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John Okello

John Gideon Okello (October 26, 1937 – c. 1971) was a Ugandan revolutionary and the leader of the Zanzibar Revolution in 1964. This revolution overthrew Sultan Jamshid bin Abdullah and led to the proclamation of Zanzibar as a republic.[1]

John Okello
BornOctober 26, 1937 (1937-10-26)
Died1971 (aged 33–34)

Biography

Youth

Little is known of Okello's youth: he was born in Lango District in what was the Uganda Protectorate, and was baptized at age two, receiving the baptismal name of Gideon. He was orphaned at age eleven and grew up with other relatives. When he was fifteen, he left and set out on his own and found work in several places within British East Africa. At various times, Okello was a clerk, manservant, gardener, and did odd-jobs as he drifted around British East Africa,[2] living in various times in Uganda, Kenya and Tanganyika.[3] He later went through training to become a bricklayer.[3] He was arrested in Nairobi, Kenya on allegations of rape and was incarcerated for two years, an experience that left him with an intense Anglophobia.[4] In 1959 Okello left for the island of Pemba, where he tried to find work on one of the farms. Okello joined the Afro-Shirazi Party of Sheikh Abeid Karume.[4] This party opposed the dominant position of the minority Arabs on the islands of Zanzibar and Pemba.[5] A charismatic individual, Okello's speeches denouncing British colonial rule, the South Asians from the Indian subcontinent who dominated the commercial life of Zanzibar and the Arabs who dominated the political life of the Sultanate won a following amongst the African population on the island.[4] In 1961, the Arab-dominated Zanzibar Nationalist Party won a rigged election, which convinced Okello that only a revolution achieved by violence would give the African majority political power in Zanzibar.[6]

Revolutionary

Okello left for Zanzibar in 1963, where he contacted the leaders of the Afro-Shirazi Youth League, the youth organisation of the Afro-Shirazi Party. The Youth League strove for a revolution in order to break the power of the Arabs. On Zanzibar, Okello was also a member of the Painters Union, being a house painter, which gave a regular salary and allowed to move around the island, supposedly giving speeches at union branches, but in reality to organize a revolution to overthrow the sultan.[7] In his free time, he built up a small army of determined African nationalists. This army was required to hold themselves to the strict rules of Okello: sexual abstinence, no raw meat, and no alcohol.[7]

The highly religious Okello was convinced he had been given orders in his dreams by God to break the powerful position of the Arabs and to find a revolutionary state on Zanzibar and Pemba. Okello also said that he received orders from God, when still in Uganda, by how he observed the position of stones in a stream. On the night before the revolution, Okello gave his men the order to kill all Arabs between 18 and 25 years of age, to spare pregnant and elderly women, and not to rape virgins.[7]

Uprising

On 12 January 1964, with popular support from the island's native African majority, Okello and his men fought their way to the capital of Zanzibar, Stone Town, where the sultan lived. Even though they were poorly armed, Okello and his men surprised the police force of Zanzibar and they took power.[8]

During a speech on radio, Okello dubbed himself the "Field Marshal of Zanzibar and Pemba". He gave the Sultan an order to kill his family and to kill himself afterwards; otherwise, Okello would do so himself. However, the Sultan had already brought himself to safety and would later escape to Britain. The prime minister and other ministers did not escape and were imprisoned for many years.[9][10]

The coup led to the little known blood bath of between 2,000 and 4,000 ethnic Arabs, South Asians and Comorians,[11][12] whose families had been living in Zanzibar for centuries, between 18 and 20 January.[7] In addition to the murders, followers of Okello carried out thousands of rapes and destroyed property and homes.[13] Within a few weeks, a fifth of the population had died or fled.[14]

Ousting

Okello created a Revolutionary Council and was named the leader of the Afro-Shirazi Party; Abeid Karume was appointed president, and the leader of the (Arabic) Umma-Massa Party, Sheik Abdulrahman Muhammad Babu Prime Minister (later, vice-president). Neither Karume nor Babu had been informed of the coup. Both resided in Tanganyika, but returned to Zanzibar, where they were welcomed by Okello. However, neither Karume nor Babu wanted anything to do with him. Afterward, Okello appeared to be too unstable to play any role in government of the new country and was quietly sidelined from the political scene by Karume, who allowed him to retain his title of Field Marshal.[15][16]

By 3 February Zanzibar was finally returning to normality and Karume had been accepted, almost unquestioningly, as its president.[17] Okello formed a paramilitary unit, known as the Freedom Military Force (FMF), from his own supporters which is known to have patrolled the streets and become involved with looting.[18][19] In addition to Okello's violent rhetoric, his thick and dialectic English pronunciations and Lango tribal English accent- typical of Lango from Northern Uganda, and his Christian beliefs, alienated many in the largely moderate, Zanzibar and Muslim ASP.[20] By March many of his FMF had been disarmed by Karume's supporters and an Umma Party militia.[19][20] Okello was denied access to the country when he tried to return from a trip to the mainland and was deported to Tanganyika and then to Kenya before returning, destitute, to his native Uganda.[20] He was officially removed from his post as Field Marshal on 11 March.[21]

The People's Liberation Army (PLA) was formed by the government in April and completed the disarmament of Okello's remaining FMF troops.[20] On 26 April Karume announced that he had negotiated to enter into a union with Tanganyika to form the new country of Tanzania.[22] Karume's reason for doing so may have been to prevent the radicals in the Umma Party from taking over the country or to reduce the possibility of increasing communist influence in East Africa.[22][23] Despite this, many of the Umma Party's socialist policies on health, education and social welfare were adopted by the government.[24]

Speculations on death

Okello then stayed in Kenya, in Congo-Kinshasa and in Uganda. He was incarcerated multiple times and was last seen with the Ugandan president Idi Amin in 1971; he vanished afterwards.[25] In the book Revolution in Zanzibar by Don Petterson, it is more or less assumed that Idi Amin saw him as a threat and arranged for his murder. After Amin promoted himself, Okello reportedly joked that "now Uganda has two Field Marshals."[citation needed] The veracity of the joke has come under scrutiny, as it was only some years after Okello's presumed death in 1971 that Amin was promoted to Field Marshal.[citation needed] But Okello's status as a member of the Lango group, alongside his popularity and charisma may have played a factor in his disappearance.

Cultural references to Okello

The black slave played by Edward Roland in Werner Herzog's 1972 film Aguirre, the Wrath of God is named "Okello". In his commentary to the DVD version of the film, Herzog also says that the character of Aguirre himself was partly modelled on John Okello, with whom the director had been in contact. (Okello had wanted Herzog to translate a book he had written.) Herzog explains: "I chose the name Okello because I owe his craze, his hysteria, his atrocious fantasies quite a bit for this film".[26]

Notes

  1. ^ Petterson, Donald. (2002). Revolution in Zanzibar : an American's Cold War tale. Boulder, Colo.: Westview. ISBN 0-8133-4268-6. OCLC 49395604.
  2. ^ "British East Africa". Retrieved 7 October 2022.
  3. ^ a b Petterson 2002, p. 25.
  4. ^ a b c Petterson 2002, p. 26.
  5. ^ Petterson 2002, p. 11.
  6. ^ Lofchie, Michael (October–November 1967). "Was Okello's Revolution a Conspiracy?". Transition (33): 36–42. doi:10.2307/2934114. JSTOR 2934114.
  7. ^ a b c d Petterson 2002, p. 27.
  8. ^ Speller 2007, p. 6.
  9. ^ Mascaro, Antonio (4 June 2017). "Zanzibar Revolution : The Biggest Massacre in East African History". KenyaTalk. Retrieved 7 October 2022.
  10. ^ "Field Marshal John Okello, the forgotten hero". Daily Monitor. 9 January 2021. Retrieved 7 October 2022.
  11. ^ Conley, Robert (19 January 1964), "Nationalism Is Viewed as Camouflage for Reds", The New York Times, p. 1
  12. ^ "Slaughter in Zanzibar of Asians, Arabs Told", Los Angeles Times, p. 4, 20 January 1964, retrieved 16 April 2009
  13. ^ Petterson 2002, p. 65.
  14. ^ Minahan, James, Encyclopedia of the Stateless Nations: S-Z, pp. 2088–2089, ISBN 9780313323843
  15. ^ Parsons 2003, p. 107
  16. ^ Speller 2007, p. 7.
  17. ^ "Zanzibar Quiet, With New Regime Firmly Seated". The New York Times. 4 February 1964. p. 9.
  18. ^ Speller 2007, p. 15.
  19. ^ a b Sheriff & Ferguson 1991, p. 242
  20. ^ a b c d Speller 2007, p. 17.
  21. ^ Conley, Robert (12 March 1964). "Zanzibar Regime Expels Okello". The New York Times. p. 11.
  22. ^ a b Conley, Robert (27 April 1964). "Tanganyika gets new rule today". The New York Times. p. 11.
  23. ^ Speller 2007, p. 19
  24. ^ Sheriff & Ferguson 1991, p. 241.
  25. ^ Petterson 2002, p. 177.
  26. ^ DVD commentary to Aguirre, Wrath of God (Anchor Bay Entertainment, 2004), track 13.

References

  • Bakari, Mohammed Ali (2001), The Democratisation Process in Zanzibar, GIGA-Hamburg, ISBN 3-928049-71-2.
  • Clayton, Anthony (1999), Frontiersmen:Warfare in Africa since 1950, Taylor & Francis, ISBN 1-85728-525-5.
  • Kalley, Jacqueline Audrey; Schoeman, Elna; Andor, Lydia Eve (1999), Southern African Political History, Greenwood Publishing Group, ISBN 0-313-30247-2.
  • Okello, John (1967), Revolution in Zanzibar, Nairobi: East African Publishing House.
  • Parsons, Timothy (2003), The 1964 Army Mutinies and the Making of Modern East Africa, Greenwood Publishing Group, ISBN 0-325-07068-7.
  • Petterson, Don (2002), Revolution In Zanzibar: An American's Cold War Tale, New York: Basic Books, ISBN 0813339499.
  • Plekhanov, Sergey (2004), A Reformer on the Throne: Sultan Qaboos Bin Said Al Said, Trident Press Ltd, ISBN 1-900724-70-7.
  • Sheriff, Abdul; Ferguson, Ed (1991), Zanzibar Under Colonial Rule, James Currey, ISBN 0-85255-080-4.
  • Shillington, Kevin (2005), Encyclopedia of African History, CRC Press, ISBN 1-57958-245-1.
  • Speller, Ian (2007), "An African Cuba? Britain and the Zanzibar Revolution, 1964", The Journal of Imperial and Commonwealth History, 35 (2): 283–302, doi:10.1080/03086530701337666, S2CID 159656717 – via Taylor & Francis Online

john, okello, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, 2014, learn, . This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources John Okello news newspapers books scholar JSTOR May 2014 Learn how and when to remove this template message John Gideon Okello October 26 1937 c 1971 was a Ugandan revolutionary and the leader of the Zanzibar Revolution in 1964 This revolution overthrew Sultan Jamshid bin Abdullah and led to the proclamation of Zanzibar as a republic 1 John OkelloBornOctober 26 1937 1937 10 26 Otuke District Uganda ProtectorateDied1971 aged 33 34 Contents 1 Biography 1 1 Youth 1 2 Revolutionary 1 3 Uprising 1 4 Ousting 1 5 Speculations on death 2 Cultural references to Okello 3 Notes 4 ReferencesBiography EditYouth Edit Little is known of Okello s youth he was born in Lango District in what was the Uganda Protectorate and was baptized at age two receiving the baptismal name of Gideon He was orphaned at age eleven and grew up with other relatives When he was fifteen he left and set out on his own and found work in several places within British East Africa At various times Okello was a clerk manservant gardener and did odd jobs as he drifted around British East Africa 2 living in various times in Uganda Kenya and Tanganyika 3 He later went through training to become a bricklayer 3 He was arrested in Nairobi Kenya on allegations of rape and was incarcerated for two years an experience that left him with an intense Anglophobia 4 In 1959 Okello left for the island of Pemba where he tried to find work on one of the farms Okello joined the Afro Shirazi Party of Sheikh Abeid Karume 4 This party opposed the dominant position of the minority Arabs on the islands of Zanzibar and Pemba 5 A charismatic individual Okello s speeches denouncing British colonial rule the South Asians from the Indian subcontinent who dominated the commercial life of Zanzibar and the Arabs who dominated the political life of the Sultanate won a following amongst the African population on the island 4 In 1961 the Arab dominated Zanzibar Nationalist Party won a rigged election which convinced Okello that only a revolution achieved by violence would give the African majority political power in Zanzibar 6 Revolutionary Edit Okello left for Zanzibar in 1963 where he contacted the leaders of the Afro Shirazi Youth League the youth organisation of the Afro Shirazi Party The Youth League strove for a revolution in order to break the power of the Arabs On Zanzibar Okello was also a member of the Painters Union being a house painter which gave a regular salary and allowed to move around the island supposedly giving speeches at union branches but in reality to organize a revolution to overthrow the sultan 7 In his free time he built up a small army of determined African nationalists This army was required to hold themselves to the strict rules of Okello sexual abstinence no raw meat and no alcohol 7 The highly religious Okello was convinced he had been given orders in his dreams by God to break the powerful position of the Arabs and to find a revolutionary state on Zanzibar and Pemba Okello also said that he received orders from God when still in Uganda by how he observed the position of stones in a stream On the night before the revolution Okello gave his men the order to kill all Arabs between 18 and 25 years of age to spare pregnant and elderly women and not to rape virgins 7 Uprising Edit On 12 January 1964 with popular support from the island s native African majority Okello and his men fought their way to the capital of Zanzibar Stone Town where the sultan lived Even though they were poorly armed Okello and his men surprised the police force of Zanzibar and they took power 8 During a speech on radio Okello dubbed himself the Field Marshal of Zanzibar and Pemba He gave the Sultan an order to kill his family and to kill himself afterwards otherwise Okello would do so himself However the Sultan had already brought himself to safety and would later escape to Britain The prime minister and other ministers did not escape and were imprisoned for many years 9 10 The coup led to the little known blood bath of between 2 000 and 4 000 ethnic Arabs South Asians and Comorians 11 12 whose families had been living in Zanzibar for centuries between 18 and 20 January 7 In addition to the murders followers of Okello carried out thousands of rapes and destroyed property and homes 13 Within a few weeks a fifth of the population had died or fled 14 Ousting Edit Okello created a Revolutionary Council and was named the leader of the Afro Shirazi Party Abeid Karume was appointed president and the leader of the Arabic Umma Massa Party Sheik Abdulrahman Muhammad Babu Prime Minister later vice president Neither Karume nor Babu had been informed of the coup Both resided in Tanganyika but returned to Zanzibar where they were welcomed by Okello However neither Karume nor Babu wanted anything to do with him Afterward Okello appeared to be too unstable to play any role in government of the new country and was quietly sidelined from the political scene by Karume who allowed him to retain his title of Field Marshal 15 16 By 3 February Zanzibar was finally returning to normality and Karume had been accepted almost unquestioningly as its president 17 Okello formed a paramilitary unit known as the Freedom Military Force FMF from his own supporters which is known to have patrolled the streets and become involved with looting 18 19 In addition to Okello s violent rhetoric his thick and dialectic English pronunciations and Lango tribal English accent typical of Lango from Northern Uganda and his Christian beliefs alienated many in the largely moderate Zanzibar and Muslim ASP 20 By March many of his FMF had been disarmed by Karume s supporters and an Umma Party militia 19 20 Okello was denied access to the country when he tried to return from a trip to the mainland and was deported to Tanganyika and then to Kenya before returning destitute to his native Uganda 20 He was officially removed from his post as Field Marshal on 11 March 21 The People s Liberation Army PLA was formed by the government in April and completed the disarmament of Okello s remaining FMF troops 20 On 26 April Karume announced that he had negotiated to enter into a union with Tanganyika to form the new country of Tanzania 22 Karume s reason for doing so may have been to prevent the radicals in the Umma Party from taking over the country or to reduce the possibility of increasing communist influence in East Africa 22 23 Despite this many of the Umma Party s socialist policies on health education and social welfare were adopted by the government 24 Speculations on death Edit Okello then stayed in Kenya in Congo Kinshasa and in Uganda He was incarcerated multiple times and was last seen with the Ugandan president Idi Amin in 1971 he vanished afterwards 25 In the book Revolution in Zanzibar by Don Petterson it is more or less assumed that Idi Amin saw him as a threat and arranged for his murder After Amin promoted himself Okello reportedly joked that now Uganda has two Field Marshals citation needed The veracity of the joke has come under scrutiny as it was only some years after Okello s presumed death in 1971 that Amin was promoted to Field Marshal citation needed But Okello s status as a member of the Lango group alongside his popularity and charisma may have played a factor in his disappearance Cultural references to Okello EditThe black slave played by Edward Roland in Werner Herzog s 1972 film Aguirre the Wrath of God is named Okello In his commentary to the DVD version of the film Herzog also says that the character of Aguirre himself was partly modelled on John Okello with whom the director had been in contact Okello had wanted Herzog to translate a book he had written Herzog explains I chose the name Okello because I owe his craze his hysteria his atrocious fantasies quite a bit for this film 26 Notes Edit Petterson Donald 2002 Revolution in Zanzibar an American s Cold War tale Boulder Colo Westview ISBN 0 8133 4268 6 OCLC 49395604 British East Africa Retrieved 7 October 2022 a b Petterson 2002 p 25 a b c Petterson 2002 p 26 Petterson 2002 p 11 Lofchie Michael October November 1967 Was Okello s Revolution a Conspiracy Transition 33 36 42 doi 10 2307 2934114 JSTOR 2934114 a b c d Petterson 2002 p 27 Speller 2007 p 6 Mascaro Antonio 4 June 2017 Zanzibar Revolution The Biggest Massacre in East African History KenyaTalk Retrieved 7 October 2022 Field Marshal John Okello the forgotten hero Daily Monitor 9 January 2021 Retrieved 7 October 2022 Conley Robert 19 January 1964 Nationalism Is Viewed as Camouflage for Reds The New York Times p 1 Slaughter in Zanzibar of Asians Arabs Told Los Angeles Times p 4 20 January 1964 retrieved 16 April 2009 Petterson 2002 p 65 Minahan James Encyclopedia of the Stateless Nations S Z pp 2088 2089 ISBN 9780313323843 Parsons 2003 p 107 Speller 2007 p 7 Zanzibar Quiet With New Regime Firmly Seated The New York Times 4 February 1964 p 9 Speller 2007 p 15 a b Sheriff amp Ferguson 1991 p 242 a b c d Speller 2007 p 17 Conley Robert 12 March 1964 Zanzibar Regime Expels Okello The New York Times p 11 a b Conley Robert 27 April 1964 Tanganyika gets new rule today The New York Times p 11 Speller 2007 p 19 Sheriff amp Ferguson 1991 p 241 Petterson 2002 p 177 DVD commentary to Aguirre Wrath of God Anchor Bay Entertainment 2004 track 13 References EditBakari Mohammed Ali 2001 The Democratisation Process in Zanzibar GIGA Hamburg ISBN 3 928049 71 2 Clayton Anthony 1999 Frontiersmen Warfare in Africa since 1950 Taylor amp Francis ISBN 1 85728 525 5 Kalley Jacqueline Audrey Schoeman Elna Andor Lydia Eve 1999 Southern African Political History Greenwood Publishing Group ISBN 0 313 30247 2 Okello John 1967 Revolution in Zanzibar Nairobi East African Publishing House Parsons Timothy 2003 The 1964 Army Mutinies and the Making of Modern East Africa Greenwood Publishing Group ISBN 0 325 07068 7 Petterson Don 2002 Revolution In Zanzibar An American s Cold War Tale New York Basic Books ISBN 0813339499 Plekhanov Sergey 2004 A Reformer on the Throne Sultan Qaboos Bin Said Al Said Trident Press Ltd ISBN 1 900724 70 7 Sheriff Abdul Ferguson Ed 1991 Zanzibar Under Colonial Rule James Currey ISBN 0 85255 080 4 Shillington Kevin 2005 Encyclopedia of African History CRC Press ISBN 1 57958 245 1 Speller Ian 2007 An African Cuba Britain and the Zanzibar Revolution 1964 The Journal of Imperial and Commonwealth History 35 2 283 302 doi 10 1080 03086530701337666 S2CID 159656717 via Taylor amp Francis Online Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title John Okello amp oldid 1119319747, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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