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genealogy Article Pan-Africanism: A Quest for Liberation and the Pursuit of a United Africa MarkMalisa1,*andPhillippaNhengeze2 1 DepartmentofEducationalResearchandAdministration,UniversityofWestFlorida, 11000UniversityPkwy,Pensacola,FL32514,USA 2 DepartmentofEconomics,AfricaUniversity,Mutare,Zimbabwe;[email protected] * Correspondence:[email protected] (cid:1)(cid:2)(cid:3)(cid:1)(cid:4)(cid:5)(cid:6)(cid:7)(cid:8)(cid:1) (cid:1)(cid:2)(cid:3)(cid:4)(cid:5)(cid:6)(cid:7) Received:23July2018;Accepted:7August2018;Published:14August2018 Abstract: OurpaperexaminestheplaceofPan-Africanismasaneducational,political,andcultural movement which had a lasting impact on the on the relationship between liberation and people of African descent, in the continent of Africa and the Diaspora. We also show its evolution, beginning with formerly enslaved Africans in the Americas, to the colonial borders of the 1884 BerlinConference,andconcludewiththeindependencemovementsinAfrica. Forformerlyenslaved Africans,Pan-Africanismwasanideathathelpedthemseetheircommonalitiesasvictimsofracism. Thatis,theyrealizedthattheywereenslavedbecausetheycamefromthesamecontinentandshared thesameracialheritage. TheyassociatedthecontinentofAfricawithfreedom. Thepartitioningof AfricaattheBerlinConference(colonialism)createdpseudo-nationstatesoutofwhatwasinitially seenasanundividedcontinent. Pan-AfricanismprovidedanideologyforrallyingAfricansathome and abroad against colonialism, and the creation of colonial nation-states did not erase the idea of a united Africa. As different African nations gained political independence, they took it upon themselvestosupportthosecountriesfightingfortheirindependence. Thebelief,then,wasthatas longasoneAfricannationwasnotfree,thecontinentcouldnotbeviewedasfree. Theexistenceof nation-statesdidnotimplythenegationofPan-Africanism. Thepoliticalideasweexamineinclude those of Marcus Garvey, W.E.B. Du Bois, Kwame Nkrumah, Maya Angelou, and Thabo Mbeki. Pan-Africanism,asitwere,hasshapedhowmanypeopleunderstandthehistoryofAfricaandof Africanpeople. Keywords: Pan-Africanism;Africa;Colonialism;Globalization;Education 1. Introduction Our paper examines the place of Pan-Africanism as an educational, political, and cultural movementwhichhadalastingimpactontheliberationofpeopleofAfricandescent,inthecontinent ofAfricaandtheDiaspora(Ayttey2010;West2005;Clarke2012;Fergus2010;Armah2010). Wealso showitsevolution,beginningwithformerlyenslavedAfricansintheAmericas,tothecolonialborders ofthe1884BerlinConference,theriseoftheindependencemovementsinAfrica(1957–1975),andthe present. Withinthediscourseofgenealogy,wearguethatPanAfricanismshouldbeunderstoodas aquestforAfrica’sself-understandingandself-knowledgethroughhistoricalnarrative. In giving a somewhat chronological development of Pan Africanism, we acknowledge how genealogy is also a narration about a people’s history and origins. Even in oral cultures, griots preservedapeople’shistorythroughstory-telling,orbiographicalnarratives(Schulz1997). Schulzalso notedthatitwasnotuncommonforgriotstorecasthistoricalnarrativessothat“thecurrentsituation ispresentedastheoutcomeofaneverspecifiedpast”(Schulz1997,p. 446). Whilegriotswereattimes Genealogy2018,2,28;doi:10.3390/genealogy2030028 www.mdpi.com/journal/genealogy Genealogy2018,2,28 2of15 beholdentothecourt,ultimately,thebestonesowedallegiancetotruthandjustice,resistingthelure ofpowerandmaterialrewards(Armah2000;Hale1994;Haley2002). Itisalsoimportanttonotethatthenarrationofhistory,eveninoralcultures,wassharedbyboth menandwomen(Hale1994). Irvine(1978)contendedthatgenealogyshouldbeconsideredaspart of history, and in the making of history, women play an important role, especially within the Pan AfricanMovement. ReadersfamiliarwithRootswilllikelybeawareoftheroleofgriotsinrecounting a people’s history, their genealogy, of how they came to be in the present condition. Genealogies generallyendwithanexaminationofthepresentcondition,basedonaremembranceofthepastand afuturethatisyettobeborn(Fall2003;Armah2000;Williams1992). Withinthecontextofthispaper,PanAfricanismreferstoaphilosophy(orphilosophies)which soughttopromoteideasofaunitedAfrica. Overdifferenthistoricalperiods,thephilosophiesevolved, butthefocusontheunityoronenessofAfricastayedconsistent. Partlybecausesomeoftheevolution of Pan Africanism took place in universities, we also examine Pan Africanism’s development as an intellectual movement tied to the aspirations of people of African descent in different parts of theworld. Inadditiontobeingaphilosophicalandintellectualmovement,PanAfricanismisalso apoliticalmovementororganizationwhosegoalwastheliberationandunityofAfrica,especially afterslaveryandtheencounterwithmodernity(Armah1973,2000,2008,2010). WealsouseBlackand Africaninterchangeably,forthatishowtheconceptoperatedwithinPanAfricanism. For formerly enslaved Africans, Pan-Africanism was an idea that helped them see their commonalities as victims of racism (Fergus 2010). That is, they realized that they were enslaved because they came from the same continent and shared the same racial heritage. Needless to say, the early articulations and manifestations of Pan Africanism took place outside Africa, mainly in NorthAmericaandtheCaribbean. PanAfricanistsassociatedthecontinentofAfricawithfreedom. ThepartitioningofAfricaattheBerlinConference(colonialism)createdpseudo-nation-statesoutof whatwasinitiallyseenasanundividedcontinent(Armah2010;WaThiongo2009). Pan-Africanism providedanideologyforrallyingAfricansathomeandabroadagainstcolonialism,andthecreationof colonialnation-statesdidnoterasetheideaofaunitedAfrica. As different African nations gained political independence, they took it upon themselves to supportthosecountriesfightingfortheirindependence. ManyAfricancountriesdrewinspiration fromthenationsintheCaribbean,includingCuba(Martin2011).Thebelief,then,wasthat,aslong as one African nation was not free, the continent could not be viewed as free. The existence of nation-statesdidnotimplythenegationofPan-Africanism. Thepoliticalideasexaminedincludethose ofMarcusGarvey,W.E.B.DuBois,KwameNkrumah,MalcolmX,NelsonMandela,andThaboMbeki. Pan-Africanism, asitwere, hasshapedhowmanypeopleunderstandthehistoryofAfricaandof Africanpeople. Pan Africanism, as it were, offered a hope that Africa will be one, united, not balkanized by colonial powers (Soyinka-Airewele and Edozie 2010). It made it possible to give a systematic presentation of a united Africa, an attempt at self-definition. Many scholars were cognizant of the fact that the history of Africa did not begin with the encounter with Europeans or foreign invaders, even though the encounter with Europeans had led to the fall of Africa (Williams 1992; Armah2010;Emerson1962).Africankingdomsandempiresexisted(Emerson1962).Itsspiritpredated thefirstPan-AfricanCongressmeetingof1900inLondon(Clarke2012)andtherewasanimplicit understandingthat,priortotheencounterwithmodernity,Africawasunited. Throughoutgenerations,PanAfricanismpromotedaconsciousnessofAfricaastheancestral homeforBlackpeople,andadesiretoworkforitsliberation(Gebrekidan2012). Atthecorewasthe understandingthatpeopleofAfricanheritagehadsimilarexperiences,regardlessoftheirlocationinthe world. Amongsuchexperiencesincludedcolonialism,racialoppression,andslavery(Padmore1956; Malcolm1992). Forasignificantpartofthe20thCentury, AddisAbabawasfrequentlyviewedas headquartersoftheOrganizationofAfricanUnity,indicativeofthehopeofaunitedAfrica. However, Genealogy2018,2,28 3of15 evenbeforefirstthePan-AfricanCongressinLondon,BlackshadenvisionedtheformationofaUnited StatesofAfrica(Gebrekidan2012). 2. DaysofSlaveryandAfter AlthoughthewordPan-Africanismcameintopopularuseinthe1950s,therearesomewhoargue thatthephilosophyofPanAfricanismwaspresentandmanifesteditselfnotonlyintheprotestsand resistancetoslavery,butthedesiretoreturntoAfrica(Geiss1967;Armah2010). Formerlyenslaved AfricanssoughttoreturntoAfrica,andevenwhenaphysicalreturnwasimpossibletheykepttheidea ofAfricaalive(DuBois1973,1992,1995;Padmore1956). Inmanyways,enslavementdidnotremove senseoflongingorbelongingtoawiderAfricancommunity,orevenareturntoAfrica(Lake1995; Tsomondo1975;Padmore1956;Armah2010). Inthe18thand19thcenturies,thereweremanyeffortstorepatriateformerlyenslavedAfricans (Blyden1967,1996),andsomeleftfromtheUSAtoSierraLeoneandLiberia. Whilesomereturned onavoluntarybasis,othersdidsoattheurgingofEuropeanAmericanswiththesupportoftheUS government(Lake1995;Liebenow1973). WhileabolitionistsintheUnitedStateswerekeentoend slavery,somewerenotenamoredofhavingBlacksliveamongthem,andencouragedthemtorelocate toAfrica. SomewereshippedfromJamaicaandtheCaribbeantomakeitfreeandsafeforEuropeans (Walker1976). ManyoftheformerlyenslavedAfricansreturningtoAfricasawtheirmissionasthatofadvancing Africa through means similar to what was happening in North America and Europe. Among the newthingstheysoughtincludednewformsofcommerceandnewreligions,includingChristianity (West2005).ForCrummell(1996),itwasafusionofcapitalismandChristianity,orAnglophiliathat couldleadtoatransformationofAfrica. The return to Africa, or the promise and premise of Pan Africanism was predicated on avisionofatriumphantorvictoriousAfrica,onefreeofslaveryandforeigndomination.However, theappearancesoftheabolitionofslaverydidnotleadtoasignificantemancipationofAfricans,inthe DiasporaorinAfricaitself. Theabolitionofslaverywasfollowedbythe“dismembermentofAfricaat the1885BerlinConference,aprocessmuchlikethebutcheringofahugeelephantforsharingamong jubilanthunterkin”(Armah2010,p. 15). TheBerlinConferenceandthesubsequentpartitioningof AfricalaidthefoundationforthecolonizationofAfrica. Toagreatextent,intheBerlinConference “Europeansocietyfoundtheprincipleofresourcetheftperfectlyacceptable,indeed,inevitable... . formalizedthisacceptanceofbrutalityasgoodgovernanceforAfrica”(Armah2010,p. 15). Africaand AfricansbelongedtoEuropeans,andGermanyplayedacentralroleinthepartitioningofAfrica. 2.1. TheBerlinConference ThepartitioningofAfricaattheBerlinConferencenotonlyledtothetheftofresources,butto the creation of borders where previously there had been none, and the making of pseudo-states administered by Europeans using European legal systems. According to Ngugi Wa Thiongo, the “Berlin Conference of 1884 literally fragmented and reconstituted Africa into British, French, Portuguese, German, Belgian, and Spanish Africa” (Wa Thiongo 2009, p. 3). Political, cultural, andeconomicindependencewerelostintheprocessofcolonialism.However,insteadofavacuum, Europe used the colonial experience to impose its cultural memory in ways that would radically alterthecourseofAfricanhistoryandidentity,aswellasthepotentialunificationofAfrica.Withthe partitioningofAfrica,whathadbeenpreviouslyonewhole,suddenlybecamealandmassofseveral nationstates. AsaresultoftheBerlinConference,GermanyhadGermanWestAfrica(Namibia)andGerman EastAfrica(Tanzania,RwandaandBurundi)aswellasTogoandCameroon. France,ontheotherhand, tookpossessionofovertenterritories,includingtheIvoryCoast,Senegal,Niger,Gambia,Morocco, Gabon,AlgeriaandTunisia. ToBritainwentGhana,Nigeria,Kenya,Uganda,SouthAfrica,Egypt, NorthernRhodesia(Zambia),Botswana,Lesotho,andSouthernRhodesia(Zimbabwe)amongothers. Genealogy2018,2,28 4of15 EvenPortugalcolonizedAngola,Mozambique,CapeVerde,andGuinea-Bissau(Chamberlain1999). Delegatesfrom14EuropeancountriesconvenedanddecidedthefateofAfricaanditspeople. ThemasqueradeofEuropeanrationalityandthesuperiorityoftheEuropeanpoliticalsystem lasteduntiltheemergenceofHitlerandhisrisetopowerandsubsequentNazism.Nazismrevealedthe shortcomingsormoralbankruptcyofEuropeanphilosophiesandideologies,especiallywithregardto theHolocaust(Armah2010;Adorno2005). FollowingthedefeatofGermany,otherEuropeancountries punishedGermanybydispossessingitofitsAfricancolonies. Coloniesthathadformerlybelongedto Germanyweregivenasspoilstonewconquerors. InadditiontodividingAfricaamongthemselves,EuropeannationsalsodividedAfricansfrom each other. This was mostly evident with the making of colonial borders. However, the colonial borders also quickly became religious and cultural borders, as colonialism was quickly followed bytheimpositionofdifferentreligioustraditions,includingvariationsofChristianity(Armah2010; WaThiongo2009). AbyproductofthedivisionofAfricawasthecreationintheEuropeanimaginary, culture, and scholarship, of Egypt and parts of North Africa as separate from the rest of Africa, especially what is now called Africa South of the Sahara (Armah 2010; Bentahar 2011). European cartographydefinedAfrica’sgeographicalandpoliticalidentity. TheBerlinConference,inmanyways, createdpseudo-nationstatesbeholdentocolonialpowers(Emerson1962). Itformedthefoundation forthecontinueddestructionofAfricanhistory,culture,andunity. However, evenfromEuropeandNorthAmerica, aswellastheCaribbean, peopleofAfrican descentstroveformaintainingtheunityofAfrica. Amongthemanyplatformsthroughwhichthis wasdoneincludedthePanAfricanCongresses. 2.2. PanAfricanCongresses NotwithstandingtheconcertedeffortbyEuropeansatdisunitingAfricaasaresultoftheBerlin Conference,leadingactivistsandintellectualsintheDiasporasoughtwaysforadvocatingfortheunity ofAfricaandpeopleofAfricandescent. ThoseintheDiasporaorganizedconferencesandcongresses to deliberate on the present and future of Africa (Mboukou 1983; Lake 1995). Pan Africanism can be understood as a practical and philosophical approach to a unity of people of African heritage, especiallythoseinNorthAmerica,theCaribbean,Europe,andAfrica. ThePanAfricanCongresses, especiallythoseduringthetimeofDuBoisandPadmore,becameplacesfordefiningthegoalsand visionforAfrica(Geiss1967). TheFirstPanAfricanCongresswasheldinLondonin1900(Lake1995). Itwasorganizedby WilliamsofTrinidadandexplored,amongotherthings,theindependenceofAfrica,andtherightsof BlackpeopleintheDiaspora. Inmanyways,PanAfricanismmadeitpossibletoviewthefutureof Africathroughadifferentlens. Agenerationalandideologicalshiftwasapparent,especiallywhen comparedwiththoseofthedaysimmediatelyafterslavery. Christianitywasnolongerviewedas essentialtotheideologicalandmaterialrevivalofAfrica(West2005). TheSecondPanAfricanCongresstookplacein1919,andwasagainoverwhelminglydominated byBlacksfromtheDiaspora. AswiththeFirstCongress,italsotookplaceinEurope,andamongthose presentincludedW.E.B.DuBois(Mboukou1983). DuBoisplayedaleadingroleinmanyofthePan AfricanCongresses(Gibrill2014);whateventuallycameintoplaywasthequestionofwhowastolead AfricaoutofEuropeandomination,andinwhatpoliticalandideologicaldirection. During this period, Marcus Garvey and W.E.B. Du Bois played a leading role in shaping the directionorpathtowardthefutureofAfrica. ForGarvey,itwasimportantforAfricanstothinkin termsofracefirst(Martin1986),andinthiscase,theBlackrace. DuBoishadalreadywrittenand publishedonthecontributionsofBlackpeopleinworldhistoryinwaysthatchallengedEuropean perceptionsanddepictionsofAfrica(DuBois1986).ThefissuresinEuropeanideologiesandcapitalism hadmadeitpossibleforBlacksintheDiasporatostudyMarxismandSocialism. TheriseoftheSoviet Union,andtheacceptanceofBlacksintheCommunistInternationalpersuadedPanAfricaniststo exploreSocialismascentraltotheunificationandfutureofAfrica(Padmore1956;Solomon1998). Genealogy2018,2,28 5of15 However,withinarelativelyshorttime,somePanAfricanistsbegantorealizetheshortcomings ofsocialism,andbrokewiththeCommunistInternational(Mboukou1983;Campbell1995). Atthe early stages of his career, the younger Padmare, for example, viewed socialism and the potential solidaritybetweenworkersoftheworldassomethingthatcouldsolvetheraceproblem. Inother words,forawhilehesawtheproblemasoneofeconomics,whileDuBois,MarcusGarvey,andothers viewedraceascentral. By1933,however,PadmorebegantoseethelimitationsofCommunismwithin thestruggleforAfricanfreedom. HehadahugeinfluenceonotherPanAfricanists,includingKwame Nkrumah(Murapa1972). MoststudentsofPanAfricanismwouldrarelyquestionthededicationthatthoseintheDiaspora hadforthecauseofAfrica. PartlybecauseoftheproximitytoEuropeansaswellastheirexperiences withEuropeanandNorthAmericaneducation,thoseassembledattheFirstandSecondPanAfrican CongressesenvisagedthemselvesplayingaleadershiproleinAfrica. EvenyoungerDuBoissawthe educatedBlacksasessentialtoamissionofcivilizingAfrica(Issacs1960).Forasignificantamountof time,theearlyPanAfricanistssawtheliberationofAfricathroughanAnglo-Americanworldview, but this is partly because they had been educated in that environment. It could be argued that “they sought to remake Africa and Africans, at home and abroad, in the image of the emerging bourgeoisNorthAtlanticsocieties”(West2005,p.88).However,overtime,manyofthePanAfricanists foundahomeinAfrica,andendedupadvisingthepresidentsofnewlyindependentAfricancountries. By the time of the Fifth Pan African Congress (held in 1945), the hope that the Anglo American model could provide a transformative and emancipatory framework for Africa was being slowly abandoned. While previous congresses had advocated for a gradual emancipation for Africans, the Fifth Pan African Congress stressed the necessity of ending colonialism (Padmore1956). Theideologicalandpoliticalrationalforgainingpoliticalindependencehadbeen laid,andrepresentativesfromAfricancountriesbeganactivelyparticipatingincongresses. WiththeadventandconsolidationofpoliticalindependenceinAfrica,thesubsequentPanAfrican CongresseswereheldinAfrica,shiftingthebalancetoAfrica. ThecreationoftheOrganizationof AfricanUnity(OAU)technicallymademanyAfricanheadsofStateambassadorsto/ofPanAfricanism. ItwaswithinthisframeworkthatNkrumahmadeGhana’sresourcesavailabletoAfricancountries fightingforpoliticalindependence(Ahlman2010,2011). WhentheOAUmetin1964,MalcolmXused theopportunitytomakeexplicittheglobaldilemmafacedbyBlackpeople. 3. PoliticalandCulturalLiberation SomeAfricanstatesgainedpoliticalindependencethroughpeacefultransitionsofpower,when formercolonialmastershandedoverpowertoAfricans. Ghanawasthefirstin1957,andSouthAfrica wasthelastin1994. Peacefultransitionwasnotthenorm,however,andmanycountrieshadtowage armedstruggletoattainpoliticalfreedom. BlacksfromtheCaribbeanandDiasporavisitedandworkedinnewlyindependentcountries. TheyalsosupportedtheMauMauofKenya,theANCinSouthAfrica,andthestruggleforNamibia’s independence. Although independence was generally attained one state at a time, the states that gained political independence provided resources for liberation movements from other African countries. TheliberationofAfricawasseenasincompletewithouteachandeverycountrybeingfree (Nkrumah1963). Perhaps the apex of the connection among the struggle for liberation by Blacks worldwide was during the wars for political independence in Africa and the Civil Rights Movement in the United States. To a great extent, the two informed each other, as evidenced by the speeches of Malcolm(1989,1992,1999) and Nelson Mandela (Mandela 1995). Torn between capitalism and socialism/Marxism,MalcomXopinedthattherewasanotherway—theAfricanway. Histravelsto Africa,andhisvisitstoGhana,Tanzania,andEgypt,amongothercountries,helpedhimseethatthere werealternativestoEuropeanandNorthAmericanideologies(Mbuguni2014). Genealogy2018,2,28 6of15 Atthedawnofindependence,therewasageneralimpressionthatadoptingwesternformsof governingorgovernmentisasignofbeingcivilizedorofbeingprogressive. Consequently, there persistedanillusionthattruedemocracyimpliedthetraditionsandtrappingsthatgowithwestern ritualsofpower,andthatinthedesireforfreedomAfricanshadtoadoptEuropeanwaysofbeing. MalcolmXwasquicktopointoutthattherecouldbeavarietyofformsofbeingandofgoverning forthosewhochoseto. Assuch,hepointedoutthatthoseAfricancountrieswhichwerefightingfor independencedidnotwanttobeEuropeanized: ButtheAfricansthemselveswanttobethemselves... . Theywanttotakeoutofanyother philosophythatwhichtheycanadoptfortheirownneedsandtotheirowndevelopment. But to be identified with either the Communist bloc or the capitalist bloc, I don’t think you will find any African country or African leader who will buy that-he’s for Africa. (Malcolm1989,p. 100) ForBlackpeopleworldwide,MalcolmXsawculturalrenewalandreconnectionwithAfricaas centraltoregainingasenseofhumanity.Hewasawarethat“historyisapeople’smemory,andwithout amemorymanisdemotedtothelevelofloweranimals”(Malcolm1992,p. 55). Hisquestforhisown historyandrootstookhimfirsttoElijahMuhammad. WhiletheteachingofElijahMuhammadgave himadistortedversionoftheoriginsofhumankind,italsotookhimontothepathwhichledhimto studyaspectsofAfricanandMiddleEasthistory. ItwasduringthisquestthatMalcolmXrealized therewasmoretoBlackhistorythanmostAfricanAmericansknew. Hewasalsoawareoftheroleof theeducationalsysteminhidingoreradicatingnonwesternhistory: It is no accident that such a high state of culture existed in Africa and you and I know nothingaboutit. Why,themanknewthataslongasyouandIthoughtweweresomebody hecouldnevertreatuslikewewerenobody. Sohehadtoinventasystemthatwouldstrip usofeverythingaboutusthatwecouldusetoproveweweresomebody. Andoncehehad stripped us of all human characteristics, stripped us of our language, stripped us of our history,strippedusofallourculturalknowledge,andbroughtustothelevelofanimals, hethenbegantotreatuslikeananimal,sellingusfromoneplantationtoanother,sellingus fromoneownertoanother,breedinguslikeyoubreedcattle. (Malcolm1992,p. 54) Withoutahistoricalmemorytofallbackon,Blackswerevulnerabletoideologicalmanipulation aswellasalackofconfidenceintheirself-worth(WaThiongo2009;Armah2010). Assuch,African Americans(andtherestoftheworld)werenoteducatedortaughtenoughabouttheirownroots, without which the struggle for human dignity lay in the impossible route of cultural assimilation. WhatsurprisedMalcolmXwasthelackofknowledgeaboutAfricaingeneral,andamongAfrican Americansinparticular: “theaverageblackpersonintheUnitedStatesknowsnothingaboutancient EgyptiancivilizationontheAfricancontinent... .OrtheancientcivilizationsofMaliontheAfrican continent. Civilizationsthatwerehighlydevelopedandproducedscientists”(Malcolm1989,p. 37). While the lack of knowledge might be puzzling in itself, it became a way for the western episteme to consolidate itself while simultaneously dislodging any positive attributes that could be associated with the non-western knowledge systems and ways of being, or to erase African history(WaThiongo2009;Armah2010). Intheprocessoferadicatingnonwesternwaysofknowing, Europeansalsocontributedtonon-Europeanshatingthemselvesandtheirorigins. Malcolm(1989) observedthatthisformofmentalcolonizationhadverydamagingandlong-lastingeffects,particularly onAfricanAmericans.MalcolmXcontendedthattheimagethatEuropeans“createdofourmotherland andtheimagethatyoucreatedofourpeopleonthatcontinentwasatrap,wasaprison,wasachain, wastheworstformofslaverythathaseverbeeninventedbyaso-calledcivilizedraceandacivilized nationsincethebeginningoftime”(p. 167). Suchculturalpracticesoftenreceivedtheblessingsof thenationormanyphilanthropistswhowerekeentospreadcivilizationtothoseunderthecloudof darkness. Foralongperiod,civilizationwassynonymouswithadoptingEuropeanways. Genealogy2018,2,28 7of15 In as much as Malcolm X strove to promote Pan Africanism, he was particularly concerned about the rebirth, as it were, of the spirit and culture of African Americans and connecting it to Africa. Cognizantoftheimpactofracismandslaveryontheblackpsyche,hestrovetoconscientize African-Americansabouttheirownhistoryandhumanity. Withoutsuchawarenessraising,Malcolm Xwasconvincedtheyweredoomedtobeperpetuallybeholdentotheirmastersforliberation: Whentheblackmaninthiscountryawakens, becomesintellectuallymatureandableto think for himself, you will then see that the only way he will become independent and recognizedasahumanbeingisonthebasisofequalitywithallotherhumanbeings. He hastohavewhattheyhaveandhehastobedoingforhimselfwhatothersaredoingfor themselves,sothefirststepistoawakenhimtothisandthatiswherethereligionofIslam makeshimmorallymoreabletoriseabovetheevilsandthevicesofanimmoralsociety. Andthepolitical,economic,andsocialphilosophyofblacknationalisminstillswithinhim theracialdignityandtheincentiveandtheconfidencethatheneedstostandonhisownfeet andtakeastandforhimself. (Malcolm1992,p. 38) Psychological and cultural regeneration, grounded on Pan Africanism, were an essential componenttothepathtoself-discoveryandparticipationasequalsintheglobalhumanfamily. Malcolm(1992)wasconvincedthatBlacks“armedwiththeknowledgeof[our]past,[we]canwith confidencecharteracourseforourfuture. Cultureisanintegralweaponinthefreedomstruggle”(p. 56). LearningAfricanculturebecameanimportanttoolandstrategyforrecreatingandstrengthening PanAfricanism. Hewasalsoawarethat,whileAfricanswereembracingIslamandotherindigenous religions,therewerealternativestoEuropeancivilizationthathadstoodthetestoftime. Tounshackle thebondsofmentalslaverynecessitatedaculturaleducationcloselylinkedtodevelopmentsoutside the United States. Dunayevskaya (1982) credited Malcolm X with transforming and infusing into blacknessarevolutionaryconsciousnessaswellasuniversalizingthenatureoftherevolutionagainst white supremacy. What Malcolm X accomplished in his theorizing about the non-Western world amountstowhatAsante(1999)sawtheplacingofdifferentphilosophiesassourcesforcreatingabetter anddifferentworld. Asante(1990,1999)creditedMalcolmXwithgroundinghisconceptionofthelifeandhistoryin anAfrocentricworldview,ortheabilityandwillingnesstoseetheworldthroughPanAfricanism.Byso doing,MalcolmXstandsontheshouldersofotherPan-Africanists,includingDuBois(1986,1992,1995) whohadcritiquedandrejectedtheviewthatWesternwaysofknowingweretheonlyonesthatwere legitimate. Similar to Du Bois, Malcolm X sought cultural regeneration or the quest of better and meaningfulhumanitybylookingattheworldthroughPanAfricanism. Monteiro(2000)sawinthe workDuBoisoneofthefirstintellectualstointerrogatetheproblemsofraceandcapitalismfrom anAfricanperspective,whileSmallwood(2005)contendedthatMalcolmXcouldbeseenasoneof theprogenitorsoftheBlackStudiesdisciplines,particularlywithregardstohiscallforreevaluating thecurriculumsothatitreflectedtheachievementsofblacks. Whilethereareundoubtedlymany similaritiesbetweentheworkofMalcolmXandW.E.B.DuBois,MalcolmXwasradicalinthewayshe sawandattributedthetransformativeroletothewholecommunityratherthanthetalentedtenthin whichDuBoissawthehopefortheregenerationoftherace. A few scholars, among them Lefkowitz (1996) and Walker (1991), question the legitimacy of Afrocentrism and the Afrocentric worldview in general, and contend that it is based on myths. While Malcolm (1989, 1992, 1999) and Du Bois (1995) based their affirmation of the validity of the epistemology of the Black world on empirical and ethnographical studies and encounters, Lefkowitz and Walker did not offer much justification for their denial other than an incredulity thatthenonwesternworldcouldofferacivilizationthatcouldchallengethestatusheldbytheWest. Indeed, they seem to be unaware of the work of W.E.B. Du Bois. Indeed, while they are quick to associateAfrocentrismwithmyth-making,neitherquestionstheideologicalandfictionalnarratives thatconstructEuropeanandAmericanhistories. Genealogy2018,2,28 8of15 MalcolmXwasawarethatblack“historyandourculturewerecompletelydestroyedwhenwe wereforciblybroughttoAmericainchains. Andnowitisimportantforustoknowthatourhistory didnotbeginwithslavery”(Malcolm1992,p. 53). MostofthosewhorejectedAfrocentrismwere alsounwillingtoacceptthatthereismoretoBlackhistorythantheencounterwithmodernity,orthat Blackscouldaspiretobeanythingmorethanformerslavesorformercolonialswhohavetodepend ontheirformerslavemastersandcolonizersforconstructingaviablefutureforAfrica. Inaddition topromotingandadvocatingforPanAfricanismindifferentplatforms,MalcolmXandothersofhis generationuseduniversitiesasaplacefordeliberatingonthepotentialofPanAfricanismtoradically altertheconditionofBlacksworldwide. Universities,inmanyways,playedaroleinshapingand preservingtheideaoftheunityoronenessofAfrica. WomenandPanAfricanism ThevastamountofliteratureonPanAfricanismgivestheimpressionthatitwasamale-dominated initiative,withwomenbeinginvisible,orplayingmarginalroles. However,acloserreadingofthe eventsandactivitiesassociatedwiththePanAfricanMovementshowsthatwomenplayedapivotal role in its history as well as the ideological directions it followed. Roy-Campbell (1996) observed that, forthemostpart, thefirstFiveCongressescouldbedescribedasmale-centered.Thewomen whosepresencewasacknowledgedincludeShirleyDuBois,AmyGarvey,MaryMcLeodBethuneand AnnieCooper. InreadingPan-Africanismthroughawesternpatriarchaleye,itispossibletonotseethepresence of women or the leadership roles they played in Pan-Africanism. However, the 1927 Pan African CongressheldinNewYorkwitnessedasignificantpresenceofBlackwomen,otherthanjustthosewho werewivesoftheleadingmen. TheSixthandSeventhPanAfricanCongressesdevotedasignificant amountoftheirproceedingstoaddressingtheconcernsofBlackwomen. ItwouldbeamistaketoviewtheissuesfacingAfricanwomenasradicallydistinctfromthose thatconfrontedAfricanmen,whetherintheglobalnorthortheglobalsouth. WomenintheDiaspora aswellasthoseinthemotherlandwerecognizantofthis. InprotestingtheassassinationofLumumba, women from different countries, including the United States, saw in the assassination a reminder of the lynching of African men. As Morrison observed, “from a woman’s point of view, in terms ofconfrontingtheproblemswheretheworldisnow, blackwomenhadtodealwithpost-modern problems ... certain kinds of dissolution, the loss of and the need to reconstruct certain kinds of stability”(Morrison,ascitedinGilroy1993,p. 178). ThequotefromMorrisonaboveillustratesthewaysAfricanwomenwereinvolvedinthefight foraqualitativelybetterworld,notjustwithinaspecificgeographicallocation. Intheperiodafter 1945,andespeciallyduringtheCivilRightsMovementintheUnitedStates,auniqueconsciousness manifesteditselfinthelivesandworkofBlackwomen: itwas“atimeofgivingbirthandofgetting born into a wider concept of ourselves ... and into a heightened sense of art and the Struggle as inseparablebedmates”(DavisandDee1998,p. 202). Among the issues addressed at the Sixth and Seventh Pan African Congresses included the survivalofBlackorAfricanwomenandchildren;womenandtheenvironment;andwomenandthe law(Roy-Campbell1996). Cognizantoftheprevalenceofwarandconflict,therewereinitiativesto strengthen a Pan African Women’s Liberation Movement. Women not only played active roles in theCongresses,buttheirlifestylesshowedcommitmenttoPanAfricanism,andoftentheyrelocated (eveniftemporarily)toAfrica. Blackwomenwereinvolvedintryingtochangetheworld. Maya Angelou is among the women who moved to Africa (Ghana) partly as a result of her commitmenttoPanAfricanism,andpartlybecauseatthattimeshewasmarriedtoananti-apartheid activist(Angelou1986,2009). ForAngelou,AfricaandAfricanculturewerecentraltotheliberationof Blackpeopleworldwide. Blackpeoplehadtofeelasenseofbelongingto,ofidentifyingwithAfrica. Women, to a great extent, became the mothers of the revolution, of the struggle for the liberation ofAfricaanditspeople. TheconditionsofBlackpeopleinonepartoftheworldcouldnotbeseen Genealogy2018,2,28 9of15 as different from other parts of the world, for there was a kinship by virtue of racial experiences (Smithers2011). In many ways, Africa gave Blacks from the diaspora a sense of home, belonging, andfamily. However,beingathomeinAfricadidnoterasethememoriesslaveryandracisminthe UnitedStates. Forwomen,thereturntoAfricawasnotwithoutchallenges. Reflectingonherexperiencesin Ghana,Angelouobserved“IdoubtedifIoranyblackfromthediaspora,couldreallyreturntoAfrica. Weworeskeletonsofolddespairlikenecklaces,heraldingourarrival,andwewerebrandedwith cynicism”(Angelou1986,p. 84). ThepointhereisthatarrivalinAfricadidnotmeananendtothe everydaychallenges,butithelpedwiththeawarenessoftheglobalsignificanceofPanAfricanism. WhenMalcolmXmetwithMayaAngelouinGhana, hewasabletopersuadehertoreturntothe UnitedStatestocontinuetoworkfortheliberationofBlackpeople. HerexperiencesinGhanagave heratasteoflivinginaplacewhereracismwasnotthenorm,whereBlackswherenotsubjectedto violence(Nehl2016). IndependentAfrica,asitwere,offeredhopefortherebirthofhumanity,orthe rebirthandhealingofthosewhohadbeensubjectedtoviolenceandracism,especiallyintheglobal north(Smith2008). Campbell (1996) observed that African women played an important role in the liberation movementsinAfrica,andassuch,shouldneitherbemarginalizednorsilenced.Women,according to Campbell, were at the heart of Pan Africanism’s self-understanding and definition and independence(cultural,economic,andpolitical). ItisprimarilythroughtheworkofAfricanwomen, particularlythoseabletoresisttheseductivelureofcrassmaterialism,thatAfricacanberedeemed (Armah2008,2010). 4. Universities,Education,andPanAfricanism Universities,inandoutsideAfrica,playedaleadingroleinthedevelopmentofPanAfricanism, especiallyinthe20thCentury. AftertheabolitionofslaveryintheAmericas,someuniversitiesbegan admittingBlackstudents,aswellasstudentsfromAfrica. However,itwasnotuntilthepassageof theCivilRightsActin1964thatuniversitiesintheUnitedStatesreluctantlyadmittedBlackstudents (Hendrickson2003;Doyle2001;Meredith1966). Insomecases,theadmissionofBlackstudentsledto riotsandprotests,andprevailedonlyattheinterventionofthefederalgovernment(Meredith1966). GrantedthelimitedplacesforBlackstudentsinpredominantlyWhiteuniversities,thereemerged a number of Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCU) and it was in these universities thatBlacks fromdifferentpartsofthe world(Africa, NorthAmerica, andthe Caribbean)metand exchangedideas. Parker(2009)arguedthatuniversitiesintheUnitedStatesplayedanimportantrole inthestruggleagainstcolonialisminAfrica. SuchuniversitiesincludedHowardandLincoln. It was at Lincoln University that Nkrumah would encounter other Africans from colonized nations.ItwasalsowhileatLincolnthathegainedabetteranddeeperunderstandingoftheconditions facingAfricanAmericans,orBlacksintheUnitedStates. Likewise,itwasatLincolnthatAzikwegot introducedtoPanAfricanism,especiallyaftermeetingPadmore(Azikwe1970). Whilethestudents mighthavecomefromdifferentcoloniesinAfrica,a“contemporaryvisitortoTuskegeenotedthat“now thesemenhaveanAfricanconsciousness;theirloyaltyisnotLiberianorRhodesianorGold-Coastan, butAfrican”(Parker2009,p. 730). UniversitieswereanidealgroundfornurturingPan-Africanism (Franklin2011;Asante2010;Fenderson2010). Inasimilarmanner,universitiesandotherinstitutionsoflearninginAfricaplayedasignificant roleindevelopingaPanAfricanconsciousnessamongstudents. Mandela(Mandela1995)arguedthat schoolswereamongthefewplacesthatpeoplefromdifferenttribesmetonequalfootingandformed friendshipsthatotherwisemightnothavebeen. Someofhisearliestcontactsaswellashisknowledge oftheANCwerewithinthecontextofhighschoolandcollegeeducation.Theinteractionswithstudents fromothertribesalsomadeiteasierforstudentstolearnotherAfricanlanguages. Mandelaalsotraced thegenesisofhispan-Africanidentitytohisexperiencesatbothhighschoolandcollege. Onsome Genealogy2018,2,28 10of15 occasions, missionaries sent students to evangelize in the villages, and during these expeditions studentsnotonlydiscussedpolitics: theyalsoformedfriendshipsacrossdenominationallines. Duringapartheid,therewereveryfewpost-secondaryinstitutionsforAfricans. Themostfamous, accordingtoMandela(Mandela1995),wasFortHare. Eventhoughblacksweresegregated,theysaw Fort Hare as the best university where they could obtain the best education in Southern Africa. AccordingtoMandela: TheUniversityCollegeofFortHare... wastheonlyresidentialcenterofhighereducation forblacksinSouthAfrica. FortHarewasmorethanthat: itwasabeaconforAfricanscholars fromoverSouthernCentralandEasternAfrica. ForyoungblackSouthAfricanslikemyself, itwasOxfordandCambridge,HarvardandYale,allrolledintoone. (p. 43) ThecoursesofferedwhenMandelawasastudentatFortHareincludedanthropology,Roman DutchLaw,English,politics,andNativeAdministration. Partlybecauseofitsacademicexcellence aswellastheinternationalstudents,FortHarewasarguablythepremieruniversityforincubating andnursingAfricanrevolutionaryconsciousnessunderapartheidconditions. Mandela’sclassmates includedOliverTamboandZ.Matthews,bothofwhomheldpostsintheAfricanNationalCongress. FortHarealsocountedSteveBiko,RobertMugabe,SeretseKhama,JuliusNyerere,DesmondTutu, JoshuaNkomo,andGovanMbekiamongitsalumni(Malisa2010). IntheprocessofsegregatingBlacks, apartheidinadvertentlymadeitpossibleforPanAfricanismtotakeroot. Manyofitsalumnibecame staunchopponentsofapartheidwithinandoutsideSouthAfrica. Mugabe,Nyerere,andKhamalater became heads of state with varying degrees of success and failure as disciples of Pan Africanism. ItwasalsowithinthecontextofuniversityeducationthatSteveBikobecameactivein,andlaterled the Black Consciousness Movement which was credited with affirming the humanity of blacks in thefaceofthedehumanizingonslaughtofapartheid. Althoughuniversitiesgenerallypropagated a Eurocentric worldview, there was a growing awareness of the ways institutions of learning had participated in the deliberate falsification of knowledge about Africa and Africans (Wilson 1993; ShockleyandFrederick2010;Asante1999;Andrews2014). Access to formal Western education, however, did not yield the desired effect with regard to PanAfricanism. TheAfricanswhowereeducatedinEuropeandNorthAmericawereincapableof transformingtheAfricanconditionorofsolvingAfricanproblemsandrealities(Armah1973,2008). SuchAfricans,withthebackingofEuropeandNorthAmerica,were“completelyintegratedintothe statusquothattheycouldnotthinkofdesigning, muchlessofoperating, andalternativesystem” (Armah2010,p. 17). EvenNelsonMandela,educatedatFortHareinSouthAfrica,wascognizant ofthewaysthateducationhadnotpreparedhimtosolveSouthAfricanproblems(Mandela1995). ItremainsdifficulttoenvisionthatanAnglo-Americaneducation,orthoseeducatedinthattradition, willbeinapositiontosolvetheissuesfacingAfrica. Unpreparedandunwillingtoimagineawayof lifeindependentofNorthAmericaandEurope,theirfunctionis“invariablythedeepeningofAfrican povertyintheinterestsofEuropeanprosperity”(Armah2010,p. 19). 5. TowardsanAfricanRenaissance: NotyetUhuru At the beginning of the 21st Century, there was some optimism about the present and future of Africa, especially in the idea of theAfrican Renaissance as articulated by former South African President, Thabo Mbeki (Ajulu 2001; Mulemfo 2000; Mbeki 1999). The abolition of apartheid and the insertion of the philosophy of Ubuntu in African and global discourse gave the impression that the revolution had been accomplished and Africa was free at last (Malisa 2010; Ajulu 2001). Asaphilosophy,UbuntuplacedimportanceonthehumanityofAfricans,ahumanitythathadbeen rejectedbymodernity. TherebirthofAfricawasabouttobegin,andforawhile,thefadingambersof PanAfricanismwererekindled. AlthoughUbuntuislargelyassociatedwiththeworkofBishopDesmondTutu(1999)andNelson MandelawithregardtotheTruthandReconciliationProcessinpost-apartheidSouthAfrica,itwasalso

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Introduction .. However, within a relatively short time, some Pan Africanists began to realize the shortcomings of Malcolm (1989, 1992, 1999) and Nelson Mandela (Mandela 1995). observed that this form of mental colonization had very damaging and .. Kemet, Afrocentricity, and Knowledge.
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