Hi, I’m John Green; this is Crash Course
World History and today we’re going to talk about decolonization. The empires European
states formed in the 19th century proved about as stable and long-lasting as Genghis Khan’s
leading to so many of the nation states we know and love today. Yes, I’m looking at
you, Burundi. [singing] DID YOU EVER KNOW YOU’RE MY BURUNDI?
YOU’RE EVERYTHING [theme music] STAN, DON’T CUT TO THE INTRO! I SING LIKE
AN ANGEL! [theme music] So unless you’re over 60-- and let’s face
it, Internet, you’re not-- you’ve only ever known a world of nation states. But as
we’ve seen from Egypt to Alexander the Great to China to Rome to the Mongols, who, for
once, are not the exception here, [Mongoltage] to the Ottomans and the Americas, empire has long
been the dominant way we’ve organized ourselves politically -- or at least the way that
other people have organized us. Mr. Green, Mr. Green! So to them
Star Wars would’ve been, like, a completely different movie. Most of them would’ve been
like, Go Empire! Crush those rebels! Yeah, also they’d be like what is this screen
that displays crisp moving images of events that are not currently occurring? Also, not
to get off-topic, but you never learn what happens AFTER the rebel victory in Star Wars.
And, as as we’ve learned from the French Revolution to the Arab Spring, revolution
is often the easy part. I mean, you think destroying a Death Star is hard? Try negotiating
a trade treaty with Gungans. Right, anyway. So, the late 20th century was not the first
time that empires disintegrated. Rome comes to mind. Also the Persians. And of course
the American Revolution ended one kind of European imperial experiment. But in all those
cases, Empire struck back… heh heh, you see what I did there? I mean, Britain lost
its 13 colonies, but later controlled half of Africa and all of India. And what makes
the recent decolonization so special is that at least so far, no empires have emerged to
replace the ones that fell. And this was largely due to World War II because
on some level, the Allies were fighting to stop Nazi imperialism. Hitler wanted to take
over Central Europe, and Africa, and probably the Middle East-- and the Ally defeat of the
Nazis discredited the whole idea of empire. So the English, French, and Americans couldn’t
very well say to the colonial troops who’d fought alongside them, “Thank you so much
for helping us to thwart Germany’s imperialistic ambitions. As a reward, please hand in your
rifle and return to your state of subjugation.” Plus, most of the big colonial powers-- especially
France, Britain, and Japan-- had been significantly weakened by World War II, by which I mean
that large swaths of them looked like this. So, post-war decolonization happened all over
the place: The British colony that had once been “India” became three independent
nations. By the way, is this Gandhi or is this Ben Kingsley playing Gandhi? In Southeast
Asia, French Indochina became Cambodia, Laos, and Vietnam. And the Dutch East Indies became
Indonesia. But of course when we think about decolonization, we mostly think about Africa
going from this to this. So we’re gonna oversimplify here, because
we have to, but decolonization throughout Afro-Eurasia had some similar characteristics.
Because it occurred in the context of the Cold War, many of these new nations had to
choose between socialist and capitalist influences, which shaped their futures. While many of
these new countries eventually adopted some form of democracy, the road there was often
rocky. Also, decolonization often involved violence, usually the overthrow of colonial
elites. But we’ll turn now to the most famous nonviolent--
or supposedly so, anyway-- decolonization: that of India. So the story begins, more or
less, in 1885 with the founding of the Indian National Congress. Congress Party leaders
and other nationalists in India were usually from the elite classes. Initially, they didn’t
even demand independence from Britain. But they were interested in creating a modern
Indian nation rather than a return to some ancient pre-colonial form, possibly because
India was-- and is--hugely diverse and really only unified into a single state when under
imperial rule by one group or another, whether the Mauryans, the Guptas, the Mughals, or
the British. Okay, let’s go to the Thought Bubble. The best known Indian nationalist, Mohandas
K. Gandhi, was a fascinating character. A British educated lawyer born to a wealthy
family, he’s known for making his own clothes, his long fasts, and his battles to alleviate
poverty, improve the rights of women, and achieve a unified Indian independence from
Britain. In terms of decolonization, he stands out for his use of nonviolence and his linking
it to a somewhat mythologized view of Indian history. I mean, after all, there’s plenty
of violence in India’s past and in its heroic epics, but Gandhi managed to hearken back
to a past that used nonviolence to bring change. Gandhi and his compatriot Jawaharlal Nehru
believed that a single India could continue to be ruled by Indian elites and somehow transcend
the tension between the country’s Hindu majority and its sizable Muslim minority. In this they were less practical than their
contemporary, Muhammad Ali Jinnah, the leader of the Muslim League who felt-- to quote historian
Ainslie Embree-- "that the unified India of which the Congress spoke was an artificial
one, created and maintained by British bayonets.” Jinnah proved correct and in 1947 when the
British left, their Indian colony was partitioned into the modern state of India and West and East Pakistan,
the latter of which became Bangladesh in 1971. While it’s easy to congratulate both the
British and the Indian governments on an orderly and nonviolent transfer of power, the reality
of partition was neither orderly nor nonviolent. About 12 million people were displaced as
Hindus in Pakistan moved to India and Muslims in India moved to Pakistan. As people left
their homes, sometimes unwillingly, there was violence, and all tolled as many as half
a million people were killed, more than died in the bloody Indonesian battle for independence.
So while it’s true that the massive protests that forced Britain to end its colonization
of India were nonviolent, the emergence of the independent states involved really wasn’t.
Thanks, Thought Bubble. All this violence devastated Gandhi, whose
lengthy and repeated hunger strikes to end violence had mixed results, and who was eventually
assassinated by a Hindu nationalist who felt that Gandhi was too sympathetic to Muslims.
Oh, it’s time for the open letter? An Open Letter to hunger strikers. But first, let’s see what’s in the secret
compartment today. A cupcake? Stan, this just seems cruel. These
are from Meredith the Intern to celebrate Merebration, the holiday she invented to celebrate
the anniversary of her singleness. Dear hunger strikers, Do you remember earlier
when I said that Gandhi hearkened back to a mythologized Indian past? Well it turns
out that hunger striking in India goes back all the way to, like, the 5th century BCE.
Hunger strikes have been used around the world including British and American suffragettes,
who hunger struck to get the vote. And in pre-Christian Ireland, when you felt wronged
by someone, it was common practice to sit on their doorstep and hunger strike until
your grievance was addressed. And sometimes it even works. I really admire you, hunger
strikers. But I lack the courage of your convictions. Also, this is an amazing cupcake.
Best wishes, John Green Since independence, India has largely been
a success story, although we will talk about the complexity of India’s emerging global
capitalism next week. For now, though, let’s travel east to Indonesia,
a huge nation of over 13,000 islands that has largely been ignored here on Crash Course
World History due to our long-standing bias against islands. Like, we haven’t even mentioned
Greenland on this show. The Greenlanders, of course, haven’t complained because they
don’t have the Internet. So, the Dutch exploited their island colonies
with the system of cultuurstelsel, in which all peasants had to set aside one fifth of
their land to grow cash crops for export to the Netherlands. This accounted for 25% of
the total Dutch national budget and it explains why they have all kinds of fancy buildings
despite technically living underwater. They’re like sea monkeys. This system was rather less
popular in Indonesia, and the Dutch didn’t offer much in exchange. They couldn’t even
defend their colony from the Japanese, who occupied it for most of World War II, during
which time the Japanese furthered the cause of Indonesian nationalism by placing native
Indonesians in more prominent positions of power, including Sukarno, who became Indonesia’s
first prime minister. After the war, the Dutch-- with British help--
tried to hold onto their Indonesian colonies with so-called “police actions,” which
went on for more than four years before Indonesia finally won its independence in 1950. Over
in the French colonies of Indochina, so called because they were neither Indian nor Chinese,
things were even more violent. The end of colonization was disastrous in Cambodia, where
the 17-year reign of Norodom Sihanouk gave way to the rise of the Khmer Rouge, which
massacred a stunning 21% of Cambodia’s population between 1975 and 1979. In Vietnam, the French fought communist-led
nationalists, especially Ho Chi Minh from almost the moment World War II ended until
1954, when the French were defeated. And then the Americans learned that there was a land
war available in Asia, so they quickly took over from the French and communists did not
fully control Vietnam until 1975. Despite still being ostensibly communist, Vietnam
now manufactures all kinds of stuff that we like in America, especially sneakers. More about that next week, too, but now to
Egypt. You’ll remember that Egypt bankrupted itself in the 19th century, trying to industrialize
and ever since had been ruled by an Egyptian king who took his orders from the British.
So while technically Egypt had been independent since 1922, it was very dependent independence.
But, that changed in the 1950s, when the king was overthrown by the army. The army commander
who led that coup was Gamal Abdul Nasser, who proved brilliant at playing the US and
the USSR off each other to the benefit of Egypt. Nasser’s was a largely secular nationalism,
and he and his successors saw one of the other anti-imperialistic nationalist forces in Egypt,
the Muslim Brotherhood, as a threat. So once in power, Nasser and the army banned the Muslim
Brotherhood, forcing it underground, where it would disappear and never become an issue
again. Wait, what’s that? …Really? And finally let’s turn to Central and Southern
Africa. One of the most problematic legacies of colonialism was its geography. Colonial
boundaries became redefined as the borders of new nation states, even where those boundaries
were arbitrary or, in some cases, pernicious. The best known example is in Rwanda, where
two very different tribes, the Hutu and the Tutsis were combined into one nation. But,
more generally, the colonizers’ focus on value extraction really hurt these new nations.
Europeans claimed to bring civilization and economic development to their colonies, but
this economic development focused solely on building infrastructure to get resources and
export them. Now whether European powers deliberately sabotaged
development in Africa is a hot-button topic we’re going to stay well away from, but
this much is inarguably true: when the Europeans left, African nations did not have the institutions
necessary to thrive in the post-war industrial world. They had very few schools, for instance,
and even fewer universities. Like, when the Congo achieved independence from Belgium in
1960, there were sixteen college graduates in a country of fourteen million people. Also, in many of these new countries, the
traditional elites had been undermined by imperialism. Most Europeans didn’t rule
their African possessions directly but rather through the proxies of local rulers. And once
the Europeans left, those local rulers, the upper classes, were seen as illegitimate collaborators.
And this meant that a new group of rulers had to rise up to take their place, often
with very little experience in governance. I mean, Zimbabwe’s long-serving dictator
Robert Mugabe was a high school teacher. Let that be a lesson to you. YOUR TEACHERS MAY
HAVE DICTATORIAL AMBITIONS. But most strongmen have emerged, of course, from the military:
Joseph Mobutu seized power in the Congo, which he held from 1965 until his death in 1997.
Idi Amin was military dictator of Uganda from 1971 to 1979. Muammar Gaddafi ruled Libya
from 1977 until 2011. The list goes on, but I don’t want to give the wrong impression
about Africa. Because while the continent does have less
freedom and lower levels of development than other regions in the world, many African nations
show strong and consistent signs of growth despite the challenges of decolonization.
Botswana for instance has gone from 70% literacy to 85% in the past 15 years and has seen steady
GDP growth over 5%. Benin’s economy has grown in each of the past 12 years, which
is better than Europe or the US can say. In 2002, Kenya’s life expectancy was 47; today
it’s 63. Ethiopia’s per capita GDP has doubled over the past 10 years; and Mauritania has
seen its infant mortality rate fall by more than 40%. Now, this progress is spotty and fragile,
but it’s important to note that these nations have existed, on average, about 13 years less
than my dad. Of course, past experience with the fall of empires hasn’t given us cause
for hope, but many citizens of these new nations are seeing real progress. That said, disaster
might lurk around the corner. It’s hard to say. I mean, now more than ever, we’re
trying to tell the story of humans… from inside the story of humans. Thanks for watching. I’ll see you next week. Crash Course is produced and directed by Stan
Muller. Our script supervisor is Meredith Danko. The associate producer is Danica Johnson.
The show is written by my high school history teacher, Raoul Meyer, and myself. And our
graphics team is Thought Bubble. Last week’s phrase of the week was “Meatloaf’s Career.”
If you want to guess at this week’s phrase of the week or suggest future ones, you can
do so in comments where you can also ask questions about today’s video that will be answered
by our team of historians. Thanks for watching Crash Course and as we say in my hometown,
Don't Forget To Be Awesome.