In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:

Reviewed by:
  • Indian Doctors in Kenya, 1895–1940: the forgotten history by Anna Greenwood and Harshad Topiwala
  • Sana Aiyar
Anna Greenwood and Harshad Topiwala, Indian Doctors in Kenya, 1895–1940: the forgotten history. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan (hb £60 – 978 1 137 44052 5). 2015, x + 266 pp.

The last three years have seen the publication of several monographs on the twentieth-century history of Indians in East Africa. Anna Greenwood and Harshad Topiwala's Indian Doctors in Kenya, 1895–1940 is an important contribution to this growing literature. Moving away from narratives of politics and passports, it reveals the history of Indian medical practitioners in colonial Kenya. Greenwood and Topiwala rightly point out that histories of Kenya in general, and those of Western medicine in particular, have overwhelmingly focused on 'old white triumphalist accounts' and more recent studies of 'black participation in empire' (p. 2), as a result of which the history of Asian professionals in Kenya has been forgotten. Combing through colonial sources, local newspapers and personal memoirs, supplemented with oral interviews, they have put together archival fragments into a coherent history. The resulting book reveals the widespread presence of Indian medical professionals in colonial Kenya, numbering about 200 between 1895 and 1940 and amounting to half the number of European doctors practising in Kenya at the time (pp. 172–3).

The most significant revelation of this work is the new data Greenwood and Topiwala have painstakingly uncovered. They trace the very first Indian doctor in East Africa, Dr Nariman, to Zanzibar in 1883, where he was the Sultan's physician a decade before colonial rule. Colonial campaigns of conquest that included Indian soldiers heralded the arrival of larger numbers of Indian medical practitioners in the 1890s. When construction of the Uganda railways began, Indian medical staff also accompanied indentured labourers from India. While colonial authorities encouraged the recruitment of Indian doctors for Indian troops and labourers on the grounds of cultural and linguistic familiarity, Greenwood and Topiwala point out that Indians were an economical option too. European doctors and medical professionals received a higher wage than their Indian equivalents, and although Indians commanded higher salaries than Africans, they remained a cheaper option than Africans. Africanizing the medical services would have entailed setting up Western medical training institutions in East Africa (which began only in the 1930s), but most Indian doctors were recruited from Grants Medical College in Bombay, where they were trained as assistant surgeons (doctors), sub-assistant surgeons and hospital assistants without cost to the Kenyan government. While many Indian medical professionals returned to India, those who moved into private practice often became long-term residents in Kenya. Many of them became prominent leaders within the Indian diasporic community and in politics more generally. Highlighting the fragility and durability of race as a political and social category within the colonial state, Indian Doctors in Kenya tracks the rise and subordination of these professionals.

Greenwood and Topiwala highlight three important ways of thinking about colonialism and race in Kenya through 'asymmetries of power' (p. 5). While historians [End Page 423] have argued that Western medicine was a tool of empire, the book asserts that, in Kenya, medical modernity arrived not from the metropole but 'sideways' from India. The encounter of Africans with medicine, as a tool of empire, was mediated by Indian colonial subjects. Yet medical hierarchies were racialized: while the Medical Officer and Primary Medical Officer were Europeans, Indian assistant surgeons and sub-assistant surgeons carried out the bulk of routine medical activities, and supervised Indian and African medical staff including dressers and compounders. Indian subordinates thus had a fair amount of autonomy when it came to mundane, everyday decisions in practising Western medicine on African colonial subjects. Finally, the presence of Indian private practitioners reflected the racialized medical hierarchy. Until the mid-1930s, Indians had no access to European hospitals and had to visit native (African) hospitals instead. Indian private doctors not only provided an important service but also donated their resources to building up the infrastructure of their own communities, for example by establishing the prominent Aga Khan and M. P. Shah hospitals in Nairobi.

From these trajectories, possible lines of future inquiry emerge. Greenwood...

pdf

Share