Madagascar SOCIETY
Population and Ethnicity
Royal tombs of kings and queens of Madagascar on Royal Hill;
audience hall in background
Courtesy Brian Kensley
Madagascar has experienced steady population growth
throughout the twentieth century. Since the first
systematic
census was undertaken by colonial authorities at the turn
of the
twentieth century, the population has grown from 2.2
million in
1900 to 7.6 million in 1975 (the last year that a census
was
undertaken) and to a population estimated by the IMF in
mid-1993
at 11.86 million. It is expected that the population will
approach 17 million by the end of the twentieth century,
underscoring a more than fivefold increase in less than a
hundred
years. Moreover, the average rate of population growth
itself has
increased from 2.3 percent in 1975 to 3.1 percent over the
1980
to 1990 decade. This rate has made Madagascar one of the
most
rapidly growing countries in Africa, with a large youthful
population--in 1992 nearly 55 percent of the population
was under
twenty years of age.
The increase in population is significantly influenced
by
Madagascar's increasingly healthy and youthful population.
As a
result of more extensive and accessible health care
services, for
example, Madagascar has witnessed a 36 percent decline in
infant
mortality from 177 per 1,000 live births in 1981 to 114
per 1,000
in 1991--the average for sub-Saharan Africa was 103.
Moreover, as
of 1991 a significant portion of the population (estimates
range
from 40 to 50 percent) was below fourteen years of age,
and
population density (per square kilometer) had risen to
twenty
(from roughly fourteen in 1981).
The urban population percentage has doubled since 1975,
rising from 13 percent of the population to 26 percent in
1992.
The annual urban population growth rate in the 1980s was
6.4
percent. Figures for Madagascar's foreign population in
the early
1990s are lacking, but in 1988, such persons were
estimated to
include 25,000 Comorans, 18,000 French, 17,000 Indians,
and 9,000
Chinese.
A unique blend of African and Asian landscapes and
cultures
is usually one of the first things recognized by
first-time
travelers to Madagascar. In the zebu cattle-raising
regions of
the south and west, for example, the savannas resemble
those of
East Africa. In the central highlands, however, irrigated
and
terraced rice fields evoke images of Southeast Asia. These
contrasting images lie at the heart of an ongoing debate
over the
origins of the Malagasy people.
According to one theory, peoples from the Indonesian
archipelago migrated along the coast of south Asia, across
the
Arabian Peninsula into the east coast of Africa and,
finally,
across the Mozambique Channel into present-day Madagascar.
This
movement occurred over several generations and, because of
the
gradual interaction between Asian and African populations,
led to
the arrival and eventual implantation of a distinct
Malagasy
people and culture. A second theory emphasizes the
diversity of
the peoples inhabiting Madagascar. Simply put, proponents
argue
that the Malagasy resulted from a series of migrations by
different peoples over time. According to this theory,
migrants
from the Indonesian archipelago arrived first and
eventually
settled in the central highlands, followed by the arrival
of
African peoples as a result of normal migrational trends
and the
rise of the slave trade. Recent scholarship has suggested
that
perhaps the theories are complementary, with greater
emphasis
being placed on the first.
Scholars traditionally have described Madagascar as
being
divided into eighteen or twenty ethnic groups, each with
its own
distinct territory; political developments in the
contemporary
period are often described in terms of ethnic conflict.
Yet
ethnicity is potentially misleading in the Malagasy
context
because it connotes a more or less self-sufficient and
unique
cultural, socioeconomic, and historically united group
that
perceives itself as being different from other groups.
The population of Madagascar, however, is remarkably
homogeneous in terms of language. Unlike most African
countries,
the vast majority speak the indigenous national Malagasy
language. Moreover, despite significant variations,
important
cultural elements unify the Malagasy people and give them
a "panislandic " identity. These include a system of kinship in
which
descent can be traced through either the paternal or the
maternal
line. The same kinship terms are used by all Malagasy. A
second
important element is the centrality of respect for the
dead
(razana) to the social, moral, and religious life
of the
people. Tombs and the ceremonies related to them are
prominent
features of both the Malagasy landscape and the way of
life of
the people. A third important feature is the division of
Malagasy
societies into three relatively rigid strata: nobles,
commoners,
and slaves (or descendants of slaves). Other common
elements
include the circumcision of children, the practice of
astrology
and divination, and certain concepts associated with
authority,
such as hasina (sacred, or life-giving, power),
which
legitimate the position of political and familial
authorities.
Another potentially valuable method of analyzing
Malagasy
society is to differentiate between the so-called
côtiers,
or peoples living in coastal areas, and those who live in
the
central highlands. Indeed, scholars have noted in recent
years
that the salience of ethnic group identity has declined,
while
the division between the central highlands peoples and the
côtiers continues to be of great importance in
understanding social and political competition. Although
many
observers equate the term central highlander with the
Merina
ethnic group (once again suggesting the importance of
ethnicity),
it is important to note that the Betsileo people also live
within
this region, and the Merina themselves have settled in
other
regions of the country. Equally important, many
côtiers do
not live anywhere near the coast. In this sense, the
central
highlands/côtier split is best understood as the
historical outcome of the domination of the Merina empire,
the
original center of which was Imerina (around the city of
Antananarivo) and was located in the central highlands.
A true understanding of the character of Madagascar's
population and historical development requires an
appreciation of
the inhabitants' shared characteristics, including
language and
kinship structure, as well as the central
highlands/côtier
split and other divisions based on geographical regions.
These
latter divisions coincide with the major geographical
divisions
of the island: east coast, west coast, central highlands,
southwest, and the Tsaratamana Massif. Within these
regions, the
people have certain cultural similarities accentuated by
the
natural environment.
Data as of August 1994
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