Abstract
In May 1955, the Archbishop of Canterbury, Geoffrey Fisher, visited Fort Hall in Kenya’s Kikuyu native reserve. The colonial government had declared a state of emergency nearly three years before in response to a secret and violent Kikuyu anti-colonial movement which it knew as Mau Mau. In the ensuing guerrilla war several thousand were killed, almost all of them Africans, and some eighty thousand Kikuyu were held in detention camps.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Reference28 articles.
1. “To plant a garden city in the slums of paganism”: Handley Hooper, the Kikuyu and the future of Africa;Casson;Journal of Religion in Africa,1998
Cited by
13 articles.
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