Stephen Snelders
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Colonial medicine and folk beliefs in the modern era
in Leprosy and colonialism
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In the early twentieth century, Dutch doctors and public health officials tried to come to grips with the Afro-Surinamese belief in treef and its influence on the execution of public health policies. Both the Afro-Surinamese and new British Indian and Javanese migrants maintained their beliefs and practices about leprosy. Faced with a continued belief in treef and other folk beliefs among the large majority of the population, practitioners of Dutch colonial medicine investigated these local beliefs. Dutch physicians in Suriname were particularly afraid of the Afro-Surinamese as potential transmitters of the leprosy bacillus to other population groups. The Surinamese colonial government and medical practitioners felt the need for compromise to obtain compliance with their vaccination programme. To Dutch colonial medicine, the Afro-Surinamese and other groups' adherence to cultural beliefs endangered early leprosy detection and prevention policies.

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Leprosy and colonialism

Suriname under Dutch rule, 1750– 1950

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