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Reem Gaafar's Blog: Life From Reem's Perspective - Posts Tagged "occupation"

Saving the Savages

I just finished reading the Game of Thrones series (caution: do not attempt to read these books if you have deadlines and children to feed because you won't be able to put them down). In the last couple of books the dragon girl Daenerys Targaryen invades and then abandons several cities, and then decides to stay in the last one to rule as queen, even though she's not even from this place and is supposed to be a queen in another place halfway across the world. She breaks into this last city by force and frees all the slaves. The idea is that these cities are slave ports who lifestyles and trade have relied on the slave trade for centuries. Many of the freed slaves rise up against their former masters and kill them and take over their homes - but she grants them amnesty.

She is then known to the people she is ruling as their 'mother', and she refers to them as her children whom she must take care of and will not abandon. When the people of the city rise against her and start killing her soldiers, they are branded as dishonorable cowards (because they kill people at night). The main narrative of this part of the book is that the innocent, good-hearted, well-meaning queen is being plagued by cowardly criminals who resist her presence in their city, and by the original city folk who resent her destroying their slave trade overnight.

I think you see where I'm getting here. Or, if you're not from a country that was occupied by any of the leading empires of the last few centuries, you may not see what I'm getting at here. This whole narrative just stinks of justifying occupation as a force for the good of the indigenous savages who must be tamed and civilized, and who, when they dare resist this occupation, are labeled as criminals and cowards. The primitive and barbaric practices that support their livelihood (i.e. slavery) are the perfect (and unoriginal) pretext for justifying this occupation. The occupier is a saviour, a gentle and well-meaning mother who is needed by her children because they cannot fend for themselves without her. Those who support her are good friends, those who oppose are traitors.

Sudan was occupied twice by the British Empire up to independence in 1956. There were several resistance movements throughout the country that were dealt with harshly and made an example of, as was the same in all the other African countries occupied by Europeans. True, Sudan did not fare as badly as countries like Congo where more than half the population was killed in the name of King Leopold II from murder, starvation, exhaustion, dismemberment and plummeting birth rates. When you read about the years under occupation and the events leading up to expelling the British Empire from the country, the picture drawn in British documents is of a loving ruler who wants what is best for the Sudanese. They worry about the greed of Egypt and its bad influence on the innocent Sudanese, about wanting to make sure the Sudanese are fully capable of taking care of their own country before leaving. But occupation is occupation, be it in the 18th century or in present day Palestine, be it direct occupation like the Americas and Israel or indirect like China and Russia.

I had a lot of respect for George R. R. Martin for this phenomenal piece of work that is Game of Thrones, but this whitewashing and romanticising of occupation is frankly nothing short of despicable. I would say I was surprised that we're still talking about this in this day and age, but that would mean that individuals/countries colonizing other people's countries was a thing of a past, when we all know that its not. Its just taken another form. But the image is the same: occupation for the better good, to save the savages from themselves. Despicable.
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Published on January 15, 2025 18:24 Tags: africa, occupation, sudan

Life From Reem's Perspective

Reem Gaafar
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