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    Friday, 14 October 2016

    french policy of assimilation

    Assimilation was one ideological basis of French colonial policy in the 19th and 20th centuries. In contrast with British imperial policy, the French taught their subjects that, by adopting French language and culture, they could eventually become French. The famous ' Four Communes ' in Senegal were seen as proof of this. Here Africans were afforded all the rights of French citizens.
    Defining assimilation
    The French Assimilation concept was based on the idea of expanding French culture to the colonies outside France in the 19th and 20th century. Natives of these colonies were considered French citizens as long as the culture and customs were adopted. This also meant they would have the rights and duties of French citizens.
    The meaning of assimilation has been greatly debated. One possible definition stated that French laws apply to all colonies outside France regardless of the distance from France, the size of the colony, the organization of society, the economic development, race or religious beliefs. [1] A cultural definition for assimilation can be the expansion of the French culture outside Europe. [2]
    Arthur Girault published " Principes de colonisation et de Legislation coloniale " in 1885 which defined assimilation as "eclectic". Its ideal he considers "the constantly more intimate union between the colonial territory and the metropolitan territory". [3] Arthur Girault also wrote that all military responsibilities of a French citizen also apply to the natives of the colonies.
    Protests Against Assimilation
    People in West Africa devised a variety of strategies to resist the establishment of a colonial system and to oppose specific institutions of the system. For example, labourers engaged in strike action in the late 19th and early 20th Century in Lagos, the Cameroons, Dahomey, and Guinea. [4]
    Ideological protests included the banding together of the Lobi and the Bambara of French Sudan against the spread of French culture. Shaykh Ahmadu Bamba founded a movement, called Mouridiyya, to protest against the French presence. British West African colonies rebelled by forming their own messianic or millernarian or Ethiopian churches with distinctively African liturgies and doctrines, such as the Native Baptist Church, founded in Nigeria in 1888. [4]
    During this same time period, a variety of groups formed to protest specific colonialist laws or measures imposed on indigenous populations, such as the Young Senegalese Club and the Aborigines' Rights Protection Society, which used newspapers, pamphlets, and plays to protect themselves from assimilation. [4]
    Despite widespread protest, Colonialism was firmly entrenched in the whole of West Africa by the time of World War I.
    [4] Till the abolishing of the colonial rule, Africa had endured many oppressions in relation to religion, tradition, customs and culture.
    History
    The creation of modern France through expansion goes back to the establishment of a small kingdom in the area around Paris in the late 10th century and was not completed until the corporation of
    Nice and Savoy in 1860. The existing "hexagon" was the result of a long series of wars and conquests involving the triumph of French language and culture over what once were autonomous and culturally distinctive communities, especially the Occitan -speaking areas of the South, whose language (langue d'oc ) distinct to French was banned from official use in the 16th century and from everyday use beginning with the
    French revolution . The creation of the French hexagon by conquest and annexations established an ideological precedent for the "civilizing mission" that served as a rationale for French colonialism. A long experience of turning peasants and culturally exogenous provincials into Frenchmen[5] seemed to raise the possibility that the same could be done for colonized peoples of Africa and Asia. [6]
    The initial stages of assimilation in France were observed in the "first French empire", during the Revolution of 1789. In 1794, during the revolutionary National Assembly, attended by the deputies of the Caribbean and French India, a law was passed that declared: "all men resident in the colonies, without distinction of color, are French citizens and enjoy all the rights assured by the Constitution". [7]
    In the early 19th century under Napoleon Bonaparte rule, new laws were created for the colonies to replace the previous universal laws that applied to both France and the colonies. Napoleon Bonaparte rejected assimilation and declared that the colonies would be governed under separate laws. He believed that if the universal laws continued, the residents of the colonies would eventually have the power to control the local governments which would have an adverse effect on "cheap slave labor." [8] Napoleon at the same time also reinstated slavery in the Caribbean possessions.
    Even with Napoleon Bonaparte 's rejection of assimilation, many still believed it to be a good practice. On July 24, 1833 a law was passed which gave all free colony residents "civil and political rights." Also, in the Revolution in 1848, "assimilation theory" was restored and colonies again were under the universal rules. [9]
    There were many problems that emerged during the colonization period, those faced with the dilemmas thought assimilation sounded simple and attainable. Specifically, those who wanted to spread French culture. Claude Adrien Helvétius , a philosopher and supporter of assimilation, believed that an education was essential to assimilation. [2]

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