Transmutation of The Reproductive Life of Women in Southern/West Cameroon(S) 1922-1972: A Colonial Manipulation
Abstract
In all human communities, societal continuity depended on the quality and availability of infant and maternity welfare services. Conscious of the outcomes of infancy care on the productive efficiency of individuals at adulthood, the reproductive life of women and child welfare became an area of European domination during colonialism. Using British Southern/West Cameroon(s) as the theatre, this paper sets out to uncover colonial motives in the transformation of reproductive practices among women as it examines the different strategies and mechanisms employed in extending maternity and infant welfare as a measure of colonial imperialism. Archival information and oral interviews made up primary sources while books, published articles and dissertations constituted the secondary sources. The descriptive historical approach was employed in the analysis of the work. This paper submits that: the British colonial administration in Southern Cameroons had a mask colonial exploitative economic agenda behind the assignment put forth by the League of Nations Mandate Commission in its Article II of the British Mandate agreement. A baseless racial discrimination and cultural domination motivated the transformation of the reproductive life of indigenous women and the extension of basic infant welfare services during the Mandate and trusteeship periods in Southern Cameroons. These services were mostly provided by Western Mission agencies and plantation firms who recognized the independence of Southern Cameroons but withheld the rights to medical autonomy. In some cases, the transfer of rights to manage the medical arm of the different agencies was partially transferred during the last years of the Cameroon federation and in some cases after the abrogation of the Cameroon federation. The British decision to administer Southern Cameroons as a mandate was a conspiracy to enforce the tentacles of colonialism and its diverse arms with hope of greater economic and cultural gains.
References
Adams, Melinda. “Colonial Policies and Women’s Participation in Public Life: the Case of British Southern Cameroons.” African Studies quarterly 8, no 3 (2006): 1-22.
Amponsah, Nana. “Colonizing the Womb, Women, Midwifery and the State Of Colonial Ghana.” PhD Thesis, University Of Texas Austin, 2011.
Asongwe, Christian. “Healthcare Delivery in British Southern Cameroons 1922-1961: An Historical Evaluation.” PhD Thesis in History, University Of Yaounde I, 2017.
Callaway, Helen. Gender, Culture and Empire: European Women in Colonial Nigeria. London: Palgrave Macmillan, 1987.
Ejogha, Nkwam, Florence. “British Medical and Health Policies in West Africa, 1920-1960.” PhD Thesis in History, School of Oriental and African Studies, London University, 1988.
Fielding, Patience. “Gender Perspectives in Higher Education: Women in Science and Engineering in Cameroon.” PhD Thesis in Education, University of California, Berkeley, 2014.
Forkusam, Lagmia, Austine, “The Evolution of Health Services in the Southern Cameroons Under British Administration 1916-1945.” DES dissertation in History, University of Yaounde
Hunts, Nancy, Rose. A Colonial Lexicon of Birth Rituals, Medicalization and Mobility in the Congo. Durham and London: Duke University Press, 1999.
Bongaatoh, Kiven, Bisherine. “Christian Mission Agencies and Mother and Child Welfare Services in British Southern Cameroon: 1922-1961.” MA Dissertation in History, University of Bamenda. 2019.
Lang, Micheal. “Colonial Child Survival Initiatives in Southern Cameroons: A Challenging Aulti-Actor Sector, 1922-1961.” Journal of History and Culture 9, (2019): 101-116.
Mokake, Flavius, M. “Public Health and Public Health Management in British Southern Cameroons, 1922-1961: The Case of the Victoria Division.” MA Dissertation in History, University of Buea. 2011.
Morgan, Jennifer. “Some Could Suckle Over Their Shoulders: Male Travellers, Female Bodies and the Gendering of Racial Ideologies, 1500-1770.” The William and Mary quarterly 54, (1997): 167-192.
Mumford, Bryant and Williamson, John. “Comparative Colonial Education.” Review of educational Research 9, no 4, (1939): 395-443.
Musi, Keng, Maureen. “Sickle Cell Disease in the Bamenda Plateau 1850-2013: Continuities and Discontinuities in the Control and Management.” MA Dissertation in History, University of Bamenda. 2018.
Ndi, Anthony. Mill Hill Missionaries in Southern Cameroons-West Cameroon 1922-1972: Prime Partners in Nation Building. Nairobi: Pauline Publications Africa, 2005.
Nehtegha, Trinidad. “Health Services in the Bamenda Division”. DIPES II Dissertation in History, HTTC Bambili. 2014.
Ngwe, Agnes. “Mbingo Baptist Hospital 1954-2004: An Assessment of Humanitarian –Driven Social Missions”. MA Dissertation in History, University of Bamenda. 2018.
Primary Sources
Archival Sources
NAB, 1626, Annual Medical Report, Southern Cameroons, 1954/1955
NAB, sa/e (1933) 1, Cameroons under British Mandate: Measures for the Improvement of Conditions of Women.
NAB, Sa/e(1943)1, Domestic Science Center Victoria.
NAB, sc(1944) 1, Advisory committee on economic development and social welfare, Cameroon’s provincial committee medicals and health.
NAB, Sc(1955)1, Annual Reports, Medical Department- Southern Cameroons.
NAB, Sc(1959)2, Annual Medical Reports
NAB, sc/a (1954) 4, Annual Report Medical Department Southern Cameroons, 1954.
NAB, Sc/a(1941)5, Medical and Sanitory Reports.
NAB, sc/a(1962)10, Training of Midwives.
NAB, Sc/a/1967/6, Teaching Guide IWC and ANC
CDC Central Archives, Annual Reports of the Cameroon Development Corporation for the year 1950.
Interviews
Ateh Christiana, Indigene of Bafut, Nsem Bafut, 12th May 2023.
Bih Helen, Indigene of Bafut, Manbu Bafut, on 9th May 2023.
Egbe Philip Egbe Ngu, Medical Doctor, Foncha Street Bamenda, 08th July 2023.
Fombe Justine, National Supervisor of Maternity and Child Health of the CBC, Mbingo Annex Bamenda, 04th August 2023.
Steger Dah Ida Maria. Retired Midwife, Nchideh Bamenda, 17th April 2024.
Mafain Dorothy, Midwife Mbingo Baptist Hospital, Mbingo village, 21st August 2023.
Neh Mbahdeh Margaret, Indigene of Bafut, Nsem Bafut, 10th May 2023.
Nkwelle Scholar, Teacher, Bangem, 17th July 2023.
Nsahtim Elizabeth kacha, Indigene of Nwa, Mbem village, 18th June 2023.
Asoh Raheal, Retired Grade II Midwife Nsem Maternity, Nsem Bafut, 12th May 2023.
Sunjo Leonard, Retired Medical Doctor Shisong Hospital, Foncha Street, 24th June 2023.
Tasah Salome, Retired Midwife, Alakuma Bamenda, 19th April 2024.