Speech Delivered by Dr P Jordan at the SA-AU-Caribbean Diaspora
Conference, Jamaica 16 - 18 March 2005 The Contemporary Relevance of Pan-Africanism
and the Challenge of Globalisation, I have been asked to speak on the "Contemporary
Relevance of Pan-Africanism", a topic that is so wide-ranging that 1 approached
it with a degree of trepidation. Pan-Africanism has had many different meanings
over the ages, but the sense in which I shall be employing the term refers to
the political project inaugurated by a group of African-descended intellectuals
and activists at the beginning of the 20th century, with the aim of restoring
the human rights of the peoples of Africa and those of African descent throughout
the world. In conception and in historical fact the pan-African movement sought
to unite in action the African communities on either side of the Atlantic Ocean
in order to address their shared condition as a colonized and oppressed people. The
term pan-African is usually attributed to Edward Wilmot Blyden, but the spiritual
father of the movement that took that name was Henry Sylvester Williams from Trinidad.
Today's conference, aimed at bringing together the peoples of Africa, on the continent
and those of the diaspora, was originally planned to coincide with the bi-centennial
of the Haitian revolution and the first decade of democracy in South Africa.
For
most people, black and white, the name of Haiti evokes images of Voodun, the syncretic
Afro-Carribean religion practiced on that island, or worse yet, memories of "Papa
Doc" Duvalier, the malevolent US-backed dictator who misruled Haiti until
his death in 1971 . Yet there was a time when the name of Haiti had a very
different meaning.
The arrival of the Europeans in the Americas let the
genie of upheaval and rapid change out of the bottle. It stimulated massive population
movements of willing and unwilling immigrants. Their differences notwithstanding,
the Europeans shared a common goal: the conquest and exploitation of the Americas.
Within the first century after contact with the Europeans, the peoples of the
islands of the Caribbean had virtually been exterminated by the new arrivals.
Along with foreign domination, forced labour, the gun and the whip, the Europeans
had brought strange diseases against which the local populations had no immunity.
Entire villages perished in the ensuing epidemics.
The holocaust of the
indigenous peoples of the Americas and the Caribbean is spoken of only in whispers.
But it's the inescapable truth that that was the price exacted for "taming
the wilderness". Merciless policies of defoulement, what in modern times
has been dubbed "ethnic cleansing", underpinned Chief Tecumseh of the
Shawnee's bitter reflection on the fate of first nations of North America:
"Where
today are the Pequot? Where are the Narragansett.The Mohican,the Pokanoket, and
many other once powerful tribes of our people? They have vanished before the avarice
of the oppression of the White Man, as snow before a summer sun." The
Shawnee themselves, despite determined resistance, in their turn lost their land
and their lives.
Slaves from Africa replaced the indigenes as the labour
force on all the islands of the Caribbean and in many parts of the mainland of
north and south America. By the mid-eighteenth century, with the exception of
Cuba and one or two other islands, the demographic profile of the Caribbean had
been completely transformed. African slavery had made it overwhelmingly African.
On the North American mainland African slavery sustained the plantation economies
of the south. South America also acquired huge concentrations of Africans in Brazil
and in the other territories along its Atlantic coast.
The creation of
African communities on the American side of the Atlantic was a harrowing process
involving the horrors of the middle passage, the humiliations of the auction block
and the brutalities of the plantation. Close to 10 million Africans perished during
transportation to feed the insatiable appetite for labour power of the plantation
and mining economies the Europeans established in the New World. African slaves
played the pivotal role the triangular trade spanning the Atlantic, producing
the raw materials that were exported to Europe for manufacture. Finished goods
were in turn sold along the Atlantic coast of Africa in return for human cargoes
bound for the Americas.
"... .the whole history of the slave trade
and slavery is a sequence of revolts." Professor Oruno D. Lara told a UNESCO
meeting of experts in 1978, Every part of the New World where slavery was practiced
experienced its share of slave revolts, large and smalt All were crushed with
terrifying brutality. All, except for the revolution of the African slaves in
the French colony of San Domingo. On 22nd August 1791, two years and one month
after the Storming of the Bastille, the slaves of San Domingo rose and in twelve
years of war inscribed one of the most inspiring chapters in the annals of humantiy's
struggle for liberation. In January 1804, after the French expeditionary force
Napoleon had dispatched to the island was defeated, Dessalines halted the independence
day proceedings briefly in order to rip out a band of white bunting from the new
national flag. "We want nothing white in our flag!" he declared. So
embittered towards their former White masters had the ex-slaves become. The liberators
renamed their island Haiti and proclaimed it the first Negro republic in the New
World.
Haiti, an African nation in the Caribbean, lit the torch of African
freedom two centuries ago. That torch was passed on from Toussaint L'Ouveture
to Henry Sylvester Williams ninety six years later, it was carried accross the
finishing line by Nelson Rolihlahla Mandela ninety four years later. When Nelson
R. Mandela was sworn in as South Africa's first democratically elected Head of
State in 1994, in every part of the world his inauguration was hailed as marking
the official end of the system of institutionalized racism that had assailed the
dignity and human worth of every person of African descent for the previous five
hundred years of interaction between Europeans and Africans. The Atlantic Slave
Trade and the triangular trade cycle of which it was an indispensable link, were
the material undergirding of the White racism that legitimized and sustained it.
The colonial conquest of Africa during the latter part of the 19th century cemented
this relationship while widening the circle of stakeholders in racism and exponentially
increasing its victims.
A conference of the leading European powers meeting
in Berlin in 1884-85 carved up the African continent and shared the pieces out
among themselves as colonies and dependencies. By the end of that exercise, with
the exceptions of Ethiopia and Liberia, every other part of the continent was
under foreign rule. Apart from these two countries, Haiti was the only other territory
occupied by Africans and their descendants in the New World that was self-governing.
As a race, virtually all Africans had been reduced to a subject people, ruled
and governed by others, usually Whites from Europe or their descendants.
During
the course of that same year, 1884, the Supreme Court of the United States of
America, ruled that the Civil Rights Act of 1875 was unconstitutional, ending
the promise that the reconstruction of the South once held out. Two years later,
the same Supreme Court made its notorious Plessy vs Ferguson ruling, sanctifying
the doctrine of "separate but equal", thus setting the stage for constitutionally
enforced racial discrimination in the provision of public services.
After
successive slave rebellions all of which had been suppressed with sadistic brutality,
in 1885, slavery was abolished in Brazil. Formal freedom did not necessarily come
with rights. Brazil's former slaves occupied the lowest rung on the social ladder
and were subjected to every form of legal and non-legal discrimination.
For
those at its receiving end colonialism was not the benign, civilizing mission
we have from the literature of imperial nostalgia. In Africa it invariably entailed
regimes of forced labour - enforced with the whip, imprisonment and the gun -
for the benefit of public works as well as for private purposes. Taxes and other
impositions were another favourite device for separating tillers from their land
in order to create a workforce to serve the colonial government, administrators
and White settlers. As colonized people Africans could claim no rights.
They were not citizens, but subjects governed in terms of the colonial administration's
construal of "customary laws". Even in countries, as in the US, where
the Constitution guaranteed citizenship rights to people of African descent, these
protections were ignored and they were treated no differently from their kith
and kin in Africa and the Caribbean. The colonial authorities exercised a host
of arbitrary powers which they wielded at their discretion or, worse yet, at the
instance of settlers or metropolitan vested interests.
In 1900 a group
of Africans from the USA, the Caribbean and the African continent gathered for
the first Pan-African conference. The struggle to restore African sovereignty
was indeed among the leit motifs of 20th century history.
The Birth of
a Movement.
Pan-Africanism was and remains a movement born in struggle;
a struggle waged to radically change the condition of Africans on the continent
and those in the African diaspora. Its history dates from 1787 when Prince Hall,
an African-American clergyman in Massachussetts, campaigned unsuccessfully to
return impoverished African freed persons to the continent. The Quaker shipbuilder
Paul Cuffe, anticipated Marcus Garvey's Black Star Line by setting sail in one
of ships he had built with 40 other black Americans and founding a settlement
in Sierra Leone in 1815.
Like other movements of the oppressed and colonised
of the time, the Pan-African conference was the brain-child of an educated elite.
The founders were drawn from the Caribbean and North America. This Pan-African
political leadership, like its counterparts elsewhere in the world, was very conscious
of the precarious perch it occupied in a world dominated by the imperial powers
of Europe. The US and Japan had only recently staked their claims to seats at
the table of imperial powers. Both had their eyes firmly fixed on the Pacific
region where their rival interests would inevitably collide.
The first
stirrings of solidarity across the Atlantic came from the US where African-American
activists attempted to arouse their own community to the threats to African sovereignty
posed by the expansionist policies of the European powers. The first recorded
meeting took place in Chicago in 1893, where resolutions were adopted in opposition
to France's unwelcome attentions to Ethiopia. Trans-Atlantic African opposition
to European colonial adventures received a welcome boost in 1895 when the Ethiopian
armies repulsed an Italian expeditionary force intent on invading their homeland,
at Adowa. In virtually every part of the African world, on either side of the
Atlantic, the name Ethiopia took on a new meaning and acquired a mystique that
continues to resonate till the present, as is evidenced by the convergence of
thousands on Ethiopia to mark the Bob Marley anniversary in recent months, An
African Association was formed in 1897 with Henry Sylvester Williams amongst its
leaders. This London-educated barrister from Trinidad convened the first Pan-African
conference in London during 1900.
"The problem of the twentieth century
is the problem of the colour-line ," declaimed the delegates to the first
Pan-African conference, "the question as to how far differences of race-which
show themselves chiefly in the colour of the skin and the texture of the hair-will
hereafter be made the basis of denying to over half the world the right of sharing
to their utmost ability the opportunities and privileges of modern civilization."
During
the Twentieth century the most consistent inspiration of the Pan-African movement
was Dr W.E.B. Du Bois, the first African-American to earn a PhD from Harvard University.
Du Bois chaired the committee that drafted "The Address to the Nations of
the World" adopted at the 1900 conference as its declaration. He convened
every subsequent Pan-African conference held outside the African continent. Du
Bois remained deeply involved in the movement even after he had passed the baton
to younger leaders from the mother continent.
Crafted in the cautious language
of petitioners, appealing to the presumed sense of justice of their colonial overlords,
the "Address" Du Bois produced in 1900 may, with hindsight, strike one
as extremely na'i've. Yet it focused on virtually all the issues that would be
at the core of the struggle for African freedom in the Twentieth century.
Six
years later, addressing an audience at Columbia University, New York, a South
African undergraduate, Pixley kalsaka Seme, could more optimistically pronounce:
"The
regeneration of Africa means that a new and unique civilization is soon to be
added to the world. The African is not a proletarian in the world of science and
art. He has precious creations of his own, of ivory, of copper and of gold, fine,
plated willow-ware and weapons of superior workmanship. Civilization resembles
an organic being in its development-it is born, it perishes, and it can propagate
itself. More particularly, it resembles a plant, it takes root in the teeming
earth, and when the seeds fall in other soils new varieties sprout up. The most
essential departure of this new civilization is that it shall be thoroughly spiritual
and humanistic -indeed a regeneration moral and eternal!
O Africa!
Like
some great century plant that shall bloom In ages hence, we watch thee; in our
dream See in thy swamps the Prospero of our stream; Thy doors unlocked, where
knowledge in her tomb
Hath lain innumerable years in gloom. Then shalt
thou, walking with that morning gleam, Shine as thy sister lands with equal
beam."
As African voices begin to be heard speaking more assertively,
so too the continental dimension of the African freedom movement assumed a higher
profile. What is striking about the international movement for African freedom
is the central role specific personalities, bodies and initiatives emanating from
the African Diaspora occupy within it. The Caribbean is particularly well represented
in virtually every phase of the movement, as the names Williams, Marcus Garvey,
George Padmore (Macolm Nurse), C.L.R. James, Aime Cesaire, Franz Fanon, and Walter
Rodney testify. The Caribbean was notably fecund in breeding the organizers, theorists
and tacticians of a movement that helped shape the trans-Atlantic African movement
at key moments, helping to give it focus and stimulating novel ideas that kept
it relevant to this African community for over a century.
From its birth
pan-Africanism in the New World was characterized by an internal tension between
those who sought a solution in abandoning the New World and re-settling in Africa,
vs those who sought to recast relations between White and African in the New World
and win equality for Africans and independence in the territories where they constituted
the majority. These two schools co-existed, often extremely uncomfortably, into
the second half of the twentieth century, when the arrival of African independence
rendered the one less relevant than in the past.
Though the strategies
implicit in these two divergent approaches appear mutually exclusive, role players
regularly discovered issues that made cooperation possible. The place the communities
of the diaspora occupied within the movement, the resources these communities
commanded as well as the international profiles its leading figures enjoyed, lent
the strategists and tacticians from the diaspora a weight disproportionate to
the numbers they commanded. Thus we find that, though the north-American African
community was a strategic minority in political terms, the tactics it's political
leadership devised to take account of that reality, were often applied in imitation,
even in environments where the Africans were an outright majority. This was particularly
true before1900, when the ideas of Booker T. Washington were dominant.
REFORM
or REVOLUTION? When the second conference was held in 1919, Williams was
no longer in the picture and Dr W.E.B. Du Bois assumed leadership. African leaders
on both sides of the Atlantic had deliberately chosen to tone down on agitation
during the course of the World War in the hope that a demonstration of loyalty
would rebound to the benefit of their cause. Even in South Africa, where an Afrikaaner
(Boer) nationalist rebellion in 1914 could be un favourably contrasted with the
cooperation the government received from African nationalists, General Hertzog,
founder and leader of the Afrikaaner Nationalist Party, was able to travel to
London and Versailles, was accorded a hearing, and was able to return to home
with solid undertakings of greater autonomy for the White Union of South Africa.
Fifty-seven
delegates, representing fifteen countries attended the conference, which met in
Pan's to give it easy access to the allied powers. Though concerned with the position
of all Africans, the Second Pan-African conference focused especially on the fate
of Germany's African colonies. It placed two principals demands before the Versaiilles
peace conference : a)That the Allies administer the former German colonies
in Africa as a condominium on behalf of their indigenous peoples.
b)That
Africans be allowed greater participation in the governing of their countries
"as fast as their development permits" with a view to self-government.
The
language was still that of the loyal subject petitioning his rulers, whom it was
assumed would respond to a tone of "reasonableness". But the war, the
experiences of African soldiers during the war, including racist attacks by White
American and British troops, had a radicalizing impact the political leadership.
The victorious allied powers chose to ignore the petitions and pleas of the Pan-African
conference as they did those of Chinese, Indian and Arab nationalists who had
hoped that the contribution their people had made to the allied victory would
at least earn them some token of gratitude.
"The Regeneration of Africa"
invoked by Seme in his speech at Columbia has been the lodestar of the Pan-African
movement since its inception. The movement was premised on inseparability of the
condition of Africans on the mother continent from that of Africans of the diaspora,
hence the integral involvement of the diasporic community and its leaders in its
conception and in the prosecution of its project. It required the political intervention
of the masses, through powerful movements on both sides of the Atlantic during
the inter-war years, for a leadership that placed its reliance on the power of
mass action to emerge. Garveyism and its Trans-Atlantic Impact.
The
Garveyist movement was probably the first trans-Atlantic mass movement among the
Africans of the English-speaking world. Its impact was felt in Garvey's Caribbean
home, the US as well as in Anglo-phone Africa and Britain. Garvey catalysed yet
another movement, Rastafarianism, by linking the deliverance of the African world
from bondage to the coronation of an African Emperor. When the Ethiopian nobleman,
Ras Tafari was crowned Emperor Haile Selassie, the Lion of Judah in 1930, his
name was adopted by a pan- African mystical sect with growing numbers of adherents
in every part of the African world.
Garveyism in the British empire, found
an echo Negritude in France's Atlantic empire, Afro-Cubanismo in Cuba, Modernismo
Afro-Brasileiro in Brazil and the New African Movement in among African intellectuals
in South Africa. In each of these regions these movements among intellectuals
were accompanied by mass protest movements such as the United Negro Improvement
Association in the US and the Caribbean, and the Industrial and Commercial Workers
Union (ICU) in Southern Africa.
It was only in the aftermath of the Second
World War that this new mood of assertiveness became evident among the leaders
of African opinion in the Atlantic littoral countries. The Atlantic Charter, adopted
by Roosevelt and Churchill in 1941 seemed to endow the demands that the Pan-African
movement had been making for forty years with legitimacy in the eyes of their
rulers. When the US-trained Dr A.B. Xuma, President of the ANC in South Africa,
commissioned a response to that document in 1943, he penned a preface which read
in part: "As African leaders we are not so foolish as to believe that
because we have made these declarations that our government will grant us our
claims for the mere asking. We realize that for the African this is only a beginning
of a long struggle entailing great sacrifices of time, means and even life itself.
To the African people the declaration is a challenge to organize and unite themselves
under the mass liberation movement,.. "
Xuma's preface was prescient.
Churchill virtually repudiated the Atlantic Charter once it was clear that the
Axis powers had lost the strategic initiative. The principles of theAtlantic Charter,
Churchill said, applied only to the Whites of Europe, and not to the colonial
peoples of Africa, Asia and the Caribbean.
But the struggle for African
rights had taken on a new character as expressed in the Declaration of the 5th
Pan African conference, that met in Manchester, Britain, in 1945. Though the participants
from the mother continent were still a minority, those who were present became
names to conjure with during the next two decades. Kwame Nkrumah from Ghana; Jomo
Kenyatta from Kenya; Obafemi Awolowo from Nigeria; Hastings Banda from Malawi.
The indomitable Du Bois was there, as were George Padmore and Mrs Amy Garvey,
the widow of Marcus Garvey..
The accent of the moderate colonial subject
was a thing of the past:
"We believe in the rights of all peoples
to govern themselves. We affirm the right of all colonial peoples to control their
own destiny. All colonies must be free from foreign imperialist control, whether
political or economic. The peoples of the colonies must have the right to elect
their own government, a government without restrictions from a foreign power.
We say to the peoples of the colonies that they must strive for these ends by
all means at their disposal. The object of imperialist powers is to exploit.
By granting the right to the colonial peoples to govern themselves, they are defeating
that objective. Therefore, the struggle for political power by colonial and subject
peoples is the first step towards, and the necessary pre-requisite to, complete
social, economic and political emancipation." the conference declared. It
ended its declaration with a call to all the colonial peoples of the world:
"The
Fifth Pan-African Congress, therefore, calls on the workers and farmers of the
colonies to organize effectively. Colonial workers must be in the front lines
of the battle against imperialism.
This Fifth Pan-African Congress calls
on the intellectuals and professional classes of the colonies to awaken to their
responsibilities. The long, long night is over. By fighting for trade union rights,
the right to form co-operatives, freedom of the press, assembly, demonstration
and strike; freedom to print and read the literature which is necessary for the
education of the masses, you will be using the only means by which your liberties
will be won and maintained. Today there is only one road to effective action-the
organization of the masses. COLONIAL AND SUBJECT PEOPLES OF THE WORLD - UNITE!"
That
battle cry was taken up in every part of the colonized world during the next two
decades. What was notable about the 1945 document was that it linked the struggle
for African independence and freedom to that of other colonized peoples, thus
anticipating the themes of Afro-Asian solidarity, the Non-Aligned movement and
those of the Tri-Continental movement of our day.
In 1958 the first Pan-African
Conference to be held on African soil, began its deliberations in Accra, Ghana.
The veterans of the Pan-African freedom movement, Du Bois, Padmore and James graced
the occasion. But the lead was now visibly being taken by the leaders from the
mother continent, culminating in the high tide of independence in Africa and the
Caribbean during the 1960s.
The founding of the Organisation of African
Unity in 1963, and the establishment of its Liberation Committee in 1965 was an
affirmation of the mission adopted in 1945 but it was also a recognition that
the tide of liberation had come up against the immovable object of the White colonial
redoubt in Southern Africa. !965 was the year that Ian Smith led the racist White
Rhodesia Front in its Unilateral Declaration of Independence (UDI) from Britain
in the full knowledge that Britain would neither use armed force to suppress them,
nor impede White-ruled South Africa from assisting them. The stubborn resistance
of the White settler regime in Zimbabwe, the apartheid regime of South Africa
and of fascist-ruled Portugal compelled the liberation movements to match the
words of the 1945 Declaration, "...that that they (the colonised peoples)
must strive for these ends by all means at their disposal." with deeds. In
June 1967, the joint forces of the Zimbabwe and South African liberation movements
commenced joint operations into Zimbabwe, announcing the outbreak of the Southern
African liberation wars.
The wars to liberate the Portuguese colonies,
Zimbabwe, Namibia and South Africa were inter-linked and intertwined not solely
by geography but also by the long-standing links amongst the freedom fighters
of Southern Africa. The founding of the ANC in South Africa had inspired sister
movements in all of South-Eastern Africa, as far north as Kenya. Many of the liberation
movement's pioneer leaders were accepted as spokespersons for the entire region.
Relations established as students at universities, in Europe and America, among
pioneers; but increasingly at Fort Hare University College in South Africa; Adams
College, Roma College in Lesotho and at Makerere in Uganda for later generations,
resulted in a remarkable espirit d'corps that united these leaders around a common
vision.
The unfolding of African independence coincides with and helped
stimulate the struggle for human rights in North America. The African community
in the US had historically made a consistent contribution to the liberation struggle
on the mother continent in a number of ways. Its most high profile leaders and
public figures invariably were held up as role models amongst Africans, especially
in the Anglo-phone countries. Numerous future leaders of the African liberation
movements studied in US tertiary institutions, many in historically Black colleges,
where they came under the influence of Booker T Washington, later of Du Bois,
and some under the influence of Marcus Garvey. When Italy attempted its second
invasion of Ethiopia in 1936, Paul Robeson, the most famous African-American performer
of stage and screen at the time, helped found the Council on African Affairs,
which mobilized support within the African-American community and the wider US
society for African liberation. The Council was eventually "red-baited"
out of existence during the McCarthy era. Robeson, Alpheus Hunton, Du Bois, Louis
Burnham, Lena Home and others who rallied to the Council on African Affairs were
also leading players in the struggle for freedom within the US itself.
The
African diaspora was destined to play a decisive supportive role especially in
the southern African theatre of struggle, where the statesmen of Europe and the
US outdid themselves in equivocation, while quietly giving tacit support to the
remaining colonial and White supremacist regimes on African soil. Thiswas baldly
stated in a US policy document:
"US direct investment in southern
Africa, mainly in South Africa, is about $1 billion and yields a highly profitable
return. Trade, again mainly with South Africa, runs a favourable balance for the
US....In addition the US has indirect economic interest in the key role which
South Africa plays in the UK balance of payments, UK investment in South Africa
is currently estimated at $3billion, and the British have made it clear that they
will take no action which would jeopardize their economic interests"
That
is how "National Security Study Memorandum 39:Southern Africa", inspired
by Henry Kissinger, stated the matter in 1969. These were the considerations that
determined the options the US, Britain and France chose in Southern Africa during
the 1970's.
When the apartheid regime, having received assurances of support
from the US, attempted to export counter-revolution to Angola in 1975, it was
the small Caribbean nation of Cuba, with apopulation smaller than that of New
York city, that committed its armed forces, materiel and its international reputation
to the defence of the project of African liberation.
Over the following
fifteen years Cuban troops destroyed the myth of White South Africa's invincibility;
called a halt to its strategy of intervention and military destabilization of
independent Africa, and finally inflicted a decisive strategic defeat on the forces
of apartheid at Cuito Cuinavale, thus opening the way to Namibian independence
in 1990 Among the pressures that finally compelled the Apartheid regime to the
negotiating table, was the defeat suffered at Cuito Cuinavale!
Who was
in whose trench during those thirteen years, will always weigh heavily in the
scales when Africa considers the situation in the Caribbean. We do not lightly
forget our old friends, even when we have found new ones!
An extra-ordinary
degree of coordination among the various fronts of a Pan-African effort to deal
the final death blow to apartheid occurred during these years In the Commonwealth,
African, Caribbean and Asian states were able to muster the isolation of Margeret
Thatcher's Tory government which could barely conceal its support for the apartheid
regime. In the US, Trans-Africa, a highly effective lobby group working in close
cooperation with the Congressional Black Caucus and African-American community
groups was able to pilot sanctions legislation through Congress in 1987.
The
mass struggles that swept through South Africa during that same period converged
with these external pressures precipitating an insurmountable crisis in the apartheid
regime. By the end of 1988 it was clear that it was just a matter of time before
all political prisoners would be released and negotiations to end apartheid commenced
in earnest.
AFRICAN FREEDOM and the CHALLENGES of the PRESENT. The
thrust of my argument in this paper has been that a shared history over the past
five hundred years dictated that the fates of the African peoples who today live
on either side of the Atlantic would be interwoven. Recognition of that reality
spurred the most far-sighted political leaders of the African diaspora to assume
leadership of a trans-Atlantic movement for African freedom. And that by demonstrating
in practice that the blood that binds these two communities is thicker than the
waters of the Atlantic, the Pan-African movement they inspired, after close to
a century of struggle, has reconquered the sovereignty of the African continent
and put an end to institutionalized racism on both the mother continent and in
the New World.
Despite this historic victory, Africa is an extremely troubled
continent, plagued by internecine wars, political instability and its people afflicted
by degrading poverty. The first free African nation of modern times, Haiti, is
the poorest country in the Caribbean, with a troubled history expressed in the
37 coups d'etat that the island has witnessed. The African communities of the
Atlantic are not prosperous. In the New World the legacy of slavery, compounded
by nearly a century of constitutionalised racial oppression, has kept them at
the lowest rungs of the social ladder. Despite the pervasive poverty evident in
virtually every part of the continent, Africa still is a net exporter of wealth
to Europe and North America. Having won political freedom through their collective
action during the 20lfl century, the challenge facing the peoples of Africa in
the 21st century is how to devise a programme of action to break the chains of
poverty and under-development that hold far too many of our people in thrall.
"Globalisation"
is the name used to describe the developments in world economy brought about by
the rapid developments in telecommunications, international travel and the movement
of capital and goods across international frontiers. Though the African continent
and the peoples of Africa have been at the core of evolution of the world system
since the 15th century, globalisation threatens to marginilise our continent even
further and to compound the social and economic situation of Africans of the diaspora.
Africa has attempted its own indigenously evolved response to globalization, the
New Partnership for African Development (NEPAD), focusing on the development of
infra-structure, the redefinition of trade between Africa and its principal trading
partners, the exploration of intra-African trade and the development of new partnership
amongst African and other developing countries.
When I passed through London
en route to Kingston this past weekend, the British media were celebrating the
publication of the Blair Commission on Africa's Report. Though this report contains
nothing that is significantly new, the profile it has been given suggests that
its validity resides in its sponsorship, a European head of government, rather
than its actual content. While it is highly commendable that a British Prime Minister
regards the issues of African poverty and under-development as important, is it
not time that collective African initiatives dominated discourse about our continent
rather than his?
The trans-Atlantic African communities must interrogate
that matter with the gravity that it deserves and provide answers that will take
us forward. There are important developments taking place in Africa, many of them
based on our own efforts. The reversal of the attempted coup in Togo in recent
weeks is a case in point. It is equally significant that it was action by ECOWAS
that achieved this.
We remain engaged with the issues of the Cote d 'Ivoire,
the Democratic Republic of Congo, Sudan, Siera Leone and Liberia.The struggle
to achieve peace and political stability on the mother continent is going to require
the same measure or commitment as well as the solidarity that brought us freedom
during the 20t century. Yet it is equally true that African capacity is gravely
constrained by the limited finances of the continent and the huge developmental
challenges facing every African country.
Here in the Caribbean, we have
witnessed yet another coup in Haiti, coinciding with the bi-centennial of Haitian
independence. The Caribbean Community was unable to thwart the aims of big powers
that took a direct hand in effecting "regime change" in Haiti and the
interventions of the Black Congressional Caucus in the USA were greeted with utter
contempt.
Well nigh a century after he spoke these words , Pixley kalsaka
Seme's clarion call for the "Regeneration of Africa" should summon us
all to the new battlefronts to defeat the scourge of poverty among the peoples
of Africa. As in the struggle for political emancipation, self-determination and
freedom it is by coordinating our efforts that we shall maximize our striking
force.
Pan-Africanism remains eminently relevant in our day because there
is still so much unfinished business amongst all of us. The future beckons. The
best and most lasting monument we can erect to the generations who preceded us
is to ensure that Africa does indeed walk tall. In the words of Seme,
Then
shalt thou, walking with that morning gleam, Shine as thy sister lands with
equal beam." Thank You. Z.Pallo Jordan. 17 March 2005.
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