Africa rising is first of two stories on an emerging global commercial powerhouse
For West Indians, AFRICA- the continent of origin of the majority black Caribbean population- is a synonym for, the Gold Coast, the River Nile, the Trans Atlantic Slave Trade, and the Sahara Desert; but sadly, also, for despotism, war, poverty, and disease.
With Europe and the Mediterranean to the North, Africa is connected to the Middle East in the North East, and then with over 16 thousand miles of coast, almost completely surrounded by sea and ocean. Geography has determined, like everywhere else, the historic, social, and economic trajectory of that massive Continent.
Africa, which is predominantly Christian, Islamic, and animist, possesses a population believed to be over 1 billion, mainly Negroid, with a mix of Moor and Arab in the North; and made up of thousands of cultures, ethnicities, and tribes: a population that is increasing rapidly.
The ancient, extraordinary, and eternally rejuvenating River, the Nile, is a life giving natural wonder: a crucial body of water that was critical spark, lighting and then igniting the powerful illuminant that has lasted for thousands of years, called written history.
The River Nile is a central feature of Africa: a critical artery and body of water. From the earliest times, it has wound over 4000 miles from East Africa, across a varied geography and huge landmass, into the Mediterranean. A story of Ancient and modern Egypt; riverside habitation, commerce, and empire; giving and preserving life, while creating and recreating rich societies and cultures for over 6000 years, along its momentous course.
The Sahara Desert has also played a crucial role in Africa’s historic and social evolution. Covering most of North Africa, it is almost as large as the United States and has shaped African history in numerous ways. The Sahara is as harsh as it is majestic: a very hot and dry ocean of sand dividing the North from the Sub Saharan region of Africa, but with a varied climate, even freezing at night at certain times in the year. The Sahara has established varied cultures, peoples, and societies, as part of its evolution; it has shaped Africa, especially the North, determining the movement of peoples, the direction of trade, the character of nations, and even the outcome of war.
Africa is a story of the corrupt billionaire and murderous tyrant; Emperor Haile Selassie, the embodiment of Rastafarianism; the clash of sword and shield at the Northern Nigerian Emir’s Hausa pageant and Durbar; the oil rich, and tumultuous Niger Delta; the multi millionaire Igbo entrepreneur, merchant, and trader, and his collection of classic automobiles; the wealthy and powerful Yoruba Chieftain at his inauguration as ‘Oba.’
But Africa is also an image of famine, starving children, and unimaginable squalor. A story of Rwanda, and the genocidal murder of hundreds of thousands of people; Biafra; and the continuous struggle for social and ethnic equality, and national identity, by millions of oppressed peoples from all corners of the Continent.
Africa is, the turbulent flow of the mighty Zambezi, majestic Mount Kilimanjaro, breathtaking Victoria Falls, and the endless Great Plains teeming with spectacular wildlife. It is the geography of the majestic plain and grassland, rolling on endlessly towards a magical horizon.
Thick jungles filled with the audible sounds of myriad animals, and ambling and swinging monkeys, chimpanzees, baboons, and gorillas; vultures waiting for the inevitable death; where dangerous safaris and wild game hunters beckon, and preening lions welcome the excited visitor; the land of trotting rhinos, spouting hippopotamuses, and ravenous hyenas; a powerful picture of tall graceful giraffes ambling majestically while herds of zebras flee the dreaded predator; swift moving and barefooted Zulu and Xhosa tribesmen; the story of a legendary Warrior Caucasian hero, Tarzan, his delectable Jane, and son Boy.
Africa is an evocative narrative: a saga, a story, an illusion, so far removed from the norm of daily West Indian and American existence, as to be irrelevant to most.
The Nigerian doctor at Peebles, the Ghanaian teacher at the private primary school, the stunning East African wife of an English banker, the trader of souvenirs in St. John Antigua, the rare trip to the African Subcontinent on a church mission, or the African professional employed by various governments, organizations and agencies across the region: this is as far as the Caribbean resident ever gets to Mother Africa!
The white American is much more connected, and knows far more about his European origins, than the Black American, or West Indian, of his own African background. This is the result of a tragic history.
Consequently, Africa remains a silhouette, a confusing kaleidoscope, a thick fog in history, a mystery even; only understood through the prism of an anglicized historical perspective, and Hollywood type productions such as Tarzan, Casablanca, Tobruk, and Roots-the story of Kunta Kinte. Stories of a white hero nurtured by apes and swinging from tree to tree on robust vines through the thick African jungle, white war heroes, fawning Negroes, and virile warrior bushmen with long spears, near naked, enacting tribal war dances, ambling the grasslands of a dark and unknown land.
Consequently, the Black American, Colored Latino, and West Indian of African origin, have been robbed of a heritage that is actually very rich and extraordinary. A great history, a wonderful perspective, rich culture, and a colourful narrative of the past, going back hundreds and hundreds of years, composed of great warrior kings, complex empires, powerful merchants, and wonderful civilizations.
African glory and ancient razzmatazz has been overtaken by a newer narrative, supported by a much more efficient and effective recording machinery, controlled by the feudal European landowner, and later the industrial bourgeoisie, and the intellectual and scientist of the Post Enlightenment period, then the global intelligentsia of the present age.
The story of Africa is a subset of hundreds of years of European history, beginning with the onset of the panoramic thinking of Henry the navigator, the voyage of Vasco da Gama, and the following era of hundreds of years of exploitative white rule on the African Continent.
History has been very unkind to Africa: a legacy of a narrative of the past written by European conquerors and colonialists, and powerful empires that defined the stories of earlier times through their own eyes, and according to their own social and political interests, and commercial and economic perspectives.
Consequently, Africa in the eyes of the black West Indian, and black American adult, teen, and child; and their white brothers and sisters, is a sorry affair. Africa is a story of war, abject poverty, misery, colossal corruption, nepotism, racism, ethnic hatred, and social and economic degradation. Nothing of the positive narrative of a people rich in history, culture, custom, and tradition has ever been highlighted in the international halls of history and academia that determine these matters, and write the annals.
For the centuries after discovery by the Portuguese and Dutch explorer; through, to the time of Dutch settlement, and British and French colonialism and imperialism; and then two devastating World wars and the Cold War aftermath; Africa has been a type of laughing stock of the rich world, a horrific image of darkness and misery, buttressing a schadenfreude, and a smug pleasure by the politically and economically dominant European, in Africa’s misfortunes.
A warning to their own peoples’ of how bad life can get, and how good they have it, after all!
To be continued
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9 Comments
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The African continent, along with being blessed with a myriad of strategic natural resources that are in demand by Asia, North America, Europe and South America, it also has wealth of culture and knowledge. It has had great civilizations, i.e., Nubian, Egyptian …etc. Its culture, knowledge and resources were instrumental in building, forming, and developing other civilizations. Some of this influence is evidence in the West Indies—the Calypso and Reggae genre are rooted in Africa.
The African enclave or diaspora in the west truly was deprived of experiencing the rich African culture. We regrettably are experiencing it vicariously; what a great lost.
The African continent is blessed with much natural resources. But its people still live in abject poverty. As another blogger, E. Leonard, noted European imperialists have plundered the resources of the African continent. The Chinese and others are still raiding African resources to develop their economies.
As noted if the countries within Africa were to collaborate, cooperate and unite, they without a doubt could be economic rising star, rivalling the other more developed and developing continents. Yes, African can rise!
True, the African continent is blessed with natural resources but it can only transform itself into an economic rising star if it rid itself of corruption, mismanagement and civil strife.
The African continent reminds me of Guyana. Guyana is larger and possess much more resources and potential yet it is one the poorest countries in the region. Similarly, the same thing can be said about Jamaica. These two larger countries was mentioned not to dissed them but to make a point—the crippling cost of corruption,mismanagement, poor planning.
The region’s experience is in a sense similar to the African experience. They were plundered, raped, exploited by European crusaders and then cast adrift without the means and mechanisms to fend for themselves.
Add insularity, disunity, greed, corruption, mismanagement to exploitation, rape and plundering and you have a royal mess; a disaster in the making. Imagine how better off both the African and West Indian’s life could be if they rid themselves of these cancerous issues.
Imagine if they established a common purpose and use their resources for the common good; the benefit of Africans and West Indians. Though the commentary was about the rise of Africa, the West Indies and African experiences are intertwined so it made sense to link both.
Dickson, another superb and informative article about the Motherland—Africa. We have ignored her for way too long; we need to get reconnected. Africa will rise again!
I don’t think a W.I. is ignorant of his or her heratage. You just have to get into a taxi and you will find out a low down on every subject on earth including Africa. I feel that the W.I. is more aware and knows more than most Americans about how they came and where they came. We must remember that now all peoples came to W.I. as slaves. From prisons, from indentured labourers, from peoples seeking a better life, they were all colours and from all parts of the world. Clearly slaves from Africa, but clearly the history is known and endlessly gone over. So Hopefully your next article will focus on Africa today and see what’s up now. All the killing, young people being used in wars, young women raped and killed, religious killings and just killing lots of killing. Let’s see now who is now to blame? Can it be the devil Europeans? What about China now and India and Russia the second wave of peoples tearing all countries – not only Africa – apart for their natural resourses. Get off the old yes heard that done that been there let’s hear about now and tomorrow. And most important how does this affect us as they say “what goes around comes around”.
Don’t get what you are trying to say- I don’t see anything inaccurate in Igwe’s story
This piece is very informative . I have been trying to collect as much information as I could about this marvelous place.
Like a child’s longing and its attachment to a mother, I long to be with with my mother, Africa. From the moment I stepped foot on her soil (Ghana), I knew that is was there I truly belong. I immediately felt a spiritual connection as if I were there all along. I was moved to tears without explanation when I experienced the walk through the “door of no return” it was then I realized that I had found my HOME. A home gives a special feeling and that was what I experienced there.
West Indian culture is rich and unique- and it derives from its African heritage- yes your son is a West Indian- and to the Masai- just another Westerner- it does not take away from the fact that the blood od Africa partly runs through his veins
An enlightening and informative commentary on the history and plight of the African continent. The African continent is viewed in some quarters as the “Dark Continent;” it’s unenlightened, poor, primitive…etc.
Yet the African continent is blessed with much strategic natural resources—energy, precious metals, minerals. Why can a continent be so rich and yet most of the population live in poverty. There are many contributing factors.
Without a doubt, the African continent was plundered and exploited by many imperialist western European countries, i.e., England, France……etc. Its natural resources was mined and harvested and exported to these countries for use in developing and improving their economies, standard of living and quality of life. But sadly except for a few corrupt leaders, the lives of much of the population change very little.
Africa has the potential to blow up if it unites; disunity is holding it back. If it were to unite, it could become an economic power house. It could surpass the BRIC (Brazil, Russia, India, China) countries in growth and development.
The African continent is rich in natural resources but these resources are poorly allocated, resulting for the most part a poverty stricken population. It needs to develop the economic mechanisms and skills to efficiently transform these resources into an abundant output for the benefit of the whole continent.
This is achievable. Resource- poor countries such as Japan and Switzerland have a high standard of living, for they are well-adapted for allocating available resources.
Looking forward to the continuation of this commentary.
Africa is an ancient, diverse, culturally rich and unique continent. When my son camped on the Serengetti alongside a small tribe of Masai and observed the annual Great Migration it was awe-inspiring. But he was quite conscious of the fact that despite his West Indian heritage, it was not his home, that he had his own culture, history and ‘roots’ that were only partially associated with Africa.
And to the Masai, he was just another Westerner, no more, no less.
africa has been decimated by europe:
slavery, disease, christianity and economic exploitation
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