Movatterモバイル変換


[0]ホーム

URL:


Jump to content
WikipediaThe Free Encyclopedia
Search

Chinese people in Tanzania

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Ethnic group
Chinese people in Tanzania
Total population
30,000+(2013)[1]
Regions with significant populations
Dar es Salaam · Zanzibar
Languages
Chinese,[2]English
Related ethnic groups
Overseas Chinese

There wereChinese people in Tanzania as early as 1891.[3] However, most of the Chinese in the country trace their roots to three distinct waves of migration: 1930s settlement onZanzibar, workers sent by the Chinese government in the 1960s and 1970s as part of development assistance toTanzania, and private entrepreneurs and traders who began doing business there during the 1990s.[4]

History

[edit]
The Chinese builtTAZARA Railway linking Zambia with Tanzania.

Most foreign labour inTanganyika's history as a German colony came from other parts of Africa; however, there were a few Chinese as well. In 1891, theGerman East Africa Company hired 491 Chinese and Javanese labourers fromSingapore to work on plantations inUsambara.[3] Separately, a community ofoverseas Chinese began to form on the island ofZanzibar, by thena British possession, in the 1930s. TheChinese noodles they produced there became a popular staple food for the local population, especially for the eveningiftar meal which marks the end of theday's fasting duringRamadan.[5]

In 1969, a few years after Tanganyika and Zanzibar achieved independence from the British Empire and merged to become Tanzania, thePeople's Republic of China agreed to provide financing and technical assistance for the construction of theTAZARA Railway, intended to giveZambia an alternative to an existing railway route passing throughRhodesia, and allow them to export copper through ports in Tanzania instead. The first thousand Chinese railway workers came toDar es Salaam on board the ocean linerYao Hao in August 1969.; they would be followed by twenty to thirty thousand more in the next five years.[6] At any given time, Chinese composed between twenty-five and thirty percent, or 13,000, of the thirty to forty thousand workers on the railway.[7] Most of them returned home after their stint in the country, but due to the emphasis placed on speedy construction, they had little time to train their Tanzanian counterparts to replace them; as a result, teams of Chinese experts continued to work for the railway authority as late as 2004.[6] During these years, China also sent some advisors to Zanzibar for work on other development projects.[4] Finally, roughly 200 doctors fromJiangsu were dispatched all over Tanzania on two-year stints; people's positive experience with these doctors laid the foundations for the later popularity oftraditional Chinese medicine, though they themselves were not TCM practitioners.[8]

The population of old overseas Chinese continued to decrease; by 2008, just twenty remained in Dar es Salaam, including aMeixianHakka couplefrom South Africa who ran aChinese restaurant, and a number ofBurmese Chinese who traced their roots to theTaishan andKaiping counties ofGuangdong.[7] However, their numbers were bolstered by the arrival of new expatriate businessmen and entrepreneurs beginning in the 1990s.[4]

Numbers

[edit]

In 2000, statistics of Tanzania's Immigration Department showed that they had issued work or residence permits to just 239 Chinese nationals, making them one of the smaller groups of foreigners in the country.[3] However, China's officialXinhua News Agency reported in 2008 that 10,000 Chinese people live in the country.[9]In January 2013, the Chinese Ambassador to Tanzania was quoted saying that there were more than 30,000 Chinese people living in Tanzania.[1]

Business and employment

[edit]

The new wave of Chinese expatriates in the 1990s initially came to Tanzania with the intention of working in more typical industries, such as construction, textiles, or food products.[10] However, theWorld Health Organization's push for privatisation of health care in Tanzania provided unexpected business opportunities to them; despite the fact that most lacked any medical training, they began setting up traditional Chinese medicine clinics, the first of which was established in 1996.[11] Qualified practitioners came later, but in the early 2000s, the majority were still learning on the job.[12]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]

Citations

[edit]
  1. ^abTagy, Mwakawago (14 January 2013)."Dar-Beijing for improved diplomatic-ties".Daily News. Dar es Salaam. Archived fromthe original on 14 May 2013. Retrieved22 July 2015.
  2. ^Hsu 2008, p. 226
  3. ^abcMwalimu 2004, p. 15
  4. ^abcHsu 2006, p. 113
  5. ^Hsu 2006
  6. ^abMonson 2004
  7. ^abQu 2008
  8. ^Hsu 2008, p. 222
  9. ^Xinhua News Agency (2008-04-13),"达市圣火传递路线精彩纷呈 14名华人参加接力 (14 Chinese march in splendid Dar Es Salaam Olympic torch parade)",People's Daily, retrieved2008-10-30
  10. ^Hsu 2008, p. 234
  11. ^Hsu 2008, pp. 221, 227
  12. ^Hsu 2008, p. 227

Sources

[edit]

External links

[edit]
Africa
North
West
East
Central
Southern
Americas
Caribbean
North
Central
South
Asia
Central
East
Southeast
South
West
Europe
Northern
Western
Southern
Eastern
Oceania
People
Organizations
Chinese schools
Other
1 Anoverseas department of France in the western Indian Ocean.See also:Hong Kong Diaspora,Taiwan Diaspora
Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Chinese_people_in_Tanzania&oldid=1330634873"
Categories:
Hidden categories:

[8]ページ先頭

©2009-2026 Movatter.jp