, expressed their fears of a life without a market for Uba as one where
women worked more than was acceptable, where children were malnourished and worked
the fields, and where practices of Hindu propriety were left unattainable. When these
testimonies are brought into conversation with government reports on the political and
social realities of the rural poor, sugar science studies, the history of cyclone science in the
colony, and forms of popular engagement on the part of Hindu revivalist organizations,
what emerges is a picture of early twentieth century Mauritius where questions of ecological
resilience informed even the most intimate spaces of everyday life.

The History and Politics of the Small Planter

Before evaluating the scientific history and social significance of Uba, I trace here the
background to the riots of 1937 and the political transformations they engendered. When
the British assumed control of Mauritius in the early nineteenth century, they gained political
control over a population of French-descendant sugar plantation owners, the Franco-
Mauritian planters. These planters had accumulated significant amounts of land and wealth
through the export of cane sugar, around which the Mauritian economy (and its politics)
were increasingly dependent. With the abolition of slavery in the 1830s, the British
compensated Franco-Mauritian planters for their “losses” and began to import South Asian
labor to the colony to replace African labor on the sugar estates. This is a process that has
marked Trinidad and Tobago, British Guyana, Malaya, Fiji, as well southern and eastern
Africa in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. And while Mauritius was the site where this

26
process first began, it has been one of the most enduring social experiments of the history of
the British Empire, as the broader South Asian diaspora has come to mark the political and
social trajectories of Caribbean and of Africa in particular, where questions of race, nation,
and citizenship in the colonial and post-colonial world.37
Global macro-economic processes marked Mauritian society and politics in the
second half of the nineteenth century when large estate planters saw themselves as
increasingly under the threat of losing their share of this commodity market. Between the
1860s and 1900s a five-fold surge in global sugar production reduced the island’s global
share in the sugar market. The increased production of beet sugar and the resulting drops in
global sugar prices further threatened Franco-Mauritian political interests. It was increasingly
clear, then, that Mauritius was more vulnerable the more it was exposed it was to global
sugar markets. Keenly aware of their predicament, however, Franco-Mauritian planters were
frustrated with the extent to which the colonial state provided little to no financial assistance
or even substantive insulation from the vicissitudes of the global sugar market.38 And as
Richard Allen has shown, it was this frustration at a lack of “foreign” (i.e. metropolitan)
capital that pushed the planter elite to look domestically for ways to cultivate new spaces of
capital.
This need to generate forms of local forms of capital was most concretely articulated
through the processes of morcellement, when sugar estates owned, in large part, by Franco-
Mauritians, divided and sold small plots of land on the estate to Indian laborers who could
plant their own sugar cane. The grand morcellement, the largest moment of this process of the
subdivision of large estates dates to the 1860s and, as Allen as shown, was a process that

37Madavhi Kale, Fragments of Empire: Capital, Slavery, and Indian Indentured Labor in the British Caribbean
(Philadelphia, PA: University Pennsylvania Press, 1998); Marina Carter, Lakshmi’s Legacy : The Testimonies of
Indian Women in 19th Century Mauritius / (Stanley, Rose-Hill, Mauritius: Editions de l’océan Indien,1994.); Marina
Carter, Voices from Indenture : Experiences of Indian Migrants in the British Empire (London: Leicester University
Press, 1996); Marina Carter, Servants, Sirdars, and Settlers : Indians in Mauritius, 1834-1874 (Delhi: Oxford
University Press, 1995); Antoinette M. Burton, Brown over Black : Race and the Politics of Postcolonial Citation
(Gurgaon: Three Essays Collective, 2012); Sana Aiyar, Indians in Kenya: The Politics of Diaspora (Cambridge,
Massachusetts: Harvard University Press, 2015); James R. Brennan, Taifa: Making Nation and Race in Urban
Tanzania (Athens, OH: Ohio University Press, 2012).
38 After 1919, Mauritian planters were afforded “imperial preference,” which ensured a market for Mauritian

sugar that had attained an agreed upon level of purity through the enforcements of tariffs. See: Report of the
Commission of Inquiry into the Unrest on Sugar Estates in Mauritius, 1937. (RW Books: Port Louis, Mauritius,
1939) Henceforth: Hooper Commission, p. 183, paragraphs 365 and 366.

27
occurred in the areas surrounding the capital, Port Louis, the colony’s capital. The process
accelerated again at the turn of the century. This time around it lasted a number of decades.
Over a ten-year period in the 1880s, the number of Indian proprietors increased to 46.5
percent of the island’s total. Using “a mix of personal savings, loans, and joint-purchase
agreements,” Indians were quickly becoming a larger percentage of the sugar producing
population on the island.39 By the 1920s, Indians account for 93% of the islands sugar 3,260
“planters,” while owning only approximately 37% of the land under cultivation. So while the
numbers reflect a rapid increase in the amounts of Indians owning and cultivating land in the
colony, and while some contemporary observers saw Indians making “small fortunes”
relative to their peasant brethren who had remained in India, ownership of land did not
necessarily mean economic autonomy, as the sugar industry’s technological capital (mills and
factories, for example) still remained under the control of large planters.4041 It should also be
noted that although there was a dramatic increase of Indian landowners, many of these small
planters remained under the employment of estate owners. One could, and indeed often
was, a small cultivator of sugar cane while also a laborer on an estate, as many of the actors
in later sections of this chapter were. In many cases that estate was quite distant from the
plot of land owned by the small farmer. The largest single group of Indians who purchased
land throughout the decades of morcellement claimed agricultural employment: “gardeners,
agricultural laborers, sirdars [cane field employment overseers], cultivators, and planters.”42
But for the purposes of large estate owners, morcellement must be seen as two-fold process,
one where local sources of capital were created to ensure the viability of large estates and of
insulating themselves from the increasingly competitive global sugar market.
The precarity of employment opportunities and the low wages that were paid for
them were critical thematic sites in the political mobilization of workers done by the newly-
formed Maurtius Labor Party, founded by Dr. Maurice Curé, a Creole intellectual and

39 Allen, “The Slender, Sweet Thread.”

40 Ibid.
41 India Office Records (IOR) IOR:L:PJ:8:270 S. Ridley, ICS (South Africa) “Report on Indians in Mauritius”

1940
42 Allen, "The Slender, Sweet Thread"., 187.

28
physician. Elite Creole intellectuals dominated politics in 1930s Mauritius.43 Politicians like
Raoul Rivet and Edgar Laurent had opened up a space for a nascent Creole political identity
in the early part of the century, as they moved away from a nineteenth century racial political
paradigm where Creole politicians, the descendants of free people of color (gens de couler libre)
often situated their racial and political aspirations in the conservative Franco-Mauritian
political arena. The 1920s and 1930s saw growth of a working-class Creole population in the
capital of Port Louis, however, which produced new organizing constituencies and political
voices. This population was largely made up of artisans, dockworkers and petty clerks who
were eligible to vote. And like Franco-Mauritian and elite Creoles, these urban workers were
largely Catholic. As such, Creole politics in the early twentieth century emerged around
questions of urban labor and articulated through the Catholic Church. 44 It was this urban
Creole community that formed the early base of Maurice Curé’s political aspirations.
But despite a foundational urban constituency, it was Curé’s work amongst the rural
poor that catalyzed the Labor Party to prominence. In 1936 he organized the first of many
protests—a march on Port Louis by field laborers—where he gave an impassioned speech
on the need for higher wages, hospital care, and unions. This political action took official
form the Mauritius Labor Party in 1936 as well as the Société de Bienfaisance des Travaillers, a
nonpolitical workers’ benevolent society. The party gained momentum with the ascent of
another Creole leader, Emmanuel Anquetil. Like Curé, Anquetil was educated in England (as
a ship carpenter) and had also tried to join the Royal Navy during World War I and was
turned away. Upon his return to Mauritius, he was horrified by the labor conditions of the
island, particularly after the great depression. Anquetil was significantly more militant in his
politics than Curé and “worked with a religious devotion.”45 And while the founding of the
Labor Party and its attention to the agricultural working class of Mauritius is significant in

43“Creole,” when used as a racial identifier, is often contested in Mauritius. It can refer to mixed race peoples
who trace ancestry back to the era of French, Afro-Mauritians who track their identities to Madagascar and
continental Africa, as well to as “Ilois,” peoples from other Indian Ocean islands, notably Rodrigues, an
Mauritian island dependency and Chaogossians who were moved to Mauritius after the expansion of American
and British military power in the Chagos Archipelago in the 1960s. See: Rosabelle Boswell, Le Malaise Créole:
Ethnic Identity in Mauritius (Berghahn Books, 2006); Richard B. Allen, “Free Women of Colour and Socio-
Economic Marginality in Mauritius, 1767–1830,” Slavery & Abolition 26, no. 2 (August 2005): 181–97.
44 Simmons, Modern Mauritius. p. 52-53.
45 Simmons, Modern Mauritius., p. 63.

29
that it signaled the first substantive mass political alignment of the poor on the island, it was
also significant in that it was a party that was non-racial. Curé embodied a significant change
from the conservative politics of earlier Creole intellectuals in that he tied the political
fortunes of non-European Mauritians to each other. Curé quickly appointed Indian leaders
within the party, some of whom were quick to court the support of labor leaders in England
and intellectuals with Fabian developmentalist ideological commitments.
Questions of political and social life in rural Mauritius in the early twentieth century
were products of morcellement. The process catalyzed an exodus of laborers from living on the
cane fields to their own plots of land where many had begun to built straw huts, grouped
those huts into villages, and plant their own small amounts of cane on their land.46 By the
1930s the terms of employment for field laborers usually fell into two categories, therefore.
The first were laborers and the families who did not own their own plots of land and still
lived on the estate. This would require travel between the estate and their offsite plots of
land if they were also small famers. In lieu of wages, these workers were usually paid in the
form of food rations: rice, dhal, and lentils. They were also provided a salary of ten rupees a
month.47 By the 1930s, however, many had obtained their own land through morcellement,
These were, nominally, “free laborers,” but were in large part impoverished, despite their
land ownership where they produced their own sugar. In many cases, however, small
planters still did work on the fields, most often hired for daily work and under the
supervision of sirdars.

Cyclone Science, Sugar Science, and the Origins of Uba

As the political worlds of the small planter transformed during the late nineteenth and first
half of the twentieth century, so did the sugar crop they harvested. Throughout the decades
surrounding the turn of the century, the very biological make up of sugar came under the

46 Richard Allen, Slaves, Freedmen, and Indentured Laborers in Colonial Mauritius (Cambridge: Cambridge University

Press,, 1999); Richard B. Allen, “Capital, Illegal Slaves, Indentured Labourers and the Creation of a Sugar
Plantation Economy in Mauritius, 1810-60,” Journal of Imperial & Commonwealth History 36, no. 2 (June 2008):
151–70,; Richard B. Allen, “The Slender, Sweet Thread: Sugar, Capital and Dependency in Mauritius, 1860-
1936,” Journal of Imperial & Commonwealth History 16, no. 2 (January 1988): 177–200.
47 “Part V: Complaints of the Small Planters”, Hooper Commission, 1939, pp. 125-131. Paragraphs 254-264.

30
investigative eye of a collection of new scientific research institutions tasked with making the
island’s monocrop more profitable. This section tracks these transformations and positions
them as the scientific background to the social unrest that would grip the colony in the
1930s.
The origins of the Uba can variety and, by extension, the 1937 crises, lay in events
forty-five years earlier; in the aftermath of an exceptionally powerful cyclone in 1892. For
decades before the landfall of the 1892 storm, cyclone scientists had attempted to produce,
without much success, models for understanding the generation, internal make up, and
future tracks of cyclones in the Indian Ocean. This was an attempt spearheaded by the long-
time head of the local Royal Alfred Observatory, Charles Meldrum. The technological and
methodological limitations of this endeavor in the late nineteenth century were profound,
however, despite Meldrum’s confidence in his research trajectory, and the 1892 cyclone
showed that these challenges endured. The storm occurred well after Meldrum’s departure
from Mauritius but exposed the inability of the RAO to provide the colony with reliable
forecasting models. Indeed, as the storm approached Mauritius, the observatory sent
telegrams to the capital city, Port Louis, indicating that the island would be spared the worst
of the storm.48 In the decades following the storm, a new field of research called
“agrometeorology” emerged in Mauritius under the leadership of a cyclone scientist and
director of the RAO, Albert Walter. Walter’s work sought to integrate the research questions
meteorologists pursued with the needs of the sugar economy in order to construct a body of
knowledge about sugar production that allowed for cane growers to mitigate their risks by
breeding stronger cane, planting in more advantageous areas, and knowing the biological
structure of the canes they grew.49
As William Storey notes, it was large estate owners who worked closely with these
new institutions of sugar science while small planters were largely excluded from access to
technological advancements.50 These advancements were multiple: improved planting and

48 Martin Mahoney “‘The Genie of the Storm:’ Cyclonic Reasoning and the Spaces of Weather Observation in

the Southern Indian Ocean, 1851-1925” British Journal of the History of Science Vol. 1, Issue 54, 2018.
49Albert Walter, The Sugar Industry of Mauritius; A Study in Correlation, Including a Scheme of Insurance of the Cane Crop
against Damage by Cyclones (London: Humphries, 1910).
50 William K Storey, Science and Power in Colonial Mauritius (Rochester: University of Rochester Press, 1997)

Chapters 3 and 4.

31
harvesting machinery, more sophisticated meteorological knowledge, and access to imported
cane material from other parts of the world. The research that drove these changes took
place in institutions like the Sugarcane Research Station (SRS), founded in 1892, and Station
Agronomique established in 1893, both founded with urgency in the wake of cyclone to
produce new methods of protecting crops. These were changes and advancements driven in
part by the Mauritius Chamber of Agriculture, founded in 1853, which represented the
interests of large estate owners.51 Indeed, it was the Chamber, and not the government, that
speared headed scientific reforms in the era after the 1892 storm. The Chamber effectively
drove the research agenda of institutions like the SRS and Station Agronomique; it was so
powerful, in Storey’s estimation, that they were for all intents and purposes “a shadow
government.”52 Capital and scientific expertise were intimately linked in late nineteenth and
early twentieth century Mauritius.
The intersection of interests and research questions between sugar scientists at the
SRS and Station Agronomique and growing research in applied cyclonology from the
Observatory produced a kind of El Dorado- type thinking amongst estate owners, sugar
biologists, and meteorologists in early twentieth century Mauritius. Collectively, the colony
sought to produce a perfect cane; one with a biological constitution that would make it
“indigenous” to the environment. An ideal cane would be high yielding, but also cyclone
proof, meaning that was fibrous enough to bend winds and with a deep enough root system
to not be uprooted, as well. A deep root system would also allow for greater drought
resilience.
Uba was, in part, the controversial outcome of the work conducted by these research
institutions within Mauritius and networks of expertise that spanned the Indian Ocean
World. In 1940, G.C. Stevenson, the senior geneticist at the SRS published an investigative
study into Uba’s biological origins in order to understand why it had become so important in
Mauritius. The cane’s history elides a straightforward explanation. It appears to initially have
been a historical accident of sorts, an outcome of networks of labor and scientific expertise

51A. North Coombes, Evolution of the Sugar Industry in Mauritius (Department of Agriculture, Mauritius, 1937)
and A. North Coombes History of the Chamber of Agriculture (Mauritius Chamber of Agriculture, 1953).
52 William Storey, “Small-Scale Cane Farmers and Biotechnology in Mauritius: The Uba Riots of 1937”

Agricultural History, Vol. 69, No. 1, 1995.

32
that crisscrossed the Indian Ocean throughout the late nineteenth and early twentieth
century. Uba Marot was, along with Uba de Riche Fund, the two dominant Mauritian
derivatives of the Uba cane, and the variant that would become post popular amongst small
planters. The Uba Marot cane was “discovered” by a Mr. L. Marot near the village of Gros
Caillous in August 1923. It occurred “as a rogue in a field of old rattoons [cane that had been
cut but its roots not removed]” of a different SRS variant and “propagated widely on
account of its extreme vigor of growth.”53 But Stevenson was weary of its “randomness.”
While appearing to be an indigenous cane, a cytological analysis suggested that it was a
hybrid cane—a cross between a “noble” (saccharum officinarum) and wild (saccharum spontaneum)
cane. In the early part of the twentieth century, noble canes were thought to be originally
indigenous to northern India, and to the subcontinent more broadly. With this in mind,
Stevenson posited that because he had first spotted Uba growing in Mauritius around Hindu
temples and noticed that some devotees used the leaves of the cane in religious rituals, that
the cane had arrived in the middle of the nineteenth century on the ships bringing
indentured laborers from South Asia. After all, Uba bore a striking resemblance, in
Stevenson’s estimation, to a cane variety he had developed in Tamil Nadu.54 Uba de Riche
Fund, on the other hand, had a more straightforward history. Riche Fund cane, named after
the estate on which it was planted, was a seedling first imported from the cane fields of
nearby Natal, South Africa. It’s unclear just how different the Riche Fund variety was from
its South African parent seed, but rumors purported that it derived its name from the bags in
which it arrived, labeled DURBAN, but with the D, R, and N not entirely visible.55
Both Uba Marot and Uba Riche Fund seemed to be a god-sent, therefore, as they
were the closet any planter or scientist had seen to be a cyclone-proof cane. Its ecological
resilience thrust it front and center of the scientific expertise on the island. Uba Marot was,
in the late 1920s, used a parent cane in breeding schemes. From the first seedlings produced
by its crossing with other canes, both noble and wild, “it was evident that it was able to
transmit is growth vigour.” One particular successful variant was crossed with an analogous

53G.C. Stevenson, “An Investigation into the Origin of the Sugarcane Variety Uba Marot” Sugarcane Research
Bulletin No. 17, Port Louis, Mauritius. 1940.
54 Ibid., 4.
55 Hooper Commission, 2

33
super-cane—POJ 2878—a variety originally bred the east Indies by the Dutch at their world
renown station, the Proefstation Oost Java (POJ). Uba variants thus proliferated throughout
the island, as multiple varieties of the cane became popular.
The Hooper Commission, the commission of inquiry into the Uba Riots, concluded
from the outset that political instability revolved around the question of access to and
management of sugar cane, the so-called Uba Question.56 To be certain, Uba was a unique
variant of cane. It was both highly resistant to pests and natural disaster, and these
characteristics alone allowed for small farmers to produce a marginal profit with decidedly
less daily care for the cane than other, more fragile varieties. The “Uba Question” therefore,
was defined in part by climate and by science. And more specifically, it was a question about
natural disaster. As the Hooper Commission itself noted, Uba had a particular social and
ecological niche. The report on the 1937 riots noted as much:

Indeed in normal years the rainfall is sufficient to ensure a good crop, but when a
shortage occurs in the rainfall, the resulting drought as a lamentable effect on the
crop, which partly dries up. Another natural calamity is the periodical occurrence of
cyclones. These are risks to which the sugar planter has been exposed ever since the
inception of the industry in Mauritius which not insurance can be contracted save at
prohibited rate. The unfortunate planter has to bear these losses as philosophically as
he can.57

Small planters’ approach to survival was less philosophical than it was practical, however,
and grounded in the strategic deployment of biotechnical advancements of the colony.
Indeed, in order to understand significance of the cut to Uba, one has to understand
its material constitution. Its cyclone-resistance consisted, primarily, of two components: its
deep root structure and its highly fibrous interior. This fiber allowed for a number of
benefits: it could bend in cyclone winds and it amplified the weight of the cane when it was
weighed at mills (thereby increasing the amount that the mills would pay). Both Uba Marot
and Uba de Riche Fund were highly fibrous and had deep root systems. These characteristics

56 Hooper Commission, 132-133.


57 Hooper Commission, 112.

34
allowed for the cane to bend in cyclone winds, to resist being uprooted in those winds, and
to thrive in poor and dry soil.58 Uba’s milling also resulted in a large amount of bagasse, after
it was milled. Bagasse, the biomaterial left after a cane is milled, was (and still is) highly useful.
At the beginning of the twentieth century, bagasse was collected and burned by small planter
families as a source of fuel and of heat. One small planter, Ramdeeal Banwary, noted that
often times mills would retain the bagasse that they milled for the small planters for their own
energy uses, a fact that persistently frustrated planters.59 The confiscation of the residual
bagasse of Uba was therefore seen as an additional cut into the usability of this versatile
cane.60 Its fibrousness, however, rendered it too expensive to crush and planters ultimately
abandoned it for higher-yielding, yet more fragile options. Indo-Mauritian small landholders,
however, quickly adopted it.61 For these farmers Uba was a miracle: not only was it disease
and cyclone resistant, but it required little day to day care and the farmers were paid not by
the purity of the juice produced, but rather by the raw tonnage of cane they brought to the
mills.
By 1936, global sugar prices hit rock bottom.62 In what is likely not a coincidence, by
1936 the ever-reliable Uba was omnipresent amongst small planters in Flacq as a threadbare
source of income that sustained . At the large Sans Souci estate mill in 1936, of the 156,000
tons of cane crushed and of the dozens of possible varieties there in, between 18,000-20,000
of those were Uba grown by small planters. Uba was part of a broader political ecology of
risk vulnerability—as cyclones, drought, and increasingly profitable forms of sugar cane
continued to push small planters to the economic margins of Mauritian life—Uba emerged
as a critical component of keeping families economically afloat. The next section turns to the
broader ecological risks small planters faced, what role Uba played in the rural economy, and

58 It should be noted here that the ability to bend in the winds was a benefit not only in that the cane retained
its physical integrity, but also that lacerations in the cane were most often points of entry for microbe-causing
disease.

59 Déposition de Ramdeeal Banwary, 8 September, 1937. Le Radical.


60 “Opinion of the Manager of Sans Souci,” The Hooper Commission, 1939. p. 136.
61 “Griefs: La Question de la Uba,” 30 September 1937. Le Radical, Port Louis, Mauritius.
62 Storey, Science and Power, p. 142.

35
the economic asymmetries that developed around access to sugar bioscience and
government responses to natural disaster.
Political Ecologies of the Small Planter

Mauritian small planters were increasingly entangled in global commodity markets, markets
where volatility was tied not only to questions of political change and imperial fiscal policy,
but also to the vicissitudes of the natural world. At the same time, however, they were
excluded from institutional production of scientific knowledge on sugar science that the
previous section outlined, knowledge built to mitigate the threats of nature.
While the 1930s were bleak in terms of the broader success of global markets, they
were boom years for some of the large estates engaged in plant breeding. As the pressures
of the global economic crisis of 1929 depressed markets, large planters and representatives
of the Chamber of Commerce sought to push back against these market changes through
strategic cane breeding. To do so, they sought to develop hardier varieties that would
withstand ecological pressures. But it was not only global economic conditions which
disrupted the sugar market. Meteorological conditions throughout the island put the sugar
crop’s profits under pressure. Between 1930 and 1937, the island was struck by eight notable
cyclonic storms and four periods of prolonged drought. These forms of natural disaster—
acute and slow moving, respectively—shaped cane growth by modifying sun exposure,
temperature, and dryness. These modifications would lead to minimal but economically-
significant fluctuations in the percentage of sucrose purity that the canes rendered. While
drought was especially potent force in terms of destabilizing cane purity, cyclones proved to
be even more catastrophic in that they could lead to the whole-sale destruction of
percentages of the crop. A storm in 1931, for example, plunged the sugar economy into
dramatic losses. The then-Governor Wilfred Edward Francis Jackson argued that the
“Council of Government” (the body of appointed and elected men of wealth and power that
would become the Legislative Assembly in the 1940s) must “plainly acknowledge [that the
storm was] a crisis in the economic history of Mauritius.”63 A lack of archival evidence
makes it unclear what the effects of this storm, not to mention the other seven of that
decade, or the successive droughts were on the everyday lives of the agricultural poor.

63 Debates of the Council of Government, 1931, Speech of HE the Governor to the Council, 21 April 1931.

36
Broader economic patterns would suggest that they pushed small planters into dire straits,
resulting in, one could surmise, more day-laborer work on the large estates and increased
workloads for women and children.
Earlier evidence around moments of natural catastrophe point to chronic small-
planter vulnerability throughout the nineteenth and early twentieth century. Droughts and
seasonal cyclones marked the rhythms of life for the agricultural poor in Mauritius. For the
vast majority of small planters, and in particular those who both worked on the large estates
and grew their own crop, a natural disaster left them with little recourse beyond filing
petitions for government assistance through the office of the “Protector of Immigrants,” a
bureaucratic position that existed in each colony where indentured South Asian labor was
used. After a major 1908 cyclone, for example, the Protector of Immigrants files contain
numerous claims made by Indo-Mauritian small farmers throughout the island. These claims
are illustrative of a number of the political and social limitations that faced Indo-Mauritians
not only at times of crises, but in the broader political moment of the early twentieth
century. In on March 6 1908, for example, less than one week after the storm had made
landfall on the first, a group of Indian proprietors in the city of Rose Hill made a claim for
assistance to rebuild their “small houses.”64 Fifty residents petitioned the governor of the for
permission to go into the nearby Reduit forest to acquire timber (only from trees damaged
by the cyclone) to be able to rebuild their own homes. The official noted that their claims
were perceived to be valid because the damage to their homes had been specifically caused
by the cyclone, and was therefore understood to be legitimate. But even then, the governor
seemed unconvinced. He asked for a government representative to be sent to each home in
Rose Hill to evaluate the validity of each claim, and even suggested that they use the more-
easily acquirable bamboo to aid in reconstruction.65 One man in particular going by the name
Lahache had requested even more assistance. He claimed the “ten broken trees” which had
originally been offered to him were not sufficient. Leaving his home after the cyclone in an
effort to find money and wood to rebuild, he revisited his home three weeks after the

64Records of the Protector of Immigrants. Mauritius National Archives (MNA) “Forwarding a petition of
certain Indian Proprietors of Small Houses at Rose Hill, re: the last cyclone” MNA/PB-50/no. 54, 6 March,
1908.
65 Ibid, no. 59, 16 March, 1908.

37
cyclone had passed and claimed that his wife and children were living “under a portion of
the tin roof” of the home, most of which had been destroyed.”66On the estates, the “huts”
of indentured workers and small planters residing near the estates proved to be no match for
the winds of the storms, as well. At major estates like Albion and Medine, the Protector of
Immigrants noted their “defective” nature and how prone they were to cyclonic damage.67 In
the case of the Albion estate camps which abutted the sea on the western side of the island,
a decision was made on the part of the estate owners, and, it appears, with the blessing of
the Protector of Immigrants, to not even attempt to rebuild those already thread-bare
lodgings. “They will move over on their own accord,” it was suggested, to “new huts allotted
to them.”68
These claims to the state and the decisions made by the estate owners show the
ecological precarity that poor Indo-Mauritians agricultural workers faced. Whether it be
residents petitioning the government for access to damaged trees for timber or the casual
assumption of estate owners that “aid” as conceived as the extension of government
resources to its subjects was simply non-existent. Natural disasters as they pertained to
everyday people were not questions for the state in the early twentieth century. However,
these claims at moments of collective crisis show how laboring both on the estates and as a
small planter was a relationship of dependency. Small planters and estate workers were
forced to petition for the largesse of the estates and the government. In a revelatory
observation in the 1900s, Jaypal Mahraz, a small planter and laborer observed that
“government is your father and your mother when you want something, but parents have a
way of interfering with their children…we have to submit to the way in which the
government treats us.”69 It was during the 1930s that small planters turned to Uba as a
method of breaking the paternalistic relationship with the state and of achieving some sort
of economic autonomy from the large estates.

66 “Lahache—petition to rebuild his house after blown down by last cyclone” MNA/PB-50/606-8/no. 77, 16

March 1908.

67 “Medine Estate camp—defective huts” MNA/PB-50/671-7/no. 554, 30 May, 1908, and “Huts in Defective

Condition” MNA/PB-51/716-8, 13 May, 1908.


68 Ibid.
69 Interview with Jaypal Mahrez in the “Swettenham Commission”: Sir Frank Swettenham, Report of the

Mauritius Royal Commission, 1909 (London: HMSO, 1910) .

38
Perhaps the most productive place to begin to understand the ways in which Uba
operated in the social lives of the rural poor is with the person who provided them with it:
the cane dealer. The most notorious of these dealers in eastern Mauritius was Michel Cayeux,
who worked in the region of Flacq, around the small hamlets of Bon Acceuil and Brisée
Verdiere.70 This part of Flacq was central to the islands sugar cane production and Cayeux
himself was the middleman between the powerful Union Flacq and Sans Souci estates. In
Cayeux’s own estimation, the work of the cane dealer was critical for the survival of the
industry. He argued that he provided a service that neither the estates nor the small planters
were able accommodate. In the eyes of the estate owners, the cane dealer formed a critical
link between the estate mills and the small planters. Cayeux argued that for the estates, he
assumed the risk of supplying seeds to small planters. He suggested that the larger estates
were demonstrably risk averse in their dealings with small planters, as they were hesitant to
become financial organizations that would sell seeds to planters on credit, which was the
nominal arrangement: most small planters could not afford to pay for seeds before their
harvest.
Additionally, he argued that his role as a technical one. Not only could he furnish sels
chemiques (phosphates, basalt, and other chemicals used for soil cultivation, which he noted
he provided without interest) and guano used to spread on the fields, but he would also act as
technical overseer of when and how small planters would properly apply sels chemiques so that
their cane would provide the highest yields—ensuring the most amount of profit for Cayeux,
the small planter, and ultimately the estate owned mills, in Cayeaux’s own opinion. But his
role, as he saw it at least, was not merely as provider of seed and expertise, but also as a
social intermediary who helped sustain social life for the rural poor.
In his first testimony to the Hooper Commission, he highlighted his role as a social
actor. When asked about moments when his services would be needed, he argued that in
addition to the fact that most small planters lacked access to liquid capital, he noted that
during the months between December and April that his services were particularly necessary
because it was cyclone season. It was during these months that his services would allow for
farmers to make ends meet were they faced with cyclone-driven losses. But he also noted
that the money he lent not only insulated planters form ecological risk but social ones.

70 Déposition de Michel Cayeaux. 22 September, 1937 Le Radical. Port Louis, Mauritius.

39
“Death, sickness, or a marriage,” he observed, were particularly difficult for the small planter
family71. These were expensive celebrations, where food, space, and the necessary
accouterments of a social event placed families in situations where their cultural and social
obligations pressed against their economic realities. He went further: in another example, he
noted that his services allowed for other planter to pay off the mortgages they owed on the
land that they had purchased decades before.72
The predatory role that dealers played in the rural political economy of the island was
highlighted by small planters. For many of those interviewed after the riots, Cayeux emerged
as the embodiment of what many small planters saw as exploitative economic system whose
repercussions were felt in their social lives. And while the dealer was not the only middleman
that planters/laborers encountered, most small planters identified him as the biggest obstacle
to their economic emancipation. “We would rather work directly with the millers,” was a
frustration often aired by planters.73 One planter, Seecharn Carap, noted, for example, that
he would purchase Uba seedlings from Cayeux, but always sought to protect himself
financially when he could. He noted that he never purchased seedlings on credit from
Cayeux.
In essence, Cayeaux operated as both a financial and technological intermediary for
small planters. A similar figure did not exist for the larger estates because of the power of the
Chamber of Commerce. Throughout the two previous decades, estates had lobbied the
colonial government to establish an agricultural bank on the island. And in 1936, the year
before the eruption of the riots, the Mauritius Agricultural bank was founded to keep large
estates capitalized. Efforts had been made by the colonial state to establish rural agricultural
collective societies that would fill the financial and technological gaps that cane dealers like
Cayeaux believed he filled. State initiatives to establish these collectives were dismal, in large
part because of the rather anemic financial and political role that the colonial state had taken
in rural development schemes. It was not truly until the following decade when political
realignments that saw the establishment of village councils and state development funding

71 Ibid.
72 Ibid.
73 “Griefs: La Question de la Uba,” 30 September, 1937. Le Radical, Port Louis, Mauritius.

40
did cooperative societies emerge as significant rural actors. Before then, planters held a tight
grip on the politics of rural Mauritius, a fact which lent them the moniker “the
plantocracy.”74
The material conditions of Indo-Mauritian small planters were under perennial threat
from both tropical cyclones and narrowness of the channels of access to sugar biotechnical
advancements, channels with gatekeepers like dealers and the Chamber of Commerce. Uba
filled this gap and allowed for planters to carve out spaces of economic autonomy in a sugar
industry that relied on their labor. With the cut to Uba, however, those spaces began to
tighten. The following section shows how planters interpreted this fall in the prices to a prize
crop as not only an economic event, but a portender of social collapse.

Uba, Vulnerability, and the Family

The riots of 1937 so worried both estate owners and colonial officials that the government
commissioned a report to understand why the cut to Uba had sparked such a dramatic
reaction. The resulting Hooper Commission produced a collection of testimonies of islands
rural poor. These interviews went unpublished in the official report compiled by the colonial
state but were published contemporaneously in some of the nation’s newspapers. I analyze
these interviews here by reconstructing ways of knowing and representing poverty and
survival in early twentieth century Mauritius. These testimonies demonstrate how people,
places, forms of work, and the articulation of moral concern emerge in common form
throughout much of the texts. This analysis relies on an aggregated reading of these
interviews that emphasizes the discursive patters and points of reference that emerge. And
while many of these original interviews were translated into French and English from
Mauritian Creole, Hindi, and most likely Bhojpuri, what emerges from these testimonies is a
form of political and social grammar; a subaltern vernacular of poverty that is constituted by
references to people, places, institutions, and social expectations and disappointments. These
interviews reveal what poverty signified for Indo-Mauritian laborers and gesture towards a
coherent subaltern strategy of knowing poverty and ensuring survival. What these interviews

74 British National Archives (BNA) Colonial Office (CO) BNA/CO/859/195/5 Annual Report of the

Department of Cooperation, 1951.

41
universally reference are the ways in which the political economy of sugar shaped the
domestic space of the household and the gendered relationships that constituted it. They
illuminate the ways in which the ecological resilience of Uba translated into the social world
of the rural poor.
The history of the family life of Mauritius’ rural poor is fragmentary in the twentieth
century. Marina Carter has shown that throughout the nineteenth century, families of field
workers and small planters were important sites of social reproduction, economic support,
and political thought. As she has argued, gender was a critical component of indenture, as
South Asian women were strategically sent to Mauritius in order to “correct” disparities
between the amount of men coming to the African colony with the few women who initially
did. Women were not mere instruments in the building of gender-balanced society, however.
Rather, they played a key role in the maintenance of the social worlds of the agricultural
poor. Carter notes that “many instances of devotion and caring” existed as forms of labor
additional to their reproductive capacity. Carter also confirms the historical transformation
of culture in the household, an argument that affirms Vijaya Teelock’s contention that it was
in the building of communities during morcellement that new cultural formations and
affiliations developed that marked the formation of a distinctly “Indo-Mauritian” world, one
separate from the disparate points of origin that many laborers could trace to South Asia.75
Family building, gendered labor, and childrearing were perennial concerns of social
management of colonial officials. The records of the Office of the Protector of Immigrants
noted with yearly-precision the number of weddings, separations, and legal divorces.76 A
1925 report conducted by attorney and deputy commissioner in the United Provinces,
Kunwar Mahraj Singh on behalf of the British Raj on the condition of Indians in Mauritius
also noted that the concerted effort at increasing the number of women in Mauritius had
been successful in the amount of marriages that had taken place.77 Importantly, Singh noted

75 Marina Carter, Servants, Sirdars, and Settlers: Indians in Mauritius, 1834-1874 (Oxford University Press, 1995). p.

249; Marina Carter, Lakshmi’s Legacy: Testimonies of Indian Women in 19th Century Mauritius (Éditions de l’Ocean
Indien, 1994).
76 Annual Reports for Protector of Immigrants, 1932-1936 (Port Louis: Government Printer, 1932-1936).
77 Kunwar Maharaj Singh, “Report by Kunwar Maharaj Singh, M.A., C.I.E. on his Deputation to Mauritius”

(Delhi: Government of India Press, 1925) pp. 9-10, paragraph 14. The wage data and prices of stables was
taken from the Mauritius Blue Books that Singh consulted.

42
that in Mauritius, marriages were only considered valid if they were civil, and noted that ones
performed by various Chinese, Hindu, or Muslim authorities held no governmental salience.
There was broad understanding that the family was the critical sociological space where the
economic and social pressures of work in the estate fields was dispersed amongst mother,
father, and child. The Singh report notes, for example, that the annual costs of living for a
family were far outpaced by market retail prices. The Protector of Immigrant files note this
as well, as in the decades preceding the riots, the folders are replete with the spending habits
of the rural poor alongside average costs for necessities.
The circulation of cash that the Protector of Immigrant files tracked came from two
sources: the selling of cane by small planters and work done on the estates. Work on the
estates was demanding physically and offered little remuneration. As the Singh Report noted
and as subsequent reports by the Protector of Immigrant show, the average work day for on
a sugar estate began at around 6 to 7 AM and finished around 2 to 3 PM, after which
laborers would usually return to tend their own fields. The nature of the work was grueling:
digging, planning cane, cleaning and manuring cane, cutting them at harvest times, and
carrying them to and from different places. Between August and December, the harvest
season, this work was significantly more. Often, during the harvest Sundays were not days of
rest, but were rather occupied by corvée labor. As the above paragraph notes, the wages paid
were roundly insufficient to cover the basic costs of living. Women and children often
earned between one half and one third of the wage of a male worker, respectively, over the
course of a month.78
The asymmetry of pay between men and women was not the only gender imbalance
in agricultural life. Memories of life on the sugar estates or as small planter families point the
critical role that women played in maintaining family life amid economic precarity. One
woman interviewed in the early 2000s, Bheem Mooneean, spoke at length about the
strugglers her family faced living and working as a small planter. She noted that as a child she
lived in a single large room and two portioned ones. The walls were soil, the floor cow dung,
and the removed latrine and kitchen, straw. When she married, she did so into similar
poverty. Her life produced different data than the Singh Report. Her work began not at 6,
but 2 am, when she would “steal “straw from a neighbor, fill two barrels with water, cook

78 Ibid., pp. 19-20.

43
for her husband, and milk a cow the family had. After giving birth to her first child, she
needed to devote her time to working in the fields. She cut cane at the Beau Champ estate
for nearly 40 years. She had seven more children, and during those pregnancies she collected
grass instead, under the direction of the sirdar. On occasion, her children joined her in the
fields. Her memories were that of a hard life, and of one where she was expected to work in
the fields alongside men and even children.79
In many ways, then, Mooneean’s memories reflect that of Dooknee Seeparsand, the
only woman interviewed by the Hooper Commission. Like Moonean, Seeparsand testified
that her gender was not taken into consideration when it came to manual labor. Seeparsand’s
interview offers a unique entry point into the ways in which questions of gender, the family,
and nature co-constituted strategies of survival for Mauritius’ rural poor. Her own
autobiographical sketch of her life was bleak:

I am very poor. I have many children and my husband is old. I earn about twenty
five to thirty five cents per day working early in the morning for about four hours
and then three after noon. I have a small child who I am forced to carry when I work
the fields. Three of my daughters work as, well. One is married, while there are two
other daughters, one fourteen, one fourteen, the third is eight. My oldest daughter,
which is married, has a son and a daughter that both work.80

What is so striking about this testimony, and almost all of the ones of the men
interviewed, is the strategy of narration. The family and field are the critical nodes against
which she tacks claims of impoverishment. The age of her and her husband suggests that the
twenty-five to thirty-five cents that she earned in the fields was either low because of their
physical inability to cut as much cane as younger workers or perhaps that that salary was
insufficient for the needs of an aging person. Her emphasis on her children and that they
also performed labor speaks to the direness of their economic condition, where more

79 “Life History of Bheem Mooneean” in Truth and Justice Commission, Vol. 3: Contemporary History,

Culture and Society” (Mauritius: Truth and Justice Commission 2011) , p. 395.
80 Déposition de Dooknee Seeparsand.. 29 September, 1937. Le Radical Port Louis, Mauritius.

44
working members of the family could productively add to the family wages.81 Working at
home was both aspirational and a site of protection. Another interviewee noted that growing
up in the cane fields, it was uniformly preferred for young women’s labor to be directed at
the home, not the fields.82 Yet another noted that this preference was also in response to the
sexual threats that women faced in the fields. Women working in the sugar fields were
physically vulnerable, not only from their fellow field hands, but in particular from sirdars and
Franco-Mauritians who owned the estates.83
Seeparsand’s testimony does not differ too much from the men also interviewed for
the Hooper Commission. The family was almost uniformly the reference point through
which poverty was articulated. Laborer Bissoondeal Lalmate testified, for example, that he
had seven children, all of whom worked. He needed to do so to survive, he asserted, even
though children on averaged earned sixty percent of what adults could earn in the field.84
Despite ostensibly eight working family members, however, he still relied on credit
forwarded to him by Chinese shop owners for food staples. Another laborer, Omcharam
Bhoyroo, also pointed the fragility of his family as a way to express his poverty. Bhoyroo
revealed that he was chronically ill, and because of his sickness he was unable to cut cane. He
did other kinds of work in the sugar factories, like filling gunny sacks with cane. As result of
his chronic illness, he stated that his wife and children were forced to work in the fields.
Moreover, during the entrecoup (the time between harvests, where there was little work), no
one in the family could find employment, not even doing nettoyage (“cleaning” the fields, i.e.
weeding) which was often what sugar laborer families turned to in the off season. Bhoyroo
and his family lived on the estate, which meant he was provided rations, but he asserted
those were not enough. The family was usually given rice, dhal, salt, and coconut oil. “The
our rations are not good” he observed, “We’re given two sacks of rice, but the quality is not
good and the amount is rarely exact.”85

81 Ibid.

82 Author interview with M. Rami, December 9, 2016. Quatre Bornes, Mauritius.


83 Author interview with D. Chooroomoney. December 11, 2016. Quatre Bornes, Mauritius.
84 Déposition de Omcharam Bhoyroo, 7 September, 1937. Le Radical. Port Louis, Mauritius.
85 Ibid.

45
In addition to articulating poverty through the register of family labor, references to
food and its preparation, as the above testimony showed, also played a central discursive role
in speaking about poverty as shown above. Bhoyroo’s complaint of the quality and quantity
of food points to a crises of food access, production, and consumption that posed an
existential threat to the household. Unlike Bhoyroo, however, most of the laborers in early
twentieth century Mauritius lived away from their places of work. As such, they were not
provided with the basic rations that those living on the estates were. More often than not,
the only way for these families to purchase the needed staples for daily living was through
lines of credit extended by Chinese shop owners scattered throughout the island. Still in
existence today, these shops mirrored to a large extent the history of the Indian dukka
common throughout much of Eastern and Southern Africa, where the shop and the shop
owner emerged as sites of racial negotiation, capital accumulation, and indeed exploitation.86
Many laborers complained that most of their salary went to maintaining their credit lines at
Chinese shops.
But despite the economic asymmetries that were forged through these lines of credit,
the Chinese shops emerged as critical sites for maintenance of the health of the family.
Luchman Bagoo, a daily laborer noted that without the labor of his two eldest children in the
fields, they “would not be able to eat” food purchased from a Chinese shop.87 But even then,
it appeared as even with the food that Bagoo was able to purchase for his family, his two
youngest children did not work not because of their age, but because they were
malnourished. Similarly, Soobhan Noockheddy suggested that his only sustenance came in
the form of boiled potatoes and the occasional banana. He wanted to, in his words, “grow a
garden for vegetables.”88 The vegetables would have been a necessity it appears, as
Noockheddy also complained of chronic weakness, which he said made cane cutting difficult
and his wages lower. He was also chronically indebted to Chinese shop owners.
While everyday laborers leveled complaints at the labor system in which they were
enmeshed, not all of the laborers interviewed, however, related tales of women and children

86See: Patrick Eisenlohr, Little India: Diaspora, Time, and Ethnolinguistic Belonging in Hindu Mauritius (University of
California Press, 2006).
87 Déposition de Luchman Bagoo, 23 September 1937. Le Radical. Port Louis, Mauritius.
88 Déposition de Soobhan Noockheddy. 8 September 1937. Le Radical, Port Louis, Mauritius.

46
joining adult men in the fields. Amongst small planters who had accumulated more
comparative wealth, we see clear divides between the spaces of field labor and the domestic
space of the family. It is here, in the recounting of the domestic that gendered roles emerge
most saliently through a comparative vision of what constituted labor. The one woman
interviewed, Dooknee Seeparsand, offered a prosaic evaluation of gendered labor. After
narrating her struggles of working with the field with her child tied to her back she stated
“My gender doesn’t help me. I have no land, no cattle, not even a goat. I live in a shed that
belongs to my father in law, I never ask for help.” Her assertion that her gender ‘doesn’t
help” her suggest that for some, the fact of being a woman could have provided alternatives
to field laborer.89
Some of the men interviewed suggest as much: that women working in the domestic
space, and in particularly preparing food, was a mark of pride. Ramnarain Beedah, the
narrator of Francis’ political struggles noted at the start of the chapter, pointed out that
although his wages were low he had effectively produced a domestic network of food, labor,
and credit funded by his selling of Uba. When asked what he eats, he replied mostly rice and
dhal, but also that he was afforded the luxury of drinking tea and milk twice a day. His wife,
he said, took care of the house and the family. In the entrecoup, however, times were leaner.
The family would eat manioc (cassava) or potatoes provided to them by their neighbor, who
grew food alongside their cane.90 This dual planting of Uba and starchy foodstuffs was not
uncommon for small planter families, with manioc and potato as the preferred stomach-
filling root vegetables. Beedah went to say, however, that because of the tight times of the
entrecoup, he was forced to purchase more credit at Chinese shops, and to also “do the work
of women, washing clothes…five to six hours a day” to make extra money. It appears that
even during the entrecoup, Beedahs gender, like Seeparsands, didn’t help him.91 But ultimately,
the ability for small planters to sell large quantities of Uba allowed for the construction of a
domestic space separate from the fields.

89 Déposition de Dooknee Seeparsand. Le Radical. 29 September 1937. Port Louis, Mauritius.


90 Déposition de Ramnarain Beedah. 8 September 1937. Le Radical, Port Louis, Mauritius.
91 Ibid.

47
Nature, Gender, and the Religious Life in Agricultural Mauritius

The previous section has shown how the cut in the price of Uba generated a reaction
amongst the island’s rural poor, and that this reaction was expressed through mobilizing
gender and the family as discursive tropes to emphasize the transgressive nature of female
field labor and child labor. But this narrative strategy raises an important question: why was
an appeal to ideas about gendered labor and familial propriety significant at this historical
moment when, in fact, women and children had long been present as manual laborers in the
cane fields of the island throughout the nineteenth century? Why did this language take on a
specific salience at this historical juncture? This section argues that the framing of the cut to
Uba as a potential threat to the internal makeup of the family reflected the influence of a
rapidly expanding Hindu reformist organization, the Arya Samaj, which sought to uplift the
island’s laboring Indian classes and construct a coherent vision of Indo-Mauritian life in
Mauritius.
Founded in Bombay by Dayananda Saraswati in the 1870s, the Arya Samaj spread
initially in Punjab before branching out into other regions of South Asia. Broadly speaking, it
was invested in a number of social and religious debates, most notably the elimination of
caste identities and the rejection of idolatry. At its core, however, it sought to reform
orthodox Hinduism through a vigorous investment in evangelical uplift and popular
education. The Arya Samaj arrived in Mauritius in the late nineteenth century but became
formally founded in the first decade of the twentieth century with the support of Manilal
Doctor, an Indian barrister who traveled throughout diasporic communities from Mauritius
to Fiji providing legal support, founding newspapers, and emphasizing cultural connections
between the diaspora and South Asia. As Patrick Eisnlohr has shown, Samajists were critical
actors in the early production of Indo-Mauritian identity, most notably around the question
of language learning.
While language is a largely agreed upon analytical category for understanding identity
formation of identity in modern Mauritius, historians have pointed the moment of
morcellement as a point of profound change: it reshaped the landscape of the island through
the breaking up of large estates and in so doing catalyzed the growth of villages of small

48
planters, mainly of Indian descent.92 As mentioned earlier in this chapter, Vijaya Teelock has
argued that it was this process of making villages that, in part, engendered the growth of an
Indo-Mauritian identity, an identity shot through with fissures along religious, linguistic, and
class lines, but one that sought to supersede divisions amongst religious difference or points
of origin in South Asia. The emphasis on small-plot owning and villagization as critical
components of the building of a coherent Indo-Mauritian identity based on labor and a
shared South Asian past was a process identified by the Arya Samaj. Samajists were the first
to establish baitkas in villages as centers of learning open to anyone in the community, not
just members of the organization.93 The emphasis on baitakas and their location in rural
villages adds a spatial dimension to the genesis of a coherent Indo-Mauritain identity in the
early twenteih century, a dimension driven by the breaking up of estates and the foundation
of rural village life.
The pages the Arya Vir, the weekly newspaper of the Arya Samaj in the first three
decades of the century attest to the salience of “Indo-Mauritian” not merely as a social
category but also a racial one constructed in contraposition to mixed-race and Afro-
descendent peoples, both identified as Creoles. Throughout its articles, the term Indo-
Mauritian is employed alongside Hindu as a marker of identity, suggesting that the term itself
carried cultural weight at this moment in time. Racial distinctions were not made not only by
pointing to country of origin, as the “Indo” in Indo-Mauritian surely does, but also to the
kind of work one did. As one article highlighted, developing class divides within Mauritius
marked the Indo-Mauritian community as distinct through their in relationship to work.
After noting that the 1930s depression had not just affected the agricultural sector but also a
growing population of urban artisans and workmen, most likely in Port Louis where the
majority of these jobs were filled primarily by Creoles, the author suggested that urban
employers would never consider working in the sugar fields because he feared it would
“discredit…their prestige and dignity,” suggesting that racial identities were informed, in

92 Patrick Eisenlohr, Little India: Diaspora, Time, and Ethnolinguistic Belonging in Hindu Mauritius (University

of California Press, 2006); Thomas Hylland Eirkson, “Linguistic Diversity and the Quest for National Identity”
Ethnic and Racial Studies, Vol. 13, No. 1, 1990; Gitanjali Pyndiah, “Decolonizing Creole on the Mauritius Islands:
Creative Practices in Mauritian Creole” Island Studies Journal, Vol. 11, No. 2, 2016; Roshni Mooneeram, From
Creole to standard: Shakespeare, Language, and Literature in a Postcolonial Context. (Amsterdam: Rodopi, 2009).
93 Burton Benedict, “Factionalism in Mauritian Villages” British Journal of Sociology Vol. 8, No. 4, 1957.

49
part, by labor.94 It is therefore important to note that the work of the Arya Samaj as an
organization invested in evangelism and uplift pursued these goals with an eye towards the
social and cultural project of forming a coherent racial identity, and one that could be
mobilized towards political ends.
Alongside its concerns with theological practice and social life in South Asia,
peasant-uplift institutions like the Arya Samaj played closed attention to understanding the
pressures that ecology placed upon rural workers was a touchstone not only in their work in
Mauritius, but in South Asia in decades prior. As Sunil Amrith shows, it was the records and
newspapers of the Poona Sarvajanik Sabha in the rural expanses of part of the Bombay
Presidency during the nineteenth century where the stories of the agricultural poor, those
who suffered the most during famine and drought, were circulated. The Sabha acted as an
intermediary between the poor and local colonial officials an, importantly as institution that
could provide material support. Its growth coincided, Amrith notes, with moments of
catastrophic famine. It’s workers actively sought to collect data and bear witness to the ways
that ecology shaped the social worlds of the poor.95
Similar attention was paid to the natural world in the pages of the Arya Vir in the
aftermath of the 1937 riots and in the years preceding them. In particular, Samajists, as they
were known, became increasingly critical of the seasonality of labor in relation to the sugar
economy and the social and economic precarity of Indo-Mauritians who worked the fields.
As one 1935 article noted, small planters had been out of work throughout the first half of
the nineteen thirties because of the “dryness” of earlier years and the great depression. In
another piece, author Ramaswamy Pydiah noted the extreme ecological precarity caused by
tropical cyclones in relation to the social worlds of the agricultural poor. He observed that
“when the seasons are normal…the labourer has the chance of getting the livelihood, but
when there is a cyclone or drought, his difficulties and sufferings are great.”96 Although
Mauritius “has an excellent climate for cane plantation” it was an “unhappy” fact that there

94 “The Question of Unemployment” Arya Vir, 6 October, 1935. The suggestion of dryness was most likely a

mistaken. A 1931 cyclone had done serious damage to the sugar crop at the height of the global depression,
and this is what most likely caused small planters to suffer.
95 Sunil Amrith, Unruly Wates: How Rains, Rivers, Coasts, and Seas Have Shaped Asia’s History (New York: Basic

Books, 2018) p. 67.


96 “Labour Conditions in Mauritius” Ramaswamy Pydiah, Arya Vir, 3 March 1939.

50
were regular visits from cyclones. “The natural calamities which to which our planters and
workers were exposed for the past twelve years” pushed the rural poor to “struggle.”97
The spaces of economic and social insecurity carved open by natural disaster were
fertile zones for the evangelical work done by the Arya Samaj. By the mid 1930s the
organization moved quite consciously into the sugar producing regions of the island and
began focusing explicitly on questions of poverty as a consequence of both the structures of
the sugar economy and the years of unstable weather. Indeed, the observation that twelve
years of climatic disturbance was central Pydiah’s argument in the Arya Vir that small
planter’s troubles were grounded, in part, in climate. He noted, for example, “the vagaries of
the drought” which had struck the island in the middle of the 1930s “had been so severe that
cane and vegetable plantations had dried up,” leading to a dramatic and damaging rise in
“unemployment among the day labourers.”98 There had been, he noted, an emergency
intervention in to address the drop in employment on the part of government, but one
conclusion remained: “How long such provisional relief work, at an enormous cost, can be
continued, we cannot say.”
The fear generated by the cut to Uba prices also revealed broader connections
between rural life and the expansion of religious life in rural Mauritius. In many cases, it was
not just an assemblage of Uba’s profits and credit from the nearby Chinese shop that could
keep families from slipping into starvation, but religious and cultural institutions like the
Arya Samaj. Samcharun Lobin, for example, faced similar conditions to his fellow Indo-
Mauritian laborers: poor rations (he lived on the estates), seasonal drop in work at the
entrecoup, and poor housing. He shared a room with his wife and four children. But when
asked how his family made ends meet at the slow times of the year, he referred to “his
society,” the Arya Samaj, which went so far as to provide his family with a heifer for milk.99
Alongside the material interventions the Arya Samaj made to mitigate the risks that
ecological instability engendered, the 1930s also saw it increasingly invested in the
production of the ideal Hindu man and woman in Mauritius. In 1931, for example, the

97 Ibid.
98 Ibid.
99 Eisenlohr, Little India.

51
Mahila Mandal or Women’s Organization branch of the Arya Samaj was formed. In 1933,
nearly five hundred women from across the country participated in a rally in Port Louis that
aimed to support women’s rights and greater equality between husbands and wives. The
Mahila Mandal also sought to educate women through gender-specific language classes.100
But in addition to language as being a critical metric in the foundation of an Indian diasporic
identity, the pages of Arya Vir, sought to center question of gender, and in particular
women’s uplift campaigns, as territory through which Indo-Mauritianess could take shape
amongst the rural poor. These articles argued that it was imperative for rural Mauritian
women to leave the cane fields and focus their energies on the domestic space.
Women were long the specific vehicles for this this “civilizational” evangelism
advanced by the Arya Samaj in South Asia. As J.E. Llewellyn noted, gender lay at the center
of Samajist reformism, as their educational centers separated men and women in different
tracks.101 Indeed, Samajist reform was marked by both a belief in women’s uplift and virulent
anti-feminism. In Mauritius, women’s uplift was the predominant thematic emphasis of
Samajist publication and organizing. “If women today enjoy a certain amount of freedom,”
an Arya Vir author going by the name Vishnu asserted, it was because of the work of the
Arya Samaj. Through Samajists, women were awakened “out of the darkness of
superstition,” Vishnu argued. In the sugar-producing region of Flacq, moreover, the Arya
Samaj established a presence not only in the baitkas, village meeting centers, but also a formal
center of learning and community outreach.102 One of the central missions of the larger
establishment at Flacq was to fundamentally transform the island from “terre Francaise” to
“Ghar ki Lutchmee,” or the “House of Lakshmi,” in reference to the Hindu goddess of
fortune.103 Building the house of Lakshmi in Flacq consisted of eradicating the social and
moral causes of what Ram (likely a pseudonym), an employee at the Flacq outpost noted was
the “grey” existence of the rural poor. Women and children needed the assistance of

100 Anjalee Dabee, “Rethinking Women’s Political Agency in Mauritius: An Intersectional Feminist

Perspective” Doctoral Dissertation, Flinders University, 20 June, 2018 p. 132.

101 J.E. Llewellyn, The Legacy of Women’s Uplift in India: Contemporary Women Leaders in the Arya Samaj (Delhi: Sage

Publications, 1998) and Amarpreet Kaur, “Gender and Education Arya Samaj” Proceedings of the Indian History
Congress, Vol 72, Part I (2011), pp. 836-40.
102 “L’Arya Samaj au Centre de Flacq” Arya Vir, 26 October, 1935.
103 Ibid.

52
Samajists, and in Flacq the work was coming along quite nicely. The center provided support
for families that allowed for women and children to not work the fields but to rather learn
the foundations of domestic labor.
Like the testimonies of the striking planters, the pages of Arya Vir pointed to the
poverty of the agricultural poor as the largest obstacle to familial stability. One of the most
dramatics series that the paper printed was the ongoing of the Delhi Provincial Women’s
Conference in early 1930. Over one week the paper printed the proceedings of the
conference, including resolutions on the question of women and work. In an extended
quotation from a Mrs. Sohun Rai, she expressed the dangers, presumably sexual, that women
would have from “being in close proximity to workers.” Rai also mentioned the need for
employers to offer services for women bringing young children to the factories in which they
worked. Other speakers at the conference lamented practices of child marriage and
polygamy. 104
And while the pages of Arya Vir had begun to emerge as a space where questions of
Indo-Mauritian identity, Hindu propriety, and work were discussed, the Arya Samaj made a
conscious effort in the years before the 1937 riots to establish an institutional presence in the
eastern part of the island, where the majority of small planters resided. In large part, the rural
presence of the Arya Samaj revolved around questions of uplift of rural families, and in
particular the spread of an ideal agricultural family. Samajist “pioneers” actively worked in
village baitaks. But it was here were visions of the family were also articulated. Rural families
were given educated in “an affable manner, with sweet words for comrades who would
eventually become friends.”105
In the pages of Arya Vir in the aftermath of the 1937 riots, it again was women who
were highlighted as the specific victims of a political ecology of sugar production.
Commenting on the testimony of a small planter, Ramdeeal Panwary, an author noted that
women’s sufferings were “very great” in the decades preceding the riots. The unnamed Ayra
Vir author was particularly interested in the ways in which Panwary described the conditions
of women were uniquely difficult. “Sometimes mothers,” he lamented, “bring their babies

104 “Delhi Provincial Women’s Conference” Arya Vir, 31 January, 1930, Port Louis, Mauritius.
105 “Le Progress d’l Arya Samaj” Arya Vir, 26 October, 1935.

53
and keep them in the fields under an umbrella.”106 But beyond the image of a pitiful woman
working with her field sin the children, the author hit upon a well-known danger of the
sexual assault that women faced from white estate owners and the Indo-Mauritian sirdars.
Women were “sometimes insulted and assaulted.”107
The vision of the ideal Hindu family articulated by the leaders at Flacq and
throughout the country was one where the domestic labor of household conferred a
religiously (and historically in the mind of many Samajists) conceived ideal femininity. The
maintenance of the household—the rearing of children, making of food, and maintenance of
a sanitary space—emerged as a dominant form of Indo-Mauritian Hindu sociality. That the
Arya Samaj and its offshoot organizations emerged in the 1930s as both a venue for some
financial support and social education in the rural fields of Mauritius helps explain why
notions of femininity and labor were placed front and center of the critiques lobbed by small
planters and estate workers as the driving social fear behind the Uba Riots. That Samcharun
Lobin’s family was supported by the Arya Samaj thus raises questions not only about the
financial obligations that the Arya Sabha (in Lobin’s case) was able to alleviate for rural
families, but also the extent to which that financial support was paired with efforts at cultural
uplift.

Conclusion

The 1930s was a turbulent decade in Mauritius. It was one defined by global economic
collapse, the flourishing of new scientific methods of sugar breeding, and repeated natural
disaster. The preceding pages have argued that the cane variety of Uba migrated into the
social lives of rural workers as a method of protection against both the natural world and
from the economic marginalization. It was precisely because Uba had deep roots, retained
water, and could bend in cyclone winds that it required less day to day maintenance from
small farmers, whose labor was spread from their cultivation to the fields on which they
harvested for the large estates. But as the interviews conducted after the riots demonstrate,
though, the cut to the price in Uba sparked much more than outrage at economic injustice.

106 “Evidence of Ramdeeal Panwary” Arya Vir, 17 September, 1937.


107 Ibid.

54
The income that Uba could bring, were small farmers not hampered by middle men, low
wages, and job insecurity, could aid in the construction a feminine domestic space that had
acquired increasing social meaning through the work of the Arya Samaj. A cut to the price of
Uba was understood to be an existential threat to the social worlds of the Indo-Mauritian
agricultural workers. Acknowledging these connections, chapter has sought to bring
histories of scientific knowledge production and the social worlds of the Mauritian
agricultural poor into the same frame, and in so doing has reframed the historical causes and
contexts of the 1937 riots away from a singularly materialist line of causation from economic
injustice to political organizing to a more capacious understanding of the social, economic,
and scientific worlds of the 1930s Mauritius.
The 1937 riots sparked profound changes in the history of Mauritius. In the
following years there were newly-formed labor unions, an emboldened Labor Party, and new
bureaucracies in the colonial state that sought to build welfare institutions that would extend
benefits and support to the colony’s poorest subjects. But as these new institutions grew to
address, in part, what colonial officials believed that the needs of Mauritian subjects were,
they were also shaped by pressures placed upon the colony by the natural world. The next
chapter turns to these policy changes in the 1940s and 1950s, and asks how the building of
an ethic of colonial “development” had to reckon with questions of climate, disease, and
culture.

55
CHAPTER 2

CYCLONES AND CALORIES: DEVELOPMENT IN


MIDCENTURY, 1940s-1950s

“The welfare of the inhabitants of any land is inseparable from the development of its
resources. The natural riches of Mauritius cannot be fully exploited except by a people
of a high productive capacity. Upon increased production depend full employment
and social security. The present productive capacity of Mauritius is low: except by
improvement in health and a general improvement in the conditions of life it cannot
be increased to any appreciable extent.”

- Donald Mackenzie-Kennedy, Governor of Mauritius, 1946108

Introduction

This chapter argues that “development” colonialism in Mauritius was more than a project of
creating political and civil society institutions. It was also one that sought to modify the
natural world at multiple intersecting scales, to understand the effects it produced amongst
those whose livelihoods were tied to it, and to manage both the landscape and its people to
more efficiently produce sugar, the crop that lay at the heart of the island’s economy. The
following pages also argue that the data and discourses of imperial improvement proved to
be fertile ground for a growing movement of Hindu intellectuals attempting to formulate a
coherent notion of Indo-Mauritian Hindu identity in relation to the natural world. For
multiple colonial and Mauritian actors “development” was multifaceted project: intellectual,
political, environmental, and social.
Mauritian historiography on mid-century has emphasized political and civic
transformation as the central projects of “development.” Studies of this era have focused on
three disparate threads: the construction of a system of free public education, the building of
nascent institutions of the modern Mauritian welfare state in reaction to the Uba riots, and

108 Previous speech given to legislative assembly quoted in “Conclusion” of Annual Report of the Colony of

Mauritius, 1948.

56
debates over women’s suffrage and constitutional participation.109 However, the following
pages show that these histories have overlooked the ways in which these debates occurred
alongside and in conversation with broad-based efforts on the part of the colonial state at
mitigating the perceived threats posed by the natural world. This chapter is an environmental
history of development. It expands the terrain of colonial development policy by insisting
that alongside questions of education, constitutional change, and the building of welfare
institutions were growing concerns on the part of colonial officials, particularly those
working within and alongside the newly-established Department of Labour and the Medical
and Health Department, that ensuring the ecological stability of the island was a
foundational component of “development” for colonial planners.
The destruction of seasonal cyclones and the material and discursive power of the
calorie serve as conceptual entry points into the study of the era of development in modern
Mauritius. Tropical cyclones (in both Mauritius and in other parts of the Indian Ocean) act
as staging events: as moments of acute destruction and as catalytic points that shaped the
parameters of policy debates over ecological change and the social ramifications of those
changes. Cyclones sparked crises in food production and outbreaks of disease, specifically,
two areas of intense interest for colonial planners. The calorie, alternatively, emerged as a
vehicle through which food crises and the diseases that come from malnutrition and
exacerbated by natural disaster could be understood, measured, and mitigated. The more
efficiently Mauritian subjects produced, consumed, and burnt their daily caloric intake, then
the more robust the “national body,” one member of the legislative council noted, would
be.110

109 Patrick Eisenlohr, Little India: Diaspora, Time, and Ethnolinguistic Belonging in Hindu Mauritius (California, 2006);

Jeremy Seekings, “British Colonial Policy, Local Politics, and the Origins of the Mauritian Welfare State, 1936-
1950” Journal of African History, Vol. 52, No 2, 2011; Ramola Ramtohul, “Contested Terrain: Identity and
Women’s Suffrage in Mauritius” Journal of Southern African Studies Vol 32, No. 6 (2016); Deborah Sutton, “The
Consecration of Political Community in Mauritius, 1948-1968,” Journal of Imperial and Commonwealth History Vol.
5, No 2 (2011).

110 “The capitalists, millers, labourers, artizans [sic], and other people do work for the sugar industry of which

all of us do benefit. There is no doubt as to that. But it happens that when certain part [sic] of the body is sick,
that part requires some special attention. Attention is given to that part although by the suffering of that part
other parts of the body also suffer; but we apply treatment to that special part of the body. So when there is a
cyclone it has been thought that a large of the plantations of this islands are destroyed, and the plantation on
which the family is living.” Abdool Rahman Osman, an attorney and member of the legislative assembly In
Debates of the Legislative Assembly. Debate No. 53, The General Cyclone and Drought Reserve Fund, 16
August 1949.

57
While the chapter brings to the fore state policy, it also examines the ways in which
non-state actors spoke back to discourses of development. As the closing pages show, a
politics of ecological development in mid-century Mauritius became fertile territory for
Hindu intellectuals to develop a foundation for articulating difference in mid-century. As
scholars have noted, post-war Mauritius was an era of Hindu revivalism, when religious
institutions and thinkers sought to carve out space in a colony undergoing political change. I
show here that a shared vernacular of difference emerged between colonial planners and
Hindu intellectuals, one that mobilized a language of managing ecological catastrophe,
natural improvement, and the body.
Indo-Mauritian Hindu leaders emerged in this era as a potent cultural force in
articulating a communitarian and religiously-focused diasporic identity.These thinkers
actively linked questions of nature, diet, and ecology to the broader category of “Greater
India,” the transnational community of Indian diasporic communities that ranged from the
cane fields of Durban and Mauritius, the urban spaces of Kenya and Tanzania, to the rubber
estates of Malaya. In Mauritius, as in other diasporic communities throughout the Indian
Ocean, the idea of “Greater India” in and of itself was contested. It could mean a number of
imagined and material connections to India: religious, cultural, mercantile, or social.111 For
the religious leaders I highlight here, Basdeo Bissoondoyal and Pandit Vishwanath Atmaram
in particular, Greater India was a conceptual field defined by the difficulties of navigating
Hinduism in diaspora, unmoored from the physical spaces, social mores, and institutional
cultures that defined it in South Asia, they believed. The writings and political activism of
Bissoondoyal and Atmaram, drew heavily from colonial expert studies of the era to make
specific claims about the broader civilization health and longevity of Indo-Mauritians, a
community they saw has nutritionally and ecologically corrupted in diaspora.

Cyclones, Disease, and Development

111Sana Aiyar, Aiyar, “Anticolonial Homelands across the Indian Ocean.” American Historical Review, Vol. 116,
Issue 4, 2011, pp, 987- James Brennan, Taifa: Making Nation and Race in Urban Tanzania (Ohio University Press:
2012); Isabel Hofmeyr, Gandhi’s Printing Press: Experiments in Slow Reading (Harvard University Press, 2012)
.


58
This first section has three aims: to provide the political and ecological context of the Indian
Ocean World in the 1940s and 1950s, to locate Mauritius’ embeddedness in those forces,
and to identify and understand the primary actors and their ideological commitments which
shaped development policies: doctors, nutritionists, bureaucrats, and legislators.
Amongst the actors highlighted in this section were two medical professionals, Adam
Rankine and Frank Wilson. Rankine, a medical doctor trained in the United Kingdom, was
invited to Mauritius by Governor Bede Clifford to address growing fears over malaria and
malnutrition in early 1942. This was a posting that would earn Rankine a permanent position
in the colonial state as the director of Medical Services within the broader Mauritian Medical
and Health Department after he submitted his influential report in 1945. Rankine frequently
worked alongside another significant policy maker, Frank Wilson, the lead Nutrition Officer
within the Medical and Health Department. Wilson was both an expert in nutritional policy
and a conduit between the Mauritian government and the colonial office in explaining the
successes or failures of the work done in Mauritius to Whitehall. He also oversaw the
development and deployment of the so-called Nutrition Units that I discuss in later sections.
Wilson and Rankine’s work also shaped policy. In particular, their work influenced that of
their contemporary, RC Wilkinson. Wilkinson was the first head of the Department of
Labour, created in 1937 after the political upheaval of the Uba riots. It was a bureaucracy
that emerged in this era as a significant point of contact between the colonial state and
agricultural laborers in particular around questions of development policy, the sugar industry,
and public health. As the following pages will show, it was the Department of Labour that
crafted and implemented much of the colony’s development policy in the 1940s and 1950s,
policy that relied heavily on the findings of experts like Rankine and Wilson.
What, however, did the era of colonial “development” look like in mid-century
Mauritius? Like other parts of French and British Africa in the 1940s and 1950s, the colony
saw increased focus from both metropolitan and local officials interested in expanding
imperial access to and management of capital, human or otherwise, while also encouraging
non-European peoples limited access to the levers of political power, a move aimed at
legitimizing colonial rule. Within Africanist historiography, “development” has in large part
been understood as a response to the protests of urban workers organizing to protest labor
conditions. Beginning in the 1930s and continuing until independence, Africa was swept
with strikes from Senegal, to Zambia, to Kenya. In response, British and French colonial

59
officials implemented “stabilization” schemes to turn urban Africans into a wage-earning,
city-dwelling class, and “modern” workforce, one more amenable to the ends of colonial
rule.112
Beyond the realm of the urban, however, Africanist historiography has long shown the
ways in which the arrival of “development” colonialism also synthesized questions of social
change with interventions in the natural world.113 And more specifically, it has shown how
state efforts at producing knowledge about the natural world, about the health of its
subjects, and about the social worlds of those subjects, produced a coherent and ecological
whole. Emphasizing the ecological “embeddedness” of colonial subjects was a central
discursive touchstone for producing hierarchies of political power and social difference.114
Indeed, “ecology” as a scientific method developed in Mauritius in the early twentieth
century to account for the destructive effects of cyclones, but it also served as a conceptual
approach that integrated people into structures of understanding nature.
The broader political spaces of the Indian Ocean World were the staging grounds of
development policy in 1940s and 1950s Mauritius. These were years of war and years of
ecological instability. As the colony’s annual report of 1946 contend, the time between 1938

112 John Lonsdale and D.A. Low, “Towards the New Order,” in History of East Africa, Part III , eds. Lonsdale

and Low (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1976), 1-64. For Cooper’s work on the history of development, see his On
the African Waterfront: Urban Disorder and the Transformation of Work in Colonial Mombasa (New Haven:
Yale University Press, 1987), Decolonization and African Society: The Labor Question in French and British
Africa (New York: Cambridge University Press, 1996), and, for this period in French-controlled Africa, see his
Citizenship between Empire and Nation: Remaking France and French Africa, 1945-1960 (Princeton:
Princeton University Press, 2014).

113Helge Kjekshus, Ecology Control and Economic Development in East African History: The Case of Tanganyika, 1850-
1950 (California, 1977) David Anderson, Eroding the Commons: The Politics of Ecology in Baringo, Kenya (Oxford,
James Currey, 2002); Shane Doyle, Crisis and Decline in Bunyoro: Population and Environment in Western Uganda 1860-
1955 (Oxford, James Currey 2002) Christopher A. Conte Highland Sanctuary: Environmental History in Tanzania’s
Usambara Mountains (Ohio University Press, 2004); William Beinart and JoAnne McGregor, Social History and
African Environments (Ohio 2003); James McCann, The Historical Ecology of Malaria in Ethiopia (Ohio, 2013) for a
closer look at the development of “ecology” as a method of scientific inquiry, see: Hellen Tilley, Africa as a
Living Laboratory: Empire, Development, and the Problem of Scientific Knowledge, 1870-1950 (Chicago, 2011).

114 Arjun Appadurai, “Putting Hierarchy in its Place” Cultural Anthropology, Vol. 3, Issue 1 (1988) p. 37. Also:

Helen Tilley, Africa as a Living Laboratory: Empire, Development, and the Problem of Scientific Knowledge: 1870-1950
(University of Chicago Press, 2011) p. 147. Helen Tilley has shown, however, that ecology is an historically-
contingent and much-debated conceptual approach to understanding the networks that bind the human and
non-human, not only a metaphor for those general interactions. Within British Africa, ecology emerged as a
distinct way of conceiving of and acting upon the natural world that imperial scientists embraced in the early
twentieth century. An ecological approach sought understand the “how” and the “why” of natural phenomena
and their myriad interconnectivities, not just the “what” of those processes.

60
and 1945—the wartime years—"naturally” fell into two temporal categories. The first was
from the initial outbreak of the war until the Japanese occupation of Singapore, Burma, and
the landfall of a catastrophic cyclone in Bengal in 1942. The second, from 1942 until the end
of the war. But the end of the war would not be easy for the colony, as a series of major
cyclones struck the island in the first half of 1945, a collective event that pushed the colonial
state to orient its broader “development” policy to attend to the risks posed by cyclones,
whether they be ones that make landfall in Mauritius or ones that did damage to the Indian
Ocean commercial networks in which Mauritius was situated.
This periodization, which emphasizes 1942 as the transformative moment of the war for
Mauritius, corresponded to political change in the colony as well. It was in April of 1942 that
Governor Bede Clifford, governor since 1937, moved to take up a governor ship in Trinidad
and Tobago. He was replaced by Donald Mackenzie-Kennedy, who came from a posting in
Nyasaland. Both governors embodied what Robert Peace has called “the great turning
point” in the “methods and purposes” of the British in Africa: the embrace development as
a model of governance.115 Clifford, for example, took up the question of natural
improvement through an enthusiastic embrace of irrigation techniques. Mackenzie-Kennedy
continued his predecessor’s enthusiasm for development policy until he vacated the post in
1948, to be succeeded by Hilary Blood. The vast majority of the efforts discussed in this
chapter happened under Mackenzie- Kennedy’s watch, but he continued an ideological
commitment to reshaping colonial rule first begun in Mauritius under Clifford. At the initial
outbreak of the war, the growing need to redirect resources towards metropolitan London
put pressures on the island colony. As the war escalated, fewer and fewer ships came to
Mauritius. Revenues dropped while emergency expenditures rose.116 The 1940 fall of France
brought home the seriousness of the task at hand for colonial administrators. The island’s
production was to set to a “maximum.”117 The crisis of the war would bring to light the first
of two major crises on the island: the of food precarity.

115 Robert D. Pearce, The Turning Point in Africa: British Colonial Policy 1938-1948 (Routledge, 1982).

116 Annual Report for the Colony of Mauritius, 1949, p. 4


117 Ibid.

61
Mauritius has never been food independent. As the colony’s Blue Books have shown
since the arrival of the British, the island has actively situated itself in oceanic networks of
food and foodstuff exchange between Madagascar, continental Africa, and South and
Southeast Asia. The war put unprecedented pressure on these networks. As sugar output
was to be increased dramatically, existing stocks of goods on the island were to be preserved,
and the growing of food was encouraged. These restrictions were met with little resistance
from the Council of Government (the body that would eventually become the Legislative
Council), despite the newly-articulated push for funds for “development.” The passage of
the Colonial Development and Welfare Act in 1940 offered increased funding for
development schemes in the colony, but these were continually stymied by war time
restrictions.118 London was aware of how the war was further isolating Mauritius from the
lifeblood of its oceanic trade networks as it simultaneously became further implicated in the
war effort: “His Majesty’s government recognized that concentration on the war effort
would necessarily involve deferring, and in some cases, curtailing development and welfare
services,” later reports would note on the stalling of development schemes.119
The economic pressures heaped on the island in light of the war took an even more
dramatic turn in 1942 with a number of major political and meteorological events: the
Japanese invasion and occupation of Singapore and large swaths of Southeast Asia, a
devastating cyclone in Bengal, and a resurgence of domestic instability on the island through
a brief strike in the north. The Japanese occupation of the eastern reaches of many the
British Empire’s Indian Ocean possessions was not merely a strategic blow to the geopolitics
of Britain and the Allied powers, but it also harkened an effective collapse of the rice market
of the Indian Ocean, one based primarily on exports from the deltaic regions of south and
southeast Asia: the Irrawaddy and Ganges/Brahmaputra, as well as the grain producing
zones of Java. 120

118 Ibid. p. 10.

119 Ibid.
120The Japanese occupation of major parts of Southeast Asia proved to be an economic burden for much of
British Africa. See, for example: Judith Byfield “Women, Rice, and War: Political and Economic Crisis in
Wartime Abeokuta (Nigeria)” pp. 147-165, and Thaddeus Sunseri, “World War II and the Transformation of
the Tanzanian Forests” pp.238-258, both in Judith Byfield, Carolyn Brown, Timothy Parsons, and Ahmad
Alawad Sikainga, et al, Africa and World War II (Cambridge University Press, 2015) See also: Raymond Bryant,
The Political Ecology of Forestry in Burma: 1824-1994(Honolulu: University of Hawaii Press, 1997) and Nancy Lee

62
The disintegration of these food links across the ocean first appeared amongst food
suppliers in Mauritius. As the Government Gazettes reveal from the first few years of the
1940s, the effective disappearance of Burmese “Rangoon rice” became of central concern to
colonial state officials. A. Espantelier Nöel, the Mauritian Controller of Supplies began to
register increasing concern over the lack of rice, in particular in rural interior regions on the
colony.121 As a result, legislators reacted by instituting emergency rations, dramatically
limiting who could import certain grains into Mauritius, who could sell it, and the amount
that people could buy.122
However, the lack of rice and the rations instituted by the state began to raise
concerns amongst political actors about the biometric effect that a lack of food would have
amongst laborers. In particular, these changes amplified concerns about how the lack of
nutritious food would intensify the prevalence of disease, and of malaria in particular. In the
legislative assembly, fears of a lack of food production and the attendant malnourishment
and disease it would engender pushed members of the body to point to the dangers that a
lack of food would have for its economic health. In the early 1940s members lobbied the
governor and the secretary of state for the colonies on issues of the state’s responsibility to
those most ecologically vulnerable, and in so doing pointed to the ecological precarity as
threat not only to the health of the individual or community, but to the economic health of
the colony more broadly.
One of the loudest voices in the assembly was Pierre Rafferay, a representative from
Black River, who, when addressing the state’s efforts at combating malaria in 1942, argued
that they were woefully short. He noted that “the treatment of the malaria problem in
Mauritius and attempts to get this colony free from this disease have been a failure.”123 The
newly-appointed governor, Donald Mackenzie-Kennedy, took Rafferay’s critique in stride,

Peluso, Rich Forests, Poor People: Resource Control and Resistance in Java (Berkeley: University of California Press,
1992).
121 “General Notice No. 384: “Delivery of Rangoon Rice in Upcountry Districts” and Notice No. 427 “Deliver

of Rice in Upcountry Districts” in Government Gazette of the Colony of Mauritius, 1942.


122 Government Noted No. 178, “Food Control Regulations: Rationing, The Emergency Powers (Colonial

Defense) 17 June, 1942.

123Pierre Rafferay (Black River) to Gov. Donald Mackenzie-Kennedy “Report No. 87 on Minute No. 104

headed “Anti-Malaria Measures,” head 36 (J), Item 18. 24th November 1942.

63
and in so doing conceded that the pace of government assistance in eradicating the disease
was insufficient. In his response, however, he gestured to the underlying nexus of bio-social
concerns that undergirded development policy in Mauritius.

Hon. Members may have noticed a certain inquisitiveness displayed by the governor
of this territory, since he has been here, in matters of health, nutrition, and
education. They all three go together and I cannot believe that you ever obtain an
educated polity without first, healthy bodies, then healthy minds, and so healthy
politics, without in fact a marriage of the three.”124

But in addition to this observation, that minds, bodies, and polities were intimately linked
through collective efforts at ensuring public health Rafferay’s pleas to the state also touched
upon another equally important component that disease had on the island, which was in its
economic productivity. He noted that malaria had a direct link to labor as the disease
corrupted the body’s capacity for long-term physical labor.

[The] labour of the colony was inefficient in the way that a man working eight hours
was only producing six hours of work of an able-bodied man. Moreover the
residents of the island living in places along coast, rampant with malaria, have found
it necessary…to move to higher regions, and we are now witnessing a state of things
which is wrong, economically speaking, as every estate on the Island [sic] having to
send lorry loads of men’s from one end of the island to the other to make up for that
reduction in the number of inhabitants on the coast.125

This observation was met with a ringing endorsement by Seewosagur Ramgoolam,


nominated member of the council, researcher with the Department of Labour, and future
prime minister of an independent Mauritius. He noted that wages were affected “by the

124 Mauritius Legislative Council Minutes. Gov. Donald Mackenzie-Kennedy to Sir Jules LeClézio (Moka), Ibid.
125 Pierre Rafferay (Black River) to Gov. Donald Mackenzie-Kennedy , Ibid.

64
question of malaria, with the question of capacity of workmen to give the full amount of
work that is due from them.”126
Malaria was not new to Mauritius, however. Between 1715 and 1810, the beginning
of British rule in Mauritius, there were no reported cases of the disease. With the continued
arrival of African slaves and, later, Indian indentured laborers, there were still only a handful
of cases. This changed, for largely unexplained reason, in 1866, when a two-year epidemic
killed nearly forty-three thousand on the island. It remained endemic to the island and was
considered the primary cause for the island’s uniquely high mortality rate throughout the late
nineteenth and early twentieth centuries.127
When the disease again appeared with renewed intensity during war time,
development officials within the colonial government saw an opportunity to not simply
bring the disease under control, but to correlate the natural improvement of the island
through malaria eradication to a social leap forward for the island’s Indo-Mauritian poor, the
community most exposed to the threat of malaria because of their employment in the
island’s cane fields. A collection of observations from state officials, medical professionals
and nutritionists, on the question of a 1943 anti-malaria campaign in Mahébourg, a town in
the southwest of the island, show most explicitly the linkages between and a discourse that
emphasized the ecological pathologies of Mauritius that malaria signified and the purported
social dangers it produced. The Mahébourg eradication campaign pointed to the fact, in the
eyes of those writing about it, that Mauritius was “a Sanatorium.”128
Writing about the campaign, the aforementioned physician A. Rankine saw no
distinction between the natural improvement of the island and the attendant social
improvement it would bring. In a short essay entitled “An Isle of Romance” included in a
collection of essays reflection on the Mahébourg campaign, Rankine gestured to the long
history of Mauritius’ placement within imperial discourses on Edenic landscapes, but also

126 Dr. Seewosagur Ramgoolam to Pierre Rafferay, Ibid.,

127 “Malaria in Mauritius” Communicable Diseases Control Unit, Ministry of Health & Quality of Life. (Beau

Bassin) 28 January 2008. http://health.govmu.org/English/Documents/Bulletins/mal-history.pdf. Accessed


June 1 2017. See also: Sir Donald Ross, “Report and the Prevention of Malaria in Mauritius (London: Waterlow
and Sons) 1903.
128 Multiple Authors, “Mauritius: A Sanatorium: Published in Commemoration of the Anti-Malaria Campaign

Started in Mahébourg, 1943.” Published by the Government of Colony of Mauritius.

65
embraced a decidedly modernist declensionist argument with respect to the challenges of
diseases and malnutrition in the colony. While the “beauty” of Mauritius endured over
centuries, he suggested:

“…how changed it is as regards health! Ravaged by the effects of Malaria and of


certain other diseases the great majority of its people no longer know what it is to
enjoy good health and to take pleasure in work and relaxation.

Is it possible that once again Mauritius may be able to claim to be a country as


benign and healthy as it is beautiful? The answer is yes. Other tracts of country have
been cleansed of the sore of Malaria and the same can be done in this island.”129

He would go on to assert that these battles were to be fought, on the social level at least,
within the parameters of the family. “it is for each family to ensure,” he suggested, that there
is no place in its house or property in which mosquitos may breed.”130
Frank Wilson, another contributor to the Mahébourg collection, noted the
importance of tying social development to food systems. The war had, in Wilson’s
estimation, “thrust the nutritional problems of peoples, all over the world, to the
forefront.”131 Nutritional change would allow for the “emancipation” of Mauritius, he
suggested.132 Wilson noted the importance of his work, and the work of the government
more broadly. “Before governments can take steps, facts…must be gathered; and facts do
not fall from heaven.” With this in mind, he suggested the “battle” against malnutrition
consisted of two phases. The first was to “one of silent preparation” and one of “direct
attack.” The first in his mind consisted of general studies of the nutritional lives of Mauritian
subjects, while the second, he suggested, was to let Mauritians fend for themselves.133

129 Dr. A. Rankine, “An Isle of Romance,” in Ibid.

130 Ibid.
131 FA Wilson, “Food Health and Happiness” in Ibid.
132 Ibid.,
133 Ibid.

66
Wilson’s observation that “facts do not fall from heaven” was not a mere rhetorical
flourish, but an affirmation of the significant role he and others like Rankine would play in
policy making. Unlike many other African colonies, Mauritius lacked the complex colonial
bureaucracies where imperial civil servants like District Officers operated as the points of
connection between native peoples and European bureaucracies. Mauritius, rather, was
governed by expert study. Technocrats like Wilson and Rankine, as later sections will show,
had an outsized effect on questions of legislative governance on the island because it was
their work that would be taken up explicitly by the legislative council and governor as the
raw data through which governing decisions were made. In other words, neither Wilson nor
Rankine were not mere observers of these processes, but rather the intellectual drivers of the
very projects that would shape government policy.
Alongside the figures of Wilson and Rankine as scientist-cum-policy maker were officials
within the newly formed Labour Department, in particular its first head, RC Wilkinson.
Under the direction Wilkinson, the Labour Department spearheaded efforts to ween
Mauritius off the broader Indian Ocean food markets that linked it to South and Southeast
Asia as well as to Madagascar and other parts of East Africa. Just as in the legislative
council, Wilkinson noted that while there were general humanitarian concerns that shaped
the state’s responses to the war, questions of food were, for officials in the Labour
department, also questions of productivity. He noted that the lack of rice enfeebled the
Mauritian worker; he lamented the “deterioration of the physique” of the average worker
due to due increasing cases of hookworm and malaria caused by malnutrition.134
As a consequence of the Bengal cyclone and the Japanese occupation of Southeast Asia,
Mauritian officials ordered that some of the land used to grow sugar cane be immediately
converted for food production, an effort organized by the Department of Labour. Around
the colony, teams of estate workers and small planters manually uprooted sugar cane to
make room for foodstuffs: manioc, sweet potatoes, and maize. In 1943, the government set
a compulsory rate of 27.5% of sugar cane land be converted to food production, although
this process was slow.135 Changing the productive capacity of the island was a process of
navigating wartime contradictions: the 1942 sugar harvest was record breaking, but an

134 Ibid.
135 Annual Report, Department of Labour, 1943.

67
emphasis on food production revealed a broader need for sugar field laborers.136 There were
also signs of worker resistance to these policies of crop changing and reticence to fully
engage in increased state management of the agricultural economy. The chronic labor
shortages throughout the early 1940s were purported to be a consequence of laborers being
unwilling to work more than four days a week. Alternatively, it was suggested to be a broad-
based strategy employed by labors to produce an artificial shortage to drive up wages at a
time of unprecedent wartime profits for the industry.137
The opinions of Wilkinson and the Labour Department regarding the relationship
between food, land, labor, and development occupied significant space in the minds of
legislators. In speaking to the assembly at the outset of the food shortages and growth of
malaria, Wilkinson argued that the malaria was a force that amplified “the difficulty of
[ensuring] labour which is become more acute year to year.”138 When he dramatically
declared to the governor to “get some plan” to eliminate malaria for the long term economic
survival of the colony, he was cheered on by a collective “hear, hear!” by the other members
in the body.139
Three years later, natural disaster refocused fears over the economic stability of the
colony. The crippling effects of the Bengal cyclone and the Japanese occupation of
Southeast Asia were magnified by three cyclones in early 1945. The 1945 storms were
historic, the strongest since the famous storm of 1892. In early January of the year, the most
severe storm of the three struck the island and did deep damage to the sugar crop.140 Military
and civil infrastructure, and in particular the housing of laborers, suffered dramatically. 141
Wilkinson’s reports here are revealing. Anxious about what was anticipated to be a crop
reduced by nearly half because of the storm, he noted that the cyclones had the potential to

136 Annual Report, Department of Labour, 1942.


137 Ibid.

138 RC Wilkinson in Legislative Council, Debate No. 68, 24 November, 1942

139 Ibid.

140Sir P. Mitchell (East African Governors Association) to Oliver Stanley, Secretary of State for the Colonies
(SSC). “Cyclone Mauritius” BNA/CO/167/927/5 20 January 1945.
141 Donald Mackenzie Kennedy (Governor) to Stanley SSC, BNA/CO/167/927/5 22 January 1945 See also:

“Police Report on the Cyclone 5-7 April 1945” Ibid., 16 May, 1945.

68
unravel the social worlds of laborers: it unleashed an epidemic of infantile polio, exaggerated
an already existing malaria threat, and “aggravated the bad housing conditions and
malnutrition conditions” they faced.142 Later sections in this chapter will look more closely at
public health and public service instability catalyzed by these storms, but what was clear was
that the sugar industry, to not speak of the broader colonial state, was ill prepared to weather
these storms.
The immediate response of Mackenzie-Kennedy was to provide a limited amount of
material aid to the island’s poor and to emphasize to both his superiors in London and those
working in Mauritius on the need to cultivate “morale” and “self-help.”143 Within three
months, however, two more storms, less severe in terms of wind and rain impact struck the
island, hampering not only efforts to rebuild, but also stymying the ability of the damaged
sugar can to regrow.144 The damage to sugar shook the government to its core. Shortly after
the first storm made landfall, Mackenzie-Kennedy addressed the legislative assembly and
announced a decision to revert all the lands that had just prior been allocated to grow food
to be reverted back to sugar.145 In addition to returning these lands to the estates for
production, the colonial government also endeavored to fund a cyclone insurance scheme
through the Agricultural Bank for planters, founded nearly a decade earlier.146 But the
governor was quick to note that although these lands would be returned to sugar use, the
state would pursue alternative land schemes projects to produce a food-sustainable colony.147

142 Annual Report, Department of Labour, 1945.


143 MacKenzie Kennedy to Stanley, Ibid., 27 January 1945. This also included sending the Kings African Rifles

to assist in the rebuilding.

144Much work had been done in the preceding decades to understand the specific effects that cyclones would
have on just on the cane itself, but the broader ecological spaces the canes grew in. But one known fact was
that the cooler and clearer weather that was often believed to arrive shortly after a cyclone was beneficial for
the re-growth of damaged cane. The two other storms thus impeded efforts at regrowth. See, for example:
“The Destructive Effects of Cyclones” Nature of Damage, paragraphs 2 i- iv, BNA/CO/167/927/7 July
1945.
145 MacKenzie Kennedy Address to Legislative Assembly, Jan 1945 BNA/CO/167/927/5 12 February 1945.

146“ OAG to SSC, Precis on Report by R. Owen on Cyclone Insurance”, BNA/CO/167/927/7, for a more

thorough actuarial report on the workings of the cyclone insurance scheme and the Agricultural Bank more
broadly, see: “Report on Year Ended 31 December 1946” BNA/CO/167/933/4 2 February 1947, also: Report
on Year Ended 31 December 1950” Loans Under Hurricane Ordinance, 1945, BNA/CO/167/947/7.
147“Cyclone Mauritius” Sir. P. Mitchell (East African Governors Conference) to S.S. for the Colonies. 20

January, 1945 BNA/CO/167/927/5. Initial reports on the damage were catastrophic. It was noted as the
“strongest in fifty three years,” that is since the major storm in 1892. In regards to land policy: the annual

69
As earlier paragraphs explained, in the early 1940s there was a broad-based belief
amongst officials in the Department of Labour that it was difficult to get Indo-Mauritian
agriculturalists to work because of (amongst other things), a reticence to work more than
four days a week. By 1949, however, there appears to have been an about-face in how
officials saw Indo-Mauritian laborers. Indeed, in Wilkinson’s report he articulated an
operational logic of emphasizing colonial development through an “anti-industrial” lens, and
how that marked Mauritius as distinct from other colonies on continental Africa.

In Mauritius…what is happening is not the industrialization of the peasant worker,


but his deindustrialization. And if the chapters of the standard Labour report may be
compared to windows through which we see the African laborer passing from varied
work for himself and his village to specialized work for an employer, the Mauritian
laborer is to be seen through the same windows moving in just the opposite
direction. The very laws introduced to help the proletariat in an industrialized
community may be hindrances to the Indo-Mauritian forcing his way out of the
proletariat.148

It’s unclear to what laws Wilkinson was referring to specifically, most likely labor laws and
the creation of industrial associations after the 1943 unrest, but writing in 1949, one can
most dramatically see that the underlying project of “developing” Mauritius had become,
first and foremost, directed a retaining Mauritius as an agricultural colony. While it should be
noted that this reflected, first and foremost, a commitment to retaining sugar as the island’s
monocrop, one of the central conceits that informed this commitment to building an
agriculturally-focused social space was that Indo-Mauritians were pre-disposed to agricultural
life. Wilkinson went on: “the Indo-Mauritian laborer doesn’t want to be industrialized. From

reports of the forestry department in Mauritius shed light on one particular form of land-holding that the state
believed would be highly sought after given the spatial limitations caused by sugar. This scheme, called taungya
land holdings, was a Burmese system of forest farming that saw the state extend permits to clear land between
trees for food production. As Thaddues Sunseri has argued, taungya was used by the colonial state across
Tanganyika to “anchor a forest work force and to ten exotic fast-growing trees, especially eucalyptus.” It
proved to be highly popular in war time Tanganyika. See: Sunseri, “World War II and the Transformation of
the Tanzanian Forests” in Africa in World War II (Cambridge, 2015) .
148 Annual Report, Department of Labour, 1949.

70
the beginning he has fought to free himself from the shackles of the working day and the all-
important pay packet; he valued his independence above free housing, free medical care, and
a monthly wage…”149 It was an odd observation. The Department of Labour itself had been
a response to the concerns raised by those striking laborers of the Uba Riots twelve years
earlier, and was established, ostensibly, to help correct what much of the agricultural poor of
the island had identified as points of injustice: housing, food, and health services. So while
Wilkinson’s observation is at odds, in part, with the demands made by Indo-Mauritian
agricultural laborers in the previous decade, it does shed light on the overarching ideological
framework that informed changes in the Mauritian social and political landscape in the
1940s.150
Alternatively, what little institutional conversations were taking place between
officials in Labour and Health departments regarding Afro-Mauritian Creoles revealed a set
of assumptions that also situated race and racial identity firmly within the echoes of a
political economy defined by the abolition of slavery and assumptions tied to people
understood to be representative of continental Africa more broadly. In one comment an aide
made to an official working on land settlement and food production schemes, said official
noted that when it came to Afro-Mauritian Creoles, the state needed to “create an
agricultural sense,” in black Mauritians so that they would not need “to be spoon-fed.”151
The “Creole’s only capital” was “a share in a fishing boat” or “his skill as an artisan,”
another report observed.152 This mirrored a broader demographic shift that occurred in the
aftermath of the abolition of slavery, and indeed even in the decades before its official
abolition, which was that Afro-Mauritian maroon and newly-emancipated communities
moved to the literal periphery of the island, away from the big estates. They built fishing
villages that dotted the coast or ones deeply ensconced in the impenetrable mountains of the
southwest region of Black River.

149 Ibid., paragraph 5.

150 For more on agricultural within British imperial development schemes, see: Joseph Morgan Hodge, Triumph

of the Expert: Agrarian Doctrines of Development and the Legacies of British Colonialism (Athens, OH: Ohio University
Press, 2007).
151 Parkinson to Siddebotham, “Land Resettlement” BNA/INF/1032, 2 February 1944.
152 Annual Report, Department of Labour 1949.

71
While race was both the determinative factor in understanding a community’s
relationship to nature and the assumed social expression of physiological difference that
malnutrition produced, the question remained for colonial officials to conceive of a way in
which to bridge disparate scales inquiry and action. How could the state rationalize questions
of race, climate, and disease? Officials sought a category of analysis that could speak to the
precarity and productivity of the natural world, the productivity of the people who worked
it, and the material changes in the bodies of those people when they encountered disease or
food shortages. In the following section, I show how the calorie emerged as a conceptual
tool for understanding the broader condition of the agricultural poor in Mauritius, how the
calorie was read through the lens of race, and how it allowed for policy changes at multiple
scales.

Calories, Bodies, and Food: Materializing Race and Development

The cyclones in Mauritius and in Bengal and the political upheaval in Burma and Singapore
are important points of inflection in the mid-century history of Mauritius because they
shaped the ways in which the colonial state developed policy. In this section I argue that
colonial nutrition experts and policy makers conceived of the calorie as a bridge between the
natural and the social. The emergence of the calorie as a unit of energy produced in the
natural world—made manifest through food—points to efforts to integrate prescriptive
ideologies of natural and social governance, ideologies that were mobilized around the
assumed unruliness of the natural world and the putative social and cultural habits of
everyday Mauritians.153 While policies aimed at producing food security and the management
of natural world sought to mold a body of laborers who could both attend to the material
needs of the sugar economy while also building a sustainable food system, these policies also

153The calorie itself has a historiographical footprint. Sydney Mintz’s Sweetness and Power deploys the calorie in a

decidedly Marxist valence, by integrating it as a unit of energy within systems of labor, whether it be the
plantation or the industrialized factories of Europe. Nicholas Cullather’s work has shown how the calorie
emerged as an important conceptual and material tool of US foreign policy, in particular in fighting the war
against “global hunger.” Sidney W. Mintz, Sweetness and Power: The Place of Sugar in Modern History (Penguin,
1986).; Nick Cullather, “The Foreign Policy of the Calorie,” The American Historical Review 112, no. 2 (2007):
337–64.

72
furthered a specific vision of race and racial difference within those working in these
institutions.
The work of doctor Adam Rankine, introduced in the last section, is largely
responsible for linking the calorie to the social improvement of Mauritius. Rankine was the
lead investigator of a study that focused on the nutritional habits of Mauritians and saw no
distinction between the natural improvement of the island and the attendant social
improvement it would bring. His arrival was celebrated by the Mackenzie-Kennedy, who
noted with enthusiasm Rankine’s experience in “cleaning up malaria.”154 His belief in the
symmetry between ecological health and the health of the human body most dramatically
surfaces in his study of the nutritional lives of the Mauritian poor and highlights an emergent
consensus amongst colonial institutions that women operated as social and ecological
prophylactics.155 Conducted between 1942 and 1945 and formally published in 1946, the
intentions of Rankine’s study were twofold. The first was to address the social habits of
Indo-Mauritian food consumption, an ethnic category that was assumed in his research to be
flattened across class difference and geographical difference throughout the island. The
second, which Rankine explicitly addressed in his introduction to the study, was to better
understand Mauritius’ position within the broader food systems of the Indian Ocean World
during World War II. Specifically, he sought to address the effects that Japanese control of
Southeast Asia would have on the island. His conclusion was that the effects would be
catastrophic.156

154 Governor Mackenzie-Kennedy, Debates of the Legislative Assembly, Debate No. 68, 42 November, 1942.

155 Scholarship on the eighteenth and nineteenth century has shown how the management of disease and the
bodies of imperial subjects was also a critical component of the sugar plantation economy of Mauritius. As
Yoshina Hurgobin has shown, the plantation system of labor in Mauritius inculcated a specific medical
ideology that “regimented the ‘body’ of labor.” She shows how these efforts at regimenting the body were done
in the paramount service of labor on the plantations, but were “contingent on various factors” ranging from
“cost cutting measures, perceptions, and the physicality of climates,” and were also formed more often that not
in both Mauritius and in Calcutta. See: Yoshina Hurgobin, “Making Medical Ideologies: Indentured Labor in
Mauritius,” in Histories of Medicine and Healing in the Indian Ocean World, Palgrave Series in Indian Ocean World
Studies (Palgrave Macmillan, New York, 2016), 1. For other histories of disease in Africa: James Giblin, “The
Precolonial politics of disease control in the lowlands of Northeastern Tanzania,” In Gregory Maddox, James
Giblin, and I. Kimambo et. al, Custodians of the Land: Ecology and Culture in the history of Tanzania (Athens, OH:
Ohio University Press, 1995).
156 A. Rankine, “Final Report: Nutritional Investigation in Mauritius, 1942-1945” (JH Bowkett: Government

Printer, Port Louis, Mauritius, 1946., The rice diet had always been precarious, however, he noted that in the
first twenty years of the twentieth century, the vast majority of imported rice was paddy rice. The rice was
usually husked “at home” in mortal and pestle and then sifted. Refined rice had become unpopular amongst

73
Central to Rankine’s work were questions of the calorie: How could the Mauritian
soil produce this unit of energy more efficiently? How could the calorie mitigate the threat of
disease? How would the calorie be stewarded as a productive unit of energy within the social
worlds of the agricultural poor? The post-war years were, in Rankine’s estimation, an era of
caloric “deficiency.”157 The various social and biological pathologies that Rankine identified
were, he argued, products of dramatically low caloric and vitaminic intakes on the part of
Indo-Mauritians. Importantly, the effects of rations had a dramatic effect on the biological
lives of Mauritius. The combination of bredes, the occasional meat, fish, and rice that formed
the basis of the pre-war diet of Mauritius amounted to around 3,200 calories during the
harvesting season and around 2,700-2,900 calories during the entrecoup (the time between the
harvest). After the institution of rations, caloric intake plummeted. At no point in Rankine’s
study did rationing provide more than 2,000 calories. More often than not, the numbers
were closer to 1,400 a number that was generally agreed to be dramatically below what was
the basic requirement for work in the fields.158
This deficiency was, oddly, characterized by Rankine as new. In the middle of the
1930s, Rankine notes, there was little evidence that malnutrition posed a serious problem to
agricultural laborers.159 And indeed, a 1936 circular purported to show that the average
worker on the sugar cane fields had a caloric intake that matched what was believed to be
what was needed to remain healthy, and that the availability of “protective” foods like
tomatoes, pulses (grain seed for legumes), and leafy vegetables was sufficient.160 Of course,
this data appears to be deeply incongruous with the testimonies of laborers that were
examined in the preceding chapter of this dissertation, which roundly pointed to a
nutritional crisis amongst Indo-Mauritian agricultural workers in the late 1930s.

rural Mauritians, however, because it “did not hold in the stomach,” and was trace to outbreaks of various
diseases, beri-beri (thiamine deficiency caused by a lack of Vitamin B) in particular, and was discontinued.
157 See: Ashley Jackson, War and Empire in Mauritius and the Indian Ocean (Springer, 2001).

158 These numbers were tacked against calculations done by the state in relation to an emergent global

consensus on the mean caloric intake that would sustain life. These numbers, offered by the United State
National Resource Council, Hot Spring Conference, were often included in Rankine’s work as foils against
which he would evaluate laborer’s diets.
159 Ibid.
160 Ibid. This was assumed to be around 63 grams of protein and 2,800 calories daily.

74
Like his colleagues in the Department of Labour, Rankine identified race as a
primary marker of difference in terms of building development policy. With regards to food
consumption specifically, he saw race as a collection of cultural predilections reflected in
taste, collection, and preparation of food, and thereby the driving force of caloric incongruity
amongst various communities in the colony. Indeed, the first sentence of his study notes that
the initial arrival of Indian indentured laborers in the 1830s marked a fundamental
transformation in the food economies of the island. He pointed to the fact that the original
French settlers and African enslaved peoples on the island lived primarily on potatoes,
maize, pork, and goat. It was Indians who brought rice to the island. The rice diet in and of
itself proved to be untenable beyond a small scale, as the island’s agricultural landscape,
dominated by sugar, could not support the large-scale production of another commodity like
rice. As such, a number of varieties were initially imported, leading to different nutritional
results. After the end of World War I, however, refined rice was the preferred option; rice
already husked and ready to be cooked.
The effects on the nutritional lives of Indo-Mauritian agricultural laborers was
dramatic. Before the Japanese invasion and occupation of Burma, for example, rice
accounted for nearly sixty percent of the calories consumed by agricultural laborers, while by
1944, a mere two years after the collapse of the rice networks, flour consisted of forty-two
percent of the total calories consumed.161 Beyond rice, both Creoles and Indians were noted
to consume brédes (leafy relishes) daily. These leaves proved to be critical nutritional
components of the Mauritian diet, and were prepared usually in bouillon and eaten with rice
or as touffée, cooked with just sufficient water and a little fat. As Rankine argued, Indo-
Mauritians and Creoles had different caloric intakes first and foremost because of cultural
predilections and taste for certain foods. That culture acted as a determinative force in the

161Ibid., Before the advent of rationing regimes, an inquiry into the cost of living of laborers compiled nutrition
consumed on a “per-man” value across income group. These data were interpreted against the UD National
Research Council standard. Research found that the “typical field laborer” fell into group two: “adequate” in
regards of the number of calories they consumed in relation to the work they did and money they earned.
These calories largely game from protein: fish meat (the occasional goat meat for Indian laborers) and eggs.
Vitamin B, riboflavin, Vitamin A, and ascorbic acid were low amongst laborers, and this was attributed to an
Indian habit of discarding the water in which rice was soaked, more often than not given to cattle to drink. See
also: E) Consumption and Food Habits: Pre-Rationing,” Ibid., 18. Although goat meat was eaten occasionally
by Indo-Mauritian laborers, Creoles were described to :eat varied sources of animal food [meat] whenever they
can get it, and generally managed to have some sort of animal food at least three times a week.” See Also:
Mauritius Government Gazette from 1943.

75
selection of diet was shared by other researchers, and the various Mauritian “cultures” were
deeply tied to the broader political ecology of the Indian Ocean World.
To explain these apparent racial differences, Rankine pointed to what he broadly
defined as nutritional deficiencies; that is to say the lack of nutritious food. There were early
signs before malnutrition set in or before malaria could wreak havoc. Rickets, gingivitis, and
dental cavities were all tell-tale signs of nutritional deficiencies. The racial breakdown
amongst those populations which exhibited cavities were stark: around 79% of children in
the colony were shown to have cavities, while African children were shown to have the
healthiest dental condition with around thirty percent of children cavity free, while the
Chinese were found to only be four percent free.162 Indo-Mauritians, it was increasingly clear,
were those most vulnerable to malnutrition. Rankine reported that Indians, for example,
consumed flour rations in the fahrattas, a flour-based flat bread filled with various items,
whereas Creoles most often used flour for noodles or bread.163 “Curries” appear to have
been common across the island that consisted of mostly jack and bread-fruits as the primary
ingredient, two items that grew naturally in “gardens,” and were thus not needed to be
bought and, by extension, rationed. In “fishing villages,” which meant in the parlance of the
time as Creole communities, fresh and salted fish were understood to be beneficial to the
nutritional health of Afro-Mauritians. This was also argued to be because of the benefits of
the consumption of meat 164In addition to studying the caloric and vitaminic intake of Indo-
Mauritian and Creole Mauritians, Rankine’s study also incorporated work done by another
medical doctor, Ann Sippe, into his broader nutritional analysis. Sippe’s work through late
1944 and early 1945 aimed to produce a colony-wide schematic understanding of the mean
hemoglobin levels. Hemolgobin, the complex protein found in red blood cell molecules
responsible for transporting oxygen from the lungs to the muscles, could reveal much about
nutritional health.

162 Table 5: Racial Incidents of Caries, Twinning Report, p. 71.

163 Interestingly, debates over the interrelatedness between food, society, and the landscape found their ways

into the scientific journals of the colony, and in particular Reveu Agricole, the publications of the Chamber of
Agricultulre. In a 1943 edition, for example, postulated about the possibilities of growing potatoes on the island
which could then be used to make bread. “Utilisasion de la Farine de Patate pour la Fabircacion de Pain” Reveu
Agricole Vol. XXII No. 2, Mars-Avril, 1943.
164 “Food Habits and Supplies,” A. Rankine, “Final Report: Nutritional Investigation in Mauritius, 1942-1945” .

76
Race was an analytical category that gave hemoglobin discrepancies meaning
throughout Sippe’s work. The main focus of the study was to understand the relationship
between nutrition and malaria via hemoglobin levels and how that relationship expressed
materially across racial divides. The objects were “(1) a determination of mean hemoglobin
values of Hindoo and Creole children.”165 This was accomplished by taking blood samples
from children and from pregnant women. What her work revealed was incidents of
macrocytic anemia were six times higher in children from “malarial” districts of the island.
Rankine, in commenting on Sippe’s research, noted that “this is no doubt connected with
the destruction of red blood cells in malaria and consequent heightened demand for
principles in the food necessary for blood regeneration.”166
Where Rankine relied most heavily on Sippe’s work was on her studies of children’s
bodies, and how biometric data of children, when disaggregated along lines of race,
produced material markers of difference. Over the course of a number of pages in his study,
he produced charts that tracked the differences in physical sizes—the height and weight—of
young Indo-Mauritian boys and girls with their African counterparts. Drawing on data Sippe
had collected in rural villages, he noted that “Boys of African descent are on an
average…heavier than their Hindoo [sic] boys for the same weight/height ratio. Girls of
African descent are also heavier than their Hindoo counterparts.”167 This analysis,
reproduced in graphic form at multiple points throughout the text, offered a striking
expression of the ways in which race emerged as the determinative social category, amongst
medical experts, of difference. In the concluding section, these findings reappeared in the
writings of Hindu intellectuals as data points that pointed to a cultural crisis of sorts.
Significant portions of Sippe’s study was conducted with May Twinning, the wife of
the officer in charge of the field work on rural treatment of malaria. Twinning’s work also
shows the structural relationships that formed between scientific institutions and ideas about
the natural world. Malaria treatment schemes were predicated on “field work” and
“laboratory work,” with fieldwork efforts starting with understanding the specific ecological

165 Hemoglobin Survey of Children; (3) Incidents of Macrocytic Anemia” in A. Rankine, “Final Report:

Nutritional Investigation in Mauritius, 1942-1945”., 23.

166 “Ibid. p. 23.

167 Ibid., “Section C, Anthropometric Data”, p. 10

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zones where officers were to work168 At the heart of Twinning’s report was an argument that
outlined malarial prevalence as a consequence of three distinct but related components:
geography, climate, and race. Twentieth century Mauritius should thus be understood as a
confluence of these forces in the eyes of colonial planners.
Rankine and Sippe’s studies positioned malaria as a disease of material scarcity and of
racial habit. The more isolated Mauritius became from Indian Ocean food systems, the more
drastic the condition of malnutrition, and, by extension, the prevalence of malaria would be.
At an alternate political register, however, Rankine and Sippe’s studies reveal a dramatic new
approach to social policy and the role of the colonial state in Mauritian history. Both studies
show that the body were understood to be methodological entry points to understanding the
putative ecological “embeddedness” of everyday Mauritians. This biological data could then
be extrapolated to make larger social claims about the lives these imperial subjects. As the
next section shows, one kind of social claim that was to be made by colonial officials was
that understanding the transmission of the calorie from the land, to food, to the body was a
question of understanding the family, and of the role of women in particular.

Engendering Development

As discussed in the preceding section, the bodies of Afro- and Indo- Mauritian children were
sites of inquiry into caloric deficiency. Initial experiments attempted to intervene in the
caloric intake levels of children first appeared in newly-founded public schools. But these
interventions, like state-sponsored lunches and the occasional planting of a shared food
garden, failed to produce any marked bio-metric improvements in children like growing

168“According to Altitude” Distribution of Malaria in Mauritius, Table I, Chapter 2, Twinning Report, p. 9. In


regards to climate and geography Twinning noted that it was altitude and seasonal variability in temperature,
humidity, and rainfall that produced the conditions that would support malaria outbreaks. At altitudes between
sea level and six hundred feet, the number of villages examined with physiological signs of malarial infection
(enlarged spleens amongst children), the average rate of infection proved to be around six and a half percent
higher than those living above eighteen hundred feet above sea level. But these levels varied dramatically
according to season as well. A perceptible malaria season was understood to occur between December and
June. This seasonal rhythm mirrored cyclone season on the island, and this correlation is not entirely
surprising. Cyclones could spike infections for two primary causes: the rise in unhygienic spaces that would
result in increased breeding spaces for malarial mosquitos, and the sheer volume of rainfall that would result in
dramatic expansions of standing water that would also allow for breeding.

78
larger in size, having stronger gums, or having fewer parasites in blood tests.169 Rankine and
Wilson both, however, identified the family, and in particular the mother-child relationship,
and not state schools, as a space where biological interventionism could take place. Mothers
mediated between the climatic scale of the cyclone and the molecular scale of the calorie.
Calories produced stronger bodies, less vulnerable to diseases unleashed by malnutrition and
the destruction of the landscape, whether it be in Mauritius or in Bengal.
By 1944, colonial officials recalibrated their approach to focus on women and the
household.170 The most dramatic of these efforts was the creation of “nutritional units,”
which first emerged in 1944, while Rankine was conducting his study. These units were
tasked with bringing an imperial gospel of good nutritional practice and of hygienic habit to
the agricultural poor of Mauritius, and to train them how to become the food-independent
laborers that the colony desperately needed. The work of these units reflected an assumption
of ignorance amongst Indo-Mauritians, that the change from rice to flour as a consequence
of war and disaster “presented serious difficulties to the Mauritian housewife, who had no
idea how to handle the latter properly.”171 The units consisted of three vans with one
woman “demonstrator,” one man “demonstrator,” one cook, and one chauffer. Their
qualifications to become part of these mobile health units, as listed in an internal
memorandum circulated within the Public Works office, is revelatory of the central concerns
and goals of the unit: “both women had red cross [sic] training. The man demonstrator is an
Indian. Both women and men Demonstrators [sic] have received a course in nutrition and
hygiene.”172 Of central importance to these units was their gendered and racial make-up.

169 CJ Smith (Officer in Charge of School Meals, Education Office) to Director of Education, “School Meals”

BNA/CO/167/924/2, 8 March 1944. This plan mirrored a similar attempt at ensuring food security in Ceylon
under the 1944 “Schools Emergency Food Production Campaign”. There were reports, for example, children
being selected for nutritional supplements at food being underfed at home, so as families could better
economize what scarce food they had. See: The Feeding of Children: Extract from Report on Food Control in
Mauritius” BNA/CO/859/11/5 28 October, 1944.

170 Motherhood itself came under the purview of the state under the directorship of Governor Bede Clifford,

for example, as the state created a Maternity and Child Welfare Society on the island. This society aimed to
“advise expectant mothers of the less prosperous classes of the community during their pregnancy, to provide
medical and nursing assistance before, during or after their confinement….to educate them in the care of their
babies…to grant material relief.” Ordinance No. 8 of 1941. BNA/CO/859/77/6 April 1941.
171 “Nutritional Condition of the People: B: War Years” BNA/CO/859/114/5, 17 April, 1944.
172 “Programme of Work. Health Units: Organization:” BNA/CO/58/114/7, 1943.

79
Emphasizing such reveals the extent to which colonial planners believed that the social
pathologies that needed to be corrected amongst the rural poor, and which manifested in
material form through malnutrition and disease, were products of social and cultural habit.
As the vans spread throughout rural Mauritius, each community that was selected for
assistance would be visited three times over the space of three weeks. On arrival for the first
visit, one member of the team would travel from household to household and ask its
residents, and “in particular women,” to assemble in an open public space in the town or
village.173 Once enough people had gathered, one of the women demonstrators often held
informal conversations with some of the attendees about child care, the kinds of food they
ate, and hygiene.174
Once enough people had amassed, one of the demonstrators would announce that
the vans had arrived to “help them over their war time difficulties and to improve their
standard of health.” The reasons for these shortages were, the demonstrator would assure, to
a world-wide shortage because of the war. They would then turn to the audience to ask them
how they would utilize the rations they were allotted. In large part, the answer would be that
the flour that was given to replace the lost rice was used to prepare farhatta. It was only
through making this Indian dish that the flour was palatable, most respondents said. They
were then informed that alternative uses of the flour to make either bread or noodles would
be easier. A woman demonstrator would then publicly demonstrate how to make bread.175
After the bread demonstration, a male demonstrator would give a lecture on malaria.
Here, he would emphasize that “Malaria causes more misery than anything else in
Mauritius.” Eliminating malaria relied on the support of the villages, he argued, and because
of that each person had a duty from eliminating standing water. After this lecture, another
woman demonstrator would make a soup consisting of vegetables when meat was scarce (as
it almost always was) that would emphasize ways in which the making of the soup would be
most nutritious. The vegetables, the demonstrator suggested, should be introduced to
already boiling water to reduce cooking time and the attendant loss of nutrients. They must

173 “First Visit,” Ibid.


174 “Notes on Social Welfare Development: (A) Rice Cooking” MNA/SD 293/1944-1945.
175 Programme of Work. Health Units: Organization:” BNA/CO/58/114/7, 1943.

80
be cut only immediately before being introduced to the water, and that discarded parts of the
vegetables should never be wasted, as they could be used in later soups. The male
demonstrator would then step in to remind the villagers to begin raising their own vegetables
in small individual and community gardens. Those who prepared their own beds for
vegetable growing, he noted, would be given plants and seeds on the team’s next visit.176 The
emphasis here on methods of cooking speaks to the space that the calorie was understood to
have in the lives of the agricultural poor; methods of cooking were encouraged to retain as
much energy as possible.
At the next meeting, the demonstrators would again turn to the question of food.
Villagers were asked whether or not they had experimented in making their own bread or
soup, as the demonstrators circulated amongst demonstrators and villagers, receiving both
“congratulations and criticism,” while samples of yeast were distributed to those who
continued to show interest in baking bread.177 Shortly thereafter, a women volunteer would
demonstrate how to cook noodles to assembled women, while a male demonstrator would
give a lecture on general hygiene, and in particular on hookworms and other intestinal
worms with the help of posters and diagrams. He emphasized the importance latrines—their
construction and maintenance—as well as the need to keep children clean and free of flies.178
In the third and final visit, the attention paid in the first two sessions to the
production of nutritional habits turned most explicitly from culinary skills building amongst
women to the question of child care. One of the first sessions in the last visit was to
emphasize the importance of breast feeding their children, and to build the habit of regularly
breast feeding. When the time came to wean, women demonstrators emphasized, there was a
danger of giving flour to children under six months, a practice they observed with concern
amongst some villages. After six months, milk should be supplemented with a vegetable
broth, and fruit juice/pureed fruit. Any mother present could ask for more specific

176 Ibid., The vegetables and fruit that were encouraged were both ones easily grown in the tropical climate of

the island ones and ones with high nutritional value.

177 The utility of yeast in the building of new tastes and culinary habits was critical. Not only did yeast allow for

a more appealing recipe for bread to be taught, but it was also rich in vitamin b complex, phosphorus, and iron,
all of which fought against the anemia that was prevalent throughout the island. See: “Wide Application of
Distillery Yeast,” Nutrition Research Unit Report from Period November-February 1944.
BNA/CO856/114/7.
178 “2nd Visit”, Ibid.

81
assistance, while there were also instructional efforts on the “elementary” hygiene of infants
and children in the case of potentially deadly diarrhea.

Figure 3: A woman demonstrator from a “Nutritional Unit” instructs a group of Indo-Mauritian woman on
bread making, c. 1948. BNA/CO/859/114/7

In large part, these mobile health units reveal the critical social spaces that colonial
planners viewed women to have. More explicitly, they reflect an imagined position as an
important link between youth and adulthood, between the natural and the social, and
between the family and the state. Indeed, the role of women’s care over children in these
broader efforts emerged as a critical component in how the state saw its future development.
The multiple reports on the development of malaria on the island all referenced the
importance of women in their eradication schemes, alongside plans for river canalization,
water oiling, and marsh draining. In the Twinning Report, for example, he noted that
“further, the employment of women in such a team is of great advantage in ensuring
accurate results when dealing with poor and ignorant Creole and Indian populations whose
female members are unwilling to undress for proper examination by a male doctor.”179
The emergence of women as the critical link between the dangers of the natural
world, the health of the family, and the development of the colony is also evidenced in

179 Twinning Report, p. 1.

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relation to another disease besides malaria, infantile polio, an outbreak of which struck the
island after the 1945 cyclones. Much like the malaria studies, initial investigations in the
outbreak pointed to nutritionally deficiencies, population overcrowding, and the cultural
proclivities of certain races to be more or less hygienic. This outbreak appeared to have
specifically impacted children, which was also cause for significant concern, as children
tended to have more physical contact with other children and adults, as well as were less
inclined to obey specific hygienic regulations.180 In one survey, eighty three percent of
practicing medical professionals considered malnutrition to be more prevalent in nursing and
pregnant women, and that in particular it was Hindu and Tamil women to be uniquely
vulnerable. The same amount noted that if there was an inability to nurse a child, it was
almost one hundred percent of the time a woman who work on a sugar estate.181
Recognizing the severity of the crisis, the Mauritian government brought in Oxford
orthopedic surgeon HJ Seddon and doctor AM McFarlan as advisors to assist the state in
responding to the storms.182 Seddon’s assistant, a Miss Crossley, appears to have authored a
narrative account of Seddon’s and McFarlan’s clinical work on the island, as they visited
multiple sugar estate camps and hospitals to examine out patients brought in to be
examined, and to be measured for splints. Here, these patients would have their names and
address immediately taken upon arrival before waiting to be admitted by the hospital.
While Seddon and McFarlan were outside experts whose work never entered the
policy discussions within the legislative assembly the same way that Rankine and Wilson’s
did, the observations made by the author of the diary reveal the extent to which race and
the family emerged as the operative discursive categories through which the problem at
hand, poliomyelitis, was interpreted by these representatives of the colonial government. As
the doctors first entered one hospital ward, for example, the ward was described as “one
seething mass of men, women, children, flies and smells. That sweet sickly smell of

180 Drs. McFarlane & Dick “Report on the Epidemic of Poliomyelitis in Mauritius: February to May 1945, Part

II Epidemiology” pp. 13-24 BNA/CO/927/83/6, 1945. See also: Dr. Kenneth Martin (Senior Medical Office,
Kenya) “Report on Sanitary Conditions Affecting the Outbreak of Poliomyelitis in Mauritius”
BNA/CO/1071/264, 1946.
181 “Questionnaire Survey to Medical Practitioners,” Rankine Report, p. 7.
182 SSC (Stanley) to Mckenzie Kennedy (Gov) BNA/CO/1071/264 3 April 1945.

83
unwashed foreign bodies.”183 These “foreign bodies” were the families, largely Indian (with a
“small sprinkling of Creole)184 of estate employees who had arrived on an ambulance that
morning that sought to collect the children suffering from the disease.
The diary also betrays the growing intimacies between the state and its subjects. Just
like the work done by medical and ecological experts when encountering malaria in the years
before, this appeared to be an alien relationship, as the diaries reveal the general unease and
uncertainty with which Indo-Mauritian sugarcane workers encountered these medical
experts. In one encounter with a sick child, the journal reveals the multiple frustrations of
both medical expert and patient.

The baby screams, the Professor has to raise his voice to ask the mother to ask the
child to waggle its toe. The mother raises her voice in a thin wail of non-
comprehension.

‘Mo pas comprendre ce que Docteur fin dire’[I don’t understand what the doctor said]

The attendant interpreting…hurls the question back in her clarion Creole, and deftly
fields the answer too, then everyone falls in a body upon the yelling child, exhorting
it to-

‘ramasse les pieds, mon p’tit, ramsse lee bien’ [flex your toes, flex them good]185

Frustrated, Seddon suspected that the child perhaps also suffered from malnutrition before
coming down with polio, and posed the question to the waiting mother:

‘Est ce que cette enfant allait bien, avan d’etre malade?’ [Was the child ok before becoming
sick?]

183 “Poliomyelitis in Mauritius” Ibid.


184 Ibid.
185 Ibid. p. 6.

84
He asks the waiting mother in his lovely English French. The mother wipes her nose
convulsively on her sari, giggles helplessly, stunned by the unfamiliar tones, and
indefatigable little [woman] plunges into voluble Creole again.

‘Lee bien, lee touzours bien, avant le fin gagner cette malaide,’ [he was fine, always fine, before
getting sick] the mother replies in her high hopless voice, but she is so obviously un-
bien [sic] herself that one feels she can be no judge…

…Poor little sub-human looking things clutching their ten months old babe. They
couldn’t reason, they couldn’t argue, they couldn’t stop ca mamzelle ca [that woman,
meaning the translator] from stupefying them with her eloquence, they could only
hold on dumbly, blindly, to their one conviction that their baby would have died if it
was taken away.186

These observations were repeated through the multiple retellings of the doctor’s experiences.
In another instance, the doctor, a midwife, and a translator were for hours unable to
comprehend the conjugal lives of a woman who had brought in a child because she was
apparently unable to distinguish between herself, her sister, and their respective husbands
when asked about who the child belonged to. When those relationships were finally
established, Seddon scoffed at their living arrangements: a family of ten in two rooms, a
family of five in one. “Boys, girls, grandmothers, parents, uncles and aunts all lumped
together like so much heterogeneous junk.”187 In another observation, the doctors came to a
similar conclusion to that of other colonial experts that sought to improve the condition of
the island, that one of the central causes of the polio outbreak was, in addition to the
cyclone, the nutritional state of its subjects.188

186 Ibid., 8.
187 Ibid., 13.
188 Ibid.

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The focus on the role of women as intermediaries between the ecological and social
world lay at the foundation of development policy in colonial Mauritius. But the state’s
production of anthropometric data about its subjects, and the biological interventions it
sought to achieved through Mauritian mothers had resonances outside of just ideologies of
development. As the following section shows, Indian intellectuals and politicians mobilized
ecological and biometric ideologies of development within alternative epistemologies and
sought to mobilize the bodies of Mauritians within the intellectual category of “Greater
India.”

Nature and the Biological Subject in Greater India

The improvement of the natural world and of the human body was not a goal limited to
nutritional or ecological experts in the colonial state. This final section shows how efforts to
produce gendered and raced biological subjects operated within multiple political and social
scales without being necessarily tied to the colonial state. It shows how regimes of regulating
the biological lives of Mauritians emerged as a critical component of emergent forms of
religious and racial belonging within the capacious geo-social category of “Greater India” in
the twentieth century Indian Ocean World.
This final section, however, seeks to understand the integration of the political
ecology of crisis and the role of women as mediating actors between the natural and the
social into emerging forms of articulating political and social belonging in mid-century
Mauritius. To be sure, the improvement of the natural world and the health of the subjects
who inhabited it was a component of emerging state forms of belonging and citizenship. But
the connection between biopolitics and the rise of the state is one well documented across
diverse historiographical traditions. This concluding section therefore turns to ways of
imagining the natural and the somatic within forms of community other than the nation.
In this section, the invocation of “India” as a cultural, social, and political touchstone
to mirrors what Antoinette Burton has identified as the “politics of the citation.” In her
analysis of Indian writers in Africa, she notes that the presence of African in African-Indian
authors helped “to shore up and consolidate an Indian self-dependent on a set of racializing
hierarchies—a citationary dynamic that points to a larger set of questions about Africa, and

86
of blackness, as a trope of the post-colonial political imagination.”189 But more concretely,
what the following paragraphs show, in part, what Projit Mukharji has termed “biometric
nationalism.190” Mukharji shows how anthropometric data, while wielded by the colonial
state, was quickly seized upon by competing visions of Indian nationalists. While the notion
of a political nationalist project was never an agreed upon outcome of Hindu intellectuals in
the 1940s and 1950s, (indeed in later paragraphs I show how this was actively rejected by the
intellectual who most passionately argued for a bio-metric vision of development), early
political agitation by Hindu leaders was grounded in an a nascent anti-colonialism that took
inspiration, in large part, from the political transformations throughout South Asia.
The 1940s was an era of Hindu revivalism in Mauritius, but it was also a moment of
political realignment in the colony. As Patrick Eisenlohr and others have shown, this was a
decade of significant cultural effervescence amongst Hindu Indo-Mauritians. He identifies
the linking of colonial efforts at institutionalizing education with communal emphases on the
recovery of Indian languages as a powerful driver in the building of a diasporic Indo-
Mauritian community. As Eisenlohr observes, during the war, “Indo-Mauritians asserted
themselves politically in the context of changes that were moving Mauritius towards
decolonization in the British Empire…”and that “the teaching of ancestral languages led to a
growing ethno-religious ‘communalization’ of debates about language in Mauritius…”191
These visions of a regional model of political community grew alongside the writing of a
new constitution. Indeed, for political elites within the colonial government in Mauritius, the
a critical political question of the time was the writing of a new constitution, where questions
of representation and universal suffrage dominated public and legislative conversations on
the future of the island colony.
Emergent discursive strategies of Hindu elites to articulate forms of religious
community went largely overlooked by colonial government officials in as much as they

189 Antoinette Burton, Brown Over Black: Race and the Politics of Postcolonial Citation (Three Essays, 2012), 7. See

also: Isabel Hofmeyr, “The Idea of ‘Africa’ in Indian Nationalism: Reporting Diaspora in The Modern Revie,
1907-1929” South African Historical Journal, No. 57, 2007, p. 60-81.
190Projit Bihari Mukharji, “The Bengali Pharaoh: Upper-Caste Aryanism, Pan-Egyptianism, and the Contested
History of Biometric Nationalism in Twentieth-Century Bengal,” Comparative Studies in Society and History 59, no.
2 (April 2017): 446–76,.
191 Eisenlohr, Little India, pp. 172-173.

87
posed a serious threat to the political project of constitution writing, however. Certain
figures, in particular Basdeo Bissoondoyoal, did prove to be thorns in the side of successive
governors, but there appears to be little concern that he would undo the work of the state.
However, debates over the scale of juridical inclusion ongoing amongst the political actors in
mid-century Mauritius generated a response on the part of these intellectuals, a response that
reveals a plurality of voices in mid-century, and ones that spoke back to colonial officials.
The 1940s and 1950s saw increasing debates over what it meant to be Indo-Mauritian both
culturally and politically.
In large part, the limited scholarship on identity in modern Mauritius has identified
the middle of the twentieth century as an important moment in the formation what is largely
considered the contemporary idea of what it means to be Indo-Mauritian.192 In large part,
this has focused on revivalist efforts amongst major political, intellectual, and religious
figures on the island. In addition to the 1940s being a moment of two significant social
developments—of Hindu revivalism and of colonial development—many writers in the
Indo-Mauritian popular press and in intellectual circles identified the moment of colonial
development as one of scientific and technocratic expertise. But these authors did not
merely defer to colonial forms of technocratic expertise, they sought to articulate alternative
scientific ontologies that they believed also informed a potential awakening of Hindu life in
the colony. In the pages of the newly-founded Indian Cultural Review, for example, authors
debated the significance that an ancestral connection to India would have to Indo-Mauritian
Hindus. One 1949 article entitled “The Scientific Background of Indian Civilization,” for
example, sought to situate a formal scientific logic within ancient Indian religious
traditions.193 “Ayurveda, literally the science of art and life,” the author noted, “cast in the
distant past its rays in civilized countries like Arabia, Egypt, and Rome…cover[ing]
Philosophy, Biology, preventive and curative Medicines, Surgery, and Ayurvedic
pharmacopeia. The Ayurvedic physicians knew about human blood circulations, the laws of

192 Eisenlohr, Little India; Deborah Sutton, “Imagined Sovereiegnty and the Indian Subject: Partition and

Politics Beyond the Nation, 1948-1960” Contemporary South Asia Vo. 19, No. 4, 2011, 409-425; Sutton, “The
Consecration of Political Community in Mauritius,” (2011).

193 K. Tapsy, “The Scientific Background of Indian Civilizations” The Indian Cultural Review (Port Louis, 1949),

pp. 14-19.

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Etiology, Therapeutics, and Dietary. They lectured about the infection by air and water of
diseases like leprosy, fever, pulmonary consumption and about microbes.”194
This article in the colony’s first and most prestigious journal on Indo-Mauritian
cultural life speaks to the significance of questions of scientific expertise at the moment of
colonial development. It evidences an increasing effort to define a racial and cultural identity
against a set of new social and political conditions in the colony. The author was not alone in
his efforts to tie ideas of contemporary racial ideas about what it meant to be Indo-Mauritian
to a utopian past defined by scientific inquiry. One actor who has largely gone unnoticed in
the historical record of modern Mauritius is Pandit Atmaram Vishwanath. Atmaram came to
Mauritius in 1912 at the request of Manilal Doctor, an attorney and politicians sent by
Gandhi to edit the Hindusthani newspaper. Atmaram’s career trajectory was marked less by
activism than it was by scholarship. He settled permanently in Mauritius and became on of
the first authors of an authoritative history of Mauritius, Mauritius ka Itihas (The History of
Mauritius) published in 1923. It was the first Hindi book published in Mauritius and lay the
groundwork for dramatic growth in Hindi publishing in the colony.195
For the purposes of this section however, I turn to one of Atmaram’s lesser known
publications, and one in English, Truth at Last. Truth at Last, published in 1949 at the height
of the colonial developmentalist moment in Mauritius and in the wake of Indian
independence and partition, specifically mobilizing anxieties over race, gender, and the
environment to make claims about Indo-Mauritian and Hindu authenticity in a time of
dramatic social, political, and ecological instability. Atmaram saw the mid-century as a
moment of cultural crisis for Indo-Mauritians. Indo-Mauritian Hindus were under, he
suggested, “a pall of ignorance and indifference” to their collective experience as a religious
and racial group in diaspora.196 His emphasis on the religious and cultural specificities of
Indo-Mauritians he believed, marked him in stark distinction from other authors at the time

194 Ibid. p. 17.


195 Pahlad Ramsurrun, “Pt. Atmaram’s Anthropological Study of Mauritian Society” Le Mauricien, 10 Jan, 2013.

http://www.lemauricien.com/article/pt-atmaram%E2%80%99s-anthropological-study-mauritian-society
196 Pandit Atmaram, Truth at Last (Port Louis: Shardhanand Printing Pres, 1949, p. 3(introduction).

89
who focused on political independence in India, or on “obsolete and worn out notions of
nationalism and patriotism.”197
Atmaram begins his assessment on the cultural decay of Indo-Mauritians in dramatic
fashion: his opening chapter meditates on how Indo-Mauritians are a “dying race.” Drawing
on colonial census data, Atmaram foresaw an impending demographic collapse of Hindu
Mauritius.198 “Toiling and sweating” in the cane fields, Atmaram suggested that his predicted
population collapse was direct cause of “malnutrition, unhygienic and unsanitary living,
inadequate medical help, immature unproductivity, infant mortality, birth control, poverty,
ignorance, and conversion.”199 The same threat did not apply to Muslims and Creoles, he
argued, in large part because of social custom. Muslim Indo-Mauritians eat better, were more
virile, and cleaner, while Creoles were far removed from the diseased sugar cane fields, were
“more clever,” more promiscuous, and eager to proselytize, in his estimation.200
His analysis of racial difference having both material and cultural formulations mirrors
the operational assumptions of colonial planners of the time as well. Hindu degeneration, he
feared, was as much a question of interior decay as it was outside threat. But the interior
threats were not merely moral, but also material. Ill-prepared or non-nutritional foods were
part and parcel of the larger threat of racial decay. Here, the consumption of food and drink,
and the broader dietary habits of Indo-Mauritians were central to Atmaram’s argument. In
this line of argument, the very data that the colonial state produced emerged as front and
center of his case for changes in the Indo-Mauritian diet.
In a subsection of the text focusing on diet, he begins by paraphrasing medical officer
Frank Wilson’s assessment of Rankine’s nutritional study conducted in the first part of the
decade. Atmaram was particularly worried of Wilson’s assessment that “the boys and girls of
African descent are heavier than the Hindoo (sic) boys and girls for the same height ratio.”201
He then relayed Wilson’s observation that eighty six percent of medical practitioners who

197 Ibid. p. 5 (introduction).

198 As later chapters will show, this belief is in stark contrast to the opinion of colonial planners, who saw a

potential Malthusian population crisis in the making as early as the late 1940s.
199 Atmaram, Truth at Last, 3.
200 Ibid.
201 Ibid. p. 17.

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worked with children observed that in the sugar can fields, “Hindoo, Tamil, and Muslim”
children were uniquely struck by malnutrition.”202 The threat that these numbers posed was
catastrophic in his opinion. “If we cannot aspire to increase our number, we should at least
preserve what we have and hence this dab at food and drink.” His multi-section analysis of
Hindu food habits in relation to the data produced by the colonial state correlates to a much
broader historical argument he makes for, counterintuitively, de-centering questions of diet
to Hindu life.
In an extended passage on the development of the cow as a sacred animal in Hindu
religious life, Atmaram sought to contextualize the historical development of the practice
and thereby remove its sacred sheen. While never explicit, this was done, it appears, to
suggest that the eating of bovine flesh would not mark a consequential doctrinal
transgression. Quite the opposite, one would be lead to believe by Atmaram’s text, that the
increased consumption of meat would allow for Hindu Indo-Mauritians to attain a physical
parity with other racial communities on the island, in particular Creoles who he noted ate
meat with abandon. On cattle, he observed that the “more I think of the restrictions and
prohibitions imposed by our ancients on certain articles of food and drink, [the] more I
become convinced that the interdictions were originally not conceived by the considerations
of hell or heaven but on practice reasons then prevailing in the country.” More specifically,
he argued that because the cow had been a critical natural crutch, so to speak, in times of
famine in India, that it naturally became sacred.203 “You can smoke gandia and drink Bhang,
very harmful to health, ceremoniously, but you are not allowed to have a grog from a
Chinaman’s shop. In this way our religious penal code confined to the stomach without any
reference to health and strength has been prepare and this has remained theme of our
religions for centuries.”204
This separation of “the stomach” from the greater individual and social health was
something exacerbated in diaspora. In particular, he notes the emergence of a cultural
proclivity to perform sacerdotal piety while also engaging in religious transgressions out of

202 Ibid.
203 Ibid. p. 15.
204 Ibid.

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the view of other citizens. The “loss of food and drink” that occurs with Indo-Mauritian
field labor, he suggested, had “given a mentality” to Indo-Mauritians to be ostentatiously
pious around each other, but morally loose around members of other racial communities, in
particular when drinking in Chinese shops. This was a moral failing that would continue, he
suggested, because adults could hide behind the “shield of their creolized children.”205
Efforts to articulate a distinct racial and religious identity at a moment of technocratic
and scientific knowledge production in the colony was not limited to the writings of
intellectuals however. Politicians and the newspapers of Hindu revivalist organizations also
incorporated these concerns in their efforts to build political movements and a collective
notion of Indo-Mauritianness. The most important figures of this time was himself a high-
profile Indo-Mauritian cultural and religious revivalist, Basdeo Bissoondoyal. Bissoondoyal
was born in 1908 in rural Mauritius, Bissoondoyal became a significant political figure in
mid-century. He undertook his higher education in India, Lahore and Calcutta specifically,
and upon returning to Mauritius in 1939 took up what Jimmy Harmon has called a
“discourse of defiance.”206 This discourse in defiance was explicitly anti-colonial, and he
would articulate this anti-imperial message within a specific culturally Hindu aesthetic. He
wore a dhoti, addressed his crowds in Hindi, and often held meetings in local baitkas,
neighborhood meeting houses where community members would come to learn Hindi and
perform other religious rituals or community events. Bissoondoyal operated within a
crowded ecosystem of Hindu revivalists and other, non-religious political actors who
interpreted their political and cultural position in Mauritius was fundamentally diasporic.207
Much of the language of political mobilization and of resistance more broadly, then,
operated within a spatial imagination of diaspora, claims for political inclusion and for
cultural power were articulated through the lens of an Indian past.

205Ibid., 17. Atmaram’s at times contradictory calls to both return to while also shedding a specific sort of vedic
utopianism found metaphoric salience through Zionism. Atamram saw the recently created state of Israel as the
historic embodiment of a political and ecumenical refinement of Judaism, whose peoples, like the Indian
diaspora, were “scattered throughout the world, as if thrown by wind.” Ibid.

Jimmy Harmon, “Basdeo Bissoondoyal (1906-1991), Sermons of Liberation. Appravasi Ghat Trust Fund
206

Newsletter, No. 12, 2015.


207 While dramatically different in tone and message, see, for example, the early writings Jay Narain (JN) Roy.

Like Bissoondoyal, Roy couched his early political identity in relation to the Indian subcontinent, see
“Homeward Bound” published in the Mauritian Indian Cultural Review, 1937.

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A much-overlooked component of Bissondoyal’s political repertoire, however, was
his strident engagement with the political and social developments in relation to the natural
world, nutritional campaigns and disease eradication efforts underway in Mauritius at the
time of his rise. Writing at the cusp of independence thirty years later in his own retelling of
Mauritian history, he noted that “To know the whole truth about Mauritius it is imperative
to remember that calamites visit this island from time to time. Cyclones have been hitting it
of late and it is not necessary to dwell upon the havoc wrought by them. Traces of their
violence can be found even to-day…Malarial fever…brought great changes.”208 Cyclones
and disease were formative “calamites” in the history of modern Mauritius in Bissoondoyal’s
estimations, cyclones so much so that their effects were in his estimation not necessary to
dwell upon because of their quotidian nature. His noting of cyclones and diseases as marker
of Mauritian history show that natural threats were not mere peripheral tinkering’s by the
colonial state towards an abstract development project, in Bissoondoyal’s mind, but rather
constituted as significant and sustained threat to the potential political primacy of Hindu
Indo-Mauritians in the colony.
Letters from Mackenzie Kennedy back to London highlight the role that questions
of dietary restrictions were entering into discourses of Hindu nationalism and the formation
of Indo-Mauritian cultural and political community. Unionist Hurryparsad Ramnarain,
rallying on behalf of Bissoondoyal, drove at the heart of the matter at a rally in Midlands in
January of 1944. In the wake of the 1943 riots, he spoke to the perceived effects that food
rationing systems were producing communitarian imbalances. He noted that “the
government had reduced food rations and, at the same time, encouraged drink to weaken
Indians in order to keep them down.” He went on that the anemic efforts to import food for
laborers shows just how disinterested the colonial state was in supporting the island’s
poor.209 Bissondoyal, like Atmaram, expressed suspicion about the dogmatic belief in
vegetarian in the 1950s, a time when Mauritians were “set a-thinking” about the role that

208 Basdeo Bissondoyal, The Truth About Mauritius (Bombay: Bharatiya Vidya Bhava, 1968) Chapter XX “The

Epidemic of 1867.”
209 IOR No. 87 Secret, Mackenzie Kennedy to SSC, 28 Jan, 1944.

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religious practice and public expression of creed could play in building religious
community.210
The anxieties over the effects of rationing on the social life of everyday Indo-
Mauritians appeared in the newspapers. In the pages of Arya Vir — Jagriti, the newspaper of
the Mauritian branch of the Hindu reformist sect of the Arya Samaj, repeated columns
wondered what the “causes are of our backwardness?”211 Quite often, authors in the pages of
Arya Vir would answer this question with a cultural answer, and this answer was more often
than not what was a purported backwardness that was reproduced by caste.
Alongside these articles were other pieces of writing that pointed to increased
scientific rationality alongside a Hindu cultural commitment as a productive way of
imagining a brighter racial and religious future. One way this was articulated was, in the
middle of the 1940s, by pointing to the development of a soon-to-be independent India.
India’s “plans for the future,” revolved in large part, a reader of Arya Vir would be lead to
believe, through its rapid adopting of scientific forms of social planning and natural
management. The paper profiled Indian plans for “agricultural development,” “artificial
fertilizers,” and “scientific research.”212The paper went to lengths to affirm, however, that
these strategies drew from ancient histories of Indian stewardship over the natural world. In
one article, for example, an author simply going by the name “Hindoo” argued that the “Red
Cross Existed in India 2000 years ago.”213
But the paper did not only attempt to offer a deeper history of Indian scientific
thought, it also advanced an argument for racial scientific determinism that Atmaram would
three years later also affirm. In one piece entitled “High Time for Elimination,” the author
worried about the possibilities of an Indo-Mauritian extinction.

210 Basdeo Bissondoyal, Life in Greater India (Bombay: Bharatiya Vidya Bhava 1984), p. 37.

211 “The Causes of our Backwardness” Arya Vir - Jagriti, 16 March, 1945.

212 “India Plans for the Future” Arya Vir - Jagriti 19 April to 17 March 1946.
213 “Red Cross Existed in India 2000 years ago” Arya Vir - Jagriti 19 July 1946 This emphasis on the historical

roots of Indian scientific thought was also explicitly articulated in later articles like “Indian Scientists,” which
emphasized that current scientific work constituted a “renaissance” in Indian thought after centuries of
stagnation. “Indian Scientists” Arya Vir – Jagriti 11 April 1947.

94
Evolutionary process does not eliminate altogether the character of the thing
involved but gives shape by gradual advance from a rudimentary condition to a
higher one, it rather transforms. But if the method becomes unwieldy and ungainly
the thing perishes as is evidence in the fossils including the famous DODO[sic] of
Mauritius which has become extinct only a few centuries before…This is what has
taken place with the Hindoos.

In this long march extending over thousands of years after the retreat of ice about
18,000 years ago. Our ancestors experiment with life, death, rebirth, food, drink,
clothes, castes, Karma, Idols, rites, creeds, sexts…

…There is no design in the scheme of creation. Everyday life has been so evolved as
to protect itself by its offensive of defensive means….214

Again, this article was written by an author under the name of “Hindoo,” who explicitly
articulated an evolutionarily-framed model of social development that mirrored the
ideological underpinnings of colonial officials and of Hindu revivalists alike.
What the writings of Atmaram, the politics of Ramnarain and Bissondoyal, and the
publications of the notion of Indo-Mauritians as biological creatures was thus both a conceit
of the colonial state to articulate massive interventionist policy in the lives of its subjects, but
also a constitutive part of a budding intellectual framework for understanding Indo-
Mauritian life in an era of political change and development colonialism.

Conclusion

As this chapter has shown, bureaucrats like Wilkinson and medical officials like Rankine and
Wilson, amongst others, spearheaded a model of social development that tied understanding
Mauritians positions with in the island’s climate and ecology to ensure its productive
capacity. This era saw the integration of a number of heretofore discrete aspects of the
colonial state—its political arena, scientific experts, medical doctors, and technocrat—in

214 “High Time for Elimination,” Arya Vir – Jagriti, 1 November, 1946.

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service of ensuring the stability of a pool of healthy and productive laborers. Development
was, therefore, a broad-based effort in modifying the natural and social world in service of
sugar. Indeed, the opening quotation of this chapter emphasizes the integrated project of
development in the mind of the erstwhile governor: improvements in the land would
produce improvement in the bodies of the people that inhabited it. As the last section has
shown, however, conversations about the natural improvement and public health occurring
amongst colonial officials proved to be a generative discursive field for Hindu intellectuals.
Questions of health, the body, and the relationship Mauritians had to the natural world
translated neatly into rhetorical strategies mobilized by people like Atmaram and
Bissoonodyal. Just like state officials sought to understand the nutritional lives of Mauritians,
so did Hindu intellectuals in the search for a language and model for understanding the
dangers of life in diaspora.
As a consequence of “development,” life on Mauritius changed. Efforts to improve
the health of Mauritian subjects proved successful. Malaria rates plummeted and with them
mortality rates. The island saw its population grow dramatically in the coming decades. A
catastrophic cyclone in 1960, however, would reveal in dramatic effect the pressures that
“overpopulation” and under-investment in social welfare and infrastructure. It is to the
social, political, and cultural transformations that this cyclone, Carol, catalyzed that the next
two chapters turn.

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CHAPTER 3

CITÉ LIFE:
RACE, DECOLONIZATION, AND CYCLONE CAROL

Introduction

If the colony’s annual reports are any indication, the late 1940s and 1950s were a time of
relative meteorological peace on the island. Between 1945 and 1960 Mauritius escaped
unscathed from any direct landfalls by tropical cyclones. The 1949 report opened, for
example by exclaiming that “Mauritius was fortunate; it escaped visitation by a cyclone.”215
The next year: “Climatic conditions have been on the whole, largely satisfactory…the most
favorable factor has been, no doubt, the lack of cyclones.”216 While these reports also noted
the enduring effects of the 1945 storms discussed in the previous chapter, there was
collective relief amongst both colonial officials and the popular press that the island had
gone so long without a storm. This would change in early 1960, however, when two, now
named, storms, Alix in January and Carol in late February, would leave Mauritius reeling.
Carol, in particular, was catastrophic. With winds exceeding one hundred and sixty miles per
hour, it still holds the record for the most powerful storm in the island’s history. For such a
powerful and destructive storm, Carol holds surprisingly little historiographical significance;
in fact, it is largely invisible. This chapter, however, puts Carol at the center of social and
political questions regarding processes of decolonization in mid-century Mauritius. In
particular, it looks at how questions of race and the racial identity transformed as a
consequence of the storm and how those transformations shaped debates over political
independence.
The historiography of 1960s Mauritius reflects a broader approach to the twentieth
century historiography, which is to portray the decade as an historical dénouement to
processes begun in the nineteenth; the political transformation of the island generated by
Maurice Curé and the Labour Party (Parti Travallaiste) comes to its triumphant conclusion
with the ascension of Seewosagur Ramgoolam to the position of first Prime Minister and
leader of Labour. Indeed, the established histories of 1960s and the post-colonial era are

215Mauritius Annual Report, 1949, “Part I.”


216 Mauritius Annual Report, 1950, “Introduction: Register of Cooperative Societies.”

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often high-political ones that narrate a story of decolonization from the perspective of those
negotiating it: the ascendant political elite of Mauritius and British colonial officials intent on
producing a politically-friendly state in the western Indian Ocean.217 For Simmons, the Carol
and post-Carol era, from roughly 1959 to 1967 were ones dominated by question of whether
or not Mauritius’ future was one of independent nation state or one “associated” with the
British Empire; some elite Creole economic and political actors even suggested a
retrocession movement back to the French Empire. These debates raged within the
legislative assembly and in the public press as multiple parties both soft-peddled communal
politics while also seeking to create delicate coalitions across communal lines. These debates
were markedly more tame in the series of diplomatic negotiations between the leadership of
Labour and the Parti Mauricien in London over the course of the decade.218 On the ground,
however, the story is different. Carol is largely understood to be a transformative moment in
the history of modern Mauritius.
When an journalist asked Mauritian historian Benjamin Moutou about how cyclone
Carol shaped Mauritius as part of an oral history effort to document peoples’ memories of
the storm, his response was definitive: it changed how and where Mauritians lived.

First of all, when you speak of the nature of habitation, before they [homes] were all
maison creole, now Carol marked the disappearance of the maison creole, wooden houses,
now there was a law that had been enacted that in the center of Port Louis you
cannot construct wooden houses on account of fire and all that, but…after Carol
there was no question of constructing wooden houses. Now all these housing estates
that you see everywhere, have been constructed just to protect the people who used
to live in thatch houses and corrugated iron roofs. Cyclone Carol is the cyclone
which has marked the end of wooden houses and of corrugated iron sheets on roofs
everywhere. I think Mauritius in one sense is uglier after cyclone Carol.219

217 Adele Smith Simmons, Modern Mauritius: The Politics of Decolonization; Ashley Jackson, War and Empire in

Mauritius and the Indian Ocean (Palgrave, 2001); Brij Mohan Kaushik, “Mauritius and Diego Garcia: A Legacy of
Decolonization” Strategic Analysis: Vol, 6, No. 12, 1983.
218 Simmons, Modern Mauritius, p. 144-171.

219Mauritius National Archives (MNA)/Cyclone Carol Oral History Project, Interview with Benjamin Moutou.
The maison creole to which Motou refers is a colonial style of homes that began on the sugar plantations of
Mauritius and in the urban spaces of nearby French possession Reunion Island. There are often made of wood
and were largely replaced after Carol in Mauritius. In older parts of cities and towns, however, some are still
standing.

98
Like most other Mauritians who lived through Carol, Moutou noted that the enduring marks
of the storm have been the ways in which the physical and social space of Mauritius was
reorganized in the decade following its landfall. Carol did major damage to the built
environment of Mauritius. Nearly a quarter of the island’s homes were damaged beyond
repair.220 From taxi drivers, to government officials, to academics, almost every Mauritian
has pointed to the changes in housing as a primary after-effect of cyclone Carol. “It was the
end of the straw huts” or “now the houses are square and built with concrete” are
commonly offered as succinct descriptors of the singular changes the cyclone brought. And,
as evident in Motou’s observation, there is often an ambivalence in these responses
lamenting the loss of an old Mauritius as they also celebrate the rebuilding and
transformation of Mauritius from a more primitive state of existence when the island as a
whole was subject to the regular onslaughts of cyclones. Indeed, Carol made Mauritius
“uglier,” yet safer.
This chapter, however, interrogates what often goes unsaid in casual conversations
about how Mauritius has changed as a result of Cyclone Carol: the ways in which ideas of
popular notions of race took new meaning in the years following the landfall of the storm. It
argues that the reordering of social space following Carol opened debates over Mauritian
history, the viability of a multi-racial democracy, and, more specifically, the role that the
Afro-Mauritian Creole peoples played in the history of the colony and their future in an
independent Mauritius.221 To access this story, the chapter looks specifically at the
construction of the cités—housing estates constructed by the late-colonial and post-colonial
governments that sought to provide affordable, cyclone-proof housing for those left
homeless and without a claim to land after Carol—as critically important developments in
shaping discourses of racial belonging and political decolonization. They were built under
the aegis of the Central Housing Authority (CHA), a governmental bureaucracy created after
Carol to tackle the problem of home ownership and the construction of cyclone-proof

220 CHA Annual Report, 1967, p. 1.

221Indeed even the one study that explicitly examined race and decolonization in Indian Ocean Africa, Jean
Houbert’s 1992 “The Indian Ocean Creole Islands: Geopolitics and Decolonization,” the Creole communities
he centers the political machinations of those historically marked with that identity—mixed race or French
descendant settlers in the southwest Indian Ocean—not those of African descent. See: Jean Houbert, “The
Indian Ocean Creole Islands: Geopolitics and Decolonization” Journal of Modern African Studies, Vol. 30, No. 3,
1992, pp. 465-484.

99
homes. Today, the vast majority of cités residents are Mauritians of African origin, who, as
descendants of formerly enslaved peoples on the island, had been largely excluded from
development, housing, and land-ownership schemes in the decades preceding Carol.222
At the moment of their construction in the 1960s, the cités quickly emerged as sites of
debate over the political, social, and cultural future of the colony. Carol, of course, did not
strike a politically or socially inert island. The delegation of resources, discourses of
resilience, rebuilding, governmental entitlement, and the emergence of political leadership in
the storm’s aftermath grafted onto deeper historical debates over race, belonging, and
personal place in twentieth-century Mauritius. These debates reached into the island’s distant
past, as well as looked towards its immediate future. The storm and its aftermath brought to
bear new questions regarding these historical processes. How would a future Mauritius
endure the economic trauma engendered by tropical cyclones? How would Mauritians adapt
to these massive infrastructure projects? How would the rebuilding of the country shape
what was understood by many as the gradual movement towards political self-rule?
The cités changed popular notions of racial belonging and produced a new set of
discursive and material concerns that shaped the national conversation over race and
decolonization. These changes occurred on two scales: the national and communal (the term
often used in Mauritius to refer to race). Nationally, the cités brought Afro-Mauritian
communities into urban and peri-urban spaces in unprecedented ways in the island’s history
and at a time when the future of the island was uncertain. As such, new political and social
intimacies between racial communities—Afro-Mauritian (Creole), Indian, Chinese, and
Franco-Mauritian—inflamed debates over the political and social changes seen as necessary
in the moment of political independence. Communally, the cités re-ordered the social and
economic everyday lives of Afro-Mauritians, who had heretofore and for the most part lived
in isolation from the economic and political hubs of power in the colony. The move to the
cités changed how communities interacted, where people found employment, and how black
Mauritius understood their participation in Mauritian political, social, and economic life

222The terminology of race, to be explored in the following section, is complex in contemporary Mauritius. The
term Afro-Mauritian, black, Afro-Malagasy, and Creole are all used to refer to black Mauritians with varying
levels of purported specificity to ancestry. For the purposes of this chapter, I use Afro-Mauritian and black.
Residents of La Mivoie, a cité where I conducted research many refer to themselves as Afro-Malagasy, but I am
not certain about the extent to which this terminology extends beyond the cité, so I refrain from using it here to
discuss island-wide processes.

100
more broadly. To have physical permanence in Mauritius, that is to say, to have a house that
could withstand the forces of cyclones, offered a corrective to centuries of historical injustice
in the eyes of black Mauritians. It was seen as addressing what one interviewee called “the
cyclonic condition” (kr: kondition siklonik). This condition, interrogated more thoroughly in
the concluding section of the chapter, refers to the regularity with which descendants of
slaves were forced to rebuild after their homes were destroyed by cyclones. This condition
was ultimately more than that, however; it was also a status of temporal impermanence and
geographical dislocation.
This chapter’s linking of temporal impermanence and the claim to geographical
space as constitutive parts of racial identity also draws from the broader theoretical
interventions of spatial theory, which suggests that “place” is the “the outcome of social
processes of valuing space [the physical setting in which an event occurs], a product of the
imaginary, of desire, and the primary means by which we articulate with space and transform
it into a humanized landscape.”223 The inability to be spatially rooted in the Mauritian
landscape had made the present and future uncertain, or at the very least not open to change
for black Mauritians. So, while for many modern Mauritians the cités mark the beginnings of
urban and peri-urban social ills, they must also be understood as moments specifically for
black Mauritians to lay claim to a history of the island perennially denied to them.
In large part, this argument relies upon scholarship that has interrogated the
twentieth century urbanization of modern Africa. Much of this work has been devoted to
understanding the ways in which colonial states inscribed power into the built environment,
as a method of “enframing” and monitoring colonial subjects.224 Other studies have sought
to understand the ways in which prevailing economic forces, most often the consolidation of

223Robert W. Preucel and Lynn Meskell, “Places,” in A Companion to Social Archaeology, edited by Lynn Meskell
and Robert W. Preucel (Malden, Massachusetts: Blackwell Publishing, 2004), 215. See also: Henri Lefebvre, La
production de l’espace (Economica, 2000) For more on how post-colonial politics reordered the geo-political space
of the Indian Ocean, see: Jeremy Prestholdt, “Locating the Indian Ocean: Notes on the Post-Colonial
Reconstitution of Space” Journal of Eastern African Studies, Vol. 9, No. 3, 2015. 440-467.

224 This work has emerged out of a Foucauldian framework of emphasizing observation and the colonial efforts
at disciplining subjects. Examples in African historiography: Timothy Mitchell, Colonizing Egypt, Garth Myers,
Verandahs of Power. Edward Denison, Guang Yu Ren, and Naigzy Gebremedhin. Asmara : Africa’s secret modernist
city (London: Merrell, 2003); Karina Landman, “Gated minds, gated places: the impact and meaning of hard
boundaries in South Africa,” in Samer Bagaeen and Ola Uduka, eds. Gated Communities: Social Sustainability in
Contemporary and Historical Gated Developments(London: Earthscan, 2010).

101
material capital and labor in urban nodes have reshaped social and cultural formulations.225
This chapter pulls generally from the broader conceptual paradigms that see urban
architectural change as an articulation of colonial power, but it is firmly situated within the
latter category that focuses on the local socio-cultural registers of urbanization. More
specifically, it emphasizes the historical significance of the broader process of urbanization,
which is to say the incongruency of plans of colonial forms of urban planning with the
unforeseen social and cultural changes catalyzed by those plans.
The chapter begins with an evaluation of the interstices between the politics of race
and political decolonization from the late 1950s to 1960s. This first section writes a yet
untold story about the roughly two decades before independence from the British Empire. It
was a period of turbulent political change in Mauritius, when a number of political parties
were vying for social relevance and political power in a colony where the politics of race,
while hardly absent throughout its centuries-long history, had taken on new urgency as
multiple people and parties sought to position themselves as the political beneficiaries of the
end of empire. This overview shows just how race often emerged as the language of political
grievance in the era of decolonization in Mauritius, and it assess the ways in which Afro-
Mauritian political organizing and modes of self-identification developed at mid-century. It
also shows how the articulation of place—the imbuing of a Mauritius with a specific set of
racially exclusive meanings—was part of the lexicon of racial identity in the middle of the
century. This background is critical to understand the social and political stakes engendered
by the profound changes in the built environment that the second section of the chapter
shows. Here, we see how the foundation of the Central Housing Authority (CHA), the
ongoing work of colonial experts in tropical housing, and the political machinations of
members of the Mauritius legislative council oversaw the physical construction of the cités in
the 1960s. This section also illuminates how non-governmental organizations in the late
colonial and post-colonial eras helped produce the broader discursive tropes of black

225 Cooper, Frederick. “Africa and the World Economy,” African Studies Review Vol. 24, no. 2/3 (June-

September, 1981): 1-86. Terence Ranger, Bulawayo Burning: The Social History of an African City (London: James
Currey, 2008); Luise White, The Comforts of Home: Prostitution in Colonial Nairobi (Chicago: University of Chicago
Press, 1990); Teresa Barnes, We Women Worked So Hard: Gender, Labor and Social Reproduction in colonial Harare,
Zimbabwe, 1930-56 (Portsmouth: Heinemann, 1999); James Brennan, Taifa: Making Nation and Race in Urban
Tanzania (Athens: Ohio University Press, 2012); Nate Plageman, Highlife Saturday Night: Popular Music and Social
Change in Urban Ghana (Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 2013).

102
backwardness that were born out of the social conditions of the cités. Finally, the chapter
takes a closer look the experiences and memories of those living in the cités. It looks in
particular at the development of Cité La Mivoie in the Black River district of the island. In
the early 2000s, La Mivoie was the site of the Mauritius Truth and Justice Commission, a
long-term study of the history of the legacy of slavery in Mauritius, through the eyes of
people living in the estates. Based on the raw and published data of this report, interviews
conducted by previous researchers and my own interviews of residents of La Mivoie, as well
as with social workers who service the community, this final section attempts to understand
how life changed for its residents after cyclone Carol and how life in the cités differs from
national narratives that emphasize social corruption and moral deviance.

Memories of “Mazambik” and the Post-Colonial Futures of the “Nasyon”

The question of housing struck at the heart of the social and political life of mid-century
Mauritius because affirmed a vision of race defined by space; space both as a structuring
component of a diasporic narrative, as physical permanence in Mauritius, and as a relational
component understood through social proximities with other communities. Mauritius has no
indigenous populations. Its original inhabitants—Dutch settlers and enslaved Africans—
came from elsewhere. And as earlier chapters have discussed, the shift from Dutch to
French to British imperial control, and from African to South Asian populations of laborers
have shaped the demographic, linguistic, and political history of the country in ways that
have allowed multiple communities across centuries to lay claims to belonging on this Indian
Ocean island. This is not to say that that unlike other areas of Indian Ocean Africa where
genealogical models of racial thought informed autochthonous claims over land, but rather
that racial identities were formed by marshaling historical narratives of movement and
diaspora to give the landscape meaning.226

226See, for another western Indian Ocean example: Jeremy Prestholdt, “The Politics of the Soil: Separatism,
Autochthony, and Decolonization on the Kenyan Coast” Journal of African History, Vol. 55, No. 2, 2014, for a
history of how racial logic tied genealogical pasts to the physical place of the Kenyan coast, the (Sw: mwambao)
and Christopher Lee, Unreasonable Histories: Nativism, Multiracial Lives, and the Genealogical Imagination in British
Africa (Duke University Press, 2014) for examples in British Central Africa.

103
Scholarship on the making of black identities in modern Mauritius has tended, as
much scholarship on the island itself, to focus on the seventeenth through nineteenth
centuries. This is a product, in large part, of the voluminous source material available to
researchers. For scholars like Megan Vaughn, William Miles, Edward Alpers, and Vijaya
Teelock, one of the central questions has been the genesis of a coherent identity in diaspora
from the African continent.227 Unfortunately, the Indian Ocean stands in stark distinction
from the Atlantic World where black figures like Equiano generated a “diasporic literary
tradition” or where figures like Marcus Garvey articulated a Pan-African movement that
would allow historians to reconstruct a narrative.228 With that said, however, studies on the
African diaspora in the era of slavery have shown that imagining and cultivating affective
bonds between Afro-descendant communities in the Mascarenes, the Persian Gulf, or
southern India to continental Africa existed, most often as a strategy of affirming an
communitarian identity. In Mauritius these bonds existed through a number of social and
cultural registers—through the translation of religious documents, musical tradition,
nomenclature of self-identification that drew from continental Africa, and even the naming
of a neighborhood in Port Louis “Camp Yollof” after the “Senegalese” who first settled
there.229 And to this day, ethnographic research has shown the new forms of affirming
cultural connection between Mauritius and continental Africa through the growth of cultural
heritage sites.230
This section shows that debates over the political future of the island in the middle
of the twentieth century activated historical imaginations of space and place in Mauritius that
had existed for centuries. As earlier chapters in this dissertation have shown, beginning in

227 Vijaya Teelock, Bitter Sugar: Sugar and Slavery in 19th Century Mauritius (Mahatma Gandhi Institute, 1998);

William FS Miles, “The Creole Malaise in Mauritius, African Affairs Vol. 98, 211-228 (1999); Megan Vaughn,
Creating the Creole Island: Slavery in 18th Century Mauritius (Duke University Press, 2005).
228Edward Alpers, “Recollecting Africa: Diasporic Memory in the Indian Ocean World”, African Studies Review.,
Vol. 3, No. 1, Special Issue on the Diaspora, April 2000, p. 84.; see also: Gwyn Campbell, Structure of Slavery in
Indian Ocean Africa and Asia (Frank Cass, 2005).

229 Alpers, “Recollecting Africa;” Pier Larson, Ocean of Letters: Language and Creolization in an Indian Ocean Diaspora

(Cambridge, 2009); Roseabelle Boswell, Le Malaise Creole: Ethnic Identity in Mauritius (Berghan, 2006); Teelock,
Bitter Sugar. Gwyn Campbell, “The African-Asian Diaspora: Myth or Reality?” African and Asian Studies, Vol. 5,
No.3-4, 2005. Teelock and Alpers, et al. History, Memory, and Identity (University of Mauritius, 2001).
230 Candace Lowe Swift, “Privileging the Diaspora in Mauritius: Making World Heritage in a Multicultural

Nation,” Diaspora, Vol. 6, No. 3, 2007. See also Le Morne’s development as a UNESCO heritage site.

104
the 1930s, Afro-Mauritians were not alone in operating within a discursive landscape where
belonging was tied to locating oneself in the historical space of the Indian Ocean; Indo-
Mauritian belonging also relied on articulating belonging within a diasporic framework. As
many scholars of the African Indian Ocean have shown, Indian diasporic consciousness—
which at times incorporated Africa into a capacious geo-political spatial conception of
“Greater India”—was often a critical component, as well as a political foil, for African
nationalists politics throughout Eastern and Southern Africa.231 And beginning in the middle
of the twentieth century, Mauritian intellectuals and politicians like Jay Narain (JN) Roy,
Pandit Atmaram, and Basdeo Bissondoyal, while dramatically different from each other in
tone, ideology, argument, and background, were articulating an Indo-Mauritian identity
predicated on the historical experience of diaspora.232 This was a narrative of racial
community, as was also shown in earlier chapters, championed by groups working with non-
elite populations like the Arya Samaj.
In addition to a communal narrative over a collective diasporic experience, land
ownership and the attendant physical permanence it allowed has also operated as a critical
component of identity formation in Mauritian history. As earlier chapters have also shown,
Indo-Mauritian access to land through processes of morcellement allowed for Indians to lay
claim to Mauritius, an ostensible “Little India” In the late nineteenth century.233 The nexus of
landownership and communitarian identity building was not new in Mauritius, however; it
predated morcellement. Expression of racial belonging through geographical permanency
emerged through the racialization of historical patterns of land redistribution. Land, as
Mauritius’ history since French rule has shown, was often subdivided, sold, or otherwise
conferred along racial lines. Centuries before the elimination of racial categories from the

231 See, among others: Sana Aiyar, Indians in Kenya: The Politics of Diaspora (Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard

University Press, 2015); James R. Brennan, Taifa: Making Nation and Race in Urban Tanzania (Ohio University
Press, 2012); Antoinette Burton, Brown Over Black: Race and the Politics of the Postcolonial Citation (Three Essays,
2012); Jonathon Glassman, War of Words, War of Stones: Racial Thought and Violence in Colonial Zanzibar (Indiana
Univeristy Press, 2011) Christopher Lee, Unreasonable Histories: Nativism, Multiracial Lives, , and the Genealogical
Imagination in British Africa (Duke University Press, 2014); Jon Soske, Internal Frontiers: African Nationalism and the
Indian Diaspora in Twentieth Century South Africa (Ohio University Press, 2017);Vijaya Teelock, Mauritian History:
From Its Beginnings to Modern Times (Moka, Mauritius: Mahatma Gandhi Institute, 2001).
232 Most recently, this diasporic model has been embraced by Mauritain poet and scholar Khal Torabully in his

work, Coolitude: An Anthology of the Indian Labour Diaspora (Anthem, 2002).


233 Eisenlohr, Little India.

105
census, for example it was free people of color (gens de couleur libre) in Mauritius who were the
first peoples of African and Asian descent to acquire landholdings in the colony. This was a
racial and social category comprised primarily of a small group of manumitted slaves, mixed
race people, and free people of Asian origin, in particular Indians from the French holding
of Pondicherry. By the early nineteenth century, three fourths of all free people of color
appear to have been Mauritian born, pointing to their solidification within the social
structure of the island and as a “distinct corporate identity.”234 They also, for the first time,
outnumbered white Mauritians by 1815.235 This identity also became tied to landownership
over the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries. And as Richard Allen has shown, in
Mauritius, “the acquisition of real property was crucial too free coloured’s attempts to
establish a significant place for themselves in colonial society.”236 In large part, before the
building of the cités in the 1960s, Afro Mauritians could make no juridical claims to
landownership, as many had become either fisherman or, had they acquired, saw it
expropriated by white farmers.237So it was clear, then, that for centuries the lack of an
indigenous population to Mauritius meant that laying claim to land on the island afforded a
sense of belonging and integration into colonial life.
In contrast to earlier centuries when Africans and Afro-Mauritians figured
prominently in the historical record, this community largely slides out of the archival record
of the colony in the twentieth century. As such, reconstructing the political thought and
cultural history of Afro-Mauritians poses quite significant methodological challenges. A
singular Afro-Mauritian-directed newspaper, L’Épée, which emerged in the late 1950s is, as
far as my own work can tell, the only publication whose target audience were Afro-
Mauritians. Importantly, the paper was published both in French and in Mauritian Creole in
an attempt to at least symbolically represent the concerns of non-elite and African Creoles. It
should be noted that the paper’s editor, Joseph Coralie, was himself a Creole politician who
used the paper in the later years of the decade to support his ultimately unsuccessful

234 Richard Allen, “Landownership by Persons of African and Asian Descent” TJC, Vol. 2: Legal and

Administrative Aspects, November 2011.


235 Miles, “The Creole Malaise,”p. 214.
236 Allen, “Landownership by Persons of African and Asian Descent.”
237 Boswell, Le Malaise Creole, p. 27; also: Teelock, Bitter Sugar.

106
candidacy for legislative elections in 1959 under the Parti Mauriciene, the party largely
considered to be a “Creole” political organ. And while L’Épée never became an official
mouthpiece for Afro-Mauritians, many of its articles spoke to the deeper social and political
anxieties that informed Afro-Mauritian life.238
The articles, editorials, and columns of L’Épée spoke to anxieties about African
political power in what many feared would be a French or Indian Mauritius. The specter of
future Hindu and Franco-Mauritian political dominance was central to the formation of an
Afro-Mauritian political and cultural psyche in the middle of the twentieth century. Afro-
Mauritians were under siege according L’Épée, from political forces aligned with the Franco-
Mauritian elite and from the growing political power of Indo-Mauritians and India itself, a
newly decolonized nation that had begun to assert its political power throughout the Cold
War Indian Ocean. “Vive le Complex d’infériorité,” a weekly repeating column in the late
1950s, retold stories of the little man making it big or of life changing strokes of luck
affecting the lives of the poor or marginal, for example.239 And to be sure, Afro-Mauritians
comprised the collective little man of the political and social landscape of mid-century
Mauritius, as the paper went at great lengths to remind its readers. This point was most often
made by referencing the history of slavery (kr: esklavage) on the island.
The paper also regularly deployed invective as a way to challenge the positions of
more conservative Creole politicians.240 One of the most striking features of this publication
was, however, the “dialogue” in each edition between two fictional characters, Soondron, an
Indian, and Gaby, an Afro-Mauritian Creole, who in their debates or conversations with one
another articulated some of the most salient political issues of the day. In the late 1950s, for
example, conversations centered around the political future of Afro-Mauritian Creoles.241
Suggesting that Mauritians were “guinea pigs” in a global multi-racial experiment of
decolonization. Gaby railed against the “white” Creoles that ran the Parti Mauriciene, the
political party which ostensibly advanced the interests of all Creoles. Discussing the

238 Rashi Rohatgi, Fighting Cane and Cannon: Abhimanyu Unnuth and the Case of World Literature for Mauritius

(Newcastle UK: Cambridge Scholars Publishing, 2014), 156.


239 “Vive le Complex d’infériorité”, L’Épée, 28/1/1959 - 4/2/1959.
240 “Ta Grossess Nous a Trompés, Forget!” L’Épée, 28/1/1959 - 4/2/1959.
241 “Les Cobayes Mauriciens” L’Épée, 18/2/1959 - 25/2/1959.

107
possibility of an Afro-Mauritian like Coralie running in the city of Curepipe, Gaby wondered
whether or not the candidate was hamstrung by the fact that “the island was too small, that
he was too much a man of the people, and that he was too African [the original term here
was mazambique].”242
The paper’s use of the term mazambique offers an important view into complexities of
articulating nationhood at mid-century in Mauritius. Mazambique [alternatively spelled
mazambik] speaks to a specific historical memory that links Afro-Mauritian identity to the
African continent and to the history of slavery. In his authoritative dictionary of Mauritian
Creole, Vinesh Hookomsing defines mazambik as “a derogatory term for a Mauritian of
African decent.” But he also notes that “mazambik is phonetically distinct from the name of
the country, Mozambik, though the two words are no doubt cognate.” He goes on to situate
the word and its etymological relatives within the relative fluidity the broader historico-
linguistic landscape of the southwest Indian Ocean. He observes, for example, that msumbiji,
the Swahili name for the country of Mozambique, is markedly different in etymology from
mazambik, a marker of place. At the same time, among the Giriama, an ethnic group within
the broader Mijikenda people of coastal Kenya, the term msimbiji is a marker of race— and in
particular, of blackness.243 The term kreole (Creole), on the other hand, is defined as a “locally
born person of any race,” while also a “Mauritian of racially mixed descent, usually
Christian.”244 The term melanz could also apply here for a mixed-race person.
As scholarship on the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries has shown, the evolution
of the term mazambik evolved in relation both to the point of origin of African slaves and to
the processes of creolization that occurred between the coasts of eastern and southern

242 Ibid. The original reads as such: “Coralie [the candidate] fine arrive a la conclizion que parcequi li ene trop

p’tit nation, parcequi li ene z’homme di peple, parcequi li trop mazambique…” The strageci use of these
ficiontlized conversations appeared in other parts of Indian Ocean Africa in service of the production of racial
stereotypes. See: Brennan, Taifa, Chapter 5.
243 Vinesh Hookoomsing, Diksyoner Kreol Moriysen, (Paris: Editions L’Harmattan, 1987), 222. He continues:

Recehenbach 1967 indicates that the Swahili term name for this territory, Msumbiji [Mozambique] is of ‘an
origin but does not give the etymon. Note also the Giryama msimbiji “black.’” The dictionary suggests, as
historians have rightly shown, that the term was less a marker of locality (Mozambique) than it was a marker of
blackness. See also: Truth and Justice Commission Volume Three (TJC/Vol. 3) p. 567 re: Mazambik used as
racial slur in the same tradition as say shenzi/washenzi on the Swahili coast. It holds similar civilizational
connotations.
244 Ibid., 164.

108
Africa, the Comoros, Seychelles, Madagascar, and Mascarenes. Edward Alpers has
demonstrated, for example, that while the term Mozambiques may have been “no more than a
convenience for a slave owning class in Mauritius” to the extent that the term collapsed a
number of continental African and island (Madagascan/Comorian/Seychellois) ethnicities
into one category, its use within Mauritian society and its movement across the Mozambique
channel to Madagascar and the Mascarenes reveals a more complex past.245 Initially an
ethnic category ascribed to slaves in Mauritius in the early nineteenth century, Mazambik
slaves existed alongside Creoles, Indians, Malagasy, and even some Malay slaves. Mazambik
here was institutionalized thus as an umbrella term to mark slaves brought from various
ethnicities across southern and eastern Africa. It initially emerged in the eighteenth century
both a racial identity that hailed both blackness and continental Africa, a distinction from
other Creole. Its folding into the broader term “Creole” remains unclear, that is to say the
processes and points of convergence that allowed for mixed-race peoples and peoples of
African decent to occupy the same category in official state calculations is unclear.
Mazamik does not stand alone within the Creole lexicon in its polysemousness: the
term nasyon is also marked by definitional flexibility.246 Nasyon can mean both the formal
political structures that constitute a nation state, or, as it is most often used colloquially
within Afro-Mauritian communities, an ethnic grouping. Unlike for Indo-Mauritians for
whom the term, as mentioned earlier, graphs onto caste differences, for black Mauritians
nayson confers inclusion within a broader historical narrative that ties the community to
Africa and the slave trade: the history that makes one mazambik. One interviewee from the
early 2000s study on the legacy of slavery (Truth and Justice Commission—TJC) on the
island noted that:

Q: What does a Creole person look like?

A: Creoles are black people. A Creole is someone like me, nasyon.

245 Edward A. Alpers, “Becoming Mozambique: Diaspora and Identity in Mauritius” Harriet Tubman Seminar

Department of History, York University, Toronto15 November 1999. Quoting Baron d’Unienville, Alpers
shows that by the early nineteenth century, the term “Mozambiques” amongst slave owners in Mauritius was
included a number of African ethnic groups. See: Baron d’Unienville, Statistique de l’île Maurice et de ses
Dépendences. Suivie d’une Notice Historique sur cette Colonie et d’un Essai sur l’île de Madagascar (Paris, 1838), pp. 276-
278.
246 Eisenlohr, Little India.

109
A: What does nasyon mean?

Q: Same as ‘Mazambik’, we are distinct from others, we came from [continental]


Africa.247

If we place L’Épée’s observation that Coralie was too “mazamibque” side-by-side with
the above observation of a black Mauritian in the 2000s, what appears are a number of
intellectual convergences and separations. On one hand, we observe the slippage between
notions of race and nation. These ideas were not, and do not continue to be, mutually
exclusive categories of political thought or action, and as such historical debates over the
political future of the island at time of decolonization should be read with attention to the
multiple register of meaning that were deployed throughout by the press, political elites, and
subaltern actors. Thus it is possible to see the fundamental incongruence between political
vocabulary of decolonization with communal patters of inclusion and exclusion. On other
hand, the linguistic and intellectual connections made between race and nation signify
Mauritius’ position with the broader geo-political space of the southwest Indian Ocean, a
space where race and nation were never terms exclusive to themselves, and where histories
of “Africa” loomed large within discourses of racial difference and civilizational expansion
and contract. The process of building a shared notion of community and leveraging that idea
to interpret historical change and contemporaneous political issues reflects John Kelly and
Martha Kaplan’s analysis of “community…as a fundamental political institution” in late-
colonial Fiji.248
This erasure, or more precisely this non-inclusion, in state census calculations of
terms like black, Africa, Creole, or mazambik, does not mean, however, that they had no life
in the informal, daily calculations of race. The use of the term to describe Coralie’s failed
candidacy in the middle of the century points to its salience in the everyday vernacular of
black life in mid-century Mauritius as a strategic re-appropriation of a history of violence.
And even by the early twenty first century, mazambik has endured as a form of self-
identification, while retaining forceful derogatory identification of Afro-Mauritains. As one

247 TJC/ Vol. 3/ Interview 022_ 27062010/ p. 547.

248 John D. Kelly and Martha Kaplan, Representative Communities: Fiji and World Decolonization (Chicago: University

of Chicago Pres, 2001) .

110
Afro-Mauritian resident noted in an interview with the TJC on the legacies of slavery in the
island, mazambik endured as a societal burden and slur:

My biggest suffering is in the lack of self-esteem. Because my father was mazambik,


my mother’s family rejected him. Creoles still have disdain for themselves. He cannot
accept himself. It’s a bad start in life. It has been hard for slave descendants, because
the slave system is an economic system. The Catholic religion is the official religion
of this system. 15 articles on Code Noir talk about the Catholic Church as a partner
of this system. It is still damaging the descendants, by stigmatization. You remain
tikreol for life whatever successes you have.249

Embedded within this observation is a comment on historical and civilizational difference


that undergird twentieth century racial thought in Mauritius, namely that the contemporary
Afro-Mauritian Creole identity is marked both one largely rejected by contemporary
Mauritian society and marked by specific historical narratives: slavery, the legacies of French
racial governance, and the complicity of the Catholic Church. Collectively, this shared
history produced the tikreol, in this interviewee’s estimation. Ti being the diminutive prefix
added to nouns in Creole that roughly translates to “little.”250
The use of the term mazambik in the pages of L’Épée in the middle of the twentieth
century should therefore be understood as a deliberate attempt on the part of the
newspaper—and we can assume Coralie—to address and cultivate a specific racial political
constituency—Afro-Mauritian Creoles—as distinct from the politically-mainstream mixed-
race Creoles. What that said, however, Coralie’s candidacy as a member of Jules Koenig’s
PM required a deft balancing act in that it encouraged Afro-Mauritian political participation
in Creole party whose leadership was constituted by a very different people within the
broader Creole spectrum. In one conversation, for example, Gaby and Sondoo, parse out
whether or not Jules Koenig was, in fact, a “true Creole.”251 They concluded that he was.

249 TJC/Vol. 3/Respondent 14, p. 37.


250 “ti” as a prefix in Kreole used as a diminutive and is an etymological inheritance from French, where

petit/petite signifies smallness. In Mauritian Creole its not only used as a suffix, but also within nouns
themselves. Papa/Piti translates as Father/Son, for example. Ti-Kreole, therefore, is little Creole.
251“La Population Général: Jules Koenig est un ‘Creole’” L’Épée, 25/2/1959 - 4/3/1959.

111
From the pages of L’Épée, readers learned that tracing ancestry to continental Africa
through the slave trade could define Afro-Mauritian identity and affirm a diasporic notion of
mazambik. This dual result most saliently achieved by emphasizing the work that Afro-
Mauritians had done for the building of the colony. In one cartoon published in the weeks
before Coralie’s standing in the municipal election, the paper showed a shirtless black man
“burying alive” a pit of light-skinned people who represented the “anti-black” establishment
of Mauritius, also referred to as “our communal adversaries.”252 The imagery and language of
a communal response to racism affirmed an image of blackness tied to national labor, yet a
labor largely ignored or exploited by non-black Mauritius. As the image went on to affirm:
“the discipline of men like us continues to confound men of color [those who would also be
part of the larger “Creole” population], Hindu-Mauritians, and Muslims, who continue to
court us…is the first line in our attack and defense.”253
The translation of racial identitarianism into political action came to a head in the
1959 general election. L’Epee argued for a black awakening on the island at the moment of
the elections in the colony. Indeed these were critical elections that would ultimately lay the
political groundwork for the 1961 talks in London that would begin the move towards
political independence. Ultimately, the Parti Mauriciene ended up sending a delegation to
London, but as the pages of L’Épée showed, however, there was little hope that either the
PM or any other politician or political party in Mauritius had the interests of Afro-Mauritians
at heart. The paper’s efforts shifted from electoral sloganeering to arguing for a larger
cultural and political “awakening” for Afro-Mauritians. It did so in a number of ways: by
deepening its anti-Hindu bend and by locating the future of black Mauritian politics in
radical syndicalism.254 It should be noted, however, that in all likelihood the political salience
of syndicalism had limited appeal beyond mixed-race Creole urban artisans and
dockworkers. Many Afro-Mauritians did not work in industries where unions existed:
agriculture, fishing, and salt production, to name a few.

252 “Enterrons Les Vivants” L’Épée, 4/3/1959-11/3/1959.

253 “L’Enfoussier a l’ouvrage” L’Épée, 11/3/1959 - 18/3/1959.


254 The paper ran, for example, a series on the benefits of beef consumption and lobbied for its increased

importation from nearby Madagascar.

112
Even after Coralie’s defeat, the orientation of the black political imaginary remained
directed towards continental Africa. The embrace of syndicalism, while itself indicative of a
broader intellectual engagement with a global lingua franca of revolutionary socialism, was
paired with an effort to link the potential for racial and class liberation in Mauritius with a
growing discourse along the same lines in other parts of Africa. L’Epee, for example,
encouraged Mauritians to consider applying for the new African Labour College in Kampala,
Uganda. The college was a site from where the intellectual and political genesis of African
syndicalism would, ostensibly, grow the world over.255
The paper also explicitly articulated a notion of diasporic belonging for Afro-
Mauritians as a necessary corollary to the Indo-Mauritian affective and political connections
to South Asia, as well as to other parts of the world, in fact. One “dialogue” between Gaby
and Sondoon for example, displays the power of the diasporic community at work, as well as
intellectual distinctions between notions of race, nation, and citizenship. Gaby begins:

Gaby: What’s your opinion, Soondron, of the speed with which my country is
advancing towards winning its independence?

Soondron: You think Mauritius is capable of winning its independence these days?
Are you crazy?

Gaby: It’s not Mauritius that I’m speaking to you about, but Africa.

Soondron: Weren’t you born in Mauritius….?

Gaby: …Don’t you know that everyone in our country has three nationalities?
Indians have three nationalities, whites have three nationalities, Muslims have three,
Chinese have three…what can we Creoles do who don’t have three?

Soondron: What do you mean?

255 “La College de Kampalla” L’Épée, 27/3/1959 - 3/4/1959

113
Gaby: It’s simple my friend! Indians…are descendants of people from India,
therefore they are Indian by decent, they are Mauritian by birth, and British by
citizenship. Whites are the same: French by descent, Mauritian by birth, British by
citizenship. Chinese the same, Muslim the same. So what are we to do, we of African
decent who have the right to make a claim to a Creole [kr: patiwayou] king, like any
other race in this island?

Soondron: Ah Gaby, you are the first person that I’ve met who is happy to claim
decent from the Zulu [kr. Zoulou] in this country256

As in earlier observations highlighting the spatial production of race in Mauritius, this


fictionalized exchange also shows the slippage of terms like nation, race, and citizenship.257
For Gaby, and, one would presume, given that this conversation was published in L’Épée, by
extension for most Afro-Mauritians, affirming historical links to continental Africa was not
incompatible with an individual’s existence as a Mauritian. In fact it was a critical component
of being Mauritian; that is to say, there was an explicit acknowledgement in Gaby’s plea for a
connection to “Zulu” and African ancestry that Black Mauritians needed to secure ancestral
roots outside of the island, just as Indians, Chinese, and White Mauritians could do as well.
Nevertheless, it would seem that at the beginning of the 1960s, the vernacular of
Afro-Mauritian social critique and political belonging lay in a growing call against the specter
of Hindu domination, a communal fear articulated by a number of political parties, and by
growing syndicalism. By March of 1960, however, that would change, as the trauma brought

256 “Silence! L’Afrique Vous Parle…” L’Épée, 13/4/1960-20/4/1960 Original Kreol reads as follows: Gaby:

Comment to trouve ca Soondron, to trouve vitesse qui mo pays après advancer pou gagner so l’indépendance?
Sondroon: To croire l’Ille Maurice pou capave gagne so l’indépendance ene zour? To pas trouver to malade toi
la? Gaby: N’a pas pou Maruice qui mo prés cause are toi. Lors L’Afrique…Soondron: Qui, to ne plis Mauricien
estere la? Gaby: To pas connais qui sacque dimoune énan trois antionalités dans nou pays Maurice la? Indien
énan trois nationalités. Blancs énan trois, Mizilman énan trois, Sinois énan trois, qui faire nous creole nou n’a
pas pou gagne droit énan trois?. Soondron: Explique moi ca me guetter? Gaby:Li simple, mo camarade. Ene
Indien de Maurice c’est éne bougue qui se grand dimoune fine sorte dans l’Inde; donc li ene Indien par
descendant, li ene Mauricien par naissance et Britannique par size, Sinois pareil, Mizilman paeril; qui faire nous
creole de déscendance Africaine nous n’a pas pou énan droit etre African par descendant comment sacque le
roi patiwayou sacque communauté ca pays la? Soondron: Ah Gaby, premier dimoun qui mo trouver qui va
content vine dans éne dscendant Zoulou dans ca pays lá: Toi.
257 Hookoomsingh also defines patwa as a derogatory term for black Mauritians, and zulu as another term of

Afro-Mauritains. Hookoomsing, Diksionair.

114
by cyclone Carol would not only physically reshape the island, but also provide all
Mauritians, and in particular Afro-Mauritians, a new set of symbols, reference points, and
discursive strategies to affirm community and mark difference between and amongst each
other.
As the cités filled with new residents towards the end of the 1960s, the racial
landscape of the island changed. The vast majority of cité dwellers were, and indeed continue
to be, Mauritius of African decent.258 As a consequence of the historical and socio-economic
position of Afro-Mauritians, cyclone Carol was understood to have had a particular effect on
their lives and livelihoods. As Roseabelle Boswell has noted, the cités are linked in the
historical memory of Afro-Mauritians to cyclone Carol and the broader question of le malaise
Creole.259 Carol was described as “the hand of God” in L’Épée, and a number of stories
published in the years after its landfall tracked the construction of the cités and the spatial
reorganizing of the island.
The movement of Afro-Mauritians into urban and semi-urban spaces brought to the
fore new questions about the uncertain social and political future of Mauritius. As outlined
in the first section of this chapter, the prospect of “communal” politics imbued the political
landscape with fear and suspicion that racial tensions might impede the political and
economic development of a future independent nation of Mauritius. These social tensions
came to a head with a series of explosive race riots in the weeks and months before and
immediately following independence in March of 1968 between Muslim Indo-Mauritians at
the “General Population,” i.e. Afro-Mauritian “Creoles.”260
These were not the first signs of racial tension in the island. In 1964, for example,
the town of Vacoas was nearly consumed with unrest when a group of Hindu men attacked
two Muslim men they mistakenly believed to have been drug dealers and petty thieves.261
The violence that plagued the colony around the moment of independence revealed the

258 Guy Delforge “Enquete Sociale: La Vie Sociale dans les Cités C.H.A et E.D.C des Plaines Wilhems,”

(Henceforth “Enquete Sociale”) L’Institut pour le Développment et Les Progress”, (Port Louis: Joint
Economic Committee Rogers & Co. Ltd., 1972), p. 12 “Composition Ethnique.”
259 Boswell, Malaise Creole.
260 Gorah Dassut “A Plea for Peace,” Week-end, 28/1/1968.
261 “Intercommunal Relations, Mauritius Intelligence Report, March 1964” BNA/CO/1036/1219.

115
extent to which race had become the political idiom of mid-century. The riots quickly cast
into doubt the viability Mauricianisme, or any other articulation of a multi-racial utopia into
doubt. However, the riots also needed an explanation beyond just “racial tensions.” It was
during the riots that that the specter of the cité emerged as the site of explanation; of national
shame and transgression; as incubators of racial instability.
The newspapers on the morning of April 3, 1968 revealed the how central the cités
had become to anxieties over racial violence. Ever since the beginning of the year, the colony
had been struggling with violence between Muslims and Afro-Mauritian Creoles that were
rumored to have developed within the estates ringing Port Louis. On April 2, 1968,
however, the colonial government brought the fight to the cités. While the island had
ostensibly attained political independence around four weeks earlier, a group of British
soldiers were flown in from Malaya, fresh from fighting its own armed insurrection,
providing the government with an armed battalion to quash the violence that had gripped
the island’s urban areas. In the early morning hours of April 2, these soldiers surrounded the
cités of Vallijee, Roche Bois, and Martial, all within the urban zone of Port Louis. The city
had been under a curfew for around a week at this point, with police and military efforts
reportedly recovering large caches of weapons owned by “gangs.”262 The violence in Port
Louis was thus initially tracked to the cités. But these estates in particular, however, were
distinct from other regions of the island. They were not only occupied by Afro-Mauritians,
but also with other members of the urban poor who had been displaced by Carol, Indo-
Mauritian Muslims in particular. The pre-dawn raids uncovered a variety of offensive
weapons. Twenty-three people were arrested for violating the curfew; two, on suspicion of
murder.263
Beyond the association of racial violence with the cités was the question as to what
social relations would be reproduced in light of their construction. Mauritius, like its Indian
Ocean neighbors in Kenya, Tanzania, Malaya, Singapore, Burma, and others, was engaged in
a public debate over how to accommodate a multiracial democracy, how to rationalize its

Multiple Articles, Week-end, 20/3/1968-28/3/1968, Also: “Disturbances and Major Incidents” Annual
262

Report of the Mauritius Police Force and on Crime for the Year 1968. Week-end was the Sunday edition of Le
Mauricien a paper described by British intelligence files as “middle of the road.”
263 “Vallijee, Roche Bois, et Cité Martial,” Week-end, 3/4/1968.

116
history of racism with the prerogatives of a Hindu majority, as well as how fit those issues fit
into a context of Afro-Asian political cooperation that had gained currency amongst political
elites in newly decolonized nations after the 1955 Afro-Asian meeting in Bandung,
Indonesia. Indeed concomitant with coverage about the violence at the moment of
independence were editorials on Afro-Asianism as a prophylactic against future racial
tensions. For many authors, Afro-Asianism seems to have been a global corollary for
Mauritianisme.264 As one editorial argued, “African and Asians have first to live in harmony
with our respective continental peoples…Europe is powerful! America still more powerful!
Asia and Africa can and will match them…the Afro-Asian dream will come true, whether in
ten or one hundred years.”265
These riots were heralded twenty years earlier in Durban, South Africa, where
explosive violence between Indians and African in 1949 also thrust the question of racial
cooperation to the fore of public concern. In Durban, as it would be twenty years later in
Mauritius, questions of the role that an Indian diasporic community would play in the
development of an African country despite an increasingly global language of Afro-Asian
solidarity.266 As Mauritianisme and Afro-Asianism emerged as salient idioms of domestic and
global political engagement across races, the cités became emblematic of a transgressive racial
communalism. Some feared that the cités were an unofficial form of South African style
apartheid, in particular in the light of the recent violence.

“above all one very serious dilemma. Will refugees be able to reintegrate into their
old lodgings, (those of course which have not been burned to the ground) for the
idealist who always respond, ‘naturally, they must reintegrate. It’s only like that will
real peace come between communities, etc”. Only realities know well that this is
impossible! How many refugees will accept to rent a house in a dangerous
area?...They want to be able to sleep soundly, and where a husband who leaves for
work will not be constantly asking where his wife and children are. We already see

264 Maxime Celeste “Asians, Africans, and Europeans” Week-end, 1/3/1968.


265 Ibid.

266 Jon Soske, Internal Frontiers: African Nationalism and the Indian Diaspora in Twentieth Century South Africa (Ohio

University Press, 2017) Chapter 3.

117
this happening, though: “there are already Creole neighborhoods and Muslim
neighborhoods. And each time that we create these barricaded ‘ghettos’,
‘communalism’ wins a bit more territory and the cause of peace sinks lower.”267

These worries about violence and racial integration, exemplified through the 1968 riots and
their relationship to the cités evidence a growing fear that the island was slipping into a de-
facto form of communal living.

Changing the Social Landscape: Constructing the Cyclone Estates

Cyclone Carol was historic. The storm’s landfall in the first week of March of 1960
transformed Mauritius. To this day it holds the record for both the lowest barometric
pressure and the highest wind speeds ever recorded on the island. 268Throughout Port Louis
and other towns on the island, the homeless “roamed the cities” looking for bread and for a
roof to sleep under.269 To accommodate them, local governments opened refugee centers,
converted public schools into temporary shelters, and began to immediately distribute tools,
plastic sheeting, and bamboo rods to encourage people to rebuild to the extent that they
could.270 As in the aftermath of previous storms, the governor and members of the colonial
administration stressed the importance of “self-help.”
Of course, “self-help” was not equivalent to having a sufficient plan for rebuilding
the colony.271 The damage wrought by Carol was catastrophic to the electrical grid, to
transportation networks, and to water reservoirs.272 Above all, the starkest lesson Carol
taught the colonial government was the need for housing infrastructure. Initial figures

267 “Et maintenant, quoi?” La Vie Catolique, 4/2/1968.


268 Padya, Les Cyclones a Maurice: Un Survol de 1500 a 1960 (Carol) (Port Louis: Education Production Ltd) .
269 “Homeless Roam City without Bread”, Mauritius Times, 11/3/1960.

270 Crown Agent Report” BNA/DSIR/3479, 1960, Also: “Secretary of State’s Visit”. BNA/DSIR/3479, 1960.
271An initial report? not provided by the governor on the plan to bring in an expert to provide town planning,
however, indicated that he would have preferred any plan to be part of a broader “rehabilitation after the
cyclones” through the provisions of employment opportunities in rebuilding. Ibid.
272 Ibid.

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between the two storms of 1960—Alix (which made landfall on January 19) and Carol—
placed the number of residences destroyed between eighty and one hundred thousand.273
This number was smaller after a more thorough accounting, but there was difficulty initially
in evaluating the extent to which dwellings were destroyed or damaged. This level of
destruction revealed the weakness of most Mauritian housing structures and the relative
disinterest of the colonial state in imagining the construction of adequate housing. The 1952
census revealed as much. Despite some aborted attempts at instituting a nation-wide housing
plan, housing infrastructure across the colony was for all intents and purposes non-
existent.274 At the time, census officials reported that there were approximately one hundred
thousand dwellings it deemed to be “hovels,” and fifty thousand were judged to be
“huts.”275 Hovels were defined as “a small dwelling cheaply built and in a state of disrepair.”
Huts were “a small dwelling made of cheap of flimsy material such as bamboo, ravenal, or
straw with a thatched roof.” There were smaller numbers of “cottages,” “better class
homes,” and around thirty five hundred “mixed tenements.”276 The cyclones, however, had
revealed the extent to which the colonial state had effectively turned a blind eye to the
question of housing.
Many of the political parties at the time saw the landfall of Carol as a political
moment to be seized. Almost immediately, Labour Party leader Seewosagur Ramgoolam and
Minister of Labour Veerasamy Ringadoo went to London to lobby for reconstruction
funds.277 Ramgoolaam and Ringadoo’s trip was viewed with suspicion by many of the other
political parties at the time who had already seen Labour as the party that had embraced
British plans for gradual independence, and their trip for funds appeared at face value as a
way to position Labour as the delegator of reconstruction funds and political largesse.

273 Mauritius Legislative Council (MLC), Sessional Paper No. 8 of 1960 (MHL 11/1/1), “Cyclone Housing

Program”. Pp, 1-2.


274 See, for example: P.M. Aldred. Colony of Mauritius “Report on Estate Housing, Slum Clearance, and Town

and Regional Planning in Mauritius” Publication 29, 1946 and British National Archives (BNA/) BNA/CO
167/931/2 “Report on Slum Clearance.”

275 Colony of Mauritius Central Statistical Office, Census 1952 and its Dependencies, Part I.
276 Ibid.
277 J. Fulena, Mauritius Intelligence Committee “Cyclone Carol: Intelligence Report, February 1960”

BNA/CO/1036/704.

119
Conversely, the Independent Forward Block party (IFB) under the leadership of the
Bissondoyal brothers was officially excluded from any governmental negotiations on
reconstruction, and as such it vehemently insisted that loans be extended to people who lost
their homes and that reconstruction begin immediately.278
The destruction brought by the storms spurred the legislative council to act.
Approximately two weeks after the landfall of Carol, debates began in the legislative body to
devise measures to better confront the threats to substandard housing that cyclones posed.279
The charge for the colonial government to take up the task of providing cyclone-proof
housing, or at least access to it, was taken up by two members in particular: Jay Narain Roy,
representing Plaine Magiene, and Gaetan Duval, an up and coming Creole politician of the
PM from the town of Curepipe. Roy and Duval figure prominently in the debates in the
Legislative Assembly: Duval in particular as a champion for specific housing policy directed
towards the Afro-Mauritian population and Roy as a moral voice for the importance of
cyclone reconstruction. Highlighting these two actors shows that the high politics of 1960s
Mauritius was not merely a set of negotiations between political elites and the British
colonial state towards independence, as it usually the case, but rather that members of the
legislative assembly saw the aftermath of Carol as a salient moment to engage questions of
race, reconstruction, and the future politics of Mauritius.
In late March of 1960, when the council met for the first time after the storm, Roy
emphasized the human cost of the storms and the opportunity that the cyclones presented
for a reorienting of Mauritian society. Roy was a third-generation immigrant whose family
had come in the 1861 to work as a sirdar, or field overseer on the sugar fields of Mauritius.
Like most Mauritians, he traced his ancestral lineage to Bihar, in the foothills of the
Himalayas in north-central India. As a child, he was identified as having an inclination for
academics.. His family sent him to India at age sixteen to study under Pandit Banarsidas
Chaturvedi, and Pandit Madan Mohun Malaviya. He would then enroll at Allahabad
University where he concentrated on English literature and Law. After graduating with a law
degree, he began to work closely with the Indian nationalist movement, and with Gandhi in
particular. After a catastrophic 1935 earthquake in Bihar, Gandhi asked Roy to work on the

278 Ibid.
279 Sewoosagur Ramgoolam, Our Struggle; 20th Century Mauritius (Vision Books, 1982) p. 104.

120
reconstruction effort under the guidance of the future president of India, Rajendra Prasad.
This was a formative time in Roy’s life. It was during two years of work on reconstruction
after the Bihar Earthquake when he refined for himself a number of ideological and
intellectual commitments: Gandhian nonviolence and Marxian social theory in particular.280
And it was in working on his primary task in Bihar—to found a new post-earthquake
village—that his political commitments came into view. Minapur, as the village would
become known, proved exemplary of the political possibilities opened by the power of
nature. The razing of Bihar offered an opportunity to rebuild again, in Roy’s opinion. The
earthquake heralded the possibilities of revolutionary change of Marx with an agrarian vision
of development and post-colonial nationalism offered by Gandhi.281
The legacy of Minapur lived on when Roy returned to Mauritius and his work on
housing after Carol gathered force. After joining the Labour Party, he pursued a career in
politics. Having split with Labour, he was ultimately elected to the Legislative Council in
1948 as an independent candidate. He also held editorial positions at a number of
newspapers in the colony. In the weeks and months after Carol, Roy emerged as an
omnipresent voice in articulating a vision of post-reconstruction and, by extension, post-
colonial Mauritius. In both his columns in the colony’s papers and on the floor of the
legislative assembly, Roy spoke about the moral case for mass construction of cyclone-proof
housing. Beyond founding his own utopian village in the model of Minapur dubbed “Carol
Village,”282 he postulated that the destruction left by Carol and Alix could mark a new
beginning for the colony. In his article “Alix and Socialism,” published between the landfalls
of Alix and Carol, for example, Roy argued that Alix was “a blessing in disguise, as it enabled
an audit of political accounts.”283 “Mauritius is in the cyclone zone,” and, headed, “the basic
conception of welfare can only be weighed against the capacity of the average man to
withstand [this] scourge.”284

280 Interview with Ashoke Roy, (son of JN Roy). Port Louis, December 2016.

281 Interview with Ashoke Roy, Curepipe, January 2017.


282 Ibid.
283 JN Roy, “Alix and Socialism” Le Mauricien 26/1/1960.
284 Ibid.

121
On the floor of the legislative assembly not long after the landfall of Carol, he argued
for what he believed was the moral imperative for immediate and thorough reconstruction:
Spiritually speaking, it might be asked whether it is necessary to put shelters between
the sky where the Creator is said to exist and the head of man which creates
everything on earth. But, in fact, these shelters have always been a sort of
delimitation between the kingdom of God and that of men. And I believe it is more
than that. In the worldly sense it is the delimitation of civilization. To put it simply,
we may say: Tell me how your workers are lodged and I will tell you what is the state
of your civilization, and what is the state of your prosperity.285

PM representative and firebrand member of the legislative council, Gaetan Duval, similarly
argued for the importance for a massive, post-Carol public housing project as part of a larger
moral vision of the future of the island. Born in 1930 in Rose Hill and trained as a lawyer in
Curepipe and London, he joined Jules Koenig’s PM in 1955, when the language of
communalism had begun to take hold on the island. Duval’s career would flourish in the
1970s and 1980s as the leader of the PMSD (a new title the PM would later adopt), and
eventually as Vice President of the Republic. But it was his time as a member of the colonial
legislative council working on questions of post-Carol reconstruction that would cement his
reputation as a populist, earning him the nickname “King Creole” as a champion of the
Creole community. Indeed, Duval’s rise to prominence at the moment of Carol’s landfall
proved to quite significant. The PM had been undergoing a reshuffling of its leadership.
Koening was beginning to delegate power to Raymond Devienne, but all signs were that
Duval would ultimately direct the parliamentary presence of the party. Duval’s legislative rise
gave “new life” to the PM by beginning to advance populist legislation like the
implementation of mass housing projects as a way to “uplift the prestige of the party and at
the same time discredit” Labour.286

285“Housing Scheme” Address by JN Roy (Plaine Magiene) Debates of Mauritius Legislative Council, May 19,
1960, 1072.
286 J. Fulena, Mauritius Intelligence Committee “Cyclone Carol: Intelligence Report, February 1960”

BNA/CO/1036/704.

122
In the weeks after the cyclone, Roy and Duval pushed for the government to assume
responsibility for re-constructing a cyclone-proof island.287 A number of questions emerged
as to what kind of plan would be required from the government. Would reconstruction be
run through already existing and rather anemic local town and village planning committees?
What would a time line for reconstruction look like? And, most critically, who would mostly
benefit from these efforts? The organization of a plan for reconstruction was initially
delegated to Abdul Razak Mohammed, the national Minister of Housing, who was a
conservative politician, immigrant to the island, and 1958 founder of the Comité d’Action
Musulman political party (CAM). In the weeks following Carol he was tasked with
articulating the future housing projects that the colonial state would embrace. Mohammed,
with other members of the council, in particular Duval and Roy, urged London to organize
and fund a massive housing development program. Makeshift refugee camps that were built
in the immediate aftermath of the storms had become increasingly squalid, a political liability
for the government, and a short-term fix to what was gradually being understood to be a
structural problem.288 Additionally, the camps were largely located at far distances from the
original site of habitation for many refugees, as complaint that Roy brought to the floor of
the legislature on more than one occasion.289

287 In his own recounting of the aftermath of the storm, Duval noted his frustration with the speed with which

the government responded to the catastrophe. See: Gaetan Duval, Une Certaine Idee de L’lle Maurice, pp. 47-49.
288Richard Titmuss’ Papers. London School of Economics Woman’s Library Archives (LSE)

LSE/Titmuss/5/648. “Report on Seven Weeks in a Cyclone Refugee Camp, “International Volunteer Service”
A number of smaller “self help” organizations emerged, as well, in various municipalities to begin the
reconstruction process? Examples of these efforts included “La Solidarité Vacoassienne” in the town of
Vacoas, Plaines Wilhems. “Mauritius Intelligence Reports, March-April, 1960,” BNA/CO/1036/704. See also:
Gaetan Duval, Une Certaine Idee de L’lle Maurice, where Duval recounts how the centers were filled even before
the storm had ended.
289 J. Fulena, Mauritius Intelligence Committee. “Cyclone Carol: Intelligence Report, February 1960”

BNA/CO/1036/704.

123
Figure 4: “Refugee” Camp constructed after cyclone Carol, 1960 in Barkly, Beau Bassin. Barkly would
ultimately become one of the largest estates built in the following years. Central Housing Authority Annual
Report, 1965, Appendix B

A final plan was ultimately constructed which saw both London and Port Louis
tackle the problem collectively. In November of 1960, Ordinance Number 32 of the
Legislative Assembly created the Central Housing Authority (CHA), which was a Mauritian-
based governmental body purposed to oversee the re-construction of the island, an
important move which re-centralized housing policy throughout the colony after nearly
twenty years of increasing delegation of city and town planning organization to village and
town councils crated in the 1940s. Now, housing policy would be federalized under the
initial leadership of Abdul Razak Mohammed and the CHA. However, the planning and
construction decisions to be made through the CHA would initially come from metropolitan
and other colonial housing experts, in large part brought from other colonies in southern
and eastern Africa.
London initially sent George Atkinson, architect and head of the tropical housing of
the Division of Scientific and Industrial Research (DSIR) as a consultant to Ian Macleod, the

124
Colonial Secretary, to conduct a study of the effects of the cyclone and to draft a
reconstruction program. The task before Atkinson was herculean. His initial report to
Macleod confirmed a plan for upwards of twenty-five thousand homes and a budget
approaching nearly 1.5 million pounds.290 The stakes were clear for him: “Disasters like
Cyclone Alix […] and Carol […] reveal unsolved problems of bad housing and poverty.” He
identified a series of systematic shortcomings that he saw as the underlying causes of the
devastation wrought by the cyclones and the difficulties in rebuilding: a lack of housing data,
weak town planning systems, little systematic land subdivision and usage, rent control, and a
“an experienced institute for home savings and loans” for building.291 Atkinson confided to
a friend that because “so little concrete data” obtained, he had to “rely on my judgment
and instincts” to piece together a coherent plan of action.292 To his supreme frustration,
there was no qualified town planner in Mauritius at the time of Carol’s landfall.293 Within
days of his arrival in Mauritius, then, Atkinson realized the enormous scope of the project at
hand. His role was officially advisory, however. A.J. Archibald, Atkinson’s close friend, was
ultimately selected to lead the CHA, a tenure he would hold from the middle of 1960 until
1965.
Even before the formal outlining of a plan for reconstruction, however, the question
of Mauritius’ racial demographics moved front and center of how the government would
move forward with rebuilding. The appointment of Archibald was initially seen as a potential
risk because of his position as a member of the Johannesburg town council in nearby South
Africa It had been twelve years since the election of D.F Malan in South Africa. Malan and
the nationalist party began to officially pursue a domestic policy predicated on apartheid and
as a consequence, South Africa became a global pariah state. While tapped early by Atkinson
to be the most qualified for the position, an official confirmation of his appointment to lead
the CHA was delayed on the grounds that “owing to present feelings over events in the
Union [most likely the Sharpeville Massacre] it looks as if recruitment there is not possible at

290Atkinson to MacLeod. “Mauritius Cyclone Rehousings” [sic] BNA/DSIR4/3478.

Mauritius 1960: Assessment of Damage to Housing in Cyclones Alix and Carol, Together with
291

Recommendations for Reconstruction (Henceforth Atkinson Report). Introduction, 2 i-vi. BNA/DSIR4/3478.


292 Atkinson to Daldy, BNA/DSIR/4/3478, 26/3/1960.
293 Atkinson to Andrassay BNA/DSIR4/3478, 4/3/1960.

125
the present time.”294 He defended himself by arguing that “apartheid doctrines” were “so
objectionable in the eyes of the world,” that the Union government of South Africa “stinks
in the nostrils of the world.”295
Archibald’s defense of his liberal credentials seems to have convinced the colonial
government in Mauritius. Public Works Department (PWD) head Robert Newton
responded by thanking Archibald and noting that, in fact, the colonial government in
Mauritius was deeply concerned about how to manage race and racial division as it moved
forward with its proposed housing schemes. The “intensely difficult problems of Africa”
were best to be avoided in Newton’s estimation and appeared confident that Archibald’s role
in the Johannesburg local government would ultimately pose no significant hurdle to his
participation in the CHA.296
Archibald and Atkinson went to work immediately fielding offers for timber,
concrete, and other materials from neighboring South Africa, Kenya, and the Rhodesias to
begin enacting Atkinson’s master plan. The original cyclone housing scheme outlined by
Atkinson and passed in the legislative assembly in late 1960 advocated for seventeen
thousand timber houses to be built for sale and three thousand concrete ones to be occupied
by renting tenants. This plan was initially based on an assumption that a majority of the
houses which had been destroyed were those of “owner-occupiers,” that is to say people
who both owned the home and occupied it at the time of its destruction.297 This belief,
which was ultimately based on a lack of data on the nature of Mauritian homeownership,
was designed to encourage the rebuilding of these homes on plots that were already
connected to the island’s infrastructure (roads, water, and sewage). Part of the legislative
action to initiate the Cyclone Housing Scheme was to institute a model for financial
assistance, as well. Applicants had to provide some proof that their houses had been in the

294 Archibald to Newton BNA/DSIR/3479, 13/5/1960.


295 Ibid.

296 Newton to Archibald BNA/DSIR/3479, 23/5/1960.


297 “The Cyclone Housing Scheme,” Central Housing Authority Annual Report, 1965, paragraph 21. Although
it took nearly two years for this to change, there were early indicators that the plan was to be scrapped. In one
report circulating within the CHA in early 1961, there was “surprise” that Atkinson opted for a plan that pre-
supposed land ownership. See: Anonymous, “Land Proposals Regarding Sites Owned by Applicants”
BNA/DSIR/4/3479.

126
storm, and that they were unable to pay back a government loan or had insufficient funds of
their own to rebuild their homes.298
However, as an early analysis of the applications of those applying for assistance in
the reconstruction effort after the passing of the Cyclone Housing Scheme plan noted, the
vast majority of those whose homes were destroyed after Carol and Alix were not, in fact,
owners of either the land or of the homes they occupied. Following a second visit by
Atkinson in November of 1961, a new plan was adopted the next year, published as
Government Notice 71. The emphasis in the new plan was the construction of “housing
estates.” The construction of estate was an even larger undertaking than the initial rehousing
plan. Construction required the government to purchase land and to extend state
infrastructure to accommodate these new estates.299
Under the new plan, the number of homes was revised downward, to just over
fifteen thousand, and they fell into four broad categories.300 First, seven thousand homes
were to be built as part of multiple housing estates on land purchased by the Mauritian
Government in urban areas with access to waterborne sanitation, water, and road access.
Each of these homes was to be fitted with an outdoor kitchen or “cooking shelter” and a
wash closet.301 The second was an allotment of five thousand homes in estates on land also
purchased from the government in “semi-urban” districts which had access to “pit latrines
and public water fountains,” as well as to a “small cooking shelter.”302 Third, approximately
three thousand homes were to be on land owned by individual applicants; and finally, one
thousand small houses equal to five hundred standard houses were “to be rented to families

298 This would become a point of contention between Indian and Creole beneficiaries of the system.

299 “Land Proposals Regarding Sites Owned by Applicants” BNA/DSIR/4/3479.


300One of Atkinson’s, and later Archibald’s great frustrations was a pervasive belief amongst members of the
legislative council and ordinary Mauritians alike that concrete homes would be better suited for cyclonic
weather. And despite Atkinson’s own studies that showed that timber houses would also withstand cyclone
winds, it was ultimately decided to suite local tastes and opt for concrete. See: Atkinson to Archibald, 27 May,
1960. BNA/DSIR/4/3479.

301These homes were to be built at a cost of Rs. (Mauritian Rupees) 4,800, of which around Rs. 2,800 would be
loaned at 6.5% interest over twenty-five years, Central Housing Authority Annual Report, 1965, paragraphs 26-
28, i-iv) .
302 These homes were built at cost Rs. 4267, of which Rs. 2,527 would be loaned a 6.5% interest over twenty-

five years., Ibid.

127
unable to pay the installments for the standard houses.”303 These houses were also offered
retroactively to applicants who last their homes in cyclones Beryl in December of 1961 and
Jenny in February in 1962.304
In addition to efforts to build homes for ownership, one of the first actions of the
legislative assembly aggressively supported by Duval was tenant protection. In addition to
exposing a crisis in homeownership on the island, “cyclones [had] revealed difficulties
between landlords and tenants,” observed Atkinson on his arrival in Mauritius, noting that
tenants repeatedly lodged complaints against landlords for refusing to rebuild damaged
properties without assistance from the government.305 In addition to promoting
homeownership, the municipal government of Port Louis began passing laws formalizing
the relationship between landlord and tenant. These laws were modeled on the “Landlord
and Tenant Ordinance” passed in shortly after Carol, and they provided for the courts to
“order the landlord to effect the necessary repairs” to a dwelling house.306 The president of
the Port Louis homeowners association celebrated the laws, and noted that it was Carol that
finally allowed for the laws to be written.307
Contracts for the majority of the homes to be built in the estates for eventual
ownership were tendered to Longtill Ltd., a Mauritian construction company. Longtill
homes accounted for approximately half of the homes built in the estates. Rectangular
timber structures with corrugated iron roofs, the homes displayed a distinctive design and
were equipped with a number of cyclone-proof features like 22 -ounce galvanized iron roof

303 The third category would be built at Rs. 3,767 of which Rs. 1,995 loaned at 6.5% payable over twenty five

years. The fourth at Rs. 2000, Rs.666 at a loan of 6.5% over twenty five years. Ibid.
304 Ibid.
305 Atkinson, “Landlord-Tenant Relations” in “DSIR Assessment of Damage to Housing in Cyclones Alix and

Carol Together with Recommendations for Reconstruction” BNA/DSIR/4/3478, 1960.

306 Ordinance No. 13, of 1960: The Landlord and Tenant Control Ordinance. Collection of Ordinances,

Proclamations, and Government Notices (1960) (Port Louis: Government Printer, 1961). See: Juste v/s District
Magistrate of Port-Louis of 1st Division 1961, MR 70 and MR 235; Ruttun v/s Bissesur, 1987 SCJ 302;
Amarkhan and ors. v/s Hafeejee 1993 SCJ 350 in Urmila Banyamandhub Boolel, Case Law of Mauritius: A
Compendium II (under heading of “Leases’) .
307 “Une Lettre du Président de la ‘Port Louis Homeowners Association.” Le Mauricien. 29 March, 1960.

128
sheeting hooked onto steel bars attached to the homes’ foundations; galvanized windows
and doors; and a wall of two-inch concrete. The interiors of the homes were whitewashed.308
As Longtill homes were ubiquitous, they became synonymous with Carol itself. Cité
Longtill became shorthand referencing any homes or estates in the 1960s that were under
construction after the storm.309 The homes themselves emerged as markers of a new
moment in the development of Mauritius. One survivor of Carol observed that the cyclone
“taught us to take precautionary measures in the future,” and encouraged people start
building concrete homes.310 The first three thousand Longtill Homes were divided into seven
initial estates that stretched from the outskirts of Port Louis to the uplands of Beau Bassin,
along the main road that extended from the northwest corner of the island to its central
highlands.311 This initially construction emphasized already-existing patters of urbanization in
Mauritius. The area between Port Loui and Beau Bassin was already urbanized, but
populated largely by Hindu and Muslim Indo-Mauritians and Creoles. This physical space
became the heart of where “new” Mauritius was being built (See figures 3 and 4).
Occupation of these estates proceeded slowly at first, but a 1962 housing census
celebrated the fact that a gradual movement to the urban areas of the island was being
avoided.312 This had long been Atkinson’s suggestion, and it had been the policy advocated
by Archibald, Mohammed, and the CHA more broadly. The preference to resist the
urbanization of the island was a policy prerogative inherited from past governments on the
island in the course of implementing “development” schemes. As earlier chapters of this
dissertation have shown there was a pervasive belief amongst most colonial administrators in
Mauritius, and in particular amongst those staffed in the Ministry of Labour, that Indians
and Indo-Mauritians were culturally averse to city life. This belief undergirded the economic
commitments of the state to the continued cultivation of sugar. Just as the 1945 cyclones

Atkinson “Landlord-Tenant Relations” in “DSIR Assessment of Damage to Housing in Cyclones Alix and
308

Carol Together with Recommendations for Reconstruction” BNA/DSIR/4/3478, 1960.


309 Interview with Anonymous, Beau Bassin, December 2016.

310 MNA/Cyclone Carol Oral History Project/Interview with Sou Tourail


311Sir Alexander Gibb & Partners (Nairobi), Report on the Central Housing Authority Cyclone Housing Them for
Government of Mauritius Ministry of Housing, Lands, and Town and Country Planning, Part A, Section B, Housing
Estates Sites” p. 6, BNA/DSIR 4:3483, 1962.
312 Housing and Housing Policy, CHA, “Movement of Population,” Table 3., BNA/DSIR/4/3483 , 1962.

129
had not pushed the colonial state to diversify its economy, neither had Carol. Part and parcel
of Atkinson’s plan, therefore, was to ensure that enough agricultural space remained for the
continued cultivation of sugar. What thus emerged after Carol was the uniquely
contradictory policy position to increase the population density of the country without
urbanizing it.313
But even with the stated plan to limit urban growth while also retaining significant
tracks of agricultural land, many left homeless by Carol, Alix, and later by Beryl and Jenny
avoided the cités because they were simply inadequate. Indeed, in many cases living with
families, staying in resettlement camps, or in improvised housing after the cyclones was
preferable to the conditions of some of the cités. The government suggested that the initial
lack of interest in moving to cités was the reluctance of the poor to take on costly
mortgages.314 Both explanations were true. Most of the semi-urban estates were simply not
connected to the large infrastructure of the islands, to systems of roads, sewage and
electricity. It was also the case that for many of the poor who had lost their homes after
Carol, a long-term mortgage was financially untenable. The result was a yawning gap
between the number of houses being built and those occupied. Between the opening of
Vallijee in 1962 and the middle of 1965, the colonial government scrambled to provide these
estates with these basics. 315
As the initial project of building cyclone proof homes now burgeoned into a nation-
wide expansion of housing and infrastructure, a new problem emerged in the scheme: many
of the tenants found themselves in arrears.316 From the outset, the CHA wielded
extraordinary powers: it both arranged, paid for, and oversaw construction and acted as the
bank that would subsidize mortgages. But by 1964, thousands of homes were either empty
or occupied by squatters; many families who had applied to be eligible for an estate home
were late in paying both their mortgages and the leases on the land where their homes stood.

313 The benefits of high density living were foregrounded in most reports on the progress of the CHA, which

often noted that the economics of higher density construction mitigated costs in “building materials, land costs,
and development and service costs.” Housing and Housing Policy, CHA, “The Economics of Higher
Densities” BNA/DSIR/4/3483, 1962.
314 Housing and Housing Policy, CHA, “.Unfit and Unsanitary Buildings”, BNA/DSIR/4/3483, 1962.
315 “Mauritius Central Housing Authority Continuation of Programme” BNA/DSIR/4/3485.
316 “Arrears and Legal Action” Memorandum CHA 9/64, 1964, BNA/DSIR/4/3484.

130
317
A 1964 memorandum circulated within the CHA noted the improvisational nature of the
arrangements the CHA had engaged in the process of estate home allocations. There appear
to have been no initial checks into sources of income, savings, or networks of financial
support in the initial petitioning for estate homes,318 a fact that appears to be confirmed by
the implementation of a policy that one could successfully apply for an estate home based on
a demonstrated lack of income. As such, efforts to collect back payments on the home and
the land proved to be quite difficult. Government officials tasked with collecting rents were
urged to brace for a slew of explanations, and to practice “tact, persistence, and integrity” in
the face of “family problems” or other reasons given as to why payments were delayed. In
other instances, they were urged to be firm with those so significantly in arrears that they
were considered squatters.319 The CHA did offer purchasers the option of dropping their
mortgages in favor of tenancy, but ultimately, little legal action appears to have been taken
against squatters or those delinquent on mortgage payments.320 Indebted parties were initially
asked to come up with the money on their own terms, asked to sell their assets to make
payments, and could eventually be subject to eviction. But because there was no legislation
that governed the relationship between land lessor/mortgages recipient and the government
as the holder of those debts, legal eviction was uncommon.
Thus, the CHA was compelled to draft a system of institutionalized landownership.
This process essentially amounted to constructing a system for distributing land outside any
sort of market through the gradual transfer of crown lands to residents of the cités. It’s hard
to overstate the significance of this process, as land in Mauritius had been, and indeed
continues to be at a premium. In the centuries before the construction of the cités, the sale
and control of land was highly regulated. It was, in large part, under the of Franco-
Mauritians and, in the case of small farmers, some Indo-Mauritians by the turn of the
twentieth century.321 This system advanced by the CHA attempted to pair homeownership

Report on visit by A.F. Daldy, Tropical Division, Housing Research Station, 6-20 January, 1964.
317

BNA/DSIR/4/3484.
318 Ibid.
319 Ibid.

320 “Effect of the Rent System”, CHA Annual Report, 1973, p. 9.

Tijo Salvedra, “Balancing (re)Distribution: Franco Mauritian Landownership in the Maintenance of an Elite
321

Position,” Journal of Contemporary African Studies, Vol. 31, No. 3, 2013, pp. 503-521.

131
with landownership by lending? Approving home mortgages. Over a twenty-five year period
at six and a half percent interest. Because in most cases the land of the estates was crown
land, it would initially be leased to the homeowner for a period of ninety-nine years.322
Purchasers of estate homes, then, were to sign both a lease for the house and a lease for the
land.323 While it is clear that this gesture did not signal an immediate shift in wealth from the
state to private citizens given the length of the lease, it did mark a moment of significant
juridical inclusion for Afro-Mauritians who had to this point been marginal to all
bureaucratic efforts to institutionalize wealth through land ownership. Much like for free
people of color in the eighteenth century, and Indo-Mauritians in the late nineteenth century,
access to land on the estates after Carol? Should be understood as a transformational
moment when a historical marker of belonging—laying claim to land—became officially
extended by the colonial government to black Mauritians
And although there were significant initial problems—the lack of infrastructure, non-
payment of mortgages, and squatting—the colonial government, and in particular politicians
who were beginning to jockey for leadership roles in the political decolonization of the
island, recognized that it was in the economic and political interests of most parties involved
to ensure that most Mauritians were granted access to cyclone proof housing. On the floor
of the legislative assembly in Port Louis, Gaetan Duval’s star rose as a vocal defender of the
right to access cheap public housing, further cementing his growing persona as “King
Creole.” In the midst of the crises of unoccupied or unpaid for homes, and in the wake of
some of the CHA homes suffering damage from cyclone Jenny in 1962, the CHA came
under heavy scrutiny by the Legislative Assembly, in particular Housing Minister
Mohammed. Duval swiftly came to the defense of the organization, arguing that the CHA
needed more funding and oversight, but that its core mission remained unchanged. Two
years later, Duval would replace Mohammed as minister of housing.324 His role as housing
minister would become enshrined in black popular memory on the island. As one elderly

322 “Memorandum CHA 9/64: Arrears and Legal Actions” BNA/DSIR/4/3484. While Atkinson initially

overlooked the question of landownership, the plan to subsidize mortgages was suggested by Atkinson almost
immediately after Carol. See: G.A. Atkinson, “Mauritius Cyclone Rehousing: Individual Loans.”
323 Ibid.
324 R. Terrell, “Note of Meeting with Dr. Ramgoolam on 22/5/1964” BNA/CO 1036/1245.

132
resident of the cités who traced her ancestry to enslaves Mauritius who traced ancestry from
both the Seychelles and Pondicherry, but who identified as Creole noted, “There are many
Creoles in the cités. It’s after Carol that the cités were built. Duval did look after us very
well.”325
By 1965, the initial problems that had plagued the Cyclone Housing Programme
seemed to have been mitigated. The gap between houses built and occupied gradually shrunk
as roadways and sewage pipes began to link more semi-urban areas to more populous parts
of the colony. The problem of delinquent payment was also reduced by the fact that the legal
procedures that had been established to pursue those in arrears were both too weak to
pursue the ever growing amounts of delinquent tenants and those who were brought to
court were “hardcore cases…those who were not able to able to pay the monthly
installments and whose level of arrears had reached such a level they felt it was not
worthwhile to make any arrangements” to pay back the loan. The result was thus not a
collection of indebted capital but rather occasional evictions. And in many cases the
evictions were either never fully enforced or the evicted families would return at a later
date.326 And to this day, it appears that in some cases, tenants in CHA homes waited out the
government, and were ultimately awarded ownership of their homes after years of non-
payment.327 Efforts by members of CHA to pursue these tenants were ultimately stymied by
the newly-appointed housing minister Duval, preventing the housing director of the CHA in
his attempts to collect rents.328

325 “Respondent 26” TJC/VOl. 3/p. 47 “Dimounn lavil pli sivilize ki dimounn

lakot” Duval (Gaëtan) finn bien okip nou». In large part, however, many of the “foreign experts” who saw
themselves as a-political technocrats grew increasingly frustrated with the political jockeying that was taking
place amongst Mauritian politicians around the question of housing. See, for example, Archibald to Atkinson,
BNA/DSIR/4/3484.

326 Central Housing Authority Annual Report, 1966, paragraphs 44-49. By 1966 836 warrants for eviction were

procured by the state, but only 269 were actually implemented. It’s unclear how many houses were reoccupied,
either by the same family or by squatters, but there is little evidence that these infringements were ever pursued
legally. In fact the legal punishment for anyone “unlawfully occupying a CHA house” was a “heavy fine.”
327 Interview with Sophie Le Chartier, Tamarin, Black River, December, 2016.
328 R. Terrell, Notes of Meeting with Dr. Ramgoolam on 22/5/1964” BNA/CO 1036/1245.

133
Figure 5: Map of CHA Estate Locations throughout Mauritius, Central Housing Authority Annual
Report, 1965, Appendix B. The marked area highlights the space where the most and largest cités were built,
the area that stretches from Port Louis in the northwest of the island to Curepipe in the center.

134
Figure 6: Population Density, 1972. Main Report: Mauritius Shelter Assessment” United States Agency for
International Development (USAID) Housing Office 1978. The square again indicates the densest population zones in
the country, again in the area between Port Louis and Curepipe.

135
But as Mauritianisme and Afro-Asianism emerged as salient idioms of domestic and
global political engagement across races, the cités remained associated with a transgressive
racial communalism. In La Vie Catholique, the newspaper published by the Dioceses of Port
Louis, and one that was comprised of a readership that included both elite Creoles and Afro-
Mauritian Catholics, editorialists the cités were an unofficial form of South African style
apartheid, especially in the light of the recent violence:

“above all one very serious dilemma. Will refugees be able to reintegrate into their
old lodgings, (those of course which have not been burned to the ground) for the
idealist who always respond, ‘naturally, they must reintegrate. It’s only like that will
real peace come between communities, etc”. Only realities know well that this is
impossible! How many refugees will accept to rent a house in a dangerous
area?...They want to be able to sleep soundly, and where a husband who leaves for
work will not be constantly asking where his wife and children are. We already see
this happening, though: “there are already Creole neighborhoods and Muslim
neighborhoods. And each time that we create these barricaded ‘ghettos’,
‘communalism’ wins a bit more territory and the cause of peace sinks lower.329

Anxiety about the violence of the 1968 riots and their relationship to the cités evidence a
growing fear that the island was slipping into a de-facto form of communal living
In the years after independence and the riots that surrounded the events, social
research done by L’Institut pour le Développment et Les Progress (IDP), an organization
allied with the Port Louis Catholic dioceses, affirmed the fears that the cités marked a
potential pothole in the road to the modern nation state that initially appeared in
newspapers. Was highlighted by the social work that directed its efforts at conducting
sociological studies on Afro-Mauritian communities and which also worked broadly on
“development” within the black community in Mauritius. In the last few years of the 1960s
and early 1970s, for example, the IDP conducted a wide-ranging sociological study that
focused primarily on three particularly large cités in the Plaines Wilhems district, the most
populous on the island and home to the major towns of Rose Hill, Quatre Bornes, and Beau

329 Et maintenant, quoi?” La Vie Catolique, 4/2/1968.

136
Bassin. Published in 1972, this study of everyday life in the cités of Barkly, La Cure, and
Malherbes, all located in the quickly-urbanizing belt between Port Louis and Curepipe, was
aimed at responding o “the need” to understand the social and cultural effects of the
“irruption of the cités across the countryside of Mauritius,” to understand their “inhabitants,
professions, their economic situation, as well as cultural and social.”330
The picture painted by the IDP was stark. The three cités were all hotbeds of social
instability which the IDP attributed most concretely to the material impoverishment of most
its residents. Unemployment averaged around 60% for fathers, and around 85% for
mothers.331And while these numbers were quite high, the research also emphasized the ways
in which the respondents characterized the type of work they did and the moral qualities
needed for success in the work they did. The most popular job—what was considered the
most lucrative and sought-after position—was “mechanic,” while a doctor was considered
the least attractive, which most likely meant that a medical career registered as least
attainable. The most important quality needed at the workplace, the respondents of
Malherbes suggested, was “patience.”
Dissatisfaction with employment prospects was mirrored by broad disapproval with
what people estimated to be their broader social limitations engendered by life in the cités. In
some cases, the authors of the study suggested that “housing was sufficient” for the
happiness of residents. Data that pointed to the need for greater social engagement in the
estates through various civic organizations was interpreted as the estates lacking the
“equipment” for each resident to “flourish according to their capcities” (s’epanouir selon ses
capacites).332 The authors noted, however, that problems that plagued each, while often
intersecting, were locally specific. Nevertheless, one of the most significant conclusions of
the study was the worry that “the cités were becoming akin to societies in and of themselves,”
and were in need of a “social evolution.” As this observation shows, the IDP had come to
the conclusion that the cités, and by extension, Afro-Mauritians, were separate from
mainstream Mauritius. Indeed, IDP publications actively discussed a circumscribed vision of

330 IDP Enquete des Cités, Amédée Nagpen, “Avant Dire.”


331 IDP Enquete des Cités, Le Travaille: Personnes qui Travaillent en permenance” pp. 20-21.
332 IDP, Enquete des Cités, 54.

137
pan-African connection that lay in the work of the short-lived African and Malagasy Union
(UAM/OCAM in French), which sought to promote cultural and political connections
across post-colonial Francophone states. A series of articles published around a UAM
meeting in Mauritius in 1973 published its monthly newsletter, Flash, argued that Afro-
Mauritains were part of a broader part of post-colonial Francophone Africa.333
While the data produced by the IDP does reveal how the material differences
between Afro-Mauritians and other groups contributed to notions of how racial difference
was a lived experience in post-Carol Mauritius, its connections to the Catholic Church
render some of its conclusions steeped in the language of moral uplift and social
transformation. Flash often emphasized that “development” was, first and foremost,
demanded a societal belief in the “primacy of man.” Development was possible only because
“man, by nature, has the power to effectuate change.”334 Amédée Nagpen, historian of the
Port Louis diocese, vicar, and editor of La Vie Catohlique, outlined the role that the IDP
would play in Mauritian development: “the Mauritian society that we want to create is one
based upon personal responsibility.”335 IDP studies, therefore, helped develop an image of
the cités, and Afro-Mauritians more broadly, as distinct from Indo-Mauritians, Chinese, or
other groups on the island, but also, in part, products of cultural differences inherent to
Afro-descendant peoples. They also cemented the idea of the cite as a discursive touch point
to emphasize racial difference. An interview with one Indo-Mauritian homeowner in the
town of Quatre Bornes, Plaines Wilhems emphasized this point. When asked about the
processes of rebuilding after cyclone Carol, he suggested that Hindus and Muslims of the
island, they were provided some cash and materials to built their own homes on land they
owned, while black Mauritians were “given the key” to their homes in the cités…why didn’t I
get the same amount of money?”336 The observation that Afro-Mauritians were effectively
given homes at the government’s expense while other communities had to pay for and
construct their own homes is pervasive in contemporary Mauritius, and part and parcel of a
broader assumption that black Mauritians are not hard workers. The largesse of the state is

333 IDP Flash, No. 15, May 1973, p. 10.

334 IDP Flash, No. 11, December 1972, p. 5.

335 IDP Flash, No. 14, March 1973, p. 3.

336 Author Interview with Dharamlall Chooroomoney Quartre Bornes, December 2016.

138
also interpreted as the genesis for social instability, as the cités today are often associated with
criminal activity caused by cultural delinquency.
While the dominant popular assumption throughout Mauritius, and in particular
amongst white, Indo-Mauritians, and Chinese is that the cités are places of social depravity,
the testimonies of some of the residents of these estates points to a more complicated story,
one that highlights histories of social and cultural upheaval, but also one that emphasizes
transformation and, at times, racial emancipation and transformation.

“We are the New Mauritians”: Disaster, Race, and the View from the Cité

This final section evaluates the ways in which the memory of cyclone Carol and life in the
estates shapes modern notions of black identity in Mauritius. The history and testimonies of
those living in the cités explored here complicate standard narratives of race in Mauritius by
challenging the dominant explanatory models of Afro-Mauritian historical change. At its
most foundational, many Afro-Mauritians who now live in the cités and who lived through
Carol often (although by no means exclusively) remember the rebuilding process after Carol
as an emancipatory development in the history island rather than the moment they were
condemned to live in urban “ghettos.”
This section examines the testimonies issuing from a number of different cités into
consideration. To be sure, there are dozens of cités scattered throughout Mauritius that are
home to hundreds of thousands of people. And as it was emphasized to me repeatedly in
both casual conversation and in formal interviews, there is no singular experience or
narrative that encompasses the complexity of human experiences in the estates. One estate
resident, for example, reminded earlier interviewers that “each housing estate is different,
they are not all the same.”337 And just as cités are historically distinct from one another, so too
are the histories of cyclone, including Carol. Taking that diversity of experience into account,
this section does emphasizes the experiences of one cité in particular: Cité La Mivoie in the
Black River district of southwest Mauritius. While La Mivoie’s development is historically
specific, a consideration of the experiences of residents of La Mivoie alongside testimonies
from residents in other cités points to areas of thematic convergence regarding questions of

337 Quote attributed to Nichole Papeche, TJC/Vol 3. “Sak sité ena so diferans.”

139
historical memory that link questions of natural disaster, place, and race in twentieth century
Mauritius.
In the following paragraphs, then, interviews with residents from La Mivoie and
from other cités show how the cités have emerged as explanatory devices that help illuminate
the ways in which the geographical and temporal imaginaries that informed black identity
shifted after cyclone Carol.338 The historical memory of cyclones, and cyclone Carol in
particular, reveal these storms to have been moments of transformational change on both a
national and personal registere that was interpreted both as tragedy and as a moment of
celebratory change.
In 2010 a researcher from the Mauritius Truth and Justice Commission interviewed
sixty four year old Chantal Tonta in her home in the town of Piton, Riviere de Rempart.
Born in 1945, Tonta was married twice, had three children, and had moved throughout the
island in her youth. She noted that her father had told her that their antecedents had been
slaves who had ultimately “mixed with coolies (metizas entre cooli e esklav),” but that she herself
identified as Creole as a consequence of this racial mixing 339 In contrast with many others
interviewed, Tonta’s Creoleness was not predicated on a distant relationship with Africa. In
fact she went to lengths to describe her racial past as a mixing of Hindu, Muslim, and black.
It was precisely this mix she saw as emblematic of the island on which she lived; this made
her Creole.
Despite her connections to a slave past, however, her family had acquired a
significant portion of land around the city of Mahébourg, in the southeast of the island.
When asked about how her family acquired the land, she brought up what she believed to be
something of a contradiction that had emerged after the passing of Cyclone Carol. She
argued that while everyone lived in a “cyclonic condition” (kondition siklonik), it was puzzling
why some people just got access to land in such a short amount of time, while others like her
family had acquired it by law.340

338 Le Chartier’s study, “From Slave Camp to Cité: La Mivoie,” is a rich and densely researched historical

ethnography of La Mivoie. This section is deeply indebted not only to the study in the TJC, but also to multiple
conversations I was able to have with her about La Mivoie, as well her help in organizing my own interviews
with residents of La Mivoie.
339 Interview with Chantal Tonta, TJC/0H9/InterviewTC178/Piton/25 September, 2010.
340 Ibid.

140
The connections that Tonta makes between race, cyclones, and land are revelatory of
the significance of the landfall of cyclone Carol in the history of modern Mauritius, and in
particular how the storm and the rebuilding process was experienced by different
communities. If we can allow for a more thorough interrogation of the term “cyclonic
condition,” we can see that while tropical cyclones were meteorological events experienced
by all Mauritians, they were not experienced in the same way by Mauritians in differing social
positions. The effects of Carol were not experienced equally. Tonta’s mixed race past, a past
which made her ambivalent about claiming any connection to continental Africa, was what
in fact insulated her family against the violence of Carol. She noted that her land had actually
allowed for other people to take shelter on her family’s land as refugees after the storm.341
The struggles that the Creole community felt most acutely at the occurrence of
cyclones, and in particular the insufficient construction of traditional housing at moments of
disaster were also noted in the island’s iconic musical form, séga. Unique to the southwest
Indian Ocean, séga traces its roots to the songs and musical traditions brought by slaves. Also
called maloya in the neighboring island of Réunion, séga has long held a significant role in the
everyday lives of black peoples in Mauritius and the broader southwest Indian Ocean.342
Serge Lebrasse, one of Mauritius’ most famous and prolific séga interpreters , penned a song
shortly after Carol’s landfall entitled A Cause Sa Siklon La (Because of that Cyclone) which
expressed the kondition siklonik:

Everyone knows that two huge cyclones Alix and Carol have ravaged our little
country, made us suffer, from children to adults. Listen to one of them who has
suffered the most tell us about his distress,

The year 1960 I will never forget. I was eating once a day. I slept wherever I could,

All this happened because of cyclone Alix and her cousin Carol swept over
Mauritius.

Because of this cyclone, my house has turned into an accordion, my kitchen into a
fan,

“Dimun kin viv dan mem kondition siklonik ban kin gang longer in gang sa terrain la pou zotte kifer mo
341

mama p enkor epi si la kaliter la loi la sa sa ma mo pa konpren.” Ibid.


342 See: Roseabelle Boswell, “Séga as Voicework in the Indian Ocean Region” Journal of the Indian Ocean Region,

Vol. 1, No. 1, 2017; Basil Considine, “Priests, Pirates, and Opera Singers: Séga and European Music in
Mauritius, “The Little Paris of the Indian Ocean” Unpublished Doctoral Dissertation, Boston University, 2013.

141
Because of the cyclone six days I didn’t work…Sunday I rested,

I was the father of a child, I had my whole family, Carol took them, She took them
with her,

Oh God! How did Mauritius sin for you to destroy our church to stop us from
praying?

Because of this cyclone a lot of Mauritians today have known poverty,

One day when they will get old, they will always tell the story of what this cyclone
did.343

A Cause Sa Siklon La highlights the dangers that cyclones posed to the lives of black
Mauritians by lyricizing the destruction cause to homes, to families, and to the broader
community. The thematic touch points raised by Lebrasse—the destruction of the home and
the general impotence faced by Mauritians in the face of nature—are points in a larger
historical narrative for black Mauritians; one marked by the repeated landfalls of cyclones
and of the attendant loss of house, home, and property.344
When applied to the experiences of the majority of black Mauritians, the “cyclonic
condition” to which Tonta refers and which Lebrasse explores musically, a number of
themes appear which define Afro-Mauritian history. Specifically, because of their disruptions
in the geographical and temporal narratives undergirding notions of racial community,
cyclones and the consequent imperial and post-colonial state efforts to mitigate the risks they
posed hold significant space in the popular memory of black Mauritians. As evidenced in
the opening section, racial thought in mid-century Mauritius was predicated on assumptions
of geographical relationality (space) and temporal relationality (history). In the eyes of many
of those living in the estates, the material and social changes catalyzed by the construction of
the cités disrupted the inevitability and naturalness of these spatial and historical relations of
Mauritius. Moreover, as many testimonies also show, cataclysms like Carol are not always
considered mere natural “disasters;” they are just as often seen as transformative and
(re)generative forces that, in many cases, bring about moments of historical emancipation.

343 Excerpt from Serge LeBrasse, A Cause sa Siklon La, translation and transcription courtesy of Keemah

Ganga, National Library of Mauritius. Audio clip: https:/www.youtube.com/watch?v=jAjiUBSlCZ0.

Even the term that a house was crush “like an accordion” was an expression used by a number of people
344

whom I interviewed about the effects of Carol.

142
The geographical and temporal notions of racial identity that informed black life in
twentieth century Mauritius affirmed a shared collective history of trauma through slavery
and collective displacement from continental Africa. The construction of cités disrupted these
narratives in ways that fundamentally changed what it meant to be Afro-Mauritian. The
observation of one cité resident whose life was transformed by cyclones on the interstices
between natural disaster, race, space, and history in Mauritius evidences the powerful social
resonances of cyclones within popular conceptions of blackness in modern Mauritius:

There are still many families from slave ancestry who don’t even have a house today.
Indians came for sugar cane fieldwork and they had priority to have lands. Creoles
were left behind. They struggled but had nothing and still have nothing. Creoles are
those who don’t have houses. The land they lived on was not theirs. They lost it.
Many families have lost their lands...I have moved 14 times in my life because of
cyclones. Today I have a small cité house. Mother bought it after cyclone Gervaise
[1975]. I have lived in that house for 33 years, but we don’t possess it fully because
we are still paying for the land. There were 80 houses; these were the first houses to
be built after Gervaise. It was a “sample”. People have become owners of their
houses 50 years after Carol. Housing is a serious problem.345

Embedded in this observation from a person who traced his ancestry to Madagascar, and
who had little formal education, are a number of important social and historical observations
that link histories of race, land and homeownership, and natural disaster. But more
specifically, the observation evidences two parallel thematic touch points at the heart of
articulating racial belonging in Mauritius: the question of claims to space and that of
temporal permanency. Firstly, the historical narrative embedded here evidences the ways in
which land and home ownership were important metrics by which racial difference became
marked in the twentieth century. The explicit observation that “Indians” (Indo-Mauritians)
had priority to landownership gestures to morcellement and the development projects of the
post-war era that aimed to build Indo-Mauritian cultures of subsistence agriculture.

345 “Respondent 6” TJC/VOl. 3/p. 37. Around 2,000 extra homes were allotted for victims of Gervaise, The

Gervaise extension was also directed by the CHA. Main Report: Mauritius Shelter Assessment” United States Agency
for International Development (USAID) Housing Office 1978, p. 57.

143
Secondly, the housing instability of this particular observer’s also points to a broader
conception of temporal insecurity. Said differently, Afro-Mauritian life was understood to be
impermanent in the era between maroonage and the landfall of cyclone Carol. Informal
housing, little visibility in the state development schemes, and a marginality within the major
political parties in the country effectively removed Afro-Mauritians from the historical
touchstones of Mauritian history post-emancipation. The cités, however, through their
cyclone-proof fortitude and their financial integration with the state, offered a sense of
temporal place and of permanence in modern Mauritian society.
Both at the time of the construction of the estates and at the contemporary moment
in Mauritius, residents of the cités see these housing projects as heuristic devices that help
rationalize deeper histories of displacement and marginality. These histories rely on
dialectical relationships that lay at the center of black and Indo-Mauritian narratives of
Mauritian modernity, narratives that the cités, in part, undo: slavery contra indenture, India
contra Africa, rural contra urban, and home/land owner contra tenant or estate resident.
L’Épée announced the landfall of Carol dramatically: “Carol alias Godzilla” read the
headline on March 9, 1960.346 Immediately, the paper turned to the effects that the storm
would have on the black community of Mauritius, “We hope that for the fisherman who are
in trouble…that the government not allow any form of abuse, and that people will not try to
profit from the suffering of the poor.”347 The next week the paper called for martial law,
arguing that it was the only way for aid to be distributed equitably.348 In the following weeks,
the recurring “conversation” between Gaby and Sondroo noted what would take the
Legislative Assembly and the CHA months to understand, which is that for many landlords,
Carol would be a boon.349What was clear, then, was that even in the immediate aftermath of
the landfall of Carol Afro-Mauritians saw the storm not just as a physical trauma, but as the
potential for a social trauma. They were poised to be exploited.

346 “Carol alias Godzilla” L’Épée, 9 March 1960.


347 Ibid.
348 “Nous Voulons d’un Governement Militaire” L’Épée, 9-16 March 1960.
349 “Pour la Plupart des proprietaries, Carol n’est qu’une déliverance” L’Épée, 9-16 March 1960.

144
Reconstruction efforts after cyclone Carol fundamentally reshaped the social and
spatial landscape of Mauritius. It did so firstly by encouraging high levels of interior
migration.350 Through the late 1960s and 1970s, at the height of the expansion of the cités, the
linear path connecting Port Louis and the upland city of Curepipe expanded rapidly and
became the most densely populated part of the island. The cités, while not all located in
densely populated urban centers, were part of a broader demarcation between urban/peri-
urban and rural.351 That much of this population growth occurred in the outskirts of
municipal council areas reveals the extent to which the cities drove the increasing
urbanization of the island.352 In the historically impoverished region of Black River, for
example, many black Mauritians moved into densely-populated estates unconnected to major
urban zones, but close enough to sugar estate and salt production industry that finding work
was not difficult.353 Many estate owners in the region reportedly celebrated the construction
of cités in Black River after Carol precisely because the burden for housing their employees
was passed along to the state.354 The move from the southern costal regions of Black River,
however, was culturally significant as well. Many of the Afro-Mauritian fishing villages in the
southwest of the island were under the shadow of the mountain of Le Morne, a geographical
landmark which holds powerful cultural significance in Afro-Mauritian life, to urban and
peri-urban spaces on the island, in many cases in close proximity to larger populations of
mixed-race Creoles and Indo-Mauritians. Secondly, this geographical relocation sparked a
social one. The move to new areas of the island was accompanied with changes in
employment and with the social landscapes of the everyday. Homeownership suggested new

350“Human Settlement Patterns”, Main Report: Mauritius Shelter Assessment” United States Agency for International
Development (USAID) Housing Office 1978, pp. 13-19. See also: Report by J.P.J. Browne, CHA Controller,
“Housing and Housing Policy” BNA/DSIR/4/34/84, 18 February, 1964.
351Ibid.,During these years the populations of the new urban cities of Port Louis, Beau Bassin-Rose Hill,
Quatre Bornes, Vacoas-Phoenix, and Curepipe all grew, while “market towns” like Triolet, Goodlans, Rose
Bell, and Flacq in mostly rural areas largely saw little to now population growth. The report state there was “no
evidence” of migration to rural areas, p. 19.

352 Ibid.
353There appears to have actually been a marginal increase in the Black River population (in compared to the
national average). The urban areas in Port Louis and Plaines Wilhelm’s, however, dramatically outgrew each
other district. “Housing and Housing Policy” BNA/DSIR/4/3484, 18 February, 1964.
354 Interview with Sophie Le Chartier, La Mivoie, December 2016.

145
social roles, new relationships with the state, and a vernacular of place within conversations
on the possibilities of decolonization. Indeed for residents of the cites, the estates were
more often than not “slums,” as they are often described today, but sites for the
construction of a new Mauritius, one where black Mauritius could stake a claim to belonging
in the modern world.
La Mivoie was a product of the Cyclone Housing Scheme initiated by the CHA in
the immediate aftermath of cyclone Carol. The first settlement in the estate began in 1962
and 1963. As was discussed in the previous section, early settlers in the estate initially lost
their homes in estate due to inability to pay their rent. But, as many of the evicted CHA
tenants throughout the island strategies, evicted families often returned to the homes as
squatters and eventually waited out the government to become owners.355
Before the establishment of the estate, the land where La Mivoie now sits was
occupied by the remnants of former slave camps (kan), where a local population made up of
Hindi and Marathi speaking Indo-Mauritian and Afro-Mauritian Creoles lived. The kan was
constructed, in large part, from houses made of dung or straw (lakaz kaka or lakaz lapay,
respectively).356 Following the Labour Ordinance of 1922, which stipulated that sugar estate
owners had to provide housing for their employees, the camps flourished, as they drew
people searching for steady employment and who would be provided homes, or at least the
materials—like wood, dung, or straw—to construct homes in the region. Unsurprisingly,
however, many of these improvised homes were destroyed by Cyclone Carol.357
Carol was particularly catastrophic in Black River for the very reason that most
settlement was informal and unregulated. Black River was distinctly removed from most
development schemes in the colonial era, and in large part consisted of relatively remote
villages populated by black Mauritians decedents of marooned slaves from the pervious
century. It has had a long history of economic and social marginality within the history of

355 Le Chartier, “La Mivoie” p. 107. The houses in the kan were ultimately unable to withstands the wids of

cyclones, and were often simply destroyed to be rebuilt again. On the condition kan homes in cyclones, one
TJC spoke of their insecurity: TJC/0H9/AC/InterviewDJ129/Casenoyale/28June2010.
356 Le Chartier, “La Mivoie”., p 108.
357 Ibid.

146
twentieth century Mauritius,358 and in large part the duties of the district and municipal
councils within Black River were often managing everyday maintenance questions, and
referring those questions to the national government when necessary.359 In 1962, however,
members of multiple municipal councils within Black River formed an “Association of
Urban Authorities,” that appears to have been aimed at translating national housing policy
on a more granular level within the district, and in particular to apply national policy in the
cités.360
Where the District Councils, and in particular the Plaines Wilhems-Black River one,
exerted any local power was in the delegation of building permits and the wielding of state
power through cadastral survey. What 1960s cadastral studies and building permit allocations
reveal is the extent to which urban spaces, and in particular Port Louis, flourished during the
reconstruction period after Carol. Overwhelmingly, the municipality of Port Louis approved
the construction of “new concrete” residential buildings throughout the city to largely
Muslim and Hindu families, while in many cases also fielding petitions to cadastral officers
from tenants to lower land prices. 361 Similarly, many rural Hindu families used the initial
legislative act that created the CHA to apply for loans to rebuild their homes. These loans
were extended to families who offered land their already owner as collateral.362

358 For most of the period between the mid 1940s and independence, the district of Black River was governed

under a district council that included in the much smaller, but more densely populated district of Plaines
Wilhems, where most of the island’s population resided. District Council records reveal little effort at
infrastructure building or state planning in the region. This can be attributed both to the fact that the majority
of its population, Afro-Mauritians, were largely outside of colonial spaces of power, and that development
work was largely centralized, giving districts only a small amount of control over large scale projects. See, for
example, Debates No. 54, Mauritius Legislative Council, 16 Aug, 1949 for a broader conversations on
development in Black River.

359“Plaines Wilhems-Black River District Council Minutes of Meetings MNA/W8/3/1960.


360 “Annexure” Plaines Wilhems-Black River District Council Minutes of Meetings MNA/W/53/1960. See

question from Councilor E. Chang-Kye regarding the role the Association of Urban Authorities would play in
enforcing evictions from Longtill Homes in the district. Ibid.
361 “Municipality of Port Louis Engineer and Architect’s Department, Report to Works Committee (Multiple)

Building Units Approved by Mayor” in “Plaines Wilhems-Black River District Council Minutes of Meetings
MNA/W1/57/no 9-13/1966 For Cadastral Petitions, see: “Minutes, Cadastral Sub-Committee” in Minutes of
Meetings MNA/W1/57/no 6-8/1966. In almost every petition offered to the Cadastral Subcommittee,
payments for land ownership were reduced or postponed.
362 See throughout Le Mauricience, the published lists of CHA loan recipients: their names, villages, and tracts of

land used as collateral through the 1966/1967. Published under the recurring headline of “Cyclone Housing
Scheme.”

147
What these records show is that the financial resources that were directed into the
CHA and to local and district councils were wielded in the services of people who, while
lacking access to enough liquid capital to immediately rebuild, could effectively access the
wealth allotted to them through earlier eras of land ownership schemes, dating nearly a
century back to morcellement. In large part, however, these schemes were directed at Indo-
Mauritians. As a consequence, black Mauritians, on the other hand, were largely unable to
access these financial tools that were developed to rebuild the colony. It’s for this reason that
the Carol and cités hold special significance in the Afro-Mauritian historical memory.
Indeed, testimonies collected as part of the Truth and Justice Commission evidence
the perceived injustices that the cités attempted to correct. One participant noted that even by
the early 2000s,

There is a family life in the cités. There is mutual help. Many descendants of slaves
live in the cités. Could live in a coastal village People there know how to save
money363

The significance of the cités within the lives of Afro-Mauritians was evident not long after
their initial construction. A research assistant for the IDP noted as much in her work on the
sociological study the organization carried out in the late 1960s and early 1970s. While
walking through a cité in Plaines Wilhems, she noted one young man suggested to her that
the cités were experiments in the production of a new Mauritian society. “We are the new
Mauritians—in the city we are not tied to the traditions of the past, we look ahead.” This
observation, that the cités were both the sites for the production of a new Mauritian society
and as a space that rejected the “traditions” of the past emerged as a powerful discursive
commitment amongst Afro-Mauritians.
Within La Mivoie, for example, the notion that the cite marked a definitive break
from the past framed how many people explained the estate’s development. Indeed the
break with the past in particularly significant in this part of Black River because many of the
residents of La Mivoie and other estates in the region moved from the region surrounding
the mountain of Le Morne, a prominent geographic feature in Mauritius, UNESCO world

363 “Respondant 28” TJC/VOl. 3/p. 47 “dimounn lakot konn fer lekonomi.”

148
heritage site, and critical marker of historical place in the memory of Afro-Mauritians. As a
number of scholars have shown, the historical memory of Le Morne has shaped the social
landscapes of this region of Black River.364 The most prominent legend attached to Le
Morne, lyricized in the second epigraph of this chapter and in many works of Mauritian and
Indian Ocean World fiction, was of Le Morne as refuge for marooned slaved against the
bands of estate employees who sought to bring them back to the sugar fields.365 When a
group of soldiers arrived at Le Morne to inform communities of maroon slaves that they
had, in fact, been legally emancipated, hundreds climbed to the top of the mountain and
hurled themselves to their death, believing that the soldiers had come to re-enslave them.366

364 Boswell, Malaise Creole, 197; Teelock, Mauritian History.

See, for example, the second of the “Ibis Trilogy” by Amitav Ghosh, River of Smoke (Picador, 2012
365

For a similar phenomenon of slave suicide see: Marc Hertzman, “Fatal Differences: Suicide, Race, and
366

Forced Labor in the Americas” American Historical Review Issue 122 Vol. 2 ,2017, p. 317-345.

149
Figure 7: The patterns of migration between the areas surrounding Le Morne to the cités of Black River in the
twentieth century (red arrows) (TJC Appendix No. 2, La Mivoie)

The memory of slavery was, and continues to be central to articulating racial


difference in twentieth-century Mauritius. And this racial difference was evident in the eyes
of some Afro-Mauritians during the reconstruction process after Carol. The cités have
become both emblematic of a history of racial violence but also one of communal solidarity
in the face of historical injustice and contemporary marginality. One estate resident
observed, for example: “There is a family life in the cités. There is mutual help. Many
descendants of slaves live in the cités.”367 But the affective associations made by many Afro-
Mauritians between the trauma of cyclones with that of slavery that many Afro-Mauritians
make, in particular in regard to the destruction of Carol, is, at first blush, counterintuitive.

367 “Respondent 28” TJC/VOl. 3/p. 47.

150
Nicole Papeche, a resident of La Mivoie, explained to me, for example, that Cyclone Carol
“saved my family from slavery.”368 By the time Carol had made landfall in 1960, slavery had
been abolished in the southwest Indian Ocean for nearly one hundred and thirty years. The
assertion that Carol had spared her family from slavery at first blush thus appears
incongruous. Rather than interpreting Carol as a moment of destruction, however, Papeche
and other Afro-Mauritians saw the storm as a moment of rebirth. The cité was thus not
punishment but a way of entry into the mainstream of Mauritian economic and social life.
The earlier observation of one cité spoke to this rebirth by describing residents of the estates
“the new Mauritians.”
While popular discussions of the cités are replete with references to the legacies of
slavery, the move to urban and peri-urban areas was also interpreted as a move in communal
morality. As another resident observed:

Those who live in the cités have lost their home as a result of Cyclone Carol.
There are many descendants of slaves in the cités. The people from the
coasts are different from those of the cités. They are more hospitable.369

However, in another interview, a participant in the TJC noted that “Townsfolk are more
civilized than those on the coast.”370 These apparent contradictions in the ways in which the
moral registers of everyday life changed were present in my own interviews with residents of
La Mivoie, as well. Fanfan Calfir and Ambrik Zaly, two residentst in La Mivoie noted with
enthusiasm that the “new neighbors” and “good relationships” that were forged in the cités
were points of moral uplift. 371 “Life was improved” another woman mentioned. 372
Taken together, these observations on life in the cités point to ways in which black
life changed as a result of cyclone Carol. They gesture towards both a history of loss and of

368 Author Interview with Nichole Papeche, La Mivoie, February 2017.

369 “Respondent 19” TJC/VOl. 3/p. 47.

370Respondent 26” TJC/VOl. 3/p. 47 “Dimounn lavil pli sivilize ki dimounn


lakot.”
371 Author Interview with Fanfan Calfir and Ambrik Zaly, La Mivoie, February 2017.
372 Author Interview with Nichole Papeche, La Mivoie, February 2017.

151
historical emancipation. Loss of a generalized morality that developed within small coastal
communities, yet an emancipation from material and intellectual backwardness, hence the
references to urbanity as a more “civilized” way of life. But ultimately, what the cités did was
to break, in the words of an earlier interviewee, the vulnerability of the “cyclonic condition”
of black Mauritians.

Conclusion

In 1964, four years after Carol’s landfall, a collective of Afro-Mauritian singers, poets, and
artists convened a “nuit de sega,” or night of sega to celebrate Afro-Mauritian culture in the
shadow of Le Morne. To commemorate the event, a Mauritian poet, Philipe Lenoir, penned
a poem called “Ode au Morne.” In a number of stanzas he notes the deep connection
between natural disaster, Le Morne, and African identity. He wrote:

“…The cry of the slaves who threw themselves from the heights of the cliffs
Searching in death for the freedom relinquished
Still sounds along the walls where insects cling
Swirling in the embrace of the cyclone
Shouting their inability stop it,
As it ravages its summits [Le Morne] with wind and salt
Engraving the hieroglyphs of time…”373

Embedded in this stanza are clear linkages between notions of blackness, natural disaster,
and trauma—as Lenoir explicitly ties together the legend of the mass suicide of maroons and
the erasure of their voices through cyclonic winds. But in the next stanza, however, we see
Lenoir push through those tropes, heralding notions of rebirth, of transcendence over
nature, and in so doing a reaffirming of black life in diaspora:

373 Philippe Lenoir. “Ode au Morne,” in Nuite de Séga: Échos & Reflets de vieux “Morne”(Unknown Publisher,

1964.

152
…But let us leave these memories of nature for another day
Tonight the moon softens the edges of its [Le Morne] hard stone The coldest of
hearts opens this October night
As the drums reflect the ancestral rhythm held in the stars
And in ebony bodies trembling with an African soul…374

In these two stanzas lays the broader argument of this chapter: that tropical cyclones hold a
privileged place in the formation of black identity in Mauritius; and that they do so both as
moments of catastrophic loss and as transitional moments of emancipation. As the
preceding pages have shown, the building of the cyclone-proof cités shaped these notions of
a collective racial past and shaped debates over decolonization.
By the late 1960s, it was becoming increasingly clear that the housing programs
initiated in response to cyclones Alix and Carol had ceased to be merely projects of
reconstruction aimed at rebuilding the island, but rather they became constituent parts of a
broader housing policy in Mauritius.375 Homes were, by 1963, offered to those left homeless
by cyclone Jenny and by the mid 1970s to those who lost homes in cyclone Gervaise. By the
middle of the 1970s, the housing projects initiated after Carol were largely deemed a success
in both economic and social terms.376 Indeed following the storms in the 1980s and 1990s,
and in particular cyclone Hollanda in 1994, there was no accompanying housing crisis equal
to that seen thirty years earlier.
As this chapter has shown, however, there is little agreement throughout the island
about the ways in which the cités have shaped the lives of contemporary Mauritians. For
many, the cités are emblematic of the deeper pathology of le malaise Creole, whereas for the
estate residents themselves conclusions are less absolute. The notions of a break with the
slave past still endure, while there is also a frank assessment of the social problems of drug
and alcohol abuse in the estates. But what is clear is that the trauma of cyclone Carol and

374 Ibid.

375 Kirkness, Representative of Colonial Office in “Discussion with Premier of Mauritius, Meeting at Colonial

Office” BNA/FCO/141/12128, 12 May, 1966.


376Main Report: Mauritius Shelter Assessment” United States Agency for International Development (USAID) Housing Office
1978.

153
the process of rebuilding after the storm have been integrated into the popular history of the
island and the ways in which race is conceived of and rhetorically affirmed. Words and
names like Carol, cité, Longtill, have become imbedded into the vernacular of contemporary
Mauritius in ways that signal distinct historical experiences, but also participation in the
broader collective experience of the transformation of the island after the storm.

154
CHAPTER 4

MAKING THE CYCLONE-PROOF FAMILY:


OVERPOPULATION, CYCLONE RESCONSTRUCTION, AND CONJUGALITY,
1950s-1970s

Introduction

In the wake of cyclones Carol and Alix in 1960, as the previous chapter has described,
the colonial state embarked on a massive reconstruction program that sought to reshape
the built environment of the colony; to make it one that would be able to sustain the
landfalls of tropical cyclones. These so-called cités emerged as an important touchstone
in popular formulations of Afro-Mauritian identity. While today roundly considered to
be hotbeds of crime and social decay, they also mark a critical transformation in the ways
in which black identity took shape in twentieth century Mauritius. As objects of social
policy, they were meant to be, as Amartya Sen has described, “entitlements;” as much a
source of financial capital and economic recourse in times of catastrophe as they were
literal physical protections from the winds of cyclones.
While the previous chapter examined race and the cités, this one takes up the
question of how cyclone proof housing construction and urbanization shaped official
and popular conceptions of family, conjugality, and gender. For colonial planners and a
cohort of Mauritian politicians committed to a vision of Fabian state-driven
development, the cités became spaces to address a new anxiety that had gripped the
colony in the wake of the storms, which was that Mauritius was overpopulated. It was a
fear that dramatically declining death rates and spikes in births since the eradication of
malaria in the 1940s would render the island unlivable; its capacity to produce a
commodity-driven economy that could support a population pushed to breaking point.
Alix and Carol revealed the depths of this supposed crisis by bringing “to a head the
problems and paradoxes of Mauritius. [Alix and Carol] have made abundantly clear the
need to control population growth.”377 This chapter shows that the cités, and cyclone

377Richard Titmuss. Social Policies and Population Growth in Mauritius: Report to the Governor of Mauritius.” (London:
Frank Cass & Co. LTD, 1968).

155
reconstruction more broadly, emerged as a rich discursive field for developing material
solutions for overpopulation. The cités were particularly important because they were
spaces that allowed, by their very construction and organization, to emphasize a discrete
form of domesticity—the nuclear family that owned a new, cyclone-proof house—that
existed in stark distinction from that of the sugar-cane field family; of a father with
multiple wives and children.

Figure 8: A utopian vision of life in the cyclone estates. CHA Annual Report, 1968

This chapter analyses and deploys this aspirational conjugal unit through the
category of the “cyclone-proof family.” Drawing from Neel Ahuja’s category “dread life”
that sees the “management of bodily vulnerability” as a practice that “orients
reproductive futures against horizons of impending risk,” I argue that that the “cyclone

156
proof family” was representative of intersecting of efforts to reshape of the conjugal lives
of Mauritian families and the construction of cyclone-proof residences to confront
meteorological risk.378 For technocratically-minded colonial officials and local politicians
in 1960s Mauritius, the family and the home were co-constitutive social categories that
would insulate the island from future destruction caused by tropical cyclones. These new
families were to be the antithesis of the old families of the sugar cane fields. Rather than
being comprised of a single husband with multiple wives and children, mid-century social
scientists working in Mauritius emphasized the need for new cyclone-proof homes to be
occupied by nuclear families: one mother, one father, and no more than three children.
In understanding the development of this category, this chapter examines the growth of
a shared discursive field that linked conjugality and protection from natural disaster.
Reconstructing how visions of “impending risk” took on social and cultural salience for
multiple sections of Mauritian society requires an examination of the development of a
set of discursive strategies, the constituents that engaged with these strategies, and the
stakes various parts of Mauritian society found in them.
Historiographically, this chapter adds an analysis of social and cultural change to
a period whose history is dominated by narratives centering political change. Historians
of gender in Mauritius often focus on earlier centuries, where rich archival materials shed
light on the social histories of gender within the broader political economies of slavery
and indenture. 379 Whether it be the estate owner concerned about the reproductive
capacity of African enslaved women or the British bureaucrat concerned with ensuring
gender parity in a male-dominated colony like Mauritius, women—and the gendered
social positions they inhabited—have figured prominently in histories of Mauritius. But
much like how other chapters have noted the lack of social and cultural analysis of the
twentieth century, gender is similarly absent from histories of the middle and late
twentieth century. As the broader dissertation argues, however, cyclonic events

378Neel Ahuja. Bioinsecurities: Disease Interventions, Empire, and the Government of the Species (Durham NC: Duke
2016) iii.

Martina Carter, Lakshmi’s Legacy: Testimonies of Indian Women in 19th Century Mauritius(Moka, Mauritius:
379

Editions de L’ocean Indien, 1995); Marina Carter, Servants Sirdars and Settlers: Indians in Mauritius: 1834-1874
(Oxford Univeristy Press, 1995) Megan Vaughn, Creating the Creole Island: Slavery in 18th Century Mauritius) .

157
effectuated historical convergences, and in the wake of Carol questions about disaster
reconstruction, debates on the future sustainability of the economic model of the colony
homed in on the roles that women, men, and the family would play in the post-cyclonic
future. This present analysis, therefore, puts mid-century Mauritius in conversation with
a broader global historiography of gender, family, and empire that sees the nuclear family
as a model of imperial policy, but also seeks to expand the analytical debates of these
histories to embed them how people conceived of the natural world.380
It also situates Mauritius as a laboratory of sorts within a global intellectual
moment that linked population growth with ecological collapse. The middle of the
twentieth century was a moment of increased government, extra-government, and
activist interest in population growth and a collective fear of the pressures it would place
on natural systems. What began as hypothesizing over the future pressure population
would place ecosystem stability transformed in the late 1940s with the publication of
William Vogt’s The Road to Survival and Fairfield Osborn’s Our Plundered Planet into alarm
ringing on how population growth was already catalyzing ecological disaster. As William
Connelly has shown, these two books argued that “time was already running out,”
evidenced through increasing desertification and deforestation.381 In an argument that
would foreshadow the growth of the “Anthropocene” as conceptual category, Osborn
even suggested that humans had already become a “geological force.” The explicit
linking of nature, disaster, and population control is a theme that would take on
particular salience amongst environmentalists and made famous through the 1968
publication of Paul (and Anne) Ehrlich’s The Population Bomb, which predicted world-wide
famines in 1970s and 1980s because of the rapid growth of the global population. The

380 William J. Goode, World Revolution and Family Patterns (New York: Free Press, 1963); Michael Anderson,

Approaches to the History of the Western Family, 1500–1914, 2d ed. (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1995);
“Household Size and Composition in the Developing World in the 1990s,” Population Studies 55 (2001); Arland
Thornton Reading History Sideways: The Fallacy and Enduring Impact of the Developmental Paradigm on Family Life
(Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2005) Durba Ghosh, Sex and the Family in Colonial India: The Making of
Empire (Cambridge, 2006); Ken Cuno, Modernizing Marriage: Family, Ideology, and Law in Nineteenth and Early
Twentieth-Century Egypt (Syracuse University Press, 2015).

381William Vogt, The Road to Survival (Kessinger, 1948); Fairfield Osborn, Our Plundered Planet (Little, Brown,
and Co., 1948); Matthew Connelly, Fatal Misconception: The Struggle to Control World Population (Belknap, 2008), p.
128.

158
intense interest the colonial state took in managing population growth was thus not an
aberration, but part of a larger moment when population became the link between the
natural world and social policy.382 Indeed the modern environmentalist movement,
including the work of Rachel Carson, is rooted in global debates over population control.
The chapter begins at the top, as it were. Tanya Li has argued in her study on
development in Indonesia for a conceptual lens of “trusteeship” to understand the
position and power of outside development actors.383 In the mid-twentieth century
Mauritian trustees—“the people who claimed to know how others should live”—were a
collection of colonial technocrats, bureaucrats, and Mauritian politicians who constructed
a field of possible actions and processes that sought not to impose a model of behavior
per se, but to naturalize new forms of conjugal life; to mold habit. The chapter thus
begins by analyzing and contextualizing the writings of two members of the London
School of Economics faculty—Richard Titmuss and James Meade—who consulted the
colonial government of Mauritius and authored influential reports on family planning
and the relationship between overpopulation the sugar economy, respectively. It was the
work of Titmuss and Meade that provided a set of ideas, terminologies, and visions of
future development that placed the mitigation of the threats of natural disaster, family
planning, and the economy of the island at the center of political and social life in mid-
century Mauritius.
But as Li has also argued, development was not merely an idea produced at the
highest level of the government: “many parties,” she observed, “share the will to
improve.”384 Development was not merely a top-down imposition, but a synthetic
process of producing a hegemonic discourse, one that sought to cultivate consent
amongst all layers of society. Moving on from the level of scholarly research that Titmuss
and Meade produced, therefore, the chapter then examines the critical and often fraught
role that Mauritian interlocutors had in mobilizing institutions within the colonial state,

382 Paul Ehlirch, The Population Bomb (Sierra Club, 1968).

383 Tanya Li, The Will to Improve: Governmentality, Development, and the Practice of Politics (Duke, 20007).
384 Ibid.

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public media, and non-governmental organizations in pursuit of the Titmuss and Meade
prescriptions. This section shows that the ideas and the language of development offered
by people like Titmuss and Meade were often mobilized as a vector through which to
debate models of statecraft, and that lines of difference quickly emerged between Fabian-
inspired advocates, like future prime minister Seewosagur Ramgoolam and labor minister
Verrasamy Ringadoo, with those increasingly worried about state overreach, in particular
members of the main Islamic party on the island and the main Catholic family planning
institution. Constructing a “material and moral” family ethic that could attend the
seasonal threats that cyclones posed was a process of both politics and representation. 385
Politicians and family planning organizations were thus critical actors in developing a set
of salient symbols and discourses that revolved around modernizing the family.
At the heart of family planning and cyclone reconstruction efforts were ideas of
what it meant to be a man, a woman, and a family in mid-century Mauritius. The last two
sections address how these shifting ideas about gender informed debates over race and
how access to family planning institutions shaped the everyday lives of average
Mauritians. Debates about gender and familyhood sparked fierce questions about racial
belonging and the post-colonial future of the island, which seemed to be just around the
corner in 1960. At a time when people across the island were asking—what was the
future of the nation to look like? And what would be the social units through which the
country would develop?—the question of family planning became saddled with the
anxieties and hopes that accompanied discussions of decolonization in this corner of the
Indian Ocean. The chapter concludes with a closer look at the ways in which new forms
of biological knowledge that came with family planning efforts were shaped and
reshaped by everyday Mauritian women.

Cyclones, Population, and the Economies of Disaster

If one were to pick up a newspaper in the early 1960s in Mauritius, it would be


impossible to read but a few pages without coming across the “Titmuss Report.” Social

385 Butler, Gender Trouble., 22.

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Policies and Population Growth in Mauritius, published in Mauritius in 1960 (and in London
in 1961) and known as the Titmuss Report after its author, Richard Titmuss, was a wide-
ranging study on the effects that potential overpopulation would have on Mauritius. At
over three hundred pages, the study was a voluminous and in-depth work on the social,
cultural, economic, and political history of Mauritius in service of understanding how the
dramatic rise of population since the end of the second World War would shape the
future of the colony. The Titmuss Report’s presentation to the Mauritius Legislative
Council, no more than three months after the landfall of Alix and Carol, immediately
became the guiding document for reconstruction.386
In 1957 Titmuss and James Meade, a London School of Economics (LSE)
economist and future Nobel laureate, were asked by the colonial state to conduct two
research projects on family planning and economic development, respectively, in order
to provide the state with a comprehensive explanation of the issues that would hamper
future development. At the time, Titmuss was also employed at the LSE, where he held a
newly-developed chair in “Social Administration.”387 Born in 1907, he began his
professional career as an actuary and quickly began publishing books on the relationships
he saw “preventable deaths,” malnutrition, and environmental factors. In his 1936 work
Poverty and Population, for example, he examined these factors across the Great Britain,
looking at regional differences between north and south of the island. At around the
same time, he became active in the British Eugenics Society, now known as the Galton
Institute, which researched reproductive health, defining eugenics as “the scientific study
of the biological and social factors which improve or impair the inborn qualities of
human beings and of future generations. ”388 This early interest in reproductive health
and social policy was developed further in his 1943 study Birth, Poverty, and Wealth.
Shortly after this was published, he began as a student at LSE under the guidance of a

386 Mauritius Legislative Council, Sessional Paper 2 of 1961. “Reconstruction and Development Programme:

The Report of the Economic Planning Committee of the Executive Council.”


387 Preface, B. Abel Smith, The Philosophy of Welfare: Selected Writings of Richard M Titmuss (London: Allen &

Unwin, 1987) .
388 “History” http:/www.galtoninstitute.org.uk/history/.

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historian, Sir Keith Hancock. It was as a student at LSE when Titmuss wrote his most
famous work, Problems of Social Policy, where he argued that the social and economic
pressures stimulated by the second world war were the genesis of the institutions of the
modern British welfare state, an institution he had become a staunch supporter of.
Titmuss’ CV has given him wide acclaim as a renown theorist of the benefits of
the state-driven social development, an ideological commitment that made him friends
with Tanzania’s Julius Nyerere. But it is his story of the linking of the disbursement of
state resources and the management of conjugal lives of its subjects in Mauritius that he
is most remembered for in this part of the Indian Ocean. The Titmuss Report’s content
was wide ranging. It started with an analysis of the history of social services on the island,
the safety of labor on the sugar cane fields, and the “dilemma” of public assistance. In
1960, the year both Titmuss’ and Meade’s reports were published in Mauritius, the
island’s population was growing at nearly three percent, while the mortality rate of the
island had dropped to around eleven percent from nearly thirty percent in the early
1940s. The Gross National Income had stagnated at two hundred dollars and, as one
reviewer of his report noted, depended almost entirely on the vagaries of cyclones.
In one chapter on his report in particular, Titmuss focused on the sociology of the
family in relation to the growing question of overpopulation. Here, he argued that
“provisions should be made for marriage, maternity, bereavement, and for other victims
of a broken family life.”389 “Broken” family life could mean a number of things—divorce
or having children out of wedlock—but Titmuss also emphasized the strategic
employment of women as a potential stopgap against poverty and state expenditure.390
This focus on women as the critical part of understanding and rationalizing forms of
conjugality was not new to Titmuss. In his earlier work he identified “the social position
of women” as a fundamental social question in ensuring the long-term functioning of a
solvent welfare state.391

389 Titmuss, Social Policies and Population Growth in Mauritius , 125.


390 Ibid.
391 Richard Titmuss, “The Position of Women: Some Vital Statistics” in Brian Abel-Smith and Kay Titmuss,

The Philosophy of Welfare: Selected Writings of Richard M Titmuss (London: Allen & Unwin, 1987) pp. 81-101. Co-
editor Brian Abel-Smith also served as Titmuss’ research assistant during his research period in Mauritius.

162
Titmuss’ report painted a stark picture of the island colony where, without
massive state intervention in both the economic workings of the island and in the
conjugal lives of its subjects, there would be little hope to build a sustainable society.
While Titmuss’ report offers the most comprehensive articulation of the problem, it was
a subsequent publication of James Meade’s, (a summary of his larger study, published in
1961 in the Economic Journal)) where the most explicit linkages between economic
development and overpopulation took shape. In this article, “Mauritius: A Case Study in
Malthusian Economics,” Meade lays out the explicit linkages between Titmuss’ family
planning argument and his own study on the how the monocrop economy was under
increased pressure from overpopulation. “Mauritius faces an ultimate catastrophe,”
Meade argued, “unless effective birth control can be introduced fairly promptly into the
island.”392 But Meade’s study, while calling for a decline in population growth rates,
ultimately took the sugar crop as an a priori set of economic preconditions that had no
possibility of being changed or reformed. The “Malthusian” crisis that Meade imagined,
for example, was a stress on the resources on the island only in as much as sugar could
support the economy. Specifically, Meade saw overpopulation as a threat to the wage
structure of the island, and in particular its inconsistencies on the account of cyclones. A
veritable glut of labor, a consequence of plummeting death rates, had produced a pool of
easily available workers, who were then paid unsustainably low wages. When a cyclone
struck and denied this already small pool of workers the opportunity to work, social
instability was sure to follow, Meade argued. This emphasis on wages as the foundational
element of what constituted overpopulation suggests that the fear was in large part a
symptom of colonial worry over the long-term stability of the sugar economy. There was
no clear evidence provided by Meade, Titmuss, or any of the other smaller-scale studies
on overpopulation that the island faced a breaking point in relation to the allocation of
resources or of ecological pressure. Front and center was the sustainability of a sugar-
economy based on seasonal wage labor.

392“Mauritius: A Case Study in Malthusian Economics,” included in LSE Meade 5:6.

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Meade’s invoking of Malthusian economics and Titmuss’ push for “neo-
Malthusian” population control methods reflected a global imperial moment; an iteration
of development colonialism of a generation earlier, where increased interest and
intervention in the lives of colonial subjects became a hallmark of colonial governance.
As Karl Ittman has shown, discourses around the fluctuation of non-European
populations drew heavily from the intellectual traditions of both Charles Darwin and
Thomas Malthus.393 In its initial European context, Malthus’ original 1798 argument that
rapid population growth pushed European populations to the material limits of their
own food sustainability proved to be generative of multiple social and political questions
on the benefits and limitations of monarchic government, the distribution of social
services, and the productive capacities of human societies.394 With British
industrialization, the perceived limitations of the productive capacity of British society
began to evaporate. But while this “domestic Malthusianism” waned within Great
Britain, its analytical and political saliency endured in the colonies.395
In the late nineteenth century, Malthusian ideas over the dangers of population
growth became increasingly modified through the application of Darwinian evolutionary
thought amongst colonial officials in Asia and Africa.396 Colonial officials argued
specifically that demographic changes reflected “evolutionary processes at work,” an
argument that lay at the nexus of Darwinian notions of social evolutionary thinking and
Malthusian anxieties over population growth.397 The notion of demographic change as a
natural force carried social prejudices. In sub-Saharan Africa, for example, pre-World
War II ideas that the continent was underpopulated—stripped of its peoples by
dangerous exposure to disease—were supplanted in the post-war “development”

393Karl Ittman, “When Nature Dominates Man: Demographics and Policy Ideas in British Colonial Africa,
1890-1970” in Karl Ittman, Dennis Cordelll and Gregory Maddox, eds. The Demographics of Empire: The Colonial
Order and the Creation of Knowledge (Athens, OH: Ohio University Press, 2010).

394 Robert Malthus, An Essay on the Principle of Population (1798).


395 Iyer, “Colonial Population and the Idea of Development”; Connelly, Fatal Misconception.
396 Ittman “When Nature Dominates Man.”
397 Ibid. p. 61.

164
moment by its opposite: a consensus that African populations needed to be managed,
that families needed to be limited, and that Africans needed to be stripped of their
traditional familial practices; “detribalized” by urban life.398 But as Karl Ittman has
argued, and what the following pages of this chapter support, is that “causal links
proposed between population expansion, the growth of poverty, and social disorder
transformed demography into drama—more than an abstract science of numbers.”399
What better driver of this sort of “drama,” then, than tropical cyclones, dramatic
meteorological events in their own right, and natural forces that increasingly revealed the
fragility of the colonial economy.
By the middle of the twentieth century, Mauritius had become a monoculture
economy, almost completely reliant on the export of its sugar.400 As one American
scholar noted in 1964, “a country so heavily dependent on one crop is in a precarious
situation since its entire economy is susceptible to the vagaries of the market and the
climate.”401 A powerful cyclone could do long-term damage to the islands economic
stability. In large part, however, planters and colonial planners alike only assessed the
damage caused by cyclones in terms of much of the raw material of the sugar economy
was damaged or lost as a consequence of the storm; little attention was paid to the social
effects a cyclone could have on the functioning of the economy more broadly.
The planting, harvesting, packaging, and export of sugar dictated the rhythms of
life on the island. For centuries, the colonial government limited its interventions
beyond ensuring the steady supply of labor from South Asia and the maintenance of
export tariffs.402 A harbor, road network, and railroad system existed to facilitate the

398 Frederick Cooper, Colonialism in Question: Theory, Knowledge, History (California Press, 2005) and Cooper, Africa

Since 1940: The Past of the Present (Cambridge, 2002) .


399 Ittmann et al, The Demographics of Empire., p. 4.

400 By 1930, sugar accounted for 98% of Mauritian exports. See: Jeremy Seekings. “British Colonial Policy,

Local Politics, and the Origins of the Mauritian Welfare State, 1936-50.” Journal of African History. Vol. 52, Issue
2., 157-177.
401 Harley J. Walker. “Overpopulation in Mauritius: An Overview” Geographical Review Vo. 54, No 2 (April 1964)

pp. 243-248.
402 Seekings, “British Colonial Policy.”, p. 158.

165
export of sugar. Economic, social, and political planning on the island was almost
nonexistence. For indentured laborers, the power of the planters was exceptionally clear.
The industry’s “balance of payments, its budget, and the prosperity” of its employees
“depended on the earnings, and use made of the earnings” of the industry.403 The
availability of employment and the salaries paid changed according to the times and
success of the harvest, and as such indentured labor and their descendants’ livelihoods
were in the grasp over sugar. The overwhelming majority of the island’s population, the
descendants of South Asian indentured laborers, were tied to the vagaries of an
international commodity market.
This arrangement was largely successful for the colonial government and the
planters throughout the first half of the twentieth century as the state avoided major
cyclones, with the exception of one in 1931. Despite the ever-increasing power of the
sugar industry, however, the “weather, which did not lend itself to international control”
always posed a serious challenge to maintaining the prosperity of the industry.”404 The
later a cyclone struck in the season, for example, the more severe the damage, because as
temperatures cooled, the cane could not regrow as quickly. This meteorological
vulnerability is central to understanding the ways in which both the sugar industry and
social life on Mauritius developed in relation to each other in the twentieth century.
For the century preceding a series of three major storms in 1945, there is little
evidence to suggest that anything but the concerns of the sugar industry figured into the
economic calculations of damage caused by cyclones. In the responses to a storm in
1931, little beyond a general affirmation of a sense of collective “self-help” noted the
effects of cyclones on the everyday lives of Mauritius.405 After the 1945 storms this
exclusive focus on the sugar crop shifted, as officials began to attend to the broader
economic health of the economy by attempting to understand how sugar laborers, urban
workers, and other economically marginal groups were affected by the cyclones. This

403 Titmuss, Social Policies and Population Growth in Mauritius.


404 Ibid.
405 MacKenzie Kennedy to Stanley, Ibid., BNA/CO/167/927/5 22, 27 January 1945.

166
shift was, no doubt, a product of the sheer power of the storms. In January of that year,
the first storm struck, producing winds of one hundred miles an hour and dumping over
twenty inches of rainfall. Seventeen days later an equally powerful storm hit and within a
month from that storm a weaker cyclone approached the island, compounding the
damage caused by the first two, but did not make landfall. Unsurprisingly, three storms
in quick succession were catastrophic to the not only the sugar industry, which incurred
major losses, but also to human life on the island.
The storms catalyzed a response from the colonial state by revealing the need to
institute a policy of public housing. In a telegraph from governor Mackenzie-Kennedy,
he noted that houses of the “poorer classes suffered especially heavy damage and, in
many areas were completely destroyed…” and a large part of the population was forced
to live “in…ruins or in government buildings.”406 Initial reports indicated around 3,000
homeless in the immediate aftermath of the first storm. Immediately, the island’s then
Governor, David Mackenzie, called for an emergency response program that would
restore the islands communication network, temporarily feed and house the homeless,
and attempt to salvage the island’s agricultural industry.407 In the 1940s, however, the
way in which aid was distributed to the island’s poor, in the aftermath of a cyclone or
otherwise, was through a colonial Poor Law’s Outdoor Relief Provision. Poor Law, an
ever-evolving system of assistance to the poor that preceded the modern welfare state,
offered two types of aid: outdoor and indoor relief. Outdoor Relief was provided in the
form of governmental support with no requirement placed on its grantees. Indoor relief
usually required time spent in a workhouse.408 In Mauritius, Outdoor Relief had operated
as a stopgap measure against the employment fluctuations and economic inconsistencies
of the sugar industry.409 It was also put to use during cyclones: it was outdoor relief that

406 Telegraph to Secretary of State of the Colonies from David Mackenzie, Governor of Mauritius,

BNA/CO/167/927/5, 22 Jan, 1945.

407 Ibid.
408Larr Patriquin, Agrarian Capitalism and Poor Law Relief in England, 1500-1860 (New York: Springer Press,
2007); Paul Slack, The English Poor Law, 1531- 1782 Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1990); E.P.
Thompson, The Making of the English Working Class (London: Vintage, 1963).
409 Titmuss. Social Policies and Population Growth in Mauritius, p. 13.

167
was used to feed the homeless in the aftermath of the first storm of 1945.410 And even
though protective subsidies had been provided to Mauritius after World War II in order
to protect the sugar industry against competition, those protections did not
accommodate for the effects that employment cycles had on laborers. In a period of ten
years, between 1945 and 1955, for example, the governmental expenditure on Outdoor
Relief more than quadrupled. This, despite the governors push after the cyclones for the
colonial government to assume control of any land used for food subsistence to be
changed over to sugar production, in what appeared to be an attempt to double down on
the commodity and create greater economies of scale.411
It was the rhythms of the cyclone season, the seasonal labor of the sugar harvest,
and declining death rates after malaria eradication plans that spurred the colonial
government begin thinking about overpopulation as a social ill, but the initial conclusions
weren’t clear as to the primary cause.412 There is little evidence that overpopulation was a
concern ultimately shared by powerful estate owners. Meade’s warning that
overpopulation would lead to a collapse in wages paid by the sugar industry, seems to
have been met with little response from the industry, as falling wages would likely be
welcomed. What can be extrapolated, however, is that the government’s push for family
planning and public housing relieved the estates from further increases in their
obligations to their own laborers, who were able to qualify for low-cost housing and
medical care through the Sugar Industry Labor Welfare Fund (SIWLF).413 What was,
clear, however, was that studies by officials within the colonial government believed that

410 Telegraph to Secretary of State of the Colonies from David Mackenzie, Governor of Mauritius,

BNA/CO/167/927/5, 22 Jan, 1945.


411 “Minutes from Government Council, Port Louis.” BNA/CO/167/927/5, Jan. 25, 1945.
412 Mauritius’ population was expanding at a rate faster than any place on earth, other than the Cape Verde

Islands. M. Herchenroeder, Director of Statistics, “Memorandum on Population Growth in Mauritius”


BNA/CO/1023/211, 8 March 1952, see also: Overpopulation in Mauritius” BNA/CO/167/957/8, c. 1952
and “Crude Birth and Death Rates in Mauritius.” BNA/CO/1036/155, no date, c. January 1945.
413The SWILF was a funded through the contributions of sugar estates. Before Carol, they had started their
own small-scale housing estate projects on some estates by providing Kenyan pre-fabricated houses. They
continued after the start of the CHA but in much smaller numbers. The SWILF also provided clinics on some
estates. A.L Nairac, “The Sugar Industry Labour Welfare Fund Committee” Report, 1955. Accessed at
Mauritius National Library.

168
the threat of overpopulation lay in the cultural proclivities of colonial peoples.
Specifically, the statistics compiled on questions of overpopulation reflected a fear of the
growing population of Indians. One highly circulated report subdivided statistics on the
island’s fertility ratio, “the index of the rapidity with which populations grow,” into the
racial categories of “general population (Europeans and the Afro-Mauritian Creole
population descendant from slaves),” Indian, and Chinese. Between 1944 and 1952 each
racial category’s fertility ratio jumped, but the Indian one grew by nearly double, in
comparison to negligible growth in both the general and Chinese populations. 414 By
1995, the study concluded, the population of the island would reach one million, an
unsustainable number in its opinion.415

Year General Indian Chinese Total Variation


Population Population Population in ten years
1921 104, 216 265, 542 6, 743 376, 485 + 7, 694

1931 115, 666 268, 649 8, 923 393, 238 + 16, 2753

1944 143, 056 265, 247 10, 882 419, 185 + 19, 959

1952 148, 238 335,3 27 17, 850 501, 415 + 102, 787

Figure 9: Population Growth in Mauritius. Data taken from “Interim Report on Population Committee”
BNA/CO/1036/155, February 1954

414 “Fertility Ratio,” Ibid.


415 The 2014 Census estimated the island’s population at 1.2 million.

http:/statsmauritius.govmu.org/English/StatsbySubj/Documents/ei1127/population.pdf.

169
Figure 10: Inversion of death and birth rates in the mid-1940s as a consequence of anti-malaria efforts
Image from “Interim Report on Population Committee” BNA/CO/1036/155, February 1954

The first inklings of crafting policy to confront overpopulation first appeared in


the debates of the legislative council in 1952. In an address to the council, Creole
representative André Sauzier spoke of the growing threat that overpopulation posed to
the colony. Highlighting the disease eradication efforts in the years prior, he noted that a
dramatic collapse in the death rate accompanied a spike in the number of births in the
colony, so that births outpaced deaths by nearly twenty thousand per year (Figure 2).
This was a problem, he noted, because “our colony is an entirely agricultural country
producing one main crop: sugar. Favorable weather conditions, the absence of cyclones
and droughts, have made record crops possible lately.” But the threat of a meteorological
catastrophe loomed large. “Cyclones in Mauritius will mean disaster for inhabitants of
the island” whose economic livelihood was tied to the rhythms of sugar production on

170
the island.416 This opening gambit from the colonial state established a set of specific
parameters for discussing the specter of out of control population growth up until
Carol’s landfall. In June of 1953, the legislative council convened a “Population
Committee” to study the historical trajectories that produced the balloon population and
to assess the social and cultural causes therein. The committee’s first interim report
corroborated earlier conclusions that disease eradication efforts were the primary causes
for growth. At the cultural register, the committee suggested that there was little restrain
amongst “backward classes.” In regard either to the sexual habits of the poor or their
strategies in childrearing: “the child becomes from an early age an asset to the family by
performing home work [sic] and, as quite young still, by starting to earn his living and
assisting his parents…this is true in Mauritius not only of the rural population but also of
the urban population.”417 This observation, that explicitly pointed to the purported
sexual habits of the island’s poor is revelatory of just how powerful the prerogatives of
sugar were. As mentioned earlier, it was wages first and foremost that formed the heart
of the Meade argument re: overpopulation; but it was the behavior of the those who
worked the fields that came under the disciplinary eye of reformers.
The incongruity of emphasizing behavior over political economy, was not lost on
some Mauritian politicians. Radical Labour party leader and member of the legislative
council Guy Rozement argued, for example, that this focus on culture and the social lives
of the poor revealed “overpopulation” to be less a real threat to the sustainability of the
island’s future than it was a subterfuge against the extension of welfare services to non-
Europeans. He argued: “look around us, at how many arpents [1 arpent = about .8 acres]
of land unused?” If the authorities would put that land to use, Rozement suggested, the
apparent problem of overpopulation would disappear.418 He went further, arguing that
that beyond any debates over the morality of “breeding” that appeared to dominate

416 “Debates No. 31 of 1953: Fifth Session” Address to Legislative Assembly 23 September, 1952. Between

1945 and 1960, many of the annual reports compiled by the colonial state would begin with a reflection on the
fact that no cyclone of any violence had struck the island since 1945.
417 Interim Report of the Population Committee. BNA/CO/1036/155, 1955.
418 Legislative Debate. BNA/CO/167/957/8, 16 June 1950.

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debates in the legislative assembly, it was in fact planters who were to blame for the
demographic crisis of Mauritius. “The more hands you have unemployed,” Rozement
asserted, “the less you will have to pay workers to sweat for you, in order to enable you
to live in a big house.”419 While Rozement’s comments were the sole economic challenge
to the analyses based on a narrative of moral “corruption,” they are important in that
they show the extent to which the economy of the island, rather than any cultural defect,
produced the problem of overpopulation. Cyclones and the need to manage their
growing population only developed into a full blown “crisis” in the minds of colonial
planners when it necessitated the marshaling of resources in order to coordinate “all of
the social welfare services” on the island.420
These “social welfare services” were, in large part, in reference to the ramshackle
Poor Law benefits implemented to stop acute damage to the economy after natural
disasters. But just as overpopulation early preoccupation over the stability of wages in
the face of a rapidly growing labor pool and its attendant stresses on was often read as an
outcome of culture, so was the behavior of colonial subjects in the wake of disaster. This
is most clearly borne in the record of cyclone response projects. Throughout the records
of the cyclones in the twentieth century, leading colonial officials emphasized the need
for island to enthusiastically take up the cause of their own development. What
concerned the colonial government in the aftermath of the 1931 cyclone, for example,
was the “psychological effects” that the storm would have on the island.421 Mauritians
were implored to pick themselves up and rebuild in the wake of the storms, and not wait
for government assistance to support their efforts. In a speech given by governor
Kennedy after the 1945 storms, he celebrated that “many people are making the effort to
stand on their own feet and provide shelter for themselves.”422 Even in the 1950s, the
colonial government sought to mobilize a “voluntary workforce” to aid in the

419 Ibid.
420 “Social Welfare in Mauritius” BNA/CO/1036/155, 26 March, 1954.
421 “Telegram from the Governor of Mauritius to the Secretary of State for the Colonies”

BNA/CO/167/872/1/1931, 9 March, 1931.


422 Minutes from Council of Government of Mauritius. BNA/CO/167/927/5, 12 February, 1945.

172
disbursement of welfare services in the midst of the overpopulation debates. One report
note that “the best voluntary workers” came from the Indian population “and their
wives.”423 The decades-long emphasis on the need for volunteerism reveals less an
emphasis on solidarity and more a hesitant of the colonial government to extend its
welfare mandate to its non-European population; a belief in the racial
incommensurability between European notions of statecraft and governance on the
island with the perceived cultural differences with Indian immigrants in particular.
While the cyclones of 1945, plummeting death rates, and a spike in birth had all
prompted colonial officials to begin funding small scale family planning initiatives
through village councils or loosely organized family planning organizations, it was the
landfall of cyclones Alix and Carol in early 1960 that prompted a more full-throated call
for state-directed intervention into the conjugal lives of everyday Mauritius. In the
aftermath of the landfall of Alix and Carol, Titmuss observed that the cyclones had
“created acute economic and social problems for the island.” And despite the fact that
overpopulation had indeed been a worry amongst legislators and colonial planners, the
policy end of family planning efforts had been languishing in the years before 1960 both
a consequence of little funding from the colonial state and, importantly, because of a
general lack of urgency or direction from the colonial government on the issue. The
work of researching, defining, and outlining the causes of overpopulation were still
opaque, and yet had to reach any level of perceived seriousness to warrant action of any
sort or implementation of any of the recommendations being worked on by Titmuss. But
with the landfall of Alix and Carol in quick succession, the exigency with which the
colonial state understood its need to act became marked, questions of family planning
and cyclone proof housing came to the fore.
Titmuss’ ideas were perhaps best received by the new governor of the island,
Colville Deverell, who took office in 1959 and served until 1962. Deverell’s tenure was
marked by his overseeing of cyclone reconstruction. And while brief, his role as senior
administrator in Mauritius during the initial efforts at constructing a family planning

423 Darlow “Social Welfare in Mauritius” BNA/CO/1036/155, 26 March, 1954.

173
process allowed for him to assume the role as the third director of the International
Planned Parenthood Federation upon his retirement from colonial service in 1962. But
despite Deverell’s high-profile support, it was the lower ministers and Mauritian
politicians who took the lead in crafting policy. In the months following the landfalls of
the storms, for example, the colonial Minister of Finance, George Wilson, held a number
of meetings with Titmuss to discuss how to better implement a recovery program. In
Wilson’s estimation, the revenues of the colony could potentially be dramatically
handicapped by the storms through the destruction of the sugar crop. This was to be
complicated by a rise in spending from the colonial state to address reconstruction. The
sugar crop, he warned, would take at least “2-3 years to recover, and the yield would be
affected for the next 7 years.” At the same time, he warned “government expenditure
would increase, partly because of an inevitable increase in non-contributory social
security payments.”424 In light of these daunting economic pressures that Wilson foresaw
for the colony, therefore, he came to Titmuss with the contention that questions of
implementation of family planning schemes at the level of policy should begin as soon as
possible. He pointed out to Titmuss that “family planning should be proceeded with the
immediately on the grounds that the consequence of the cyclones would not have been
so serious but for the population problem.”425
Settling on birth control and a larger project of “family planning” as the most
expedient option for the mitigation of population growth followed debates over the
possibly of a large-scale emigration project to Borneo, ultimately deemed too
complicated.426 But because the hurricanes exposed the demographic crises produced by
the colonial state, the need for state-led intervention was deemed immediate. As one

424“Meeting with George Wilson” London School of Economics Collections, Women’s Library
(LSE)/Titmuss/5:647, 3 March, 1960.

425 Ibid.

426While ultimately never coming to fruition, there was much research done on emigration as possible solution
to both ease population fears in Mauritius and address labor shortages in other parts of the British Empire and
Indian Ocean more broadly. “Emigration as a Cure for Overpopulation in Mauritius and Rodrigues,” and
“Memorandum on the Negotiations of Mauritian Labour to North Borneo, 1947-1949” both in
BNA/CO/1023/211, c. 1950 also. RC Wilkinson “Overpopulation” Memo, on Madagascar, Borneo,
Tanganyika, and Nyasaland as possible destinations, BNA/CO/167/957/8, 6 October 1950.

174
member of parliament lamented, “we cannot wait until cyclones have brought disaster to
this country to do something.”427 The fear of another cyclone spurred the colonial
government to thus embark on an effort that sought to wield family planning techniques
in the service of producing a cyclone-proof, Mauritian family.
This meetings between Wilson and Titmuss, held shortly after the storms, shows
just how critical the notion of the family as an economic unit had become in the wake of
the Alix and Carol. Establishing the family as the foundational economic category
accomplished two tasks. Firstly, it became the operative social category through which
the immediate relief campaigns were to operate. Secondly, it emerged as long-term
aspiration; that is to say the colonial state viewed the family as a critical unit around
which a new post-Carol Mauritius would take shape. The following section, therefore,
looks at how the family operated as a category of post-disaster management.

Reconstruction, Housing, and Conjugal Futures

The Titmuss and Meade reports were, at their commissioning in the late 1950s, to be
part of a broader ten-year plan that aimed to modernize the Mauritian economy and
social-service structure. But with the landfall of Alix and Carol, the question of
development became entwined with that of reconstruction. The committee tasked with
the initial development project, the Reconstruction and Development Programme
(RDP), chaired by future prime minister of an independent Mauritius, Seewosagur
Ramgoolam, decided, in consultation with James Meade, to embark upon a “new five
year plan” that sought to not only attend to the reconstruction efforts but to also build a
foundation for a vision for a future Mauritian society, one that would co-exist with the
natural threats of cyclones and their effects on the sugar economy.428
While Titmuss’ study would explode into the public consciousness shortly after
Carol, it was Meade’s report which operated as the initial blueprint for Ramgoolam’s

427 Legislative Debates, BNA/CO/1023/211, 23 September, 1952.


428Mauritius Legislative Council, Sessional Paper 2 of 1961. “Reconstruction and Development Programme:

The Report of the Economic Planning Committee of the Executive Council.”

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committee on reconstruction to operate. In Meade’s 1961 publication on Mauritius and
Malthusian economics he concluded by not only supporting Titmuss’ neo-Malthusian
solutions, but also by offering a vision of how to “square the circle,” in his words, of
overpopulation and low wages in the sugar economy. Despite the suggestion of
producing some ancillary secondary industries (tea for example) that could support a
broader employment base, Meade acknowledged that it was sugar that was going to
remain the primary economic engine of the island. Sugar, for Meade, was here to stay,
and people’s lives and government had to conform to its needs. “Suppose that by some
wave of a magic wand the ownership of property could be made much more equal
without in any way diminishing the efficiency with which land and capital were used for
productive proposed.”429 The 1960 cyclones provided this “magic wand” by wiping
much of the flimsy housing infrastructure off the map, quite literally. As a consequence,
cyclone-proof housing was the public policy vehicle through which Meade’s suggestion
for equitable property ownership could operate. 430
In the subsequent reports by the RDP, housing emerged as the public policy
initiative that initially appeared as a silver bullet. Housing would protect people from the
winds of cyclones. It could alleviate pressure from sugar estates to provide housing. It
also sought to integrate everyday Mauritians into the financial systems of island through
publicly subsidized mortgages, a project that, in Meade’s language, would allow for
broad-based ownership of property. But more: cyclone-proof housing rationalized
Meade’s economic suggestion for increased property ownership and Titmuss’ neo-
Malthusian argument for family planning. The family was the operative social category
through which claims to housing, and indeed broader affective claims to trauma were
made in the wake of cyclones Alix, Carol, and Jenny, another powerful storm which
struck two years afterwards.

429 Meade “Malthusian” 527.


430About a week after the storm struck, relief centers opened throughout the island. But as the previous
chapter has shown, relief centers were agreed upon to be only a stop gap measure. Only a major housing
reconstruction project could provide long-term protection from the storms. See: Alexander and Becket
“International Volunteer Service: Report on Seven Weeks in a Cyclone Refugee Camp” LSE/Titmuss/5/648,
July 1960.

176
In the immediate aftermath of Alix and Carol, the colonial government quickly
devised a system through which to both channel aid relief and to begin a reconstruction
effort. In order to have any claim considered by the government for aid, “households”
were required to complete a “Cyclone Registration Record Card,” also known as the
“Household Card.”431 These cards, initially distributed to families after Alix, but before
Carol (although they were continued post-Carol, as well), preceded the initial efforts at
building the cités, and as such sought to evaluate the extent to which a family qualified for
aid in rebuilding.432 When filling out the cards, specific instructions were given. Firstly,
“the normal address (before Alix) should be ascertained and care should be exercised to
ensure that the household belongs to the subarea where they have applied for
registration.”433 It went on: The full names of the head of household should be entered
in the appropriate space with sex (M or F) and age in years.” Lest one think that the
suggestion that either a male or female could operate as the head of the household,
though, the instructions continued:

After the name of the head of the household should be entered the wife of the
head and then the children and their wives. Children and grand-children should
be entered in order of age starting with the eldest. It is important to make sure
that all members of the household are entered on the form. The 1952 census
children under the age of five were underrated by 17%. There is a tendency for
some people to forget to mention babies and infants and to assume that they
need not be recorded. Finally, other persons in the household as defined above
should be entered-cousins, aunts, uncles, etc. Appropriate entries should be
made---the sex, age, and residence columns for each member of the household.434

431 “Cyclone Registration Record Card” LSE/Titmuss/5:647.


432 A similar process was implement for evaluating claims for access to public housing, see Chapter 3.
433 “Cyclone Relief Registration: Instructions to Registrars” LSE/Titmuss/5:647.
434 Ibid.

177
Formalizing the social structure of the family was thus front and center of the post-
cyclone recovery program. In compelling claimants to articulate loss (and by extension
the viability of their claim) through the language of the family, we see an initial
crystallization of “the family” as a proxy category to address both reconstruction and
overpopulation.
What, however, explains this tight focus on enumerating the exact contours of
the Mauritian family? In large part, it reflects an attempt to shore up a broad institutional
lacuna in the knowledge collected by the state on the supposed make-up of the Mauritian
family. Until the late 1950s and the work of Titmuss, census data tended to be unreliable
(as the above quotation shows) and the data that does appear tended to be produced by
colonial ethnographers. While the nutrition campaigns of the 1940s tried to channel
malaria and malnutrition campaigns through the mother-child relationship, that was the
extent to which “the family” was represented in state literature. There was no answer to
the question: “what was a Mauritian household?” At its most stripped-down bureaucratic
iteration, the household was “a group of persons normally resident in the same dwelling
eat food which is cooked for that group of persons,” while the head of that household
was “the oldest adult male.”435 A capacious definition, no doubt, but one that likely
reflected less the largesse of the colonial state’s delegation of resources post-cyclone, and
more a bafflement of how to translate an abstract notion of “the family” into a
functionalist one necessary for the delegation of moneys for rebuilding.
It appears as if making claims through the lens of the family was understood by
everyday Mauritians as way of accessing state resources, as well. While Alix and Carol did
catastrophic damage to the island in 1960, Mauritius was again struck by a powerful
cyclone two years later, Jenny, in the early part of 1962. Like the storms of years earlier,
Jenny did extensive damage to the islands housing infrastructure, itself still recovering
from the cyclones of two years earlier. Jenny was particularly catastrophic for one man in
particular, Sahadeo Hurkoo. During the storm a tree fell on his small house, killing three
of his children. His house and family destroyed, Hurkoo and his wife moved into a room

435 Ibid.

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offered to them by his landlady. They were able to make small rent payments to her
through a small stiped offered to them immediately after the storm from public funds.
They were also able to cobble together the basic necessities—clothes, blankets, food, and
some medical supplies from the British Red Cross. While it was not clear what his
employment status had been before Jenny, Hurkoo was “now working as a vegetable
seller.”436
Hurkoo was petitioning the state for extra funds in the wake of Jenny. His
description of how his family had suffered because of the cyclone was dramatic, but
ultimately not completely uncommon. In the weeks and months following the storm,
however, Hurkoo’s condition worsened. As his petition to the state for more funds
asserted, while he was only thirty-four years old and in good physical health, he had
confessed to a doctor that his “mental balance had been affected” by the trauma of
Jenny. The governor noted that that up until this point Hurkoo had received funds that
were normally in excess of what some families had received after the storm, and argued
that “it appears that the petitioner is trying to make the most of his unfortunate
circumstances.”437 He was denied any further assistance.
What are we to make of Hurkoo’s predicament and his appeal for additional aid?
If anything, what is striking about his petition is the social register through which the
petition is made: that he deserved a claim because of material damage done to the family
(and indeed the loss of family) and the psychic damage done to him, the presumed head
of the family. What appears clear is that even though the state determined his claims to
be excessive, his framing of his struggle as a familial crisis sparked by the cyclone is
intended, in the most literal sense, to make a claim from the colonial government.
The discursive emphasis on the family as a vehicle through which claims are
made, exemplified through Hurkoo’s story, signals the centrality of the family to the
delegation of post-disaster resources from the colonial state, and the engendering of that
process. The heads of the households, assumed to be men, were the central actor in the

436 “Petition from Mr. Sahadeo Hurkoo”, Mauritius National Archives, henceforth MNA/SB-

Circulars/SD295/4 October, 1962.


437 Ibid.

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delegation of resources. But beyond just the fact that Hurkoo’s role as head of the family
signaled the gendering of this process, it was his narrative of what he had lost—his
children, his home, and, ultimately, his cognitive ability to work a job beyond the rigors
of “vegetable seller” that speak to a broader social and acceptance that masculinity was
intimately bound to the social project of starting a family, owning a home, and
supporting that family and home through independent labor. Jenny, it seemed, had
emasculated Hurkoo.
One could argue from Hurkoo’s strategy of using his family as a way of
explicating his struggle as evidence of a growing popular conception that family and
familial housing was a desirable social form on the part of the colonial state. Central to
constructing a new Mauritian family was to imbue rural Mauritians with modern,
European notions of family formation that could be wielded in development schemes.
Shortly after Carol members of the legislative assembly, members of the finance ministry,
and other state officials turned their efforts to reforming the rural family. They
understood their work to be, at its heart, an effort to reshape ideas of gender. In a letter
between officials in the colonial government, Leo Silberman, another development
expert who had visited Mauritius over the previous decade lecturing on development,
noted that the “ordinary pater familias be made aware of his public responsibility in
siring a large and possibly unemployed family.”438Another report claimed that “breeding
is endemic” in Mauritius, and that one must be prepared to become accustomed to
“nearly a dozen” children when learning about the size of man’s family.”439 Restraint, it
was thought, was lacking amongst the “poorer and backward classes,” while also
acknowledging that amongst the poor children served as an “asset to the family” in terms
of house work.440 But while men became the object of moral concern for the colonial
government, it was women who bore the brunt of the colony’s family modernization
push. In a report on the “social welfare” of the island, women were characterized as key

438 Leo Silberman to Hanrott BNA/CO/1036/155, 19 January 1954.


439 “Extract from Debates No 15 of 16.6.50 on Birth Control” BNA/CO/167/957/8 6 June, 1950.
440 Ibid.

180
for development in rural areas. The government needed, the report asserted, to increase
schooling for rural women, and to teach them the basics of hygiene.441 That same report
went on to recognize that outside of agricultural work in the cane fields, employment
opportunities for women were scarce at best. 442 The report suggested women be trained
for domestic work or work in light industry like bottling or embroidery.443
This effort to modernize Mauritian family life was embedded within a global,
empire-wide conversation about the social benefits of family planning. A 1955 edition of
the Commonwealth Challenge concerning the social management of family life, for
example, circulated amongst colonial welfare officials in Mauritius. The journal showed
how Mauritius’ population increased at a rate of sixteen percent in the first half of the
1950s, the highest increase in any British colony. The essays included in the edition all
offered a defense of greater state intervention into the personal lives of imperial subjects
in pursuit of better human and natural resource management. But even for those outside
of the colonial government in Mauritius, the problems that the island faced were
particularly challenging: “Mauritius, almost wholly dependent on sugar, has little land
which can be brought under production---or, under present conditions, be more
economically used—and her location and resources are such that there seems little
likelihood of any significant diversification of the economy being possible.”444 So even by
the middle of the 1950s, the central cause of Mauritius’ welfare pressures, the hegemony
of sugar on the island, had yet to be addressed.
But for someone like Hurkoo, the popular image of the cyclone-proof family was
formed less within the pages of LSE researchers and more concretely in the popular
print media of the island in the immediate aftermath of the cyclones. The process of
building a common discursive commitment between state actors like Ramgoolam,
Ringadoo, Meade, and Titmuss with everyday Mauritians was a process fought within

441 Ibid.
442 Ibid.
443 Precis of the report Presented by the JOCF, Section B: The Life of Young Girls,” LSE/Titmuss/5/647, c

1960.
444 Commonwealth Challenge, July 1955 14.

181
may of the islands newspapers, where the terms “Titmuss Report” and “family planning”
became shorthand for a new vision of what Mauritius could look like.
In large part, the production of an image of a new “cyclone-proof” family
necessated the destruction of what the colonial state understood to be a stable
sociological vision of the “traditional” Indo-Mauritian family that sustained life on the
sugar cane fields. Changing the sugar family—polygamous and fertile—to the cyclone-
proof family—compact, efficient, and productive—was proposed as a means of
distributing the burden of development and risk posed by natural disaster in Mauritius
from the public to the private. Old anxieties of the cultural intransigence of rural Indo-
Mauritian agriculturalists, while never fully put to bed from the 1940s and 1950s, were
revived with a vengeance, and the specter of the polygamous and overly-fecund rural
Indian family emerged as foil against which the modern, nuclear, cyclone-proof family
took meaning.
In the days and weeks after cyclone Carol struck, what were initially anxieties
shared amongst colonial planners over overpopulation spilled into the public arena,
where Mauritians read, wrote, and generally consumed an ever-growing amount of public
information on the linked threats of natural disaster and overpopulation. Much like
Wilson had warned Titmuss, there emerged in the pages of some of the island’s
newspapers a clear popular consensus that Alix and Carol, and later Jenny, had pushed
Mauritius to an economic tipping point where the perceived social and cultural
backwardness of a by-gone era had come home to roost in the wake of the storms.
Finance minister George Wilson was quoted shortly after the landfall of the storm, he
noted the importance of seeing the family as the incubator of a productive society

“…a bad environment corrupts and degrades, while good one elevates and
improves. We know that bad housing conditions cause poor health, social
demoralization, family tensions and even crime; we know that poor and
overcrowded schools produce semiliterates [sic], and we know too that, the lack
of social and cultural amenities produce a fragmented community.”445

445 “Government Housing Policy” Mauritius Times. 28 October, 1960.

182
Figure 11: Advance catoon, April 22, 1960

An April 22, 1960 cartoon in the daily Advance, a newspaper whose readership’s
political inclinations largely coalesced with the Labour part (Ramgoolam himself help
collect funds for its launching in the 1950s) showed just much the family had come to
represent in the politics of natural disaster on the island. In the cartoon entiteld “A
Problem” we see a man with his family in tow at a center for aid being distributed for
families after the hurricane. Children and women surround the man as he implores the
man in charge of allocations “Have pity on me mister! I have nine children and three
wives.” This “problem” was one that the colonial government sought to eradicate in the
wake of Carol and Alix. Given the increasing conversation over overpopulation in the
decades preceding Carol, we can see the chords that this picture struck in Mauritius. The
family represented here was a regressive one: stuck in the moral and sexual economies of
the sugar estate and was in desperate need of the modernizing power that the colonial
state could wield. But a consideration of the historical moment of the publication of the
cartoon also reveals the salience of this archetypal image within a moment of crisis. The

183
traditional family was not just a moral aberration in the modern world, but also a
financial one. As the image shows, large families were seen as drags on the financial and
civil commitments of the state and reflected the ways in which the colonial state sought
to mobilize gendered identities in the historical present of the image—the post-disaster
recovery period—and what it meant for the future of the island. As such, the colonial
government sought to further bring these “traditional” families under its supervision.
Cyclones allowed the governmnet to do this through the distribution of aid. But even
more than channelling aid through the category of the family, the large scale
reconstruction project that began in the aftermath of Carol also sought to construct,
quite literally, space for the new Mauritian family.
Alongside an emerging consensus on the need to modernize families was the
need to house those families. In the months following Carol, a discourse of
development that linked the family and the cyclone proof home emerged in both the
pages of the colony’s newspapers as well as in the very work being done by the
organizations tasked with building cyclone proof homes. Cyclone-proof housing
emerged as the site for the production of a new Mauritius. People who had had their
homes “unexpectedly deprived” by the “ruthless monester” of Carol clamoured for the
government to being the process of rebuilding.446 The cyclones of 1960 had “brought to
a head the problems and paradoxes of Mauritius,” and the provision of new housing
sought to rationalize these paradoxes and showed, “once and for all, the need to control
population growth.”447 Immediately after the storm made lanfall, the Mauritian
government requested the assistance of George Atkinson, the Head of the Tropical
Building Section within the Department of Scientific and Industrial Research, who had
previously worked on the rebuilding of houses in Belize and Jamaica after devastating
hurricanes and Cyprus after the 1953 earthquake. Atkinson was tasked not just with
rebuilding already destroyed homes, but also to outline forms of urban and rural life on
the island that would protect residents against cyclones. As such, a new form of expertise

446 “Slum Clearance,” Mauritius Times . 23 September, 1960.


447 Titmuss.Social Policies and Population Growth in Mauritius.

184
arrived on the island in the shape of the urban planner and construction engineer, whose
plans for reconstruction harmonized with on-going debates on the remaking of the
Mauritius family.
The cyclone-proof house provided protection for the cyclone proof family and
would encourage the production of culturally significant gender roles. It was clear that
Cyclones Alix and Carol had “undercut the standard of living of the workers and middle
class” and left “thousands who lead a good life…impoverished.”448 But the construction
of houses began to be viewed as a project that would allow for men to begin to assemble
generational wealth and insulate their wives and children against catastrophe, natural or
otherwise. Indeed, there were three criteria that had to be met in order for a person to be
able to qualify for the re-housing scheme: “have had his house destroyed by a cyclone, be
married, [and] not already owned a house of his own.”449 Using these three criteria as the
foundational requirements for the disbursement of aid set the groundwork for a larger
social project of constructing a cyclone-proof family around the figure of the aspiring,
married male homeowner.
If the early images of the homeowning family took shape most saliently in the
print media of the island and in the discourses on development that began to harden in
the legislative assembly, it was in the work done by the DSIR and the CHA discussed in
the preceding chapter, where the vision of a homeowning family became the guiding
principle for the long-term reconstruction of the island. Throughout the annual reports
of the CHA show a dovetailing of construction practices, urban planning, and a cultural
resonance of the single-family home unit. The new Mauritian family was to be a
homeowning family. Atkinson’s reconstruction and estate-building plan, therefore, was
not just to put family in cyclone-proof housing, but was also to integrate them into
broader financial systems and networks of credit and debt.
Before the building of the private homes after Carol and the building of the cités,
most Mauritians had no access to credit outside of what Chinese shop owners extended

448 The Average Houseowner,” Le Mauricien. 19 March, 1960.


449 Charles Hartwell, Report on the Central Housing Authority.” BNA/FCO/4/12128, 7 September 1967.

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to their patrons for staple items. Now, access to a cyclone proof home would require a
deepening relationship with the colonial state and its financial institutions. Atkinson
suggested that “three categories of people need to be considered; the middle classes who
may be insured and can afford to pay part of the money advanced to them in a loan; the
less well-off home owner who at best can only afforded to pay a very small part of the
cost of his house; and the tenant.”450As Atkinson planned, initial timber homes would be
offered at a rate of 250 British Pounds, one hundred of which would be offered as a
grant from the government, with the rest to be offered on a ten year loan.451 The long-
term protection that the colonial government envisioned that homes would provide was
matched with everyday protection against informal and extra-legal relationships between
amongst renters. Homeownership would allow, in the eyes of Atkinson and officials
within the colonial government, for Mauritians to escape from the power of corrupt
landlords. “Cyclones have revealed difficulties between landlords and tenants,” where
tenants repeatedly lodged complaints against landlords for refusing to rebuild damaged
properties without assistance from the government.452 Following Atkinson’s suggestion
of three “categories of people,” popular conversation on the on-going construction of
the new Mauritian home and the new Mauritian family was taking place in the press also
invoked the typologies of families in the colony.
Daily newspaper, and reliable organ of criticism of the government from the
center-left, Le Mauricien, noted that around 90,000 houses were needed for laborers on
the sugar plantations, 30,000 for “middle class families,” and 5,000 for “better types” of
housing.453 As a newspaper noted, it was time for the island as a whole to recognize that

450 George Atkinson “Hurricane Reconstruction: Notes by the Housing Advisor to the Colonial Office,

BNA/Department of Scientific and Industrial Research (DSIR)/4/3478, September 1955. This file was one
that circulated throughout the DSIR as a model for reconstruction plans. It was developed in the wake of a
Jamaica hurricane in 1951 and an earthquake in Cyprus in 1953. It modeled three phases of reconstruction
work: (i) the survey and assessment of damage (ii) the relief of families rendered homeless by the disaster (iii)
reconstruction proper. The document is revelatory of the centrality that George Atkinson had through imperial
post-disaster spaces.

451 Atkinson to Unknown., BNA/DSIR/4/3478, 26 March 1960.


452 Atkinson., “Landlord-Tenant Relationship” Assessment of Damage to Housing Caused by Cyclones Alix

and Carol; Together with Recommendations for Reconstruction. C. 726” BNA/DSIR/4/3478, c. March 1960.
453 “The Average Houseowner,” Le Mauricien. 19 March, 1960.

186
certain classes…cannot build cyclone proof homes.”454 In addition to promoting
homeownership, the municipal government of Port Louis began passing laws that
formalized the relationship between landlord and tenant. The president of the Port Louis
homeowner association celebrated the laws, and noted that it was Carol that finally
allowed for the laws to be written.455 But notions of “protection” extended beyond the
formalities of financial arrangements by taking meaning in the evolving cultural category
of the family and the gendered roles that were to comprise the modern Mauritian family.
The gendered projected of cyclone rebuilding took shape in the print media on
the island as well. In one editorial in Le Mauricien, an author recalled a story of a large
house in the capital of Port Louis which was destroyed by Cyclone Carol. In the house
lived “elderly women and spinsters” who, after the cyclone struck, were forced to wait
upon the government for assistance. The author had “heard the piercing wail of the
widow of the shopkeeper who has a crippled boy and who lived comfortably on the rent
of her shop and part of her house.”456 So in light of the struggles that hurricanes would
impose on women and children, it was argued that new homes would protect vulnerable
women and children. These homes would allow for the beginnings of systems in
inheritance, as “it is a settled fact that a house or two can be the best form of legacies to
the heirs…If I die, the man thinks, my family will have a little nest of its own, and it has
also a value that can serve them in good stead.”457

The Cyclonic Family and Racial Futures

As stated in the introduction to this chapter, the 1940s, 50s, and 60s, were decades when
global fears over population growth dovetailed with the politics of environmentalism.
One of the most salient critiques, however, of the discourse of population control as a

454 Ibid.
455 “Une Lettre du Président de la ‘Port Louis Homeowners Association.” Le Mauricien. 29 March, 1960.
456 The Average Houseowner,” Le Mauricien. 19 March, 1960.
457 Ibid.

187
corollary of environmental stewardship was that implicit in governmental and extra-
governmental efforts to curb population growth were the historical legacies of Galton’s
eugenics. As one critic of Ehrlich argued, population control equated, in part, political
repression.458 While not clear whether or not Mauritian activists were in conversation
with these critiques explicitly, the growth of a shared discourses of population control
after Carol lent itself to an already-fraught racial politics in Mauritius in the decade
preceding independence. The following section therefore analyzes how race emerged as
an arena of debate in response to population control in mid-century.
Institutionally, efforts at building a moral and conjugal ethic that could attend to
the state’s needs in the wake of natural disasters took material form in 1961 through the
passing of a law which sought to encourage Mauritian families to limit themselves to
three children. In the middle of April, 1960, the Finance Secretary of the colony
announced a vision of the ideal Mauritian family. “The Ideal Mauritian Family: Three
Children,” announced Le Mauricien in reporting the findings of a special commission
established by the Finance Secretary after Carol. This was not merely a suggestion on the
part of the colonial government. Rather, the directive to limit births to three per family
became inscribed into Mauritian law. The government proposed a financial incentive to
families who had less than three children. The government was to offer assistance to
families at different stages in their lives. The “family allocation” was to be extended to
any family already with three children under fourteen years of age, a “maternity
allocation” to be paid monthly to a woman while pregnant with any child up until her
third. There also existed monthly stipends to be paid to widows with or without
children.459 The colonial Council Ordinance number sixty two of 1961, known
colloquially as a the “Family Allowance Ordinance” established the institutional
machinery that would provide government support, through cash payments, to families
in an effort to encourage family planning.460

458 Barry Commoner, “Response to: ‘The Closing Circle’” The Bulletin of Atomic Scientists, May, 1972.

459 “Control des naissances: Politique Officiel du Gouvernement” Le Mauricien. 13 April, 1960.
460 Ordinances No. 62 of 1962: Family Allowance Ordinance” in Council Ordinances of 1961, Mauritius

National Library, Port Louis.

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The ordinance was wide ranging but sought to provide incentives when it came
to planning, to marriage, and to having children. It offered the following: (1) a “family
allocation” of fifteen rupees per month to each family with three children under fourteen
or more, as long as the mother was at least twenty one years of age and that the father
(chef de famillie) was not able to pay the entirety of his income tax burden from the
previous year (2) the legal age of marriage for a woman was to be raised from fifteen to
eighteen years (3) to encourage late marriages, a “marriage allocation” for a one-time
payment of fifty rupees as long as both members of the couple were twenty one and the
man was, like before, unable to fully pay his tax burden and (4) a “maternity” allocation
of 20 rupees per month during twelve weeks during the pregnancy if the woman was at
least twenty one years old, had not had a child in the preceding twenty four months, had
less than three infants total, went frequently to a pre-natal care center, and that her
husband was unable to fully pay the income tax of the previous year.461
Embedded in this ordinance are a number of desires for future practices and
bureaucratic structures meant to enable certain forms of conjugal behavior, desires
shared by both planners and by Mauritian politicians engaged in forming policy. Clearly,
limiting the number of children families were having, delaying how old that would
happen for mothers and fathers, and indeed even delaying when Mauritian couples were
to wed were critical components to this. There are two points worth raising, however.
The first is the strategic emphasis on identifying families, and men in particular, who had
trouble paying their taxes in full. This reveals a specifically class-directed effort,
corroborating a consensus throughout the island that the rural poor should be the object
of the state’s disciplinary efforts. Additionally, it seems quite counterintuitive, at first
blush, as to why the state would provide cash to families who had more than three
children. The underpinning logic here was the same as it was to build cyclone-proof
homes: than an early investment in the health and care of children would mitigate further
crisis expenditures down the line.
A conceptual thread that tied family planning to gender and to communalism,
which saw the disciplining and gendering of sexual behavior as a means to produce racial

461 Ibid., and “Pour la famille-type de 3 enfants” in Le Mauricien, 27 February 1961.

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improvement was embedded in the project of cyclone recovery and the family planning
projects thereafter. But its intellectual generation preceded the landfall of Carol and Alix.
In the rarefied stratum of research on the Mauritian family, Richard Titmuss’ papers
reflect a growing sociological eye directed at producing an idea of a legible family unit
that relied heavily on the expertise of Burton Benedict, another LSE affiliate and
ethnographer who authored the first major scholarly study on the island: Indians in a
Plural Society. The belief in a causal link between family life and racial communalism was
foundational to Burton Benedict’s research. At the core of Benedict’s research was a
putative fundamental socio-cultural incongruity that is identified in his study’s very title:
Indians and a “plural society.” Indian life, largely unchanged, in Benedict’s estimation,
over the one-hundred years of diaspora, was exogenous and closed; fundamentally at
odds with the “plural society” that Mauritius had become. The question of racial
difference in a plural society was one thus increasingly discussed amongst Mauritian
colonial planners, in particularly in the wake of the nutritional improvements efforts of
the 1940s, as the second chapter of this study has shown.462
In the years before the publication of Indians in a Plural Society, however, Benedict
was a critical interlocutor for the colonial state’s efforts at understanding the cultural, and
indeed sexual, habits of family life in rural Mauritius. In a 1957 memorandum “A
Programme for Family Planning,” circulated both amongst planners in Mauritius and in
the Colonial Office, Burton affirmed a long-standing assumption about the relationship
between “Indian” life in the increasingly cosmopolitan centers of urban life on the island:
Port Louis, Rose Hill, Beau Bassin, Quatre Bornes, and Curepipe.463 A family planning
scheme, were it to be implemented, Benedict argued, would have to be de-centralized
and run through village elders, as the towns and villages of the city proved to be too
diverse in racial make up, such that the vast majority of Indo-Mauritians would be
skeptical of the state efforts.464 “The politics of the town are to a large extent the politics

462On the cusp of 1960, outgoing governor Sir Hillary Blood authored a piece emphasizing the potential
benefits of better race relations on the island. Sir Hillary Blood, “Uniting Races in Mauritius” The Listener 20
August 1959.
463 Burton Benedict “A Programme for Family Planning” BNA/CO/381 5 December 1957.
464 Ibid.

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of the island” he argued, “a new program, particularly a controversial one, quickly
becomes a national issue.”465
In one sense, Benedict was correct. Controversial issues quickly became national.
Villagizing family planning, and in particular the use of the Hindu village meeting center,
the baitka, as a site for this training, would ideally mitigate fears that family planning
would be seen as anything but would thus mitigate the spread of controversy.466 This sort
of planning logic, which sought to understand the mobility of ideas within societies
believed to be suspicious of or averse to state planning schemes was a worry throughout
imperial family planning models, as it became increasingly clear that attempts at
producing a portable, modular model of planning from colony to colony was
untenable.467 Indeed, Benedict’s body of work also suggests his investment in a
sociological model that differentiated “small states” from larger national bodies.
Smallness, he suggested, meant that people occupied multiple critical roles in society, that
“political, religious, and kinship” often overlapped, a sociological problem that reified
discrete forms of identity, and in the case of Mauritius, Indo-Mauritian endogamy.468 But
he also misread the extent to which Indo-Mauritian political power in the colony had
begun to effectively become national power by early 1960s, a fact that would allow for
Indo-Mauritians to been seen less as members of a religious subgroup than as the secular
bearers of state interests, a topic I explore in more depth later in this section. His
ambivalence about how family planning models would spread throughout the colony,
and how it specifically would be adopted by Indo-Mauritian communities appears to

465 Ibid. The belief that the town/country dichotomy could explain both racial difference and cultural openness

to these efforts was echoed in later studies as well. See: “Population and Pluralism in Mauritius: Interim
Report” BNA/CO/1036/155, c. 1960, sections on the analysis of the 1952 census data.

466See,
for example: “Advisory Council on Scientific Policy: Population Pressure in the Colonies”
BNA/CO/1036/381/Ref126-UR 15 February, 1957.
467 See: Burton Benedict, Sociological Aspects of Smallness (University of London, 1962).
468 Ibid., pp. 47-48.

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have misjudged, in part, the extent to which ethnicity and religious identity would inform
popular responses to family planning methods.469
What, however, explains the translation of the abstraction sociological visions of
family planning, of the policy of housing, and discourses of racial difference that all
framed technocratic visions of development in Mauritius, into the political world of
Mauritius? In the halls of the legislative assembly, there was broad based support for the
building of the cyclone-proof estates, but there was marked division in the need for
family planning. These divisions reflected a growing polarization of politics along
communal lines. As the previous chapter showed, Indo-Mauritian political organizing fell
often along, Muslim, Hindu, and ostensibly political parties like the Comitté d’Action
Musulman (CAM) and the organizing of Bisoondoyal brothers via the Independent
Forward Block (IFB) as respective organizations. Creole elites often gravitated towards
the Partí Mauricien Social-Democratique (PMSD). But these communal divisions were
not always articulated as explicitly racial or confessional. As the previous chapter also
argued—the charge of “communalism” was often wielded in service of discrediting a
political opponent; the politics of race, while omnipresent, was universally consider
transgressive in a multiracial colony. Indeed, amongst all of these parties, it was Labour
(Parti Travalliste) that sought to self-consciously position itself as the bearer of a secular
developmentalist standard. It was Ramgoolam specifically—groomed as a civil servant in
the Ministry of Labor—and chairman of the RDPs who saw in Meade and Titmuss a
confirmation of his own political inclinations that he had developed while a student in
London.
In his own autobiography-cum-history of the Mauritian nation, Ramgoolam notes
his commitment to Fabian socialism that was first generated as a student in London.
Ramgoolam expressed an admiration for the technocratic and incremental
developmental model that Fabianism advanced. “I have tried to cultivate the
indefatigable patience of the Fabian philosopher and the Fabian belief in moderation and

469 The question of “pluralism” emerged as the operative language of many of the studies of overpopulation on

the island. In one in particular, Mauritius’ multiracial population was compared with its closest geographical
counterpart, the South Africa province of Natal, as a means for understanding how movements for family
planning. “Population and Pluralism in Mauritius: Interim Report” BNA/CO/1036/155, c. 1960.

192
conviction in parliamentary reform and the concept of the Welfare State wherein the
State is viewed as the representative and trustee, guardian and protector of the
people.”470 Acknowledging this firm ideological commitment to statist
developmentalism, it comes as no surprise, then, that for Ramgoolam and the Labor
Party more broadly largely viewed the Meade and Titmuss reports as a validation of a
growing international consensus on the dangerous of revolutionary political ideology, in
particular in regards to anti-colonial nationalism, in the building of a stable post-colonial
order.471
But for others a vision of state-as-guardian development was seen as potential
threat. Discourses of family planning therefore took on a political salience in the halls of
the legislative council for a number of reasons. First was an increasing anxiety over the
racial futures of the island, a fear discussed in the following section. Secondly, and what
appeared most concretely in the debates within the legislative council, were competing
visions of the responsibilities were of the state, how it allocated resources, and what
external examples it should model itself on. In early 1961, for example. Veersamy
Ringadoo, Labour Party member and then Minister of Labour and Social Security,
delivered a detailed and extensive summary and defense of Titmuss’ findings to the
council. Ringadoo, who had himself worked with Titmuss in his capacity as a Minister,
couched his defense of the Titmuss report by gesturing to Meade’s study—by
emphasizing the need to reform social mores in order to produce a sustainable welfare
state. He was challenged almost immediately by Sokdeo Bissondoyoal, younger brother
of Hindu revivalist Basdeo Bissonodoyal. The younger brother saw the Titmuss’
recommendations not only as foreign impositions (“did the Russians looks for the Turks
to tell them what their five-year plan should be?” he asked the council), but also as a
potential for the hording of resources by vested state interests. In one exchange, he
noted that while the fall in mortality in Mauritius could be attributed to the eradication of
malaria in earlier decades, he argued that “we have eradicated malaria but we have

470 Ramgoolam, Our Struggle: 20th Century Mauritius (London, Vision Books, 1982), pp. 42-43.
471 Bosweel, Malaise Creole, 31.

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introduced corruption in this country and this is wore than malaria.” He went on “a
solution over a grave problem…must come from the people!”472 Bissondoyal was not
the only Mauritian member of the government to express reservations about any family
planning schemes. Ajam Dahal, the leader of the CAM in the immediate aftermath of
the storm, argued forcefully that any sort of family planning was fundamentally against
the Muslim faith.473 Dahal’s criticisms put fellow Muslim, CAM Member, and Minister
of Housing Abdul Razak Mohammed in a difficult position. As Minister of Housing, he
was member of the government that had becoming invested in constructing post-
cyclonic island, of which tying family planning to housing was quickly emerging as the
primary policy vector of reconstruction. Mohammed did express concern over the
extension of state power into family planning schemes as well. In one speech before the
council, he said that “I am a Muslim first and everything else afterwards, in that
capacity…I had to consult theologians of my religion. They are unanimous in saying
there are no methods, known or unknown, which are permitted in Islam for birth
control.”474 Nevertheless, in response to Dahal’s rejection of planning, Mohammed
replied that family planning would not demand individual coercion, an argument that
seemed to convince ambivalent members of the CAM in the assembly, but one that
would ultimately produce an enduring political rift between Dahal and Mohammed, the
formed asserting his commitment to “stick to the teachings of the Quran [sic].”475
As earlier chapters have shown, throughout twentieth century Mauritius the
formation of social categories of gender and race were intertwined. Whether it be reading
the politics of racial survival and the “improvement” of the natural world or the
changing notions of work and space that accompanied the construction of the cyclone
estates, gender often emerged as a modality for living race.476 So while race lay at the

472 Legislative Council Debates over Titmuss report, 11 April 1961.

473 Mauritius Intelligence Report, March-April 1960, Serial 3/60. Section on CAM politics,

BNA/CO/1036/704, 26 April 1960.


474 Legislative Council Debates over Titmuss report, 8 April 1960.
475 Mauritius Intelligence Report, April-May 1960.
476 Paul Gilroy, The Black Atlantic: Modernity and Double Consciousness (Harvard University Press, 1993).

194
heart of the Mauritians notions of social belonging and historical change, gender often
emerged as the territory over which racial futures were both popularly articulated.
Reshaping gendered positions and social perceptions was often the place were the
colonial state also sought to intervene. It’s perhaps unsurprising then that debates over
family planning also spoke directly to growing debates over the racial futures of the
island in the years before gaining political independence.477 Demographic management,
as the second chapter’s section study of the writings of Pandit Atmaram showed, was not
limited to colonial planners, but a central component of political discourse amongst
Hindu revivalists in the middle of the century. These anxieties over demographic collapse
and the political futures of a post-colonial Mauritius again came to the fore as a
consequence of the post-Carol family planning initiatives. This section suggests that
debates between the competing confessional and institutional groups over of women’s
bodies and planning schemes should be understood, in part, as a debate over the racial
futures of the island.
In the year after Carol, when family planning became policy, a number of leaders
of various confessional communities of the island emerged as vocal opponents of any
form of family planning or birth control. The most vociferous of these critics came
overwhelmingly from the Catholic leadership. A Catholic physician, Dr. D. Chazal,
argued against the use of birth control as “immoral,” but acknowledged that “the Church
is alive to the conditions of living of the poor… promiscuity, bad housing, lack of food,
lack of light, lack of ventilation.”478 Chazal linked, as many others in this debate, a moral
argument for sexual restraint with the material conditions of life in the colony as a way of
explaining his way forward. Rather than intervene in the reproductive life of women,
what was needed was to construct a specific moral character on the island. “When
communities improve their social conditions” he suggested, “they develop a greater
sense of responsibility towards their family.” Others in the legislative assembly argued

477 The Ambivalence of Postcolonial Mauritius: Policy versus Practice in Education: A reading of Official and
Popular Multiculturalism.” International Journal of Cultural Policy (Vol. 11, Issue 3, 2005) and Jean Houbert. “The
Indian Ocean Creole Islands: Geo-Politics and Decolonization” Journal of Modern African Studies (Vol. 30, Issue
3, 1992).
478 “Legislative Debate Over Social Survey” BNA/CO167/957/8 16 June 1950.

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for an alternative conception of morality that was to be inscribed into state policy via
birth control. “What is more immoral?” one member demanded, “allowing a couple of
agricultural workers or artisans, perhaps, living on no more than 50 or 60 rs [rupees] per
month, living in a miserable little shack of a few square feet…between a few walls… and
after a few years there beings to swarm a family. Mother, father, and 6, 8, 10 children.
What’s more immoral? To watch this spectacle…or begin a process of birth control?”479
Clear differences between religious arguments in opposition to birth control and others
which emphasized the need for sound state economic and social policy through birth
control. One Indian Muslim member of parliament also commented in a parliamentary
meeting that “Hindus tend to breed much faster than any other community.”480 But a
consistent feature of both sides of the debate over birth control was a caricature of the
backward, rural Mauritian family, defined by an uncontrollable impulse to have children
they are unable to properly care for.
While these debates occurred, in large part, in the halls of the legislative council,
at the ground level the confessional distinctions took shape around the growth and
development of two organizations staffed by Mauritians: Action Familiale (AF) and the
Mauritius Family Planning Association (MFPA). AF was a voluntary, and officially non-
racial and non-sectarian organization “dedicated to the betterment of family life,” as
articulated most explicitly through the Papal Encyclical Casti Connubii of December
1930.481 From its inception in 1963, AF struck a balance between explicitly engaging the
terms of the political debate over “overpopulation,” and occupying a position of moral
arbiter adjacent to the political developments of the time. Although in its own
retrospective literature it would portray itself actively attending to the burgeoning
literature on overpopulation in the wake of the cyclones, contemporaneous records show
an organization hesitant to attend to the specifics of a crisis, real or otherwise. “Our aims

479 Ibid.
480 “Debates no. 31 of 1952: Fifth Session” BNA/CO/1023/211, 23 September 1952.
481 “Action Familiale” BNA/FCO/141/12161, c. 1963. Among other things, this encyclical stressed the

centrality of marriage to the social lives of Catholics, and its spiritual sanctity. It prohibited Catholics from
using any form of “artificial” birth control.

196
are essentially human and personal,” one memorandum sent to the colonial government
emphasized, “trying to solve the problem of the couple or of the family.” In so doing,
the document asserted, they would also “resolve overpopulation.” Overpopulation, it
asserted, was a problem which, although natural, was “constituted by innumerable small
units: the family.”482 Ideally, instructing the family in moral sexual behavior would ideally
be transmitted, the AF believed, from one generation to the next, creating a tradition
with “minimal recourse to outside bodies,” an observation no doubt meant to emphasize
the financial limitations that family planning would put on the state. It’s strategic plans
for the “betterment of family life” were clear “1. The education of the ground and of
married couples towards self-control and responsible parenthood. 2 a) helping to solve
the problems of married couples b) the teaching of natural methods of family regulation
based on a reliable method of periodic abstinence i.e. ‘temperature method.’ 3. The
support of any campaign conducted by an organization advocating only the natural
methods of birth regulation.”
Its mirror organization, the MFPA, was ostensibly secular, unhooked from any
institutional religious organization, and the preferred outlet of the colonial state to
pursue family planning efforts. The MFPA, an outgrowth of earlier disjointed efforts at
“social welfare,” explicitly channeled the language of colonial statecraft and Fabian
developmentalism in its descriptions of its own work, with explicit attention played to
cyclonic disturbances and the political ecology of sugar production on the island. In an
introduction to its annual reports, for example, it poses the question “Why Family
Planning?” Its own answer mirrors the broader concerns that were emerging amongst
demographic experts and local politicians. The report notes that “We have been forced
by circumstances to be a country almost depends on a single crop economy,” despite
being “an island frequently visited by cyclones.” It continues: Any adverse climatic
condition, cyclone…or a fall in the world price of sugar impinges directly on our balance
of trade.”483 The explicitly linking of cyclones and family planning would endure beyond

482 Ibid.
483 Mauritius National Library Collection: MFPA Annual Report, 1968. “Introduction: Why Family Planning”,

p. 10.

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the early raison d’etre statements. After a catastrophic storm in 1968 hit the island
dependency of Rodrigues, three hundred and fifty miles east of Mauritius, the MFPA
sent representatives to the island not to work as reconstruction assistance, but to begin
to fund and implement family planning techniques advanced by the MFPA on the island.
While there, however, the report noted the strong opposition on Rodrigues—an island
populated overwhelming by Afro-Mauritian Creoles—from the Catholic Church and its
ancillary organization, Action Familiale. The resistance met by the MFPA by AF in 1968
post-cyclonic Rodrigues was not new, however. Indeed as soon as the Titmuss and
Meade reports noted the need for family planning on the island, the Catholic Church and
AF sought to handicap efforts by the colonial state to implement any plans they viewed
as contrary to the mission of the church.
The main point of divergence between these two groups revolved around the
methods of family planning. Broadly speaking, AF advanced a view that family planning
was solely a question of morality—that abstinence before marriage and the rhythm
method after—were the only ways that a moral form of family planning could be
acceptable by the Catholic Church. The MFPA, while not rejecting outright the
“morality” of family planning, was much more biologically interventionist. This
interventionism ranged from oral contraceptives to condoms. These tensions came to
ahead in a meeting between the organization in 1965 that was meant to “clear the
atmosphere between Action Familiale and the Mauritius Family Planning Association.”484
The meeting opened with Harold Walter, then minister of Public Health, In the colony
explaining that the urgency of family planning in the wake of the cyclones had compelled
the state to govern. But over the course of the meeting, differences between the two
groups had become more pronounced. At the core of the debates were questions of
methodology. Francoise Guy, a medical doctor and leader within AF noted that while
both agencies were working towards population growth, AF’s emphasis was on “moral
health,” a component to social life they saw similar. This moral imperative dictated that
sex and sexuality were aspects of social and cultural life to be limited, pathologized, and

484 Notes of Meeting between AF and MFPA, BNA/FCO/141/12162 27/28 December, 1965.

198
moralized. The “acceptance of the rhythm method” was understood to be the only way
to move forward in a comprehensive nation-wide scheme.485 This was to be a strategy
that was to be instructed to newly-wed couples. AF noted that “couples should be
instructed in the principals of rhythm method before the beginning of the marriage…the
calculation of the infertile times is easy and comparatively speaking effortless, and the
necessary restraint and self-control present no great difficultly.” The argument for this
type of education concludes with: “These statements are based on facts and not merely
the expression of individual opinion.”486
This, of course, was met with some skepticism from both the MFPA and the
state. The MFPA argued for a more scientifically-oriented approach by promoting use a
number of strategies and items worked internal to the human body. Intrauterine devices,
birth control pills, and condoms. By 1966, the vast majority of people who went to the
MFPA were using the pill above all methods. But while there was suspicion that the
rhythm method was unreliable because of, if nothing else, human nature, it was still an
appealing strategy for the state in that couples who practiced it became “autonomous,”
that is to say not needing of heavy stated investment.487 But while the ostensible goal of
limiting pressures on state resources formed the central logic of family planning
throughout the island, the MFPA also sought to further integrate romantic relationships
into the bureaucracy of the state. In its multiple propaganda efforts, for example, its
reports indicate that not only was success defined as the adoption of family planning
techniques and an attendant reduction in birth rates, but also to encourage civil
marriages, and to register those marriages with the state. This was done to explicitly
“trace out religious marriages,” which were clearly seen as retrograde and social
incubators of dangerous conjugal practices.488 This effort went so far as to using MFPA

485 Ibid.

486 W.M.O. Moore, “Executive Council Family Planning Scheme: Memorandum by the Minister of Health and

Reform Institutions” No. 46 BNA/FCO/141/12160, 24 April, 1963.


487 “Organizational Costs in Section IV: Action Familia and the Mauritius Family Planning Association”

BNA/FCO/141/12162.
488 Propaganda” in MFPA Annual Report, 1969, Mauritius National Library.

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field officers to provide lists of people “who were engaged or contemplating
marriage.”489 In 1969, nearly six thousand pamphlets were produced for couples
interested in formalizing their relationship through civil marriage.
Propaganda efforts, at least with respect to methods of birth control, if not civil
registration, appears to have been successful by state metrics. By the mid 1960s, it
appears as if the rhythm method and the pill were the two primary means of practicing
birth control.490 And while throughout the decade the state sought to mediate what it
understood to be divisive political debates between “Catholics” and “secular” forms of
birth control, a closer look at the methods of knowing the body, if not necessarily the
ultimately form of birth control use, reflected a similar medical, social, and technocratic
consensus that the body of women was the territory on which the building of a cyclone-
proof state was to take shape. In the literature produced by both the MFPA and AF,
there is a shared bio-interventionist model when it comes to women’s bodies. Take the
AF’s efforts at educating couples on the “temperature method,” a form of contraceptive
practice derived from the rhythm method. This required specific thermometers for
methods of temperature take: rectal, buccal, and vaginal. It required that couples
understanding how temperature variations were tacked to nutritional state, to physical
activity, and, as one document suggested “race.”491 The pointing to race here invoked a
debate over racial biometric difference that emerged in the 1940s (see chapter 2) that a
product of differing nutritional habits between races.
The language of gender, race, religion, and family was also a means of mobilizing
action. In July of 1960, the Labour Party and CAM held a rally to inform anyone in
attendance of the work being done leadership organizing a rally in support of their
candidates in upcoming legislative council elections. In a rare show of unity, the
respective leaders of the parties were shocked with many of the seven thousand in
attendance began to heckle and boo the speakers. Enraged, Abul Razak Mohammed,

489 Ibid.
490JS Rennie to Brian Abel-Smith, BNA/CO/12161, 29 June, 1964.
491 “Evaluation of birth Regulation Porgramme in Mauritius.” In “Action Familiale”

BNA/FCO/12161.

200
then deeply embroiled in his on-going family-planning political feuding with Ajam Dahal
and his work in the construction of the cités tried to silence the crowed. He screamed into
a microphone that “their [the crowd’s] behavior indicated they wanted to return to
slavery, in which whites would rape their womenfolk.”492 It was a rash and shocking
outburst to be sure, but it provides a glimpse into the register through which the
intersection of ideas of race, nation, sexuality proved to be fertile ground for imagining
racial community and for political invective. Racial difference and sexual violence were
powerful images in the collective political and social language of the time.
So while the MFPA and AF debates reveal an overlapping ultimate goal—to limit
unwanted pregnancies in service of mitigating “overpopulation,” it is perhaps
unsurprising that an on-going conversation in the smaller newspapers and periodicals
throughout the island that wrote for racial and confessional communities—on the
question of overpopulation wrestled with the question of linking family planning to racial
governances. While the MFPA and AF sparred over methods, the scale of biological
interventionism, and public policy, what many throughout Mauritius saw was less a
spirited debate over policy and more a threat to certain racial communities. As was
mentioned earlier in this section, the sociological expertise provided by Burton Benedict
suggested that Indo-Mauritians would be the most suspicious community when asked to
engage in state sponsored family planning. But this was a misreading. Throughout the
1940s and 1950s, the colonial state had cultivated a cohort of Indo-Mauritian men,
primary amongst which were Ramgoolam and Ringadoo, as officials within the colonial
government who by in large supported family planning.493 By the 1960s, it was not
uncommon to see Indo-Mauritian civil servants, politicians, doctors, and lawyers at the
highest levels of government. As such, the Indo-Mauritian press, both its radical
elements and its more conservative, showed a general consensus on the benefits of

492 Mauritius Intelligence Report, July 1960.


493Ramgoolam himself, after spending years working as a civil servant labour camp inspector in previous
decades, vocally supported family planning efforts, noting that it was part of growing a “civilized society.”
LSE/Titmuss/5:648/12:1:2. Ringadoo, working as the Minster of Labour and Social Security, corresponded
enthusiastically with Titmuss, and sought to aid in the dissemination of his research. “Ringadoo to Timuss,” 30
December 1959, Ibid.

201
family planning efforts. In early 1960, the Mauritius Times noted that “if the Titmuss and
Meade Reports…” themselves “two great documents… are tackled in the proper
manner, than Mauritius could live to see its finest hour.”494 In the Hindi newspaper,
Zamana, made an even stronger case for it. “Hindus are not against family planning,” an
opinion that showed to Titmuss that Indo-Mauritians were “showing themselves better
than Mahatma Gandhi,” a suggestion that more than a decade after his death, the
memory of Gandhi was understood amongst colonial officials a regressive actor, but
more specifically that some Indo-Mauritian acceptance of family planning signaled
consent to the broader colonial project.495
While widespread, family planning was not uniformly greeted enthusiastically
amongst all Indo-Mauritians, though. Fifteen years after Pandit Atmaram first articulated
them, critiques against the expansion of perceived state bio-power reappeared amongst
some in the face of growing calls for family planning. Sookdeo Bissoondoyal, member of
parliament and brother to the fiery Hindu-revivalist Basdeo Bissoondoyal, authored an
op-ed in Le Mauricien entitled “L’Inde et la ‘family planning’” (India and Family Planning)
in which he suggested that family planning, in particular its “artificial forms,” posed as
cultural threat to the survival of Indo-Mauritians. “Government propagandists,” he
warned, posed a threat to “young Indo-Mauritians” in large part because they aped
strategies for combating overpopulation from “the west.” In post-colonial India,
Bissoondoyal argued, family planning was taken with a grain of salt. Like the critique
leveled by Guy Rozement earlier, Bissondooyal saw it as merely a subterfuge for
increased state surveillance and power over Indo-Mauritians. He noted that many of the
socioeconomic problems of Indo-Mauritian were ones that could be addressed by
expanding access to resources. Instead, the “vulgarities” in the system, rendered each
Mauritians “suspects in their own homes,” rather than, we suppose, citizens capable
making claims for resources against the colonial state.496 Moreover, how could western

“Press Reactions to Tituss and Meade Reports, March 1961” Newspaper Clippings, Mauritius Times,
494

LSE/Titmuss/5:648/11 March, 1961.


495 Ibid.
496 L’Inde et la ‘family planning’” Le Mauriciene, 2 March 1961.

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powers preach self-control when they had their own socioeconomic problems, divorced
from overpopulation?
Overwhelmingly, however, the community that saw itself as the most vulnerable
to family planning initiatives were Afro-Mauritian Creoles. As in the previous chapter
regarding housing and black futures, L’Épée editorialized on the news of family planning
through a fictionalized conversation between an Afro-Mauritian member of society,
Gaby, with an Indo-Mauritian, Soondroon. In one conversation, titled “The Problem of
Overpopulation: The More Intelligent Man Gets, the More Misses His Faith in God.”
Gaby laments the growth of efforts to mitigate over-population as a threat to Afro-
Mauritian identities.497 “What can you tell me,” Gaby begins, “about the
recommendations in the Meade and Timtuss reports? Beyond government attempting to
abolish the French language, now they want to control how many children we bring into
the world, because they say there are too many people.” Gaby would go on to argue that
imperial family planning was a means of mitigating demographic threats within the
empire, and tactic he suggested was developed in World War II, an implication, it
seemed, that tied British imperial demographic anxieties to Nazi race science.
In another piece in L’Épée, an anonymous author juxtaposed the role of the state
with the role of the Catholic church, an institution which had “thrown its weight” behind
famiy planning.498 This article sought to read state interventionism into the conjugal lives
of its subjects as a violation of Catholic faith of its readership, and by extension a
pointed attack at Afro-Mauritian Creoles. “Here at L’Épée, we don’t know exactly know
the behavior of the intimate lives of elite couples in our society. But with their bidets for
their secret ablutions, with their injections, and with their instruments which they refer
to, academically, as “contraceptives,” we ask if this isn’t much more than a criminal
enterprise, that they were attempt to impose en masse such a base set of practices?”499
These “base practices” were in direct contravention to the will of the Catholic God. “If

Le Problème de la Surpopulation: Plus l’homme devient plus intelleigent, plus il manque foi dans le Bon
497

Dieu” L’Épée, 22-29 March, 1961.


498 Mauritius Intelligence Report, March-April 1960.
499 “Le Control de Naissances: L’Etat d’Amour” L’Épée 17 May 1961.

203
the state is going to foil the plan of God,” the author argued, then it would have to
intervene in marriages that were convenience or for economic gain.
La Vie Catholique, the island’s weekly Catholic newspaper, also voiced concerns
over the specter of racial discrimination. While this paper never explicitly spoke as a
mouthpiece for Afro-Mauritian Creoles in the way that L’Épée did, it couched its analyses
of demographic threat and family planning within a shared conceptual envelope of
anxiety over the racial futures of a colony lurching towards independence. These analyses
were often explicated through a repeat suspicion of secularism and communism, as a
threat posed from an increasingly radical Indian Ocean community. In early 1960, the
front page of paper posed a question to its readers: “Doctrine Catholique o
Néomalthusianime?” announcing, in no uncertain terms, that these two ideas were
mutually exclusive, at odds conceptually and morally with each other.500
The landfall of Carol was interpreted by La Vie Catholique in similar ways as in
L’Épée: as a particularly violent episode whose damage was uniquely focused on the lives
of Catholics, and by extension, Afro-Mauritian Creoles. In the weeks following the
storm, the paper collected, published, and commented on the specifics of how each
Catholic church throughout the island was damaged. It also ran similar pieces that
encouraged more concerted collaboration between laypeople and the church in the
rebuilding process.501 Reading the pages of the paper one would think that Catholicism
was imperiled by Carol both materially through the damaged churches and spiritually by
the need to bind its followers tighter together.
But when the paper turned toward the fate of the island more broadly in the years
following the storm, the tone was less conciliatory towards other racial communities and
the growing biopolitical power that state sought to aggregate. Racism and racial
discrimination were repeated themes throughout the 1960s pages of the paper, as was a
corresponding fear of socialism, communism, and the secular state. These articles were
often published alongside studies of sexuality, the relationship between a “Christian and

500 “Doctrine Catholique o Néomalthusianime?” La Vie Catholique 7 January 1960.


501 “Je compte sur la collaboration effective des laics” La Vie Catholique 3 April 1960.

204
their body,” the role of women In sustaining a family, and by extension, a community.
These articles lend themselves a number of interpretations, notably the coalescing of a
number of conceptual linkages that mediated popular ideas between black and Catholic
Mauritians and the late-colonial state. The language of racial violence and growing state
secularization were discursive means of understanding the growing Indo-
Mauritianization of state institutions and the fear that those Indo-Mauritian-manned
institutions, operating as ostensibly secular entities, would impose family planning
strategies that not only violated the moral norms of Catholics, but would also operate as
a form of ethnic cleansing. This fear ultimately culminated with a mass exodus of elite
Creole from Mauritius throughout the late 1960s until the 1980s to places throughout
southern Africa and Australia.502 The seeming consensus of Catholic institutions on the
need for “natural” family planning, if any, and the broader fear of racial domination that
informed much of the popular critiques were belied by some of Catholic organizations
working outside of Mauritius. The Young Catholic Women Workers (Jeunesse Ouvrière
Chrétienne Femimine—JOCF), for example, provided a report to Titmuss which also
emphasized a sociological conclusion similar to Benedicts, which was that gender
identities amongst various Mauritians was as an expression of racial identity. Creoles in
particular, for these French Catholics, were in dire need of state intervention as a way of
emancipating women, in their opinion, of the moral “deficiency” run rampant in the
community.503 These foreign workers contended that couples “may not have had time to
get to know each other, or if they have it was in some dark corner.”504 In Creole villages,
they suggested, “all marriages are regularizations of illicit unions.”505
While the newspapers and the records and debates of the family planning
institutions tasked with building family planning strategies illuminate the on-the-ground
registers through which the ideas about transforming the conjugal lives of Mauritians

502 Roseabelle Boswell, Le Malaise Creole, p. 128.


503“Precis of the report Presented by the JOCF, Section B: The Life of Young Girls,” LSE/Titmuss/5/647, c
1960.
504 Ibid.
505 Ibid.

205
became mobilized around the politics of race on the island, there was still little focus on
how everyday Mauritian women encountered these new forms of biomedical
interventionism. It to these stories that the final section turns.

Family Planning from Below

Thus far this chapter has covered how the colonial state, newspapers, and Mauritian
members of family planning organizations conceived of their roles in building a resilient
society after the landfall of Carol. But what of everyday Mauritian people, and women in
particular, who were, ostensibly, the subject of discourses of development? If women
were the focus of state efforts at reforming the family, did their experiences correspond
neatly to the history of the institutionalization of family planning? The following section
suggests that while colonial officials and politicians sought to inculcate an ethic of
ecologically-focused conjugality, its translation to the lives of average Mauritians was not
so straight forward. Women engaged the ideas and the bureaucratic structures on their
own terms; their encounters with these ideas and institutions were critical to articulating
new forms of understanding themselves, their bodies, and their role in changing
Mauritius.
Uncovering how everyday people, and women in particular, navigated the post-
Carol worlds of family planning institutions and housing development is a difficult
endeavor. There are few archival traces that extend beyond the those produced by the
colonial state, and women who were old enough to take advantage of family planning
efforts in the early 1960s are rarely still alive to speak to. There are some, however, who
are alive and with whom I spoke. In this section I rely on the testimonies of some
women interviewed as part of the early 2000s Truth and Justice Commission (TJC) used
in the previous chapter, my own interviews, and one life history in particular—that of
Mala Rami, a resident of Quatre Bornes who, over the course of multiple interviews
discussed the ways in which she encountered the institutions and ideas that defined her
encounter with family planning efforts. These oral histories are supplemented small
archival evidence taken from Titmuss’ papers and the reports of the work of the family

206
planning associations. Taken together, the oral history and archival threads add a much-
needed context to the preceding sections of the chapter.
As is often the case in writing Mauritian history, the picture of the everyday life of
peoples in the twentieth century becomes less clear than earlier centuries, as the rich
descriptions authored by Franco-Mauritian enslavers and colonial travelers gives way to
an increasingly sterile language of British colonial statecraft; the colonial subject as an
abstracted social category often reduced to an ethnographic avatar. Given this
methodological predicament, life histories collected by the TJC in the early 2000s of
women already late in life can provide glimpses into the gynecological practices and
social worlds of family planning and child birth in the late nineteenth and early twentieth
century. One strategy of women exerting control over their bodies in a political
economy of sugar production, one where the bodies of men and women alike were
critical to the efficient settling of capital, was abortion. Abortion amongst the sugar cane
workers was a mode of asserting autonomy that endured in the fields until the twentieth
century, but one that was also remained clandestine and practiced by people outside of
the bare-bones medical care facilities that existed for field laborers.
As Meghan Vaughn has suggested in her study of slavery in Mauritius, enslaved
women on the island exercised varying amounts of control over their reproductive
capacities, a fact that could be interpreted as method of gynecological resistance.506
Abortions appear to have spiked in the late eighteenth century, for example, when estate
owners encouraged enslaved men and women to have children as a means of mitigating
the costs of importing more people from continental Africa. In regard to methods and
knowledge structures that allowed enslaved women to exercise these biological forms of
self-preservation, herbs, roots, and mixtures were all critical components of managing
reproductive health. Ananas Suavage, for example, (which translates to wild pineapple),
was an herb that enslaved women used to induce abortions. Louis de Freycinet, a French
traveler in the early nineteenth century noted that abortions were frequent amongst

506 Megan Vaughn, Creating the Creole Island: Slavery in Eighteenth-Century Mauritius (Durham, NC: Duke University

Press, 2005), 124-139. This was also argued by Linda Sussman, “Medical Pluralism in Mauritius: A Study of
Medical Beliefs and Practices in a Polyethnic Society” PhD Dissertation, Washington Univeristy at St. Louis,
1983.

207
enslaved women with this herb.507 Of course, the use of abortion as a form of social
self-preservation was not limited to sugar fields or to the eras of slavery and indenture. In
fact, it appears as if it was a practice that grew in the wake of natural disasters. Not long
after cyclone Carol made landfall Richard Titmuss authored a memorandum that noted
with some alarm that there would most certainly be a drop in the birth rate of 1960
because of the assumed rise in “post-cyclone abortions.”508 While noting this effect of
the cyclones with some consternation, Titmuss suggested that this predicted rise in
abortions was part of an underground network of family planning services deemed either
amoral or unhygienic that his efforts sought to mitigate. “Abortion,” he noted, “the
alternative to family planning by contraceptives…[is] carried out by unqualified and
unscrupulous women.”509
The belief that this sort of moral and bodily corruption was due, in part, to an
absence of men, was shared by “experts” in the social worlds of Mauritians. The
aforementioned JOCF workers, in their analysis of gender and racial difference, noted
that “prostitution” was only practiced by “women abandoned by their husbands or
lovers.”510 The rise of abortions in the wake of cyclones appears to be a strategy of
protection. Cyclones destroyed bodies, homes, and particularly in Mauritius, the
economic stability of sugar-cane field workers, as earlier sections of this chapter have
shown. The stress placed on the social and material resources needed for childbirth and
rearing in the wake of a cyclone would be pushed to their limits. But in the eyes of
Titmuss, abortions signaled two intersecting aberrations: the amoral act of terminating a
pregnancy and the intervention of “unqualified” women in a medical procedure.
Embedded in his anxieties over post-cyclone abortions was therefore an observation on
how, when, and who could intervene in the healthcare of a Mauritian woman. But taking

507 L. Freycinet, Mémoire sur la Géographie et la Navigation de l'Ile de France (Paris, 1811).

508 Titmuss memorandum, notes on upcoming presentation to Mauritian government on family planning

proposals LSE/Titmuss/5/647, 6 May, 1960.


509 Ibid.
510 Precis of the report Presented by the JOCF, Section B: The Life of Young Girls,” LSE/Titmuss/5/647, c

1960.

208
the colonial state at its word, however, would be to overlook the ways in which some
women shaped their conjugal, sexual, and reproductive worlds in the aftermath of
cyclone Carol.
Oral histories of women who started families before the institutionalization of
family planning points to well established norms and practices in regards to gynecological
health in the first half of the twentieth century. Goolamun Beebee Mariam, for example,
grew up in a working-class Muslim household, and married a sirdar. An arranged
marriage, they moved in together in a small house made of straw and thatch. The house
had three rooms, and a godown. She shared these spaces with her husband’s three brothers
and their wives. Together, Mariam and her husband had eleven children. Each birth was
at home and with the assistance of a midwife, whom she paid. Immediately after giving
birth, the midwife asked Mariam to consume kasar, a mixture of crushed ginger, chamsur,
methi, water, and sugar. The kasar was understood to provide the recently post-partum
women with the strength to recover from giving birth. It was also understood to purify
the “stomach” after birth. Mariam herself would obtain the ingredients and produce the
kasar herself, a practice she learned from her mother and one she said she passed down
to her own daughters. On occasion, ayapana another very common medicinal mixture
throughout Mauritius would also be used post-partum. Still used today, ayapana is
generally used to settle an upset stomach.511 As was the case amongst Afro-Mauritian
enslaved women, herbs were not only used as post-partum palliatives. Alternatively, they
were used to terminate pregnancies. The bark patte pule à piquants (toddalia asiatica), a plant
common through littoral communities in Indian Ocean Africa and South Asia, was used
for abortions amongst Indo-Mauritian women. This was a plant also by Telegana doctors
in South Asia against fever.512 The deeper history of abortion points to a long history of
women exercising control over their reproductive capacities to multiple ends. As studies
of earlier eras in Mauritian history have shown. Enslaved, and later indentured
communities produced bodies of biomedical knowledge and social structures for its

511 “Life History of Goolamun Beebee Mariam” TJC vol. 3, pp. 412-413.
512 “Some Common Diseases and Healing with Plants” TJC vol. 3, pp. 895-6.

209
disbursement and expertise in the cane fields where the vast majority of Mauritians
worked.
In a strategy that echoed the “nutritional units” of medical experts that canvassed
rural Mauritius two decades earlier (see Chapter 2), MFPA vans spread out into the cités
and the rural sections of the island in the early postcolonial period as an effort to reach
as many people as possible. In addition to passing out literature, these travelling units
erected billboards, performed plays that emphasized family planning, and penned segas,
the national genre of music, with lyrics in both Creole and Bhojpuri, usually the best
attended that also emphasized the emancipatory power of family planning The segas and
billboards for example, pointed to MFPA strategies aimed and expanding a shared set of
discursive touchpoints that would link the desires of the late colonial and post-colonial
state for limited families to a set of cultural markers amongst everyday Mauritians.
There appear to be two overlapping strategies in MFPA propaganda efforts. The
first was insert “family planning” as a phrase into the national vernacular. The second,
and related project, was to give meaning to this phrase by emphasizing an emancipatory
aspect to the phrase by tying it images of economic liberation of the family and the
emancipation of women from patriarchic social relations. The phrase was ubiquitous in
the island’s newspapers, as well as in the segas performed at MFPA events. “Family
planning leads to happiness” was a common refrain in the songs. The term was also
visible on billboards scattered throughout the island. The billboards “attracted
widespread attention,” and a number of designs and slogans were under consideration.
But almost universally “Family Planning” was written in capital letters, drawing attention
to the billboard itself. The second was to link family planning efforts to conjugal
happiness and to familial self-determination. Here, billboards, pamphlets, and segas all
served to emphasize these possibilities. One pamphlet, shown below, emphasized that a
“small family is a happy family.”

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Figure 12: MFPA image, 1968
Below the image, the pamphlet indicated the family would “be comfortable, happy, and
full of hope” if family planning regimes were adopted. The mother, moreover, would be
happy and healthy, it argued.513 Perhaps unsurprisingly, women were the object of much
of the propaganda efforts, but men were also increasingly viewed as
The production of new ideas of gender were not limited to a conversation about
freeing women from the social and physical stresses of childbirth and childrearing. On
one billboard in the village of Soulliac, for example, viewers saw an image of a pregnant
man. Under this image, a message questioned: “Si zomme ti, gache babe, li ti a criyé,

513 MNA/MFPA Annual Report, 1968, 30.

211
‘Family Planning’ baba!?” Translated loosely, it asked “would there be a louder clamor
for family planning coming from men…?”514 This billboard is quite revelatory of a
number of intersecting social and policy concerns. One the one hand, while appearing in
the early post-colonial era, a policy of seeing men as equally important actors in family
planning schemes dates back to Meade and Titmuss and the original question of natural
disaster, wage labor, and the size of the family. But the sign itself suggests that amongst
everyday people, family planning, and the stewardship of sexual relations and child
rearing was popularly considered a responsibility that lay with women. This required an
increased outreach to men. Indeed, the MFPA annual reports place, at times, a special
emphasis on the role of men. In January of 1969, for example, in the town of Anse la
Raie, one leader of the MFPA, R.T. Naik, spoke to a group of men, noting that “family
planning is everyone’s responsibility, it is imperative…to develop a full sense of
involvement in the campaign to curb the birth rate.”515
While earlier sections have shown the ways in which organizations like the MFPA
conceived of their mission as complimentary to broader state concerns over the
relationship between the sugar economy, natural disaster, and the future of the Mauritian
state, the preceding paragraphs have also tried to show how on-the-ground efforts at
translating these abstractions to produce meaning for everyday people took a different
tack. Economic emancipation, social freedom, and a generally “happier” life were the
ways in which family planning made sense for those living either in the cyclone estates or
outside of them. For a more synthetic look at the ways in which the discursive and
material forms that lent meaning to “family planning” as a project and how women
exercised new forms of agency in the wake of family planning initiatives, the life history
of Mala Rami helps illuminate a more synthetic story which highlights how the deeper
histories of gynecological knowledge articulated with new bureaucracies, experts, and
technologies of knowing the body. Indeed, for Mala, the social and biological processes
of reproduction marked her life so much so that she began our conversation with her
own history of abortion.

514 MNA/MFPA Annual Report, 1971.


515 Ibid. p. 30.

212
While historians may correctly consider abortion a mode “gynecological
resistance,” it became a salient form of both emancipatory and transgressive behavior in
the middle of the twentieth century because it was seen a both a moral danger to the
state and hence made illegal.. As such, women like Mala looking for an abortion would
have to turn to a network of women who could perform such services away from the eye
of the colonial and post-colonial states. This was, to be sure, risky, and these risks could
be life threatening. Mala described to me laying on the floor of the Quatre Bornes home
her husband had built, sick and in excruciating pain from an infection caused by an illegal
abortion she had had a few weeks earlier. She had aborted a fourth child: one more than
the late colonial and early post-colonial governments agreed was the number for an
“ideal family,” but three more than her husband had initially wanted. Frustrated by this
unplanned pregnancy, particularly one unplanned in a new era in Mauritius where
women were increasingly subject to new regimes of corporeal surveillance by state actors
and non-governmental organizations tasked with limiting population growth, her
husband had called for an illegal abortion practitioner to come to their home. This
woman was a figure who wore many hats. In some cases, she would act as a “traditional”
midwife who practiced gestational methods more common in the sugar cane fields were
Mala was born and grew up. She was also an under-the-table provider of abortions Her
methods were necessarily rudimentary: as Mala described it, she “stuck an umbrella” into
her “and turned.”
The pressures that Mala and her husband had felt to limit the number of children
they had was both a consequence of social and cultural dynamics internal to their family,
their religious convictions, and the socio-economic conditions in which they lived. But
they were also pressures which came from a colonial state reeling from a natural disaster.
As Mala recalled, it was after cyclone Carol in 1960 when families began using family
planning services in earnest. “Households” became units of social development, men and
women assumed discrete roles in those households. Men’s patterns of employment and
earnings were scrutinized. Pregnancies were monitored, recorded, and interpreted as
critical sociological data. “it was the same for everyone after Carol,” Mala noted.516

516 Author Interview with Mala Rami, Quatre Bornes, Mauritius February 27, 2017.

213
What did it mean to be a woman, a man, or a family in mid-century Mauritius? In
Mala’s estimation, her experience with the emergent family planning bureaucracies of the
late-colonial state marked her development as a Mauritian woman. This was in large
because of her biography, a life history defined by changing notions of work, of housing,
and of child bearing. Her life was one of dramatic transformation that mirrored the
changing colony. She was born, raised, and employed on the Belle Rose sugar estate in
the eastern part of the island, but shortly after she married moved into a CHA house in
Cité Kennedy, on the southwestern outskirts of Quatre Bornes. She married her
husband when she was seventeen years old. He was twenty-seven. He had been married
before to a wealthy woman and had one daughter from that earlier marriage. He was a
tomato farmer however, who would sell his products in the main central market in Beau
Bassin, and for this reason always felt under pressure from his wealthier in-laws. In this
earlier marriage, he was asked to live in the house of the father of his first wife, to take
care of the family as the father and mother aged. Feeling pressured by these obligations,
however, he divorced his first wife and married Mala. This divorce was not taken well by
his own mother, Mala’s new mother-in-law. She resented that her new daughter in a law
was not only a women who had disrupted her son’s earlier life, but also an interloper
from the sugar cane fields, a women who had worked the fields and was therefore not
worthy of marrying her son. Their move away from the CHA home was thus a major
turning point in her life. In recalling the move from the cité to the site of her new home,
merely a stone’s throw away from the cité, she noted that the very building of the home
was an act of resistance against the pressure exerted from the family. In constructing a
second story of the house, Mala explained that that her husband was articulating a break
from his mother by creating room for a family. She lives in that very house to this day.
The home is a mark not only of pride for her and her family, but emblematic of her
journey from a child of the sugar cane fields to a middle-class resident of one of the most
rapidly growing towns in Mauritius.
In addition to gaining access to her first marital home through the CHA the
passing of cyclone Carol marked another significant transformation for Mala. Her move

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into a more urbanized zone of the island brought her closer to new family planning
institutions—marked most dramatically by a nearby MFPA field office—that had arisen
throughout the poorer, peripheral sections of Quatre Bornes that extended from the city
center to the south and west, towards the towns of Bambous and Flic-en-Flac.
Unsurprisingly, the ways in which Mala discussed her encounters with the family
planning organs of the colony were done so through the lens of the social world she
inhabited, rather than an abstracted notion of Malthusian population danger and cyclonic
threat. As a consequence of this second marriage and the death of her father in law, Mala
and her husband inherited the responsibility of caring for the entire extended family,
including housing them in their new Quartre Bornes home. After the death of Mala’s
own father, she was also burdened with her new extended family. This called into
question how, when, and how many children her marriage would produce, if any.
The pressures of the extended family bore on the family in material and social
ways. As her daughter explained to me “she was a poor child, so her mother in law could
control her.” Upon marrying, Mala and her husband decided to have only one child.
They ultimately had three. She described her pregnancies as both burdens and as acts of
emancipation; of agency within a growing state system of supervision and of a
suffocating social world. This was a common mode of self-styling that women in her
neighborhood expressed, she noted. She told of a story, for example, of the how she
would need to walk to the far end of Seechurn road, a cross street to a major arterial road
in southwest Quatre Bornes in order to get drinking and cleaning water. This was a daily
routine. When standing and chatting with other women at the place where they would fill
their buckets, one woman stood out. “There was a woman who was pregnant every year”
they would say to each other. It was not merely a biological observation, however, but a
social one. The woman’s seemingly consecutive pregnancies was a sign of the power her
husband had over her.
So when the tools of the family planning organizations arrived in Quatre Bornes,
Mala and others saw it as a way to carve out their own spaces of social autonomy. As
Mala put it, “family planning could give women life.” But lest one merely interpret this
observation as an endorsement of an emancipatory, rights-bearing colonial state project,
it should be mentioned that Mala never registered her complaints through the lens of

215
culture, in stark contravention to how the documents of the colonial state did. In fact she
could be described to this day as a conservative and observant Indo-Mauritian Hindu.
The ways in which women wielded family planning tools were multiple. Contrary
to the opinions of colonial planners who suggested that the “dependence of the sex-life
on thermometer reading, charts, and calendar [sic] is unacceptable to many husbands and
wives as unnatural [sic], ” Mala noted the importance of embracing these new
technologies.517 Primary amongst these new ways of living as a woman in Mauritius were
forms of biological self-knowledge and self-regulation. Women in Quatre Bornes were
initially given birth control pills as contraceptive measures. Mala mentioned that this had
made her ill. She was then provided with a thermometer through which she could track
her temperature, a key correlating biometric reading that could help women track
ovulation. This way women would know when exactly they were ovulating, and therefore
when it was best to avoid or to engage in sexual intercourse with the goal of getting
pregnant. Pills, condoms, the rhythm method, and the reading of cervical temperature
were themselves deeply meaningful interventions in the biological lives of women. In
one respect, they could arm women with tools that would allow them more autonomy
over their reproductive capacities. But as the previous sections showed, they were also
technological forces that rushed into Mauritius as part of a broader attempt to reorder
the social world, an attempt spearheaded by a cohort of male social scientists and politics
in both Mauritius and in the United Kingdom. The effects of these interventions
engaged previous social and technological ways of knowing women’s bodies. But what
appeared as an initial attempt to effectively destroy hierarchies of gynecological
knowledge where “traditional” experts in gynecological health, the vast majority of which
were women, was, it appears, unable to do so. In large part, bio-medical forms of
producing legible state subjects developed as a complimentary form of knowledge;
adjacent, but never primary to, forms of medical knowledge that predated the post-Carol
anxiety over overpopulation. A growing body of complimentary ways of knowing the
body also reveals an multiple levels of gynecological knowledge: the familial, the midwife,
and that of the state.

517 “Necessity for Compromise” BNA/FCO/141/12161, 7 September 1964.

216
Mala’s experience, moreover, shows how these levels of gynecological expertise
could at items become fissured and disaggregated, thus leaving women in precarious
situations. In the case of abortions, the imprecision of the methods used by a midwife
from the fields would then compel women to turn to the hospitals to rectify any damage
done. But often they were turned away, as fathers would often be pursued by the law if
their wives were found out to have had an abortion.518
Increasing self-discipline of the body was not always in lock step with the
prerogatives of the colonial state. The figure of the local MFPA fieldworker, for example,
was one such official who embodied the complicated relationship that family planning
had with the communities they served. MFPA field stations were set up in the early
1960s throughout the island in an effort to reach every community, no matter how small.
The responsibilities of the fieldworkers, who were most often (but not always) women
were multiple. They canvassed the neighborhoods they worked in handing out literature
and advertising social events, such as sega nights at the MFPA clinics.
The fieldworkers were met, however, with both enthusiasm and suspicion.519
They were met with wariness in part because of their role as evaluators of the three-child
policy in effect after 1961. Multiple women reported to me, for example, that while the
services of the fieldworkers were often seen as quite helpful, many women had taken the
tools for monitoring ovulation, birth control pills, and other forms of knowledge to
effectively plan pregnancies that would allow for them to have pregnancies that would
ensure three children under the age of fourteen at all times, thus ensuring a steady fifteen
rupee per month allotment from the government per child. MFPA fieldworkers, while
not officially in any capacity to report the amount of children to the state, were often
seen as potential informants. As such, families said they often hid their children when the

518 Mala Rami, Quatre Bornes, Mauritius February 27, 2017.


519“Lilting Segas” in MFPA Annual Report, 1969. Interestingly, the JOCF noted that sega was generally seen as

immoral amongst Indo-Mauritians, despite the MFPA use of them as propaganda for family planning. See:
Precis of the report Presented by the JOCF, Section B: The Life of Young Girls,” LSE/Titmuss/5/647, c
1960.

217
fieldworker came in an effort to sow confusion as to how many children there were in
the family.520

Figure 13: MFPA Fieldworkers Canvassing at Tamarin, Black River MFPA Annual Report, 1968

The notion that women strategically embraced some of the tools provided by
them by these new institutions, while simultaneously evading their disciplinary power,
and doing so in an effort to extract more resources from the colonial and post-colonial
state, shows the ways in which women’s bodies were not merely canvases upon which
visions of a utopian future were projected, but agents of their own futures. These stories
show how women carved out spaces of physical autonomy by appropriating and
engaging with scientific advances in bio-medical surveillance, but also that those tools
could just as easily be put to work within the more intimate social spaces of the family.

Author interview with Anonymous. Beau Bassin, Mauritius. December, 2016. This was confirmed by Mala
520

Rami in subsequent interviews.

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Conclusion

This chapter has argued that Carol triggered profound changes in popular and official
notions of gender, family, and their roles in the production of a safe and productive
society. The emergence of a shared discursive commitment to family planning spanned
divisions in political position, race, religion, and political ideology, speaks to the salience
of the post-Carol moment as an era of crisis: economic, social, and political. Carol
catalyzed a series of social and political reorderings that relied on the development of the
family as a common conceptual touchpoint for social improvement.
These changes were largely successful by the standards of development metrics:
By the 1970s, the effort to remake the Mauritian family had, apparently, been largely
successful by the metrics of development organizations. In the wake of another cyclone,
Gervaise, which struck in 1975, a report compiled by the United States Agency for
International Development (US-AID) indicated the extent to which housing built in the
1960s shaped the lives of Mauritians. By 1972, there was an average of 5.32 persons per
household in the then-independent country of Mauritius, with 1.13 nuclear family per
average household. Increasing numbers of “smaller nuclear families” over the 1960s and
1970s necessitated the added construction of single-family dwellings. These figured
showed, in the eyes of USAID, “the preference for single nuclear family households, a
break from traditional multiple family living styles.”521
This investment in producing a legible family unit constructed of discrete gender
identities points a historical juncture, one when the colonial state took a radical new
interest in the conjugal lives of its subjects. This interest in the most intimate spaces of
the lives of colonial populations was common throughout the imperial world in mid-
century. As feminist theorists and historians of empire have highlighted, empire should
be seen, in part, as a project in the management of affective relations.522 That in

521 “Planning and Development Collaborative: Mauritius Shelter Sector Assessment” United States Agency of

International Development. June, 1968., p. 26.


522 Ahuja. Bioinsecurities, p. iii.

219
Mauritius the question of natural disaster articulated with family planning points to a
historically and geographically-specific iteration of this imperial interest, however.

220
CONCLUSION
“A WEREWOLF IN THE HOUSE OF ELEPHANTS”

Narrator: I am instructed by the elected committee of readers to say that one of the major
reasons for choosing There is a Tide [a novel] was its image of the cyclone, the utter
mindlessness of the cyclone, so long as society is trapped in its mindlessness. People at that
time thought that the effects of a cyclone were more or less inevitable. Some thought it the
work of a bad-tempered god. Others thought it was the work of an indifferent nature. It
didn’t strike anyone that people’s reality defined the effects of a cyclone.

- South African — Mauritian novelist and activist, Lindsay Colleen, There is a Tide (1990) 523

On the 6th of February of 1994 cyclone Hollanda, the most powerful storm to strike
Mauritius since Gervaise in 1975, made landfall with sustained winds of around 120 miles
per hour. Unlike the storms of decades previous, the island knew this storm was coming and
as such, preparations were made. People were evacuated from the coasts and housed in
emergency shelters before its arrival. Roads and businesses were closed as the storm made its
way over the island. Hollanda only killed two people, but it did early 135 million dollars of
damage to the infrastructure of the island, leaving nearly 1,500 residents homeless, and a pall
of darkness covering the island in its wake. For nearly two months after the storm, hundreds
of thousands of Mauritians went without electric power, slowing the country to a grinding
halt. “There is a black out-over all of Mauritius,” poet K. Goswami wrote in daily newspaper
L’Express. “Outside the wind is howling and screeching…Tonight we are actually seeing the
dance of Lord Shiva in the Mauritius sky…instilling fear in us, making us realize, were only
nothing.”524
In the days, weeks, and months after Hollanda’s landfall, however, another fearsome
specter gripped the island: the touni minuit. The touni minuit, the name given to this specific
apparition (known generically as a lougarou) was a shape-shifting werewolf. The term touni
minuit, translated from Mauritian Kreol as “naked at midnight,” refers to the behavior of the

Lindsay Colleen, “Forward Based on Annual Address to Finals Students, 2051”There is a Tide (Port Louis,
523

Mauritius: Ledikasyon por Travayer, 1990).

524 K. Goswami, “Cyclone Holanda, The Night of Fear” L’Express, 20 February, 1994.

221
creature: early reports of it were that it would, under the cover of the darkness imposed by
Hollanda, sneak into the bedrooms of women to molest, rape, or engage in otherwise
sexually aggressive behavior with women. As its mythology grew it evidenced other aberrant
behavior: theft, stalking, and even flying over the homes of people it threatened. Some said
that it would even kidnap children. Within weeks of its initial sighting in the hamlet of
Lallmatie, hundreds of people throughout Port Louis and later other parts of the island
claimed to have seen it. Marauding gangs of armed men with machetes, bats, and knives
roamed the streets of towns and cities in search of the man-wolf; it consumed the island. So
crippling was the fear that the then president, Cassam Uteem, went on national television to
assuage the fears of the nation. Calling for calm, Uteem made a plea to the frayed social
fabric of the island in his address. This collective “psychosis,” Uteem warned, would “only
lead to more animosities, which would produce dangerous responses in Mauritian society.”
In conversations I had with Mauritians about this fairly recent event, I heard a
number of reactions. For some, it was a moment of collective embarrassment. How could a
country like Mauritius, which was rapidly transforming from an agricultural to industrial
society, with some of the highest development metrics throughout Africa they would often
mention, have descended into such supernatural paranoia? Others, however, corroborated
the story. Multiple people responded that the touni minuit appeared to them as a snow-white
dog, others as a grotesque racialized figure with black skin, ambling down from the nearby
cité. The racialization of the touni minuit was a phenomenon that occurred at the time as well,
as people all suspected other communities to be either harboring the beast or controlling it
in some capacity. Some said it was hiding out in mosques, others in Hindu-owned shops.
What can be made of this event? At first blush, the appearance of the creature
seems to be an aberration brought about by the collective trauma of a major cyclone that
pushed the country’s infrastructure to the breaking point. But, in fact, the specter of a
lascivious and mischievous werewolf, and its appearance after cyclones, was not an
anomalous event but a familiar trope in Mauritian legend. The lougarou was a known quantity:
not only do werewolves following cyclones appear as a theme in children books published
today, but also as a part of the deeper mythologies of Mauritius, ones largely connected to its
enslaved African population. The wolf as an non-human animal actor in the world of the
human can be found in Mauritian mythology. In the late nineteenth century, a Franco-
Mauritian linguist and author, Charles Baissac, sat down with the descents of two enslaved

222
Africans, Papa Lindor and Mama Telisille, to listen to and collect the folklore of Afro-
descendant peoples. Collected in Le Folklore de L’Ile Maurice which was first published in
1888, the wolf was an omnipresent figure: always a trickster, a murderer, a sexual predator.
After Hollanda, the supernatural creature quickly began to take on increasing
political and social significance. In daily newspaper L’Epxress, one editorial described the
phenomenon as a “werewolf in the house of elephants,” positing collective fear over the
beast as a potential threat to political establishment of 1994 Mauritius, where the political
party the Militant Social Movement (MSM), had held power effectively since 1982 and
seemed incapable of providing sufficient disaster relief planning. The touni minuit “disturbed
members of the political majority in the country,” the author noted, and should serve as
warning to the political elite of the country. The creature even became a sympathetic figure
of sorts. In on cartoon, he is seen complaining to the editor in chief of L’Express that he’s
been mischaracterized, he wasn’t naked after all, he notes. Maybe the press had
misunderstood the appearance of the touni minuit, it suggested.

Figure 14: the tounit minuit confronts the editor of L’Express

223
In one letter to L’Express, an author going by the name M. made the argument that the touni
minuit was the product of the fact that people had “lost faith in institutions: the state, law, the
police, education, family, religion.” They pointed the finger specifically at Paul Bérenger, the
head of the recently-developed political party, the Movement Militant Mauricien (MMM),
who had “abused his authority” and opened the door to corruption.525 They went on to note
that the corruption of the MSM and MM reflected a general failure of every institution of
Mauritian society, failures exposed by the winds of Hollanda. What resulted: “So then we
have malaise. Malaise everywhere. The feeling that has spread is evil. Evil in all of its forms.
As a consequence, we have the werewolf for the simple minded, and evil for others.”526 That
the specter of the lougaroup gripped Mauritius in the aftermath of Hollanda points to a
number of historical, sociological, and political convergences. It raised fears of political
instability, of sexual violence, and of racial communalism, a perennial fear in Mauritius. It
showed that cyclones continued to spark debates over politics, belonging, gender, and race.
This dissertation has argued that cyclones have shaped the history of modern
Mauritius, from the late colonial era to the early post-colonial one. The national experience
of Hollanda, more than a quarter of a century after independence, reveals that cyclones still
figured as significant moments of cultural, social, and political inflection. 1994 was different
than 1960, however. Gone was the colonial state, and importantly, gone was the totalizing
power of the sugar industry. By the mid 1990s, Mauritius was in the throes of the so-called
“Mauritian Miracle,” a period of economic growth modeled on places like Taiwan, South
Korea, Singapore, and Hong Kong, that relied heavily on export-led growth accompanied by
tax incentives for foreign investment. In Mauritius this was most dramatically seen with the
establishment of the Export Processing Zone (EPZ), which are effectively walled-off tax
free zones where foreign first establish textile processing facilities. For historians of
Mauritius, the effects of the EPZ are ever present, as the Mauritius National Archives are
located within one of these zones in the village of Coromandel, Plaines Wilhems.
The expansion of EPZs triggered dramatic growth of the Mauritian economy, but
they also brought with them increased dependence on textiles, low wages (and
corresponding inflation when the government tried to raise wages), environmental

525 M., “Loup-Garou et les Autres” L’Express, 6 March 1994.


526 Ibid.

224
degradation, and, importantly dramatic gaps in economic inequality. Mauritius had become a
“tiger” of the Indian Ocean, but one whose success was still fragile. Much like cyclone Carol
revealed the extent to which the British colonial state had overlooked questions of housing
development, Hollanda exposed the deep shortcomings that EPZ-driven growth in
Mauritius. As one editorialist noted, Hollanda left Mauritius as a “paper tiger in shreds.”
As Luise White has shown, spectral phenomena like zombies and vampires appear at
various points of crisis or as modalities for expressing agency within systems of power,or the
face of threat.527 These stories were ways of expressing complexity, of articulating ones or
ones community’s place in the world. Hollanda and the touni minuit showed that economic
inequality and social difference persisted as powerful social cleavages in 1990s Mauritius,
differences emphasized by the nation’s transition from an agricultural economy to one
focused primarily on textile exports and long-overlooked by political leadership on the
island.
The social upheaval following Hollanda serves as a useful epilogue to this
dissertation, which has argued that tropical cyclones have shaped the history of modern
Mauritius. From the interstices of gender and politics of an agricultural peasantry in the early
decades of the century, to discourses of development, to housing, to family planning,
twentieth century Mauritius is, in part, an outcome of a relationship between the social and
the natural. More specifically, the preceding chapters have argued that tropical cyclones were
forces of social generation. They have shown that while cyclones did establish certain
ecological parameters to the successful management of the sugar economy and the ways in
which institutions of social welfare in Mauritius were constructed, they also sparked social
and cultural debates about identity, belonging, and the future of this Indian Ocean island.
What it meant to be Indo-Mauritian, Afro-Mauritian, man, woman, or part of a family
transformed as a consequence of these storms, as these categories often became the
conceptual tools around which state and subaltern efforts to mitigate the risks of natural
disasters like cyclones congealed. Mauritius is, as JN Roy observed in the wake of cyclone
Carol, “essentially cyclonic.”

527 Luise White, Speaking with Vampires: Rumor and History in Colonial Africa (University of California Press, 2000).

See also: James R. Brennan, “Destroying Mumiani: cause, context and violence in late colonial Dar es
Salaam,” Journal of Eastern African Studies2 1 2008, p. 95-111; Zebulon Dingley, “Rumor and History Revisited:
Mumiani in Costal Kenya, 1945” Journal of African History, Vol. 59, No. 3, 2019.

225
This history of cyclones and society in Mauritius raises a number of broader
conceptual and analytical questions within Mauritian history, the history of East Africa and
the Indian Ocean, and global environmental history. Within the small field of Mauritian
history, this twentieth century environmental history has shown that Mauritians of African
descent figure as significant historical actors in twentieth century Mauritius. As scholars like
Vijaya Teelock, Megan Vaughn, and Richard Allen have all shown, Afro-descendant
enslaved peoples were critical components in the making of the social, economic, and
cultural worlds of early Mauritian history. After the abolition of slavery, however, their role
in Mauritian historiography has waned as the narrative arc of the colony, and later nation,
often emphasized the rise of a Hindu elite. Contemporary ethnographic work, however,
takes the lives of Afro-Mauritians quite seriously. Future research in twentieth Mauritian
history would be well served, then, by asking how a history that places black Mauritians at
the center of the narrative would undo to contemporary assumptions about Mauritius as a
successful multi-racial experiment?
In a broader, regional context, this dissertation argues for the continued historical
importance of the environment in twentieth century East Africa and the western Indian
Ocean. As the introduction to the dissertation suggested, while the natural world has been a
hallmark of the historiography of the region, the vast majority of work that takes an
environmental approach focuses on the centuries preceding the arrival of mechanized
transport. Steam and coal power broke centuries of reliance on the winds and waters of the
sea, thereby unhooking littoral and archipelagic societies from the rhythms of the monsoon.
In many ways, this story is true: ships, and later airplanes, have reshaped networks across the
ocean. But the lacuna left by the environment in twentieth century histories of the region
omits how the natural world continues to shape the region, albeit in different ways.
At the time of writing, Mozambique, Zimbabwe, and Malawi are struggling to come
to terms with the catastrophic effects of cyclones Idai and Kenneth, the latter being the
strongest storm to make landfall on continental Africa in recorded history. And as Sugata
Bose suggested in his opening to A Hundred Horizons, the tragic Boxing Day tsunami of
2004, which extended from the coasts of Thailand and Malaysia to those of East Africa, the
ocean itself is still a binding agent that produces collective experiences for people living

226
around and within it.528 This dissertation, however, has sought to conceptualize the natural
world less as a structure that connects disparate geographies or as a “shared” experience
across the ocean, but as a constituent part of the Armitage’s “cis-”oceanic framework. The
natural world enters into the historical development of a space by reading its local
particularities as both a product of and distinct within the networks of oceanic connections
which produced them.
A reading of the natural world as a particularity seems counterintuitive in the
contemporary conversation on climate change, when scaling upwards is often seen as the
only productive method of contemplating the social effects of this process. Histories of
natural disasters are increasingly interpreted at the scale of the global: Houston, Puerto Rico,
the Philippines, and Mozambique are placed into the same analytical field. The storms that
have devasted these disparate spaces are, for better or worse, rendered as the outcomes of
the Anthropocene and the only way to fully understand them to equate them as purely
meteorological events. The same impulse to scale up is present in Indian Ocean
historiography; a move to demonstrate connectivity, connection, and circulation. But as this
dissertation has shown, the macro-effects of major events like cyclones are conjured by ones
less obvious, and perhaps less salient outside of a circumscribed space, but nevertheless
critical to understanding specific histories. In Mauritius cyclones shaped notions of race and
gender, for example, which is not to say that they do the same in Mozambique or
Bangladesh. This dissertation has thus presented a vision of what Tony Ballantyne and
Antoinette Burton have called “the trans-local,” a methodological approach that dwarfs “the
global…a means of reorganizing the spatial logics and spatializing violence that global
visions often do produce.”529
Ultimately, the preceding chapters show that the precarity brought by natural
disasters, what contemporary social scientists would describe as ecological vulnerability, is
not merely a material condition produced by ecological forces, but also a socio-political

528 Sugata Bose, A Hundred Horizons: The Indian Ocean in the Age of Global Empire (Harvard University Press,

2009).

529 Ballantyne, Tony and Antoinette Burton, Moving Subjects: Gender, Mobility, and Intimacy in an Age of Global

Empire. (University of Illinois Press: Chicago, 2008) .

227
position that shapes how people interact with their governments and amongst themselves, a
dynamic that shapes popular notions of belonging, of history, and of future possibilities.

228
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