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This programme contains scenes which some viewers may find disturbing | 0:00:02 | 0:00:10 | |
It's the early 19th century. | 0:00:19 | 0:00:21 | |
In India's north-eastern states, more than 400 woman a year | 0:00:23 | 0:00:27 | |
are burned alive on the funeral pyres of their dead husbands. | 0:00:27 | 0:00:32 | |
This Hindu ritual is known as Sati | 0:00:34 | 0:00:37 | |
and for years it's been tolerated by the country's British rulers. | 0:00:37 | 0:00:41 | |
But no longer. | 0:00:41 | 0:00:43 | |
In 1829, the British decide it has to stop. | 0:00:45 | 0:00:50 | |
When some Hindus protest to a British general, | 0:00:50 | 0:00:53 | |
he says to them, "You say it is your custom to burn widows." | 0:00:53 | 0:00:58 | |
"Very well. We also have a custom, that when a man burns a woman alive, | 0:00:58 | 0:01:05 | |
"we tie a rope around his neck and hang him." | 0:01:05 | 0:01:09 | |
"You follow your custom and then we shall follow ours." | 0:01:09 | 0:01:13 | |
For many British people, the Empire was all about doing good - | 0:01:16 | 0:01:22 | |
by force, if necessary. | 0:01:22 | 0:01:24 | |
Some believed they had a duty to bring light into the world. | 0:01:29 | 0:01:32 | |
Others that they had a right to rule it. | 0:01:35 | 0:01:37 | |
We really did know best. | 0:01:39 | 0:01:42 | |
Both beliefs fundamentally changed the nature of the modern world | 0:01:43 | 0:01:48 | |
and they changed our sense of Britain's place in it. | 0:01:48 | 0:01:53 | |
In the second half of the 19th century, the British Empire | 0:02:30 | 0:02:34 | |
reached from Canada in the west to Australia in the east. | 0:02:34 | 0:02:38 | |
The last phase of expansion was about to begin and many | 0:02:40 | 0:02:44 | |
of these Empire builders believed their work was ordained by God. | 0:02:44 | 0:02:49 | |
In the summer of 1861, a small party of white men found themselves | 0:03:23 | 0:03:28 | |
travelling up the River Shire in what is now Malawi. | 0:03:28 | 0:03:31 | |
To Europeans at that time, Africa was simply "The Dark Continent", | 0:03:42 | 0:03:48 | |
a place of ignorance and superstition. | 0:03:48 | 0:03:50 | |
They had come here to change that. | 0:03:52 | 0:03:54 | |
The men sang hymns as they travelled - | 0:03:58 | 0:04:00 | |
Lead Kindly Light was a particular favourite. | 0:04:00 | 0:04:04 | |
Their leader was already a legend in Britain. | 0:04:04 | 0:04:07 | |
A man who had come to embody the Victorian purpose in Africa. | 0:04:07 | 0:04:12 | |
His name was David Livingstone. | 0:04:14 | 0:04:17 | |
A dour, fanatically determined, lowland Scot. | 0:04:17 | 0:04:21 | |
He was the first white man to have crossed the continent of Africa. | 0:04:23 | 0:04:26 | |
He'd come here as a missionary to save African souls for Christ, | 0:04:27 | 0:04:31 | |
but what he found appalled him. | 0:04:31 | 0:04:35 | |
Britain had abolished slavery in the Empire decades before, | 0:04:38 | 0:04:43 | |
but Livingstone found Africans still being captured and sold | 0:04:43 | 0:04:48 | |
to Arab and Portuguese slavers all over East Africa. | 0:04:48 | 0:04:52 | |
Now he and his companions | 0:05:01 | 0:05:03 | |
dreamed of sowing the seeds of a new world here. | 0:05:03 | 0:05:06 | |
One based not on African superstition and slavery, | 0:05:09 | 0:05:13 | |
but on two Victorian obsessions - Christianity and free trade. | 0:05:13 | 0:05:19 | |
This river would become God's highway into the heart of Africa. | 0:05:26 | 0:05:31 | |
Down it would come African cotton and wheat and ivory | 0:05:31 | 0:05:35 | |
and ostrich feathers, and up it, in exchange, would go clothes | 0:05:35 | 0:05:40 | |
and tools and machinery, made in Glasgow or Manchester. | 0:05:40 | 0:05:44 | |
Livingstone had a slogan for it - Christianity and Commerce. | 0:05:49 | 0:05:55 | |
This would be the Empire's new civilising mission. | 0:06:06 | 0:06:10 | |
Bible in hand, he was going to unlock the Dark Continent. | 0:06:20 | 0:06:25 | |
Such was the dream. | 0:06:28 | 0:06:30 | |
The reality was different. | 0:06:30 | 0:06:33 | |
The place chosen by Livingstone to build his mission, | 0:06:35 | 0:06:38 | |
turned out to be hostile and dangerous - | 0:06:38 | 0:06:41 | |
a malarial death trap. | 0:06:41 | 0:06:43 | |
-Perfect, thank you very much. -You're welcome. -Thank you. | 0:06:47 | 0:06:50 | |
One by one, | 0:06:54 | 0:06:56 | |
Livingstone's followers succumbed to hunger and disease. | 0:06:56 | 0:07:00 | |
And this is all that remains. | 0:07:17 | 0:07:19 | |
It's the grave of one of the missionaries, Henry de Wint Burrup. | 0:07:19 | 0:07:24 | |
His name's even misspelt on his tombstone, poor chap. | 0:07:24 | 0:07:27 | |
He died of exhaustion and diarrhoea in February 1862. | 0:07:27 | 0:07:31 | |
An eyewitness said that he had shrunk to half his normal size | 0:07:31 | 0:07:36 | |
and had turned a horrible shade of yellow. | 0:07:36 | 0:07:40 | |
One of his last acts had been to write a letter to the rowing clubs | 0:07:40 | 0:07:43 | |
of Oxford and Cambridge, asking them to raise money to buy a steamer | 0:07:43 | 0:07:48 | |
to go up the Shire River to stop slavery. | 0:07:48 | 0:07:51 | |
Then, in 1865, after years of exploring the interior, | 0:08:08 | 0:08:13 | |
the most famous missionary in the world vanished. | 0:08:13 | 0:08:17 | |
Nothing was heard from him for an entire three years. | 0:08:20 | 0:08:25 | |
It was a world-wide mystery. | 0:08:27 | 0:08:29 | |
The New York Herald sent a journalist, | 0:08:30 | 0:08:32 | |
Henry Morton Stanley, to Africa. | 0:08:32 | 0:08:34 | |
"Find Livingstone", were his orders, | 0:08:36 | 0:08:38 | |
"by any means necessary." | 0:08:38 | 0:08:40 | |
Very strong man, eh? Very strong! | 0:08:50 | 0:08:54 | |
And find him he did, in what would become | 0:08:58 | 0:09:01 | |
one of the most celebrated encounters of the Victorian age. | 0:09:01 | 0:09:04 | |
Stanley was a chancer, | 0:09:08 | 0:09:10 | |
so we must take his account of the meeting with a pinch of salt, | 0:09:10 | 0:09:13 | |
but here's what he said happened. | 0:09:13 | 0:09:15 | |
"As I approached I noticed, he was pale. | 0:09:16 | 0:09:19 | |
"He looked weary. | 0:09:19 | 0:09:21 | |
"I would have embraced him, but he being an Englishman, | 0:09:21 | 0:09:25 | |
"I wasn't sure how he would receive me. | 0:09:25 | 0:09:27 | |
"So I walked up to him deliberately, took off my hat and said, | 0:09:27 | 0:09:33 | |
"Dr Livingstone, I presume." | 0:09:33 | 0:09:36 | |
But Livingstone was still in the grip of a passion to explore. | 0:09:42 | 0:09:47 | |
For almost two years he drove himself on, | 0:09:47 | 0:09:50 | |
sick with cholera and dysentery. | 0:09:50 | 0:09:53 | |
He even extracted his own teeth. | 0:09:53 | 0:09:55 | |
He died in Africa. | 0:10:00 | 0:10:02 | |
He was alone, thousands of miles from home. | 0:10:02 | 0:10:06 | |
They found him in his hut, kneeling, it was said, | 0:10:06 | 0:10:10 | |
in prayer. | 0:10:10 | 0:10:11 | |
Two faithful servants - | 0:10:17 | 0:10:19 | |
one of them a former slave freed by Livingstone - | 0:10:19 | 0:10:24 | |
gathered up his body and carried it all the way to the coast. | 0:10:24 | 0:10:28 | |
There, they loaded it onto a ship bound for London. | 0:10:30 | 0:10:34 | |
His heart, though, was buried in Africa. | 0:10:34 | 0:10:37 | |
On 18th February, 1874, | 0:10:57 | 0:10:59 | |
a great outpouring of grief gripped London. | 0:10:59 | 0:11:02 | |
The mourners stood on the street, thousands strong, | 0:11:05 | 0:11:09 | |
many of them weeping, to watch the body of David Livingstone pass by. | 0:11:09 | 0:11:13 | |
His funeral would be held at the resting place of Britain's elect, | 0:11:16 | 0:11:21 | |
Westminster Abbey. | 0:11:21 | 0:11:22 | |
This was no ordinary mortal they were burying. | 0:11:24 | 0:11:27 | |
David Livingstone had become more than an explorer, | 0:11:39 | 0:11:42 | |
more than a missionary, he had become a myth. | 0:11:42 | 0:11:46 | |
His brave life and lonely death reassured a people busy conquering | 0:11:46 | 0:11:52 | |
the world that the Empire was about more than greed and domination. | 0:11:52 | 0:11:57 | |
It was about sacrifice and justice and doing good. | 0:11:57 | 0:12:03 | |
All around the Abbey | 0:12:09 | 0:12:11 | |
were elaborate monuments to the great conquerors of Empire. | 0:12:11 | 0:12:14 | |
Livingstone's memorial was a more modest affair. | 0:12:21 | 0:12:25 | |
It's a simple slab of stone, but it lies right of the heart | 0:12:51 | 0:12:55 | |
of Westminster Abbey, because to many British people what Livingstone was trying to do | 0:12:55 | 0:13:01 | |
lay at the heart of the British Empire. | 0:13:01 | 0:13:04 | |
The tears of the nation had hardly dried | 0:13:14 | 0:13:16 | |
when Livingstone's diaries were published... | 0:13:16 | 0:13:18 | |
..heavily edited to remove evidence of his frequent failures. | 0:13:20 | 0:13:24 | |
In his entire life, he's said to have made only a single convert. | 0:13:26 | 0:13:30 | |
But the diaries would help him become | 0:13:32 | 0:13:34 | |
almost a patron saint of Empire. | 0:13:34 | 0:13:36 | |
Where Livingstone blazed a trail, other missionaries followed, | 0:13:49 | 0:13:54 | |
though in slightly more comfort. | 0:13:54 | 0:13:56 | |
Well into the 20th century, | 0:13:58 | 0:13:59 | |
thousands of them set out across the Empire to bring Christianity to the heathen. | 0:13:59 | 0:14:05 | |
They often brought with them education and modern medicine. | 0:14:05 | 0:14:09 | |
When Africans came to demand freedom from their colonial masters, | 0:14:13 | 0:14:18 | |
they dismissed much of this foreign do-gooding | 0:14:18 | 0:14:22 | |
as destroying native culture. | 0:14:22 | 0:14:23 | |
Yet, more than 100 years after Livingstone, | 0:14:40 | 0:14:44 | |
much of the missionary legacy is alive and well. | 0:14:44 | 0:14:47 | |
Very good. Class say "management". | 0:14:47 | 0:14:49 | |
-Management. -Again! -Management. -Again! | 0:14:49 | 0:14:53 | |
-Management. -As I am here, I'm managing this class. | 0:14:53 | 0:14:57 | |
Everybody is fine because I am here. | 0:14:57 | 0:15:00 | |
I am managing this class. | 0:15:00 | 0:15:02 | |
Today, the work started by Church of Scotland missionaries | 0:15:03 | 0:15:06 | |
has, as all over Africa, become a local African activity. | 0:15:06 | 0:15:11 | |
More? Another, yeah? | 0:15:12 | 0:15:15 | |
The Nkolokoti Primary School was founded in 1935 | 0:15:28 | 0:15:31 | |
in what was then the British colony of Nyasaland. | 0:15:31 | 0:15:35 | |
CHILDREN SING | 0:15:41 | 0:15:43 | |
The school now has almost 8,000 pupils. | 0:15:43 | 0:15:47 | |
Some walk for hours to get here. | 0:15:49 | 0:15:53 | |
Such is the demand, they have to be taught in shifts. | 0:15:53 | 0:15:57 | |
Missionaries have come in for a lot of stick for providing an excuse | 0:16:04 | 0:16:08 | |
for flag-planting and land-grabbing, but the fact of the matter is, | 0:16:08 | 0:16:12 | |
that without missionaries, this school wouldn't exist, | 0:16:12 | 0:16:16 | |
and so 8,000 children would get no education and, come to that, | 0:16:16 | 0:16:20 | |
no breakfast either. | 0:16:20 | 0:16:22 | |
Mine's thicker than yours! | 0:16:32 | 0:16:34 | |
Today, the school is funded by the Malawi Government, | 0:16:38 | 0:16:41 | |
although the porridge comes courtesy of a Scottish charity. | 0:16:41 | 0:16:45 | |
You know we start very early in the morning. | 0:16:57 | 0:17:00 | |
Some leave very early without eating. | 0:17:00 | 0:17:03 | |
When they come, they find porridge. | 0:17:03 | 0:17:07 | |
They fill their stomachs. | 0:17:07 | 0:17:11 | |
Now, what do you feel | 0:17:11 | 0:17:12 | |
about the missionaries who started this school? | 0:17:12 | 0:17:14 | |
They did a great job and they assisted this area very much. | 0:17:14 | 0:17:18 | |
Just imagine, it was established in 1935. | 0:17:18 | 0:17:22 | |
Up to now we are still benefiting. | 0:17:22 | 0:17:24 | |
Is it a religious school? | 0:17:24 | 0:17:26 | |
It is a religious school. | 0:17:26 | 0:17:28 | |
-So you teach them about Christianity? -Yeah. | 0:17:28 | 0:17:32 | |
We help our subject by our knowledge, yeah. | 0:17:32 | 0:17:35 | |
What do you hope they will learn in your school? | 0:17:35 | 0:17:38 | |
They learn to be good citizens. We teach them to love each other, | 0:17:39 | 0:17:45 | |
respect each other, respect elders, | 0:17:45 | 0:17:50 | |
that's what we teach them. | 0:17:50 | 0:17:52 | |
CHILDREN SING HYMN | 0:17:52 | 0:17:54 | |
David Livingstone's vision of Christianity and Commerce | 0:18:25 | 0:18:29 | |
was, in a sense, fulfilled. | 0:18:29 | 0:18:31 | |
Where the missionaries led, the traders followed. | 0:18:33 | 0:18:37 | |
They came to grow coffee or tobacco or cotton. | 0:18:43 | 0:18:47 | |
Their African workers, so went the plan, | 0:18:53 | 0:18:56 | |
would be influenced towards Christianity. | 0:18:56 | 0:19:00 | |
This was the headquarters of the African Lakes Company, | 0:19:12 | 0:19:16 | |
set up in 1882 to trade in ivory and cotton. | 0:19:16 | 0:19:20 | |
To many Victorians, it seemed a marriage made in heaven. | 0:19:28 | 0:19:32 | |
But too often, commerce and Christianity turned out | 0:19:32 | 0:19:36 | |
to make extremely unhappy bedfellows. | 0:19:36 | 0:19:39 | |
In 1893, a Scotsman came out to manage a huge cotton estate | 0:19:43 | 0:19:49 | |
outside Blantyre, Malawi, | 0:19:49 | 0:19:51 | |
named, incidentally, after David Livingstone's birthplace. | 0:19:51 | 0:19:55 | |
The manager, William Jervis Livingstone, | 0:19:55 | 0:19:58 | |
was a distant relative of the missionary, | 0:19:58 | 0:20:00 | |
but this Livingstone had rather different ambitions. | 0:20:00 | 0:20:04 | |
HE was here to make money. | 0:20:04 | 0:20:06 | |
Like other settlers, | 0:20:08 | 0:20:10 | |
William Jervis Livingstone ran a harsh regime on the plantation. | 0:20:10 | 0:20:14 | |
Floggings were said to be common. Resentment ran high. | 0:20:14 | 0:20:18 | |
But then one man decided he wasn't going to take it any more, | 0:20:26 | 0:20:30 | |
and here he is on the Malawian 100-kwacha banknote. | 0:20:30 | 0:20:35 | |
He's also on the 500-kwacha, in fact he's on every Malawian banknote, | 0:20:35 | 0:20:40 | |
because the Reverend John Chilembwe is a national hero. | 0:20:40 | 0:20:44 | |
He wasn't then, of course. | 0:20:44 | 0:20:45 | |
To the colonial authorities, he was nothing but a dangerous nuisance. | 0:20:45 | 0:20:50 | |
John Chilembwe had been educated in a Christian mission. | 0:20:54 | 0:20:58 | |
He'd even been ordained a Baptist Minister | 0:20:58 | 0:21:02 | |
and he liked to dress like a European gentleman. | 0:21:02 | 0:21:07 | |
But John Chilembwe's upbringing had given him radical, | 0:21:07 | 0:21:11 | |
even subversive ideas. | 0:21:11 | 0:21:13 | |
The notion, for example, that all humanity was equal before God. | 0:21:15 | 0:21:20 | |
His mission church, next to Livingstone's estate, | 0:21:20 | 0:21:24 | |
became the centre for a movement which took as its motto | 0:21:24 | 0:21:27 | |
"Africa for the Africans". | 0:21:27 | 0:21:29 | |
On the afternoon of Friday 22nd January 1915, John Chilembwe announced, | 0:21:31 | 0:21:39 | |
"The time has come at last to fight back against our oppressors. | 0:21:39 | 0:21:43 | |
"You go out to fight as African patriots for the whole black race. | 0:21:43 | 0:21:49 | |
"Freedom is the cry of Africa. Our blood will mean something at last." | 0:21:49 | 0:21:56 | |
Chilembwe hoped to unleash a new kind of race war - | 0:22:02 | 0:22:06 | |
black Christians against white settlers. | 0:22:06 | 0:22:12 | |
One of his chosen victims was his neighbour, | 0:22:12 | 0:22:16 | |
William Jervis Livingstone. | 0:22:16 | 0:22:18 | |
-What was your grandfather growing here? -He was growing, er, tobacco, coffee, cotton, rubber, erm... | 0:22:18 | 0:22:24 | |
'Deirdre Livingstone is the granddaughter | 0:22:24 | 0:22:27 | |
'of William Jervis Livingstone.' | 0:22:27 | 0:22:29 | |
-What was this room? -This was my grandparents' bedroom and this was, | 0:22:30 | 0:22:36 | |
er, where they slept. | 0:22:36 | 0:22:37 | |
The bed was just about there, and they would go out on the veranda | 0:22:37 | 0:22:41 | |
and have all their parties next door in the dining room. | 0:22:41 | 0:22:43 | |
Tell me what happened that night. | 0:22:51 | 0:22:54 | |
The 23rd of January 1915. | 0:22:54 | 0:22:56 | |
That was the night when Chilembwe's men decided to rise up against the white men | 0:22:57 | 0:23:02 | |
and my father was a tiny little baby | 0:23:02 | 0:23:05 | |
of six months old, being bounced on the bed, | 0:23:05 | 0:23:08 | |
and my grandmother was actually in the bath having her evening bath. | 0:23:08 | 0:23:11 | |
It was about nine o'clock, so it was a completely normal family scene, you know, at night, | 0:23:11 | 0:23:17 | |
and then suddenly armed men with spears, the natives, came in and rushed into this room. | 0:23:17 | 0:23:22 | |
They went to attack my grandfather and speared him. | 0:23:28 | 0:23:32 | |
-Where in his body was he speared? -He was speared here, | 0:23:32 | 0:23:35 | |
so she went over to try and get some port wine, or brandy, | 0:23:35 | 0:23:38 | |
the usual things they resuscitated people with in those days, | 0:23:38 | 0:23:42 | |
and then suddenly the other natives came in | 0:23:42 | 0:23:44 | |
and the whole bunch of them literally came in and cut off his head in front of her. | 0:23:44 | 0:23:48 | |
-They cut his head off? -Yes. | 0:23:48 | 0:23:50 | |
What was absolutely desperate was my father at six months old was just lying on the bed | 0:23:50 | 0:23:55 | |
and then my aunt Nyasa, who was five years old, was seeing the whole scene | 0:23:55 | 0:23:59 | |
because she was actually sprayed with the blood from the severed head of my grandfather. | 0:23:59 | 0:24:04 | |
It was an absolutely desperate scene. | 0:24:04 | 0:24:06 | |
On the Sunday morning, John Chilembwe preached a sermon in his church. | 0:24:15 | 0:24:20 | |
He told a packed congregation that better times were ahead. | 0:24:20 | 0:24:24 | |
"The Kingdom of God is at hand," he said. | 0:24:24 | 0:24:27 | |
"You will hear the bugles sounding." | 0:24:27 | 0:24:30 | |
Beside him in the pulpit as proof | 0:24:30 | 0:24:34 | |
was the head of William Jervis Livingstone. | 0:24:34 | 0:24:38 | |
The revenge of the British authorities was, as so often, | 0:24:40 | 0:24:44 | |
swift and merciless. | 0:24:44 | 0:24:46 | |
Chilembwe's church was dynamited. | 0:24:51 | 0:24:55 | |
As for Chilembwe himself, he was hunted down, shot | 0:24:58 | 0:25:03 | |
and buried in an unmarked grave | 0:25:03 | 0:25:07 | |
Today, his home town is a shrine to the struggle against the British. | 0:25:18 | 0:25:23 | |
But his missionary message still rings out from his rebuilt church. | 0:25:28 | 0:25:33 | |
CONGREGATION SINGS IN MALAWIAN LANGUAGE | 0:25:33 | 0:25:36 | |
Like many Malawians, | 0:25:58 | 0:26:00 | |
the congregation of the church he founded | 0:26:00 | 0:26:03 | |
look on John Chilembwe as a hero. | 0:26:03 | 0:26:06 | |
John Chilembwe wanted to establish a church with African origin, | 0:26:10 | 0:26:17 | |
but yet with a Western education. | 0:26:17 | 0:26:20 | |
But to kill someone, to cut their head off, | 0:26:20 | 0:26:23 | |
-is not the behaviour you expect from a religious minister, is it? -It is a terrible thing. | 0:26:23 | 0:26:27 | |
But when you look at the killing side, we also look at the other side - what did they do for him to kill? | 0:26:27 | 0:26:33 | |
Because there is a cause to everything. | 0:26:33 | 0:26:36 | |
You can kill too, when you reach at a certain stage... | 0:26:36 | 0:26:40 | |
Say I want to take your family, kill your family, you can kill too, | 0:26:40 | 0:26:44 | |
so we don't know what happened. It's just a...a mystery. | 0:26:44 | 0:26:47 | |
-And you admire him? -Yes, we do admire him in Malawi, | 0:26:47 | 0:26:51 | |
but we admire him because of his, er, teaching when he established the church, | 0:26:51 | 0:26:57 | |
because he wanted people to be self-sustaining, work hard. | 0:26:57 | 0:27:03 | |
He brought that idea. | 0:27:03 | 0:27:06 | |
CONGREGATION APPLAUDS | 0:27:06 | 0:27:09 | |
The march of the white race, led by Britain, across the globe | 0:27:17 | 0:27:21 | |
in the late 19th century was astonishing to behold. | 0:27:21 | 0:27:26 | |
So astonishing that people began to search for explanations. | 0:27:26 | 0:27:30 | |
An idea took hold among some people that this must be | 0:27:30 | 0:27:34 | |
a scientifically pre-determined destiny. | 0:27:34 | 0:27:37 | |
In 1863, the members of the Anthropological Society of London | 0:27:48 | 0:27:53 | |
gathered to hear what was billed as a scientific lecture. | 0:27:53 | 0:27:58 | |
It was a momentous and, as it turned out, hugely controversial occasion. | 0:28:00 | 0:28:05 | |
The speaker was the president and founder of the association, Doctor James Hunt. | 0:28:09 | 0:28:13 | |
The title of his paper was "The Negro's Place in Nature". | 0:28:13 | 0:28:18 | |
"I propose to discuss the physical and mental characteristics of the Negro, | 0:28:22 | 0:28:27 | |
"with a view to determining not only his position in nature, | 0:28:27 | 0:28:32 | |
"but also the station he should occupy. | 0:28:32 | 0:28:35 | |
"I shall also dwell on the analogies between the Negro | 0:28:37 | 0:28:41 | |
"and the Anthropoid apes." | 0:28:41 | 0:28:43 | |
What followed was over an hour of racist nonsense | 0:28:44 | 0:28:49 | |
dressed up in the pseudo-technological language of scientific observation. | 0:28:49 | 0:28:54 | |
"The skull is very hard and unusually thick, | 0:28:55 | 0:28:58 | |
"enabling Negros to fight or carry heavy weights on their heads with pleasure." | 0:28:58 | 0:29:04 | |
There were hisses and boos from the audience. | 0:29:05 | 0:29:08 | |
Some considered he was justifying slavery, | 0:29:08 | 0:29:12 | |
which the British were proud of having abolished, | 0:29:12 | 0:29:16 | |
but his ideas struck a chord among more fanatical empire builders. | 0:29:16 | 0:29:21 | |
Because the Empire had been such a huge success story, | 0:29:25 | 0:29:29 | |
they began to talk about how they had - and this phrase was pretty widely used - a genius for empire. | 0:29:29 | 0:29:37 | |
But what was this genius? | 0:29:37 | 0:29:39 | |
It got muddled up with Charles Darwin's ideas about evolution. | 0:29:42 | 0:29:46 | |
The champions of empire | 0:29:46 | 0:29:48 | |
argued that the British had evolved naturally to rule over others, | 0:29:48 | 0:29:54 | |
so that they were now in fact a superior race. | 0:29:54 | 0:29:58 | |
"Everywhere we see the European as the conqueror and the dominant race | 0:30:03 | 0:30:08 | |
"and no amount of education will ever alter the decrees of nature's laws." | 0:30:08 | 0:30:15 | |
David Livingstone had preached that colonisers had a duty | 0:30:18 | 0:30:22 | |
to help the unfortunate. | 0:30:22 | 0:30:24 | |
But what was the difference between unfortunate and inferior? | 0:30:25 | 0:30:30 | |
A conviction took hold that helping meant ruling. | 0:30:33 | 0:30:37 | |
One man who felt this new aggressive sense of mission more keenly than any other | 0:30:53 | 0:30:58 | |
came to Southern Africa in 1871. | 0:30:58 | 0:31:02 | |
His name was Cecil Rhodes and you'd need a fistful of adjectives to describe him. | 0:31:06 | 0:31:11 | |
He was bold, he was buccaneering, he was brilliant, | 0:31:11 | 0:31:15 | |
but he was also brash, brutal and bigoted. | 0:31:15 | 0:31:20 | |
He added great tracts of Africa to the Empire, on the principal that, | 0:31:20 | 0:31:24 | |
as he put it, "We are the first race in the world | 0:31:24 | 0:31:28 | |
"and the more of the world we inhabit, the better it is for the human race." | 0:31:28 | 0:31:34 | |
The Empire was built or stolen from others by mavericks | 0:31:38 | 0:31:42 | |
and Rhodes was the maverick's maverick. | 0:31:42 | 0:31:45 | |
He did as he pleased | 0:31:45 | 0:31:48 | |
and only told the politicians in London afterwards. | 0:31:48 | 0:31:52 | |
He made war. He created colonies off his own bat. | 0:31:52 | 0:31:55 | |
Rhodes called the English "God's chosen instrument in carrying out the divine idea." | 0:31:58 | 0:32:04 | |
It could almost have been David Livingstone talking. | 0:32:04 | 0:32:08 | |
But, where Livingstone saw his duty as being to serve, | 0:32:12 | 0:32:16 | |
Rhodes had other ideas. | 0:32:16 | 0:32:18 | |
"Africa lies ready for us," he told his supporters. | 0:32:18 | 0:32:23 | |
"It is our duty to take it." | 0:32:23 | 0:32:25 | |
Livingstone's treasure was in heaven. | 0:32:30 | 0:32:32 | |
Rhodes' was on earth - or under it. | 0:32:32 | 0:32:35 | |
He made his fortune in a diamond town. | 0:32:46 | 0:32:49 | |
Today, it's been recreated to give a flavour of what it was like in the 1880s. | 0:32:55 | 0:32:59 | |
A place of high hopes and low living, | 0:33:01 | 0:33:04 | |
where desperate men came to get rich or die trying. | 0:33:04 | 0:33:09 | |
Then, it was known simply as New Rush. | 0:33:11 | 0:33:15 | |
The Colonial Secretary, Lord Kimberley, thought the name New Rush was altogether far too vulgar | 0:33:26 | 0:33:33 | |
and, as for the Dutch name, Vooruitzicht, well, frankly it was just about unpronounceable, | 0:33:33 | 0:33:39 | |
so a grovelling official said, "Would the name Kimberley be acceptable?" | 0:33:39 | 0:33:44 | |
"Most acceptable," said His Lordship. | 0:33:44 | 0:33:46 | |
Rhodes' power-base was the Kimberley Club, where Southern Africa's business elite gathered. | 0:33:51 | 0:33:58 | |
They said you could find the five richest men in Africa at this bar, | 0:34:05 | 0:34:10 | |
but Rhodes was actually less interested in money than he was in power, | 0:34:10 | 0:34:15 | |
and specifically in realising what he called "my idea". | 0:34:15 | 0:34:20 | |
That idea, he said, was "the bringing of the whole uncivilised world under British rule," | 0:34:24 | 0:34:32 | |
and he knew his own part in it. | 0:34:32 | 0:34:35 | |
Rhodes sketched out his dream on this very map. | 0:34:39 | 0:34:42 | |
It is of British territory running right down the spine of Africa. | 0:34:42 | 0:34:47 | |
In pencil, he drew the proposed course of a railway line | 0:34:47 | 0:34:50 | |
that began at the Cape, at the tip of Southern Africa, | 0:34:50 | 0:34:53 | |
up through South Africa, through what is now Zambia, | 0:34:53 | 0:34:59 | |
on into Uganda, into Sudan and then to Cairo on the Mediterranean. | 0:34:59 | 0:35:07 | |
He believed that this would create a territory fit for white men, | 0:35:07 | 0:35:12 | |
that would be bigger and more populous than the United States. | 0:35:12 | 0:35:16 | |
Here in the Kimberley Club, | 0:35:24 | 0:35:26 | |
Rhodes planned the next stage of the conquest of southern Africa | 0:35:26 | 0:35:31 | |
and he would be its leader, not as a soldier, but as a businessman. | 0:35:31 | 0:35:36 | |
His irregular army of so-called pioneers were sent north | 0:35:40 | 0:35:44 | |
in search of new territory. | 0:35:44 | 0:35:46 | |
"Take what you can," said the British Prime Minister, Lord Salisbury, "and ask me later." | 0:35:48 | 0:35:53 | |
Rhodes' aim was, as he put it, "to set up mining companies, | 0:36:03 | 0:36:08 | |
"cultivate the land, and preserve peace and order". | 0:36:08 | 0:36:11 | |
In other words - to invade. | 0:36:12 | 0:36:15 | |
Through a combination of treaties which later turned out to mean | 0:36:17 | 0:36:21 | |
not quite what they seemed to mean at the time, | 0:36:21 | 0:36:24 | |
bribery and liberal use of the machine gun, they carved out a huge swathe of Africa, | 0:36:24 | 0:36:31 | |
now known as Zimbabwe, but then named Rhodesia, after their leader. | 0:36:31 | 0:36:36 | |
If ever there was a country founded on blood and greed, Rhodesia was it. | 0:36:44 | 0:36:50 | |
Rhodes would become Prime Minister of the Cape Colony - | 0:37:01 | 0:37:05 | |
later South Africa - the nation that gave the world Apartheid. | 0:37:05 | 0:37:10 | |
"These are my politics," he announced. | 0:37:11 | 0:37:14 | |
"The native is to be denied the vote and treated as a child." | 0:37:14 | 0:37:18 | |
This is what Rhodes' great dream, | 0:37:20 | 0:37:23 | |
the duty of the white race to civilise the earth, came down to. | 0:37:23 | 0:37:28 | |
Rhodes' triumphalist vision of Empire was partially fulfilled. | 0:37:46 | 0:37:50 | |
By the end of the 19th century, | 0:37:52 | 0:37:54 | |
the lion's share of Africa belonged to Britain. | 0:37:54 | 0:37:58 | |
But the business of actually running the world's untidiest empire | 0:38:06 | 0:38:10 | |
was a rather more humdrum affair. | 0:38:10 | 0:38:14 | |
Well into the 20th century, huge areas were governed by handfuls of white men, | 0:38:19 | 0:38:24 | |
thrown in at the deep end and told to get on with it. | 0:38:24 | 0:38:29 | |
-NEWSREEL: -A British district officer. For much of the year he's on tour, | 0:38:29 | 0:38:32 | |
visiting the remote villages of his district. | 0:38:32 | 0:38:35 | |
His arrival at a village is a great occasion. | 0:38:35 | 0:38:37 | |
Elders and councillors come down to the water's edge to meet him. | 0:38:37 | 0:38:41 | |
For Mr Todd, although only 24, rules over some 20,000 people | 0:38:41 | 0:38:48 | |
with far greater authority than that wielded by any civil servant here at home. | 0:38:48 | 0:38:52 | |
They were called District Officers | 0:38:54 | 0:38:58 | |
but they usually had dozens of jobs - magistrate, | 0:38:58 | 0:39:01 | |
tax collector, coroner, chief of police. | 0:39:01 | 0:39:07 | |
In the 1930s, the population of British Africa | 0:39:20 | 0:39:23 | |
was reckoned at about 43 million. | 0:39:23 | 0:39:26 | |
It was administered by a mere 1,200 officials. | 0:39:26 | 0:39:31 | |
One of those officials, looking around and seeing how one young man with perhaps six native soldiers | 0:39:31 | 0:39:37 | |
might be in charge of 100,000 people, | 0:39:37 | 0:39:40 | |
remarked, "Britain's entire position rests upon bluff." | 0:39:40 | 0:39:45 | |
One of the ways this enormous bluff worked | 0:39:50 | 0:39:53 | |
was through a rather British invention called indirect rule. | 0:39:53 | 0:39:57 | |
All over the Empire local rulers were persuaded, bribed or threatened | 0:39:57 | 0:40:03 | |
into throwing in their lot with the British. | 0:40:03 | 0:40:06 | |
The British pulled the strings from behind the scenes | 0:40:06 | 0:40:10 | |
and, if there wasn't a ruler, they just invented one. | 0:40:10 | 0:40:15 | |
District Officers in Africa were there for supposedly ruling alongside the local chief. | 0:40:26 | 0:40:32 | |
It could be a lonely job | 0:40:37 | 0:40:39 | |
but, then, you weren't supposed to hang around at home very much. | 0:40:39 | 0:40:43 | |
You had to be out and about in the hills and farms and villages, | 0:40:43 | 0:40:47 | |
sorting out trouble with a handful of locally recruited police officers. | 0:40:47 | 0:40:53 | |
HE SPEAKS AFRICAN LANGUAGE | 0:40:53 | 0:40:56 | |
As for preparation, well, if you could survive a British public school you could survive anything. | 0:41:33 | 0:41:38 | |
"I was head of my house," recalled one young District Officer. "I was deputy head of school. | 0:41:38 | 0:41:43 | |
"I was captain of rugger. I was Sergeant Major in the Officer Training Corp. | 0:41:43 | 0:41:48 | |
"So, when, eventually, I found myself alone in the bush, | 0:41:48 | 0:41:51 | |
"I wasn't afraid in the slightest." | 0:41:51 | 0:41:54 | |
Quite often, it worked pretty well. | 0:41:58 | 0:42:01 | |
One European writer travelling through British Africa was certainly impressed. | 0:42:01 | 0:42:06 | |
"Never since the days of Ancient Greece," he said, | 0:42:06 | 0:42:09 | |
"has the world been ruled by such sweet, just, boyish masters." | 0:42:09 | 0:42:16 | |
Thank you. Would you ask the defendant what he has to say about it, please? | 0:42:16 | 0:42:21 | |
'One of them still lives just outside Nairobi in Kenya, | 0:42:30 | 0:42:33 | |
'though inevitably no longer quite so boyish.' | 0:42:33 | 0:42:36 | |
-Jeremy. -How do you do? Very good to see you. | 0:42:36 | 0:42:40 | |
-Thank you for having us. -You're more than welcome. -Thank you. | 0:42:40 | 0:42:44 | |
There were such small numbers of people making the Empire work. How did they get away with it? | 0:42:44 | 0:42:50 | |
I think it's fair to say they trusted us. | 0:42:50 | 0:42:53 | |
And we trusted them. It was mutual. | 0:42:53 | 0:42:56 | |
Mutual respect, mutual trust, and they did what was required of them. | 0:42:56 | 0:43:01 | |
We did what was required of the Government. | 0:43:01 | 0:43:04 | |
You say you would do what was required of you and they would do what was required of them, | 0:43:04 | 0:43:09 | |
but what right did you have to require them to do anything? | 0:43:09 | 0:43:12 | |
They were...the heads of their tribes. The Government needed to exist. | 0:43:15 | 0:43:20 | |
I think we all agree governments - good or bad - are necessary. | 0:43:21 | 0:43:25 | |
Erm, and...they...found it probably as satisfying as we did. | 0:43:25 | 0:43:33 | |
Did you ever wonder what you were doing? "What am I doing here?" | 0:43:33 | 0:43:37 | |
Well, er, our basic raison d'etre, if you like, was to maintain law and order. | 0:43:37 | 0:43:43 | |
But of course, in the face of lots of armed... | 0:43:43 | 0:43:45 | |
well-armed and large gangs, it wasn't so easy. | 0:43:45 | 0:43:50 | |
Did you ever question what the Empire was for? | 0:43:50 | 0:43:53 | |
No, it was there and, er, one accepted it. | 0:43:53 | 0:43:56 | |
Some people say the Empire was an unjustifiable mistake, an imposition on the rest of the world. | 0:43:56 | 0:44:02 | |
What would you say? | 0:44:02 | 0:44:03 | |
In order to, erm, maintain, er, safety for trade, | 0:44:03 | 0:44:10 | |
it needed the government. | 0:44:10 | 0:44:13 | |
So the one followed the other. It had to. | 0:44:15 | 0:44:18 | |
-Did you think you were doing good? -Yes. | 0:44:18 | 0:44:21 | |
There was a great deal of satisfaction in...in getting... advancement, | 0:44:21 | 0:44:26 | |
you know, erm, schooling and... public health, health centres. | 0:44:26 | 0:44:34 | |
They may not have liked us. | 0:44:34 | 0:44:36 | |
Er, I'm... I still, to this day, when I go down to Kilifi, where I have a little house on the beach, | 0:44:36 | 0:44:42 | |
they'll sometimes see me in the town and greet me very warmly, so, erm... | 0:44:42 | 0:44:48 | |
..it can't all have been bad. HE LAUGHS | 0:44:49 | 0:44:54 | |
But, good or bad, by the middle of the 20th century | 0:44:58 | 0:45:02 | |
there was a new force abroad. | 0:45:02 | 0:45:04 | |
The world had turned against the very idea of imperialism. | 0:45:08 | 0:45:13 | |
Nowhere would the struggle for freedom be more bitter | 0:45:16 | 0:45:19 | |
than in Kenya. | 0:45:19 | 0:45:21 | |
It sparked a conflict that would shatter the Empire's claims to moral authority. | 0:45:21 | 0:45:26 | |
White settlers in Kenya had done well for themselves, farming the fertile highlands. | 0:45:32 | 0:45:38 | |
They developed the country. They felt they had a claim to it. | 0:45:38 | 0:45:42 | |
Many native Kenyans, especially those Kikuyu who'd been displaced, | 0:45:45 | 0:45:49 | |
felt otherwise. | 0:45:49 | 0:45:51 | |
The issue was land. | 0:45:59 | 0:46:01 | |
As one Kikuyu explained to a visiting British politician, | 0:46:01 | 0:46:05 | |
when someone steals your ox, it's killed and roasted and eaten, you can forget, | 0:46:05 | 0:46:10 | |
but when someone steals your land, you can never forget. | 0:46:10 | 0:46:14 | |
It's always there. It's lakes, it's streams, it's a bitter presence. | 0:46:14 | 0:46:21 | |
The division of the spoils in Kenya was not exactly equal. | 0:46:25 | 0:46:29 | |
A mere 3,000 white farmers occupied 12,000 square miles of prime land. | 0:46:29 | 0:46:37 | |
By contrast, over a million Kikuyu lived on just 2,000 square miles. | 0:46:39 | 0:46:46 | |
But the settlers were tough characters and they were in no mood to compromise. | 0:46:52 | 0:46:57 | |
Are you afraid of what might happen to the settlers' position | 0:46:57 | 0:47:01 | |
if the Africans move more towards self-government? | 0:47:01 | 0:47:04 | |
No. We've always stood on our feet before, I think we can do it again. | 0:47:04 | 0:47:07 | |
Do you think your property is likely to go, do you think you will be in a difficult position? | 0:47:07 | 0:47:11 | |
-Not without being fought for. -Would you fight? -Definitely. I've done it all my life. | 0:47:11 | 0:47:17 | |
Soon came rumours of a secret Kikuyu resistance movement called Mau Mau. | 0:47:23 | 0:47:29 | |
Their goal was freedom from British rule | 0:47:31 | 0:47:35 | |
and they were prepared to use terror to achieve it. | 0:47:35 | 0:47:38 | |
Mystery and fear were part of what the Mau Mau were about. | 0:47:45 | 0:47:49 | |
Deep in the forest of the Aberdare mountains | 0:47:49 | 0:47:52 | |
they conducted initiation ceremonies in which naked young people | 0:47:52 | 0:47:56 | |
drank goat's blood and swore to drive out the white invader. | 0:47:56 | 0:48:00 | |
In European circles, these became known as orgies | 0:48:00 | 0:48:04 | |
in which babies were torn from their mother's womb and eaten alive. | 0:48:04 | 0:48:08 | |
One colonial official even claimed to detect the horn shadow of the devil himself. | 0:48:08 | 0:48:14 | |
This, er, Mau Mau is a lawless and savage, er, organisation. | 0:48:17 | 0:48:21 | |
Of course, the situation in Kenya is still full of danger. | 0:48:21 | 0:48:25 | |
The stage was set for a violent showdown. | 0:48:29 | 0:48:33 | |
Native Kenyan troops working for the British were drafted in | 0:48:36 | 0:48:41 | |
to confront their own people. | 0:48:41 | 0:48:44 | |
Some settlers decided to get out while they could. | 0:48:46 | 0:48:50 | |
But, while the whites FELT under threat, | 0:48:59 | 0:49:02 | |
the people who really suffered were other Kikuyu. | 0:49:02 | 0:49:05 | |
Those who chose to stay loyal to the British. | 0:49:05 | 0:49:09 | |
On the night of March 26th 1953, the area of Lari, | 0:49:12 | 0:49:16 | |
here on the edge of the Great Rift Valley, was attacked by the Mau Mau. | 0:49:16 | 0:49:20 | |
The people here were largely loyal to the colonial government. | 0:49:20 | 0:49:24 | |
It was the middle of the night so most of the villagers were asleep. | 0:49:24 | 0:49:28 | |
The Mau Mau came to their huts, blocked the entrances, | 0:49:28 | 0:49:31 | |
set fire to them and then went to work with axes and machetes. | 0:49:31 | 0:49:37 | |
-NEWSREEL: -These pictures arrive from Kenya. | 0:49:41 | 0:49:44 | |
They show the charred remains of the village of Lari, | 0:49:44 | 0:49:46 | |
only 30 miles from Nairobi, where over 120 loyal Kikuyu | 0:49:46 | 0:49:51 | |
were massacred by Mau Mau terrorists. | 0:49:51 | 0:49:53 | |
Men, woman and children perished in a night of savagery almost beyond description. | 0:49:53 | 0:49:59 | |
An entire village was turned into a smouldering funeral pyre. | 0:49:59 | 0:50:03 | |
Alice Wanjiru Kariuki, or General Alice as she then was, | 0:50:14 | 0:50:19 | |
led the Mau Mau raid on Lari. | 0:50:19 | 0:50:21 | |
She's now aged 81 and still lives and farms near the village. | 0:50:21 | 0:50:28 | |
Good morning. | 0:50:28 | 0:50:31 | |
-You're Alice. Hello. -Nice to meet you. | 0:50:31 | 0:50:34 | |
Cor, that's a heck of a handshake! | 0:50:34 | 0:50:36 | |
Thank you. | 0:50:36 | 0:50:39 | |
Did you kill anybody? | 0:50:56 | 0:50:58 | |
Was there no other way to get your freedom, other than killing? | 0:51:26 | 0:51:31 | |
What do you think about the British now? | 0:51:42 | 0:51:45 | |
What do you think about the time that the British were here in Kenya as the colonial government? | 0:51:57 | 0:52:04 | |
Would the country have been better if they hadn't been here? | 0:52:12 | 0:52:15 | |
'Talk about a mixed verdict. | 0:52:26 | 0:52:29 | |
'But imperialism's time had passed.' | 0:52:30 | 0:52:32 | |
The struggle for uhuru - freedom - grew more intense. | 0:52:40 | 0:52:44 | |
The authorities rounded up Mau Mau suspects, thousands at a time, | 0:52:49 | 0:52:54 | |
herding them into vast internment camps. | 0:52:54 | 0:52:57 | |
-NEWSREEL: -Nearly 500 suspects were detained for questioning. | 0:52:58 | 0:53:02 | |
Over 100 of them were identified by survivors | 0:53:02 | 0:53:06 | |
as having taken part in the massacre. | 0:53:06 | 0:53:09 | |
Will you ask her, Inspector, why she pointed this man out? | 0:53:11 | 0:53:16 | |
HE SPEAKS KENYAN LANGUAGE | 0:53:16 | 0:53:21 | |
SHE REPLIES IN KENYAN LANGUAGE | 0:53:21 | 0:53:23 | |
"It's one who killed my mother." | 0:53:23 | 0:53:26 | |
Imprisonment, torture, massacres. | 0:53:32 | 0:53:36 | |
Somehow this temperate paradise had become a sort of hell. | 0:53:36 | 0:53:40 | |
The world looked on and wondered - | 0:53:46 | 0:53:48 | |
was this the empire that claimed to be doing good in the world? | 0:53:48 | 0:53:53 | |
Britain was losing the stomach for empire | 0:53:55 | 0:54:00 | |
and the ability to sustain it. | 0:54:00 | 0:54:02 | |
Much to the disgust of many farmers in the white highlands, | 0:54:10 | 0:54:15 | |
Kenyan nationalist leaders were summoned to London for negotiations. | 0:54:15 | 0:54:19 | |
Uhuru was finally within their grasp. | 0:54:19 | 0:54:22 | |
-NEWSREEL: -At the Uhuru Stadium the articles of independence | 0:54:26 | 0:54:30 | |
were handed by the Duke to the country's Prime Minister. | 0:54:30 | 0:54:33 | |
Joyful citizens of the New State celebrate their independence | 0:54:33 | 0:54:37 | |
in the most African of all ways - by dancing till they're ready to drop. | 0:54:37 | 0:54:40 | |
As the 1960s dawned, one colony after another | 0:54:42 | 0:54:47 | |
demanded - and got - independence | 0:54:47 | 0:54:50 | |
The sun had most definitely set on the Empire. | 0:54:58 | 0:55:02 | |
It had taken centuries to accumulate. | 0:55:02 | 0:55:05 | |
It was gone in a couple of decades. | 0:55:05 | 0:55:09 | |
The Empire brought blood and tears and dispossession to millions of people, | 0:55:13 | 0:55:19 | |
but it also brought roads and railways and education. | 0:55:19 | 0:55:23 | |
There is no simple judgement to be made | 0:55:31 | 0:55:34 | |
on three turbulent centuries of history. | 0:55:34 | 0:55:37 | |
Once, the official line was that, apart from the odd blip, | 0:55:41 | 0:55:45 | |
the Empire was a good thing, not just for Britain but for the world. | 0:55:45 | 0:55:50 | |
But the British grew ashamed of the Empire | 0:56:01 | 0:56:04 | |
and tried to wipe it from the national memory. | 0:56:04 | 0:56:07 | |
The Empire was certainly cruel, unjust and unjustifiable | 0:56:08 | 0:56:14 | |
if you were a slave on a plantation in the 18th century, | 0:56:14 | 0:56:18 | |
but it was benign and humane | 0:56:18 | 0:56:20 | |
if you were rescued from a slave ship by the Royal Navy in the 19th century. | 0:56:20 | 0:56:27 | |
For good or ill, much of the world is as it is today because of the Empire. | 0:56:35 | 0:56:40 | |
From the way it looks... | 0:56:42 | 0:56:44 | |
..to the sports people play. | 0:56:48 | 0:56:50 | |
From the religion they practise... | 0:56:55 | 0:56:58 | |
to the language they speak. | 0:56:58 | 0:57:01 | |
It has changed the very genetic make-up of Britain. | 0:57:06 | 0:57:10 | |
If only we can look at it clear-eyed, it can tell us a lot about who we are. | 0:57:12 | 0:57:18 | |
It's a story that belongs to all of us. | 0:57:20 | 0:57:24 | |
We've been through pride, we've been through shame, | 0:57:47 | 0:57:51 | |
mostly nowadays we seem to be in denial, | 0:57:51 | 0:57:54 | |
but if we really want to understand who we are, | 0:57:54 | 0:57:58 | |
it's time we stopped pretending the Empire was nothing to do with us. | 0:57:58 | 0:58:03 | |
To order a free Open University poster | 0:58:17 | 0:58:20 | |
exploring the legacy of Britain's Empire, go to... | 0:58:20 | 0:58:23 | |
Subtitles by Red Bee Media Ltd | 0:58:49 | 0:58:51 |