'Julius Kambarage Nyerere' (
April 13,
1922 -
October 14,
1999) served as the first
President of Tanzania and previously
Tanganyika, from the country's founding in
1964 until his retirement in
1985. Born in Tanganyika to Nyerere Burito, Chief of the Zanaki,
[1] Nyerere is known by the
Swahili name ''Mwalimu'' or 'teacher', his profession prior to politics.
[2]
Education
Nyerere began attending Government Primary School in
Musoma at the age of 12 where he completed the 4 years program in 3 years and went on to Tabora Government School in 1937. He received a scholarship to attend
Makerere University in
Kampala,
Uganda where he obtained a teaching Diploma. He returned to
Tanganyika and worked for 3 years at St. Mary’s Secondary School in Tabora, where he taught Biology and English. In 1949 he got a scholarship to attend the
University of Edinburgh (he was the first Tanzanian to study at a British university and only the second to gain a university degree outside Africa) where he obtained his Masters of Arts Degree on Economics and History in 1952. In
Edinburgh, partly through his encounter with
Fabian thinking, Nyerere began to develop his particular vision of connecting socialism with African communal living.
Political career
On his return to Tanganyika, Nyerere took a position teaching History, English and Kiswahili, at St. Francis' College, near
Dar es Salaam. In 1953 he was elected president of
Tanganyika African Association (TAA), a civic organisation dominated by of civil servants, that he had helped found while a student at Makerere University. In 1954 he transformed TAA into the politically oriented
Tanganyika African National Union (TANU). TANU's main objective was to achieve national sovereignty for Tanganyika. A campaign to register new members was launched, and within a year TANU had become the leading political organisation in the country.
[3][Encyclopædia Britannica's Guide to Black History: Julius Nyerere]
Nyerere's activities attracted the attention of the Colonial authorities and he was forced to make a choice between his political activities and his teaching. He was reported as saying that ''he was a schoolmaster by choice and a politician by accident.'' He resigned from teaching and traveled throughout the country speaking to common people and tribal chiefs, trying to garner support for movement towards independence. He also spoke on behalf of TANU to the Trusteeship Council and Fourth Committee of the
United Nations in New York. His oratory skills and integrity helped Nyerere achieve TANU goal for an independent country without war or bloodshed. The cooperative British governor
Sir Richard Turnbull was also a factor in the struggle for independence. Nyerere entered the Colonial Legislative council in 1958 and was elected chief minister in 1960. In 1961 Tanganyika was granted self governance and Nyerere became its first Prime Minister on
December 9 1961. A year later Nyerere was elected President of Tanganyika when it became a Republic. Nyerere was instrumental in the union between the islands of
Zanzibar and the mainland
Tanganyika to form
Tanzania, after a coup in Zanzibar in 1964 toppled
Jamshid bin Abdullah, who was the
Sultan of Zanzibar.
:''Positions held''
★ 1954 A Founder Member of TANU
★ 1958-1960 Member of the Legislative Assembly in the first elections in which Africans were allowed to vote.
★ 1958 Leader of the Opposition in Parliament.
★ 1960 Chief Minister of the first Internal Self-Government Administration.
★ 1961 Prime Minister of the first Government of Independent Tanganyika
★ 1962 Elected President of Tanganyika when it became a Republic.
★ 1963-1970 Chancellor of the University of East Africa.
★ 1964-1985 President of the United Republic of Tanzania.
★ 1970-1985 Chancellor of University of Dar-es-Salaam.
★ 1977-1990 Chairman of
Chama Cha Mapinduzi which was formed by a merger between TANU and the
Afro-Shiraz Party of Zanzibar. CCM was born in Zanzibar on February 5, 1977.
★ 1984-1985 Chancellor of Sokoine University of Agriculture.
★ 1985: Retired from Presidency.
★ 1999: Died of leukemia in London.
Economic policies

Symbolic mixing of Soils from Zanzibar and Tanganyika in 1964
When in power, Nyerere implemented a socialist economic program (announced in the
Arusha Declaration), establishing close ties with
China, and also introduced a policy of collectivization in the country's agricultural system, known as ''
Ujamaa'' or "familyhood."
Although some of his policies can be characterized as socialist, Nyerere was first and foremost an African, and secondly a socialist. He was what is often called an
African socialist. Nyerere had tremendous faith in rural African people and their traditional values and ways of life. He believed that life should be structured around the ''ujamaa'', or extended family found in traditional Africa. He believed that in these traditional villages, the state of ''ujamaa'' had existed before the arrival of
imperialists.
He believed that Africans were already, recently, socialists, all that they needed to do was return to their traditional mode of life and they would recapture it. This would be a true repudiation of capitalism, since his society would not rely on capitalism to exist. This ''ujamaa'' system failed to boost agricultural output and by 1976, the end of the forced collectivization program, Tanzania went from the largest exporter of agricultural products in Africa to the largest importer of agricultural products in Africa. Politically and socially the declaration was hugely unpopular. It was a failure and only plunged Tanzania into further debt, a crisis in its balance of payments deficits and worsened relations with international donors.
With the realization that the Tanzanian economy did not flourish and being unwilling to lead Tanzania using an economic model he did not believe, Nyerere willingly announced that he would retire after presidential elections in 1985, leaving the country to enter its free market era under the leadership of
Ali Hassan Mwinyi. In an act of candor in his farewell speech while commenting on his economic polcies he declared "I failed. Let's admit it."
[4]
Nyerere was instrumental in putting both Ali Hassan Mwinyi and
Benjamin Mkapa in power. He remained the chairman of
Chama Cha Mapinduzi (ruling party) for five years following his presidency until 1990, and is still recognised as the 'Father of the Nation'.
Foreign policy
Nyerere's foreign policy emphasized
nonalignment in the
Cold War and under his leadership Tanzania enjoyed friendly relations with both the
Western world and the
Eastern bloc.
Nyerere, along with several other
Pan-Africanist leaders, founded the
Organization of African Unity in
1963. Nyerere supported several militant groups active in African colonies, including the
African National Congress (ANC) and the
Pan African Congress (PAC) of South Africa,
FRELIMO when it sought to overthrow Portuguese rule in
Mozambique, and
ZANLA in
its war with the
Smith government of
Rhodesia. From the mid 1970s on, along with President
Kenneth Kaunda of
Zambia, he was one of the leaders of the
Front Line States which campaigned in support pf
black majority rule in
southern Africa. In 1978 he led Tanzania in war with
Uganda, defeating and exiling the government of
Idi Amin. Nyerere was instrumental in the coup in
Seychelles which brought
France-Albert René to power.
Outside of Africa Nyerere was an inspiration to
Walter Lini, Prime Minister of
Vanuatu, whose theories on
Melanesian socialism owed much to the ideas he found in Tanzania, which he visited. Lecturers inspired by Nyerere also taught at the
University of Papua New Guinea in the 1980s, helping educated
Melanesians familiarize themselves with his ideas.
Post-presidential activity
After the Presidency, Nyerere remained the Chairman of CCM until 1990 when
Ali Hassan Mwinyi took over. Nyerere remained vocal about the extent of corruption and corrupt officials during the
Ali Hassan Mwinyi administration. He also blocked
Jakaya Kikwete's nomination for the presidency, citing that he was too young to run a country. Nyerere was instrumental in getting
Benjamin Mkapa elected (Mkapa had been Minister of Foreign Affairs for a time during Nyerere's administration).
In one of his famous speeches during the CCM general assembly, Nyerere said in Swahili '''"Ninang'atuka"''', meaning that he was pulling out of politics for good. He moved back to his childhood home village of Butiama in western Tanzania. During his retirement, he continued to travel the world meeting various heads of government as an advocate for poor countries and especially the
South Center institution. Nyerere travelled more widely after retiring than he did when he was president of Tanzania. One of his last high-profile actions was as the chief mediator in the Burundi conflict in 1996. He died in a London hospital of leukaemia on October 14, 1999.
Positions Held after Presidency: Chairman of
Chama Cha Mapinduzi (1985-1990), Chairman of the independent International South Commission (1987-1990), and Chairman of the South Center in the Geneva & Dar es Salaam Offices (1990-1999).
In January
2005 the Catholic diocese of
Musoma opened a cause for the
beatification of Julius Nyerere. Nyerere was a devout
Catholic who attended
Mass daily throughout his public life and was known for
fasting frequently.
He has received honorary degrees from the
University of Edinburgh (UK),
University of Duquesne (USA),
University of Cairo (Egypt),
University of Nigeria (Nigeria),
University of Ibadan (Nigeria),
University of Liberia (Liberia),
University of Toronto (Canada),
Howard University (USA),
Jawaharlal Nehru University (India),
University of Havana (Cuba),
University of Lesotho,
University of the Philippines,
Fort Hare University (South Africa),
Sokoine University of Agriculture (Tanzania), and
Lincoln University (PA, USA).
He received the Nehru Award for International Understanding in 1976, the Third World Prize in 1982, the
Nansen Medal for outstanding services to Refugees in 1983, the
Lenin Peace Prize in 1987, and the International Simón Bolívar Prize in 1992. President
Yoweri Museveni of
Uganda awarded Nyerere the Katonga, Uganda's highest military medal, in honor of his opposition to colonialism and
Idi Amin's government in 2007.
[5]
Publications
★ ''Freedom and Socialism. A Selection from Writings & Speeches, 1965-1967'' (1968)
[6]
★
★ Includes "The Arusha Declaration"; "Education for self-reliance"; "The varied paths to socialism"; "The purpose is man"; and "Socialism and development."
★ ''Freedom & Development, Uhuru Na Maendeleo'' (1974)
★
★ Includes essays on adult education; freedom and development; relevance; and ten years after independence.
★ ''Ujamaa - Essays on Socialism' (1977)
★ ''Crusade for Liberation'' (1979)
★ ''Julius Kaisari'' (a Swahili translation of
William Shakespeare's play ''
Julius Caesar'')
★ ''Mabepari wa Venisi'' (a Swahili translation of William Shakespeare's play - ''
The Merchant of Venice'')
See also
★
African socialism
★
Julius Nyerere International Airport
★
List of Presidents of Tanganyika
★
List of Prime Ministers of Tanzania
References
1. ''The Crisis'', 1996. National Association for the Advancement of Colored People. Page 35.
2. Blumberg, Arnold. ''Great Leaders, Great Tyrants?: Contemporary Views of World Rulers Who Made History'', 1995. Page 221.
3. Happy Birthday Mwalimu, ''Daily News (Dar es Salaam)'', April 13, 2007
4. Karl Maier; ''Into the House of the Ancestors''; New York Times; 1998
5. Museveni honours Nyerere
6. Africa in the Cold War: A preliminary bibliography Boston University
★ Yakan, Mohamad A (1999). ''Almanac of African Peoples & Nations''. Transaction Publishers. ISBN 1-56000-433-9.
★ Smith, Mark K. "
Julius Nyerere, lifelong learning and informal education." ''The Encyclopaedia of Informal Education''. 1998.
★
Mwalimu Julius Kambarage Nyerere, profile at Embassy of Tanzania, Sweden
★
Former Presidents: Mwalimu Julius Kambarage Nyerere, Tanzania State House
External links
★
Nyerere's remarks on Ali Hassan Mwinyi Corrupt practices
★
PBS Interview with Nyerere on the Great Lakes crisis, December 26, 1996
★
Infed.org article on Nyerere and his views on education in Tanzania
★
Jerry Atkin's Nyerere tribute, from InMotion Magazine
★
SouthCentre Nyerere Memorial Site
★
★
Mwalimu Neyerere Speeches
★
A translation of Merchant of Venice into KiSwahili
★
The Guardian Orbituary
★
Nyerere Orbituary from the
ANC
★
NPR Weekend Edition reflection on Nyerere
★
Julius Nyerere Fellowship
★
Called to greatness MercatorNet, Nov 10, 2006
★
Beatification inquiry for Tanzania's Nyerere (from ''Catholic World News'')
★
Is Nyerere's process to sainthood timely? (from IPP Media)