#93 VALE A MULTIRACIAL PIONEER
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– June 13, 2012
One of the last living links to Fiji’s colonial past has been severed with the death in Britain of Philip Snow – a colonial servant, author and celebrated cricketer who retained close links with Fiji long after he left the then colony in the early 1950s. Philip was already a minor celebrity when, in 1938, he sailed half way around the world to begin his civil service career in Fiji. He’d captained the Leicestershire 2ndXI at a time when first class cricketers were as famed as modern television stars.
Arriving in Suva, he found that the game had a proud local tradition. In fact there was a local team in Levuka at the time of Cession and in 1874, it had roundly beat a side assembled by a visiting British warship, HMS Pearl. Later, in 1881, Levuka played a team from another warship, HMS Bacchantes, which included Prince George, the future King George V. That score is lost to history but 89 years later, in 1970, George’s great-grandson Charles – the current Prince of Wales – visited the patch of ground in Levuka where the match was reputed to have been played.
Philip Snow threw himself into the sporting and social life of the colony. He wrote that he was astonished to find that Europeans and Kailoma played cricket separately from i’taukei and Indo-Fijians. So in a pioneering gesture towards multiracialism, he took it upon himself to integrate the game. The exclusively European Suva Cricket Club changed its name to the Suva Cricket Association and became the first multiracial sporting organisation of any kind in Fiji. The team’s fastest bowler was a young Ratu Kamisese Mara, who would go on to play for the Otago first grade side in New Zealand and, some 30 years later, become Fiji’s first prime minister at independence in 1970.
Philip was joined by his fiancee just before the carefree life of colonial Suva was shattered by the Pacific War. After Pearl Harbor and the fall of Singapore, Fiji became a front line against the Japanese occupying its island neighbours. Philip Snow was Government Liaison Officer at the time and was joined in Fiji by his elder brother – the famous novelist C.P. Snow – who also went on to become a British MP and member of the House of Lords. Philip’s experiences are recorded in The Years of Hope, a chronicle of his time in Fiji that is still regarded as seminal in capturing the flavour of life in the 1940s. As he advanced through the civil service, Philip was a Commissioner, magistrate, Officer in Charge of Police, Superintendent of Gaols, Receiver of Wrecks and Colonial Secretary. And at war’s end, he could again indulge his first love – cricket.
In 1948, he led the first Fijian national team on a successful tour of New Zealand. This side included two more of Fiji’s most famous indigenous sons – Ratu George Cakobau, the future Vunivalu and Governor-General and Ratu Edward Cakobau, the RFMF commander and war hero who also went on to father the current President of the Republic, Ratu Epeli Nailatikau.
Enduring legacy ( photo: fiji bure) |
Forty two years after independence, the memories of colonial Fiji are fading yet the struggle for a multiracial future for the country goes on. It’s worth remembering with Philip Snow’s passing that he was the first to break down the racial barriers in sport and for that alone, he deserves an honoured place in Fiji’s history.
Philip Albert Snow: Born August 7th 1915. Died June 4th 2012. Aged 96.
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