Publications /
Opinion

Back
Africa for Africans
August 3, 2021

Pan-Africanism is a dream that never dies. A project of African politicians, united in a vision, as old as the settled Africa, which liberated itself from the shackles of colonialism: Africa for Africans, Afro Americans, or the dark skinned people of Cuba, or Haiti, African immigrants in Paris, or Rome, in step to rekindle hope, freedom, equality, cultural revival, to build a future, construct the foundations of a borderless continent, an Africa without tribal struggles, wars, or poverty.

Already in the nineteenth century, a ‘Back to Africa’ movement existed. As early as August 2, 1920, the New York Times reported: “25 000 Negroes Convene International Gathering, will prepare own Bill of Rights”—and, yes, they debated the foundation of an African Republic. Ghana’s legendary President Kwame Nkrumah proposed an independent Africa: “a quest for regional integration of the whole of the African continent”. The icons of this dream have faded with history: Julius Nyerere, Sekou Touré, William Tubmann, whose country, Liberia, was founded in 1847 by free people of color, former slaves arriving in Africa from the U.S. between 1820 and 1843. Léopold Sédar Senghor cultivated his ‘Négritude Movement’. His colleague, Mobutu, toyed with ‘authenticité’.

Pan-Africanism, notes Hanae Bezad in her thoughtful report Boosting Cultural Readiness for Pan-African Momentum, stemmed from an idealized version of Africa developed by Africans from the diaspora, and built and nurtured by members of an intellectual elite who received Western educations and were able to translate what they grasped as shared aspirations into demands made to the West. This pan-Africanism still fuels the political pro-Africanism in institutions. Bezad, member of the Policy Center’s Atlantic Dialogues Emerging Leaders program, quotes an essay by Kenyan author Nanjala Nyabola, who seems to argue that the old concepts of African unity are obsolete, overtaken by time: “Everyone can tell you what pan-Africanism stands for… when it is juxtaposed with the West. But no one seems to know what pan-Africanism means when it is self-referential. And the solidarity consciousness is dying, leaving behind a network that exists solely to protect rich, powerful men”. Hanae Bezad notes the “bitter criticisms eloquently raised” by the writer, but advances a less pessimistic tone in her paper, a narrative of rebirth and pan-African solidarity among the younger population of Africa. During her travels through many countries, Bezad realized “that young people express in a variety of ways their attachment to concepts of Pan Africanity. The pan-African Africa they dream of is often a place for their legitimate aspirations of a brighter future, of freedom and democracy, social and economic blossoming, rather than development. They have a sense that the rules of development drawn up in the post-colonial era are only a skewed power struggle. From Morocco to Ethiopia, Senegal to Rwanda, Tunisia to Ghana, t-shirt slogans and song mottos, depictions of a borderless continent stand for a pan-African attitude, if not an awareness of shared struggles and common realities. It is worth better understanding, appreciating and supporting these”.

The Digital World has no Borders

Possibly the cell phone and computer will create a new identity within the African continent, a recovery of older days, five decades ago, when hip hop emerged as a mix of Black Youth, hip hop culture, and black identity, and demonstrated to the world a young hip, proud African youth, moving to the sound of their music, dressed in their newly inspired fashions. Andreana Clay in 2003 stated in an article published by the American Behavioral Scientist, ‘Keepin’ it real: Black youth, Hip-Hop Culture, and Black Identity’, that hip hop provides the world with “vivid illustrations of Black lived experience”, creating bonds of black identity across the globe.

In August 2016, the cable news giant CNN “decided to go after Africa’s young, mobile audience”, starting with Nigeria. African fashion success stories were showcased in the CNN show African Voices, popular music artists were introduced to a global audience via Inside Africa. The sound of music, or fashion, was not supposed to be limited as a showcase of Africa. Social problems stimulated the youth into action, CNN reported. “Across the continent social movements are rising up and taking to the streets and online spaces. Activists organize their movements online, against police brutality and militarism, expressing the thirst of young people for democracy, human rights and liberation, and demanding change. The renewed pan-Africanism roots itself in this dynamic”, writes Hanae Bezad. “Nowadays, African creatives are making the most of digital tools to make their art alive and accessible”. From the 3-D Fashion week of the Democratic Republic of Congo designer Hanifa, to the Moroccan tapes of Marocopedia, the first platform dedicated to the digitization of Moroccan heritage in all its diversity ,midway between digital museum and Web TV documentary, or online pan-African galleries such as Arts Design Africa, reports HanaeBezad, “African creative’s are proving the digital revolution offers an array of venues for them to achieve their aesthetic and societal vision of a renewed pan-Africanism. Renewing pan-Africanism, declaring ourselves as one people united in our diversity, is a worthwhile visionand challenge”.

“A quick Google search shows 2+ million results for the term ‘pan-Africanism’ and 320+ million for the term ‘pan-African’. There is also a growing membership of pan-Africanist groups on social media platforms, including on Facebook, Pan-African Renaissance, pan-African music, pan-African stories, and ‘Africa is a country’, reflecting the dream of a borderless continent, united in peace and prosperity”, noted Hanae Bezad. A literature review on African youth and the impact of narrative (led by researcher Rebecca Pointer, Africa No Filter, September 2020) documented that the path to realization of the vision is long and certainly difficult: “Regarding their sense of identity, most youth firstly identified according to their nation state, followed by being African, and then by ethnicity or religion. However, Nigerians, Kenyans and Ethiopians were more likely to identify by their ethnicity, and Southern Africans, especially South Africans, were less likely to identify as being African. Nevertheless, youth overwhelmingly agreed that a shared African identity exists, based on a similar history and similar economic trajectories”. Of the many questions Bezad asks her readers, one is most difficult to answer: “How do we make sure the pan-African identity conversation is inclusive of all African citizens, and not confined to the African intelligentsia?”

 

The opinions expressed in this article belong to the author.

RELATED CONTENT

  • Authors
    August 13, 2018
    Depuis la fin de l’année 2017, le président Donald Trump mène plusieurs batailles commerciales, contre différents partenaires, sous prétextes de sauver des emplois industriels américains et de réduire le déficit commercial des États-Unis. S’il est difficile de se prononcer sur les effets des combats commerciaux amorcés par le président Trump, l’importance des opposants et des échanges pour l’économie mondiale en fait une source de risque pour la croissance, les emplois et les prix à ...
  • Authors
    Malik Abaddi
    August 8, 2018
    The African Union goes to Mauritania Under the theme “Winning the Fight Against Corruption”, the 31st Summit of the African Union was held in early July in the desert capital Nouakchott. In a bitter prelude in late June, the AU’s commitment to this central theme was dealt a blow with the sudden – and public – resignation of Ghana’s Daniel Batidam from the AU Advisory Board on Corruption. Off to a rocky start, the summit had an even rougher road ahead of it.  A month before the lau ...
  • Authors
    August 6, 2018
    Africa, preeminent recipient of Chinese aid, has benefited greatly from Chinese low-rate loans, infrastructure projects and trade relations. Consequently, these massive investments cause analysts to question whether this Chinese expansionism constitutes a new form of colonialism. The author examines the different economic intervention tools of Beijing, the Chinese capital’s economic engagement in the continent, and the long-term strategy of China in Africa. He also addresses approv ...
  • Authors
    August 1, 2018
    Comme le rappelle le Policy brief 17/32 consacré en large part à l’hypothèse dite de « Prebisch-Singer », la dynamique du prix des matières premières se décompose en tendance de très long terme, en cycle et en instabilité (volatilité) à court terme (Jacks, 2013)1 . La flambée du cours des matières premières sur la période 2002-2012 avait, dans cette perspective, conduit nombre d’observateurs à évoquer l’existence d’un « super-cycle » alimenté par la hausse structurelle de la demande ...
  • Authors
    August 1, 2018
    Dans cette minutieuse analyse des relations entre les pays du Maghreb et l’Inde, pays/continent, désormais classé au rang de 7ème puissance économique mondiale, appel est fait à plusieurs disciplines. De la politique, aux relations internationales, à l’économie et au commerce, en passant par l’histoire. Le résultat est ce tableau de bord/panorama qui renseigne à la fois sur les atouts dont dispose chacun des partenaires mais, aussi, sur les désaccords qui se font jour entre ces dern ...
  • August 1, 2018
    “This article has been originally published in 'Morocco in Focus 2018,' the magazine of the Moroccan Embassy in New Delhi, India on the occasion of the Morocco National Day 2018.” Introduction In an article published last year, the author stressed the role of partnership between Morocco and India for the inclusive growth of small farmers. There is no doubt that agriculture remains a major instrument for human development both in India and in Africa. Several international reports h ...
  • Authors
    Tristan Coloma
    Benjamin Augé
    July 27, 2018
    Arrivé au pouvoir le 2 avril 2018, le premier ministre Ethiopien Abiy Ahmed Ali, issu de la majorité oromo, a été imposé à une minorité tigréenne ayant cadenassé les postes à la tête de l'Etat, depuis la domination politique de la coalition de l'Ethiopian Peoples' Revolutionary Democratic Front (EPRDF) en 1991. Chef de l'Oromia Urban Development and Housing Bureau en charge des programmes de construction dans sa région, ainsi que vice-président de cette région peuplée de plus de 30 ...
  • Authors
    July 26, 2018
    The lion roared. A thunderous, gut-freezing roar. Followed by a ferocious growl, just to make sure that the adrenaline would reach explosive heights. Again, the thunderstorm effect, menacing, rumbling in the distance. This was a different storm. I could see the massive head. Its contour. Did I notice the eyes, yellow and green? A lion. Male and twenty yards away. Covered by a dense, green, bush. Since I am an admirer of Hemingway’s adventures, I was aware that the author estimated t ...
  • Authors
    July 23, 2018
    Why do farmers need access to newer technologies on a recurrent basis? Most subsistence farmers already know how to farm and undertake post-harvest processing from their parents. The main reason to turn to technology is that traditional techniques for subsistence agriculture are grossly insufficient when it comes to generating the productivity and output growth required to adequately lift millions out of poverty and keep them out of it. “Efficient but poor” as Schultz (1964:37) put ...
  • Authors
    François Gaulme
    July 20, 2018
    Cette note vise à mettre en lumière le cycle d’ajustement à la fois financier, économique et politique affectant deux pétro-États d’Afrique centrale, le Gabon et la République du Congo (Congo-Brazzaville). Unis par leur système économique de rente et leur histoire coloniale commune, ces deux pays n’en ont pas moins connu des destins politiques différents après leur indépendance, le premier conservant une relation privilégiée avec la France tandis que le second optait rapidement pour ...