Goals
Time period notes
Time period
Country
Location City/State/Province
Methods in 1st segment
- wore men's clothes to demonstrate power shift
- of female power
Methods in 2nd segment
- wore men's clothes to demonstrate power shift
- of female power
Methods in 3rd segment
- wore men's clothes to demonstrate power shift
- of female power
Methods in 4th segment
- wore men's clothes to demonstrate power shift
- of female power
Methods in 5th segment
- wore men's clothes to demonstrate power shift
- of female power
Methods in 6th segment
- wore men's clothes to demonstrate power shift
- of female power
Additional methods (Timing Unknown)
Segment Length
Notes on Methods
Leaders
Partners
External allies
Involvement of social elites
Opponents
Nonviolent responses of opponent
Campaigner violence
Repressive Violence
Cluster
Classification
Group characterization
Groups in 2nd Segment
Segment Length
Success in achieving specific demands/goals
Survival
Growth
Total points
Notes on outcomes
Database Narrative
In 1958 the women farmers of the Kom and Kedjom areas of the Western Grassfields, now part of modern day Cameroon, were angered by a number of changes which they interpreted as systematically decreasing the power of women farmers. These included the increasing frequency of the nomadic Fulani’s cows coming onto their fields and eating their crops, a law stating that they must switch to a new type of farming called contour cultivation, and rumors that that the KNC (the Kamerun National Congress, a political group that had aligned itself with Nigeria and in 1958 had secured nearly complete control over electoral politics in the region) would take over the land and sell parts of it into Nigerian control. In reaction to these three major concerns, the women utilized anlu, a women’s network traditionally used to punish those who transgressed against social norms. Between May of 1958 and January of 1959, thousands of women from all over Kom converged on Njinkom, leaving their husbands at home to take care of the house, crops, and family. Even after they went back to their own villages, anlu spurred social change and stayed a decisive social force in their home villages and anlu chapters until early 1961.
At the beginning of the summer of 1958, thousands of women walked up to 40 miles in order to reach Njinkom, where they held weekly demonstrations in the marketplace and disruptions of colonial meetings of which they disapproved. These disruptions were attended by up to six thousand women. Within a few weeks of beginning actions, the anlu group aligned itself firmly with the Kamerun National Democratic Party (KNDP), a pro-Cameroon group opposed to the KNC. Many of the group’s actions were in collaboration with or support of the KNDP.
One of the early and major events of the campaign (which was generally very diffuse, with demonstrations against anything of which the anlu women disapproved) took place on July 4, 1958, at a large meeting in Njinikom where the chairman of the Wun Divisional Native Authority Council was asked to explain the council’s decision to pass the controversial contour cultivation law. The chairman, Mr. K.C. Barth, stated that the law had been passed by all political parties (including the KNDP, which the anlu members supported) and would not be repealed. At this point the anlu women began to protest with screams, songs, and wild dancing. They were dressed mostly in rags and greenery, although some also wore men's clothing to symbolically claim the power reserved for men, and carried branches over their shoulders in imitation of guns (which women were not allowed to carry). They chased Mr. Barth, yelling names as they ran. A few women threw stones at their target. Mr. Barth ran until a religious man let him into a latrine where he stayed until the end of the protest. The women continued to chant, yell insults, and defecate publicly on the ground and surroundings.
By July 8, thousands of women had gathered in Njinikom from all over the Kom region. They continued to hold weekly rallies in the marketplace, and in the late summer women camped outside the main colonial office for all of two weeks, mocking colonial forces and men in power. They also demanded that teachers associated with the KNC party step down or be removed. By simultaneously removing their own children from the school system they were able to lower school attendance by up to 50-70%.
For the entirety of the three-year campaign, the women rendered the traditional government virtually powerless, sabotaged non-supporters’ farming, and found ways to assert themselves over men and manipulate traditional gender roles. An example of this is anlu members’ tendency to grab men’s rear ends as they walked by.
Anlu women not only mocked men around them but they went so far as to openly mock the Fon, the traditional leader generally regarded as partially divine. At some of their protests the women stripped naked and painted themselves in oil and red cam-wood powder before staging public disruptions of meetings. Had men attempted the same sort of disruptions they would have been forcefully removed, but officials had no idea of how to deal with naked anlu women.
The anlu leaders created their own parallel system of government presided over by the “queen” (Queen Fuam) and her Divisional Officer, Mrs. Muana. These titles were chosen as references to and mockery of the British colonial system. The village of Wombong, in which the two women resided, for a time served as an alternative capital and center of the campaign, the goals of which were by this point to secure an electoral victory for the KNDP, to demonstrate female power, and to repeal the contour cultivation laws. The two leaders dispersed their orders from Wombong and in the 1959 elections they sent out messages of how to vote to the rest of the anlu members in Kom.
Anlu members’ votes brought about an electoral victory for the KNDP party in 1959. From then until 1961, the group’s demands were gradually met. Although information on the resolution of the contour cultivation issue is not available, the rest of the women’s concerns were addressed and to this day the anlu campaign is remembered as having been an immense political force in the region.
Influences
The Anlu years influenced Cameroon's independence movement, and many of the same women were active in both (2)
Sources
Barbier, Jean-Claude. Femmes Du Camerou. Karthala-Orstom, 1985.
Nchoji, Paul. "Traditional Female Militancy in A Modern Context." NKW. <http://horizon.documentation.ird.fr/exl-doc/pleins_textes/pleins_textes_7/b_fdi_03_05/23853.pdf> accessed 04/10/11.
de Vrie, Jacqueline. Catholic Mission, Colonial Government and Indigenous Response in Kom (Cameroon). African Studies Centre, 1998. Web. <https://openaccess.leidenuniv.nl/bitstream/1887/485/1/01PUB0000001177.pdf> accessed 04/10/11
Percival, John, and Neal Lalage. The 1961 Cameroon Plebiscite: Choice or Betrayal. Michigan State University Press, 2008.
Sheldon, Kathleen E. Historical dictionary of women in Sub-Saharan Africa. Scarecrow Press, 2005.
Tadesse, Zenebework. In Search of Gender Justice: Lessons From the Past and Unraveling the 'New' In Nepad. Forum for Social Science Studies, Ethiopia. 2002. <http://www.worldsummit2002.org/texts/ZenebeworkTadesse.pdf> Accessed 04/10/11.