What is Pan-Africanism?

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They been tryin' hard just to make us all vanish I suggest they put a flag   on a whole another planet Let’s talk about Pan-Africanism, its history,   its present, its criticisms, and its future. What is Pan-Africanism?   Many books have been written on the subject of  Pan-Africanism, devoting a lot of time to carve   out some sort of definition. Some writers  don’t even bother to define it, conceding   that it has meant different things to different  people at different times. I’ll be presenting   just some of their many differing views on what  Pan-Africanism is and what it should look like,   so draw your own conclusions. That being said,  lewwe try a ting with the definition anyway.   Pan-Africanism is grounded in the belief that  all African-descended peoples are one nation.   Not in the sense of nation state, but in the  sense of all African-descended peoples, both on   continent and diaspora, sharing an interconnected  history, purpose, and destiny. That destiny   being a united and independent Africa as the  basis for liberation. As an ideology and movement,   Pan-Africanism encourages solidarity and unity  for economic, social, cultural, and political   progress and emancipation, and ultimately, the  uplifting of all peoples of African-descent.   Pan-Africanists have worked to resist the  exploitation and oppression of all those   of African heritage, oppose and refute  the ideologies of anti-African racism,   and celebrate African achievement, history  and the very notion of being African.   Most Pan-Africanists throughout history have  also been various flavours of socialist,   seeing capitalism as the enemy of liberation and  seeing communal relations, as were present in   pre-colonial African societies, as a necessity. Pan-Africanism is heavily tied to Black   nationalism, which arose around the social,  political, and economic empowerment of   Black communities. The nation here is not  defined by borders, but rather by people   who are bound together by common experience,  especially to resist Western domination and   maintain Black cultures and identities. It  is wholly separate from white nationalism,   which took the name decades later and is  inextricably tied to white supremacy.   So who are some of these thinkers, leaders,  politicians who have added to the body   of Pan-Africanism? Let’s see…there’s  Toussaint Louverture, Julius Nyerere,   Kwame Nkrumah, Thomas Sankara, Marcus Garvey,  C.L.R. James, Kwame Ture, Malcolm X, W. E. B.   Du Bois, Frantz Fanon, Aimé Césaire...I could go  on. As you can see, it’s a bit of a mixed bag.   It would be hard to describe all of  these people as united in objective,   as their ideas were often quite divergent.  Yet, in some sense, they all flew the   metaphorical flag of Pan-Africanism. Oh yeah, Pan-Africanism has a pretty fly   flag. The red represents the blood that  unites all people of African ancestry,   and that must be shed for liberation, the  Black represents Black people as a nation   united under a common heritage, and the green  represents the lush abundance of Africa’s wealth.   To understand Pan-Africanism, you need some  context on the history of African peoples, which   I can only provide in very broad strokes for now. A Brief History of African Peoples   As the most genetically diverse continent  in the world and the cradle of humanity,   it is from Africa that various peoples dispersed  and carved spaces for themselves across the world.   Africa has a legacy spanning thousands of years of  nations, kingdoms, and cultures rising, falling,   innovating, expanding, and sharing with the wider  world. Africans throughout history contributed   to the development of mathematics, astronomy,  medicine, architecture, philosophy, and more.   Even post-colonialism, there are  over 3,000 ethnic groups in Africa.   I don’t use the term tribe, by the  way, because historically speaking,   it's been wielded to dismiss complex societies  that Europeans have seen as primitive.   Prior to colonization, there was no shared  Pan-African identity on the continent. How could   there be? They didn’t all share the same religion,  language, or culture. The Khoisan peoples in South   Africa had little in common with the Songhai of  West Africa or the Habesha of East Africa. Africa   is massive, and even people living right next  to each other had vastly different lifestyles,   practices, and barriers that separated them. It’s no surprise then, that when the Atlantic   Slave Trade kicked into gear, starting with the  Portuguese, things truly devolved into madness.   Africans were kidnapped and sold into slavery,  often by fellow Africans. Kingdoms and nations   which facilitated slavery were quick to become  enslaved themselves. The brutal appetite for more   exploitable, disposable labour in the Americas  increased. At least 12 million Africans were   transported to the Americas, millions more died  in the perpetration of this great crime, and new   nations came to be established in the Caribbean,  Brazil, the United States and elsewhere. It was   the largest forced migration event in human  history. There was also the Trans-Saharan Slave   Trade, which is often left out of the conversation  surrounding the enslavement of Africans as its   consequences do not compare in size nor scope,  but I do still find it important to highlight.   It was through the Atlantic Slave Trade and  the subsequent gruelling and inhumane treatment   in the Americas that the various peoples of  Africa were stripped of their original cultures   and brought together for the very first time.  The African diaspora began to unite and develop   identities of their own. Meanwhile, Africa  was colonized and carved up by competing and   collaborating European powers, all hungry for the  wealth of the continent. At the Berlin Conference,   borders and divisions were drawn that  continue to cripple the continent today.   It has been nearly 500 years since the first  Trans-Atlantic slave voyage. As a people, we have   not known peace nor justice since. The creation  of our diaspora came alongside the emergence   of global capitalism, European domination, and  anti-Black racism. Racist ideas were forged to   support the economic motives of the elites, and  even today, many still hold to a perception of   African inferiority, (mis)informing their attitude  toward our conditions. We still suffer from the   erasure and suppression of our history and legacy.  Our labour has built and continues to build   the wealth of the Global North. We have  been exploited not just by European powers,   but also Arab and Asian powers, and our  enslavement persists today across the world.   Our land has been stolen and we have been stolen  from our land. We have been denied autonomy,   denied rights, and denied our very humanity. The historic response of African peoples has   been Pan-Africanism, a river with many streams and  currents. Let’s discuss some of the major thinkers   and movements over the years. The History of Pan-Africanism   Pre-19th Century In the late 18th century,   the slave trade was in full swing. And yet,  even then, abolitionists worked to campaign   for its end. One of the most famous of these  abolitionist groups was The Sons of Africa,   made up of educated, formerly-enslaved Africans in  London. It was the first Black political group in   Britain and has been described as one of the first  Pan-African organizations. The Sons of Africa   wrote letters to the press, lobbied Parliament,  jointly addressed the Quakers and co-operated with   other abolitionists and radicals as part of the  wider campaign against the trafficking of Africans   and for the rights of all. Notable members  included Olaudah Equiano, a slave since childhood,   sold twice before purchasing his freedom, and  Ottobah Cugoano, who was sold into slavery when   he was 13 years old and eventually purchased,  educated, and freed by a British merchant.   19th Century Arguably the most existentially   terrifying moment for the European empires in the  early 19th century was the success of the slave   revolt in Haiti. The Haitian revolution, famously  led by, among others, Toussaint Louverture, began   in 1791 and ended in 1804, establishing the first  and only state to be founded by slave uprising.   It challenged long-held European beliefs about  the intelligence and capacity of enslaved peoples   to achieve and maintain their own freedom. While  post-revolution Haiti faced assassinations,   embargoes, crippling taxation by the French, and  a highly segmented colour-based class society,   what Haitians established was a beacon of hope  for Africans everywhere, even post-emancipation.   Haiti became a safe haven for runaway slaves,  revolutionaries, and all who were oppressed.   In the mid to late 19th century, early  thinkers like Alexander Crummel, Martin Delany,   and Edward Blyden began to lay the groundwork for  more comprehensive Pan-African thought. Alexander   Crummel, born free in 1819, was one of the first  Black nationalists, advocating for solidarity and   economic development. Martin Delany, born free in  1812, famously called for “Africa for Africans”.   He believed that Black people had no future in  the United States, and should leave to found   a new nation elsewhere, like in the Caribbean  or South America. He ruthlessly criticized so   many individuals, ideas, and institutions that he  alienated moderate abolitionists. He also opposed   racial segregation (0f course) and was well known  for his deep-seated pride in his own people.   Lastly, Edward Blyden, born free in 1832,  advocated for a return to Africa to help   rebuild the continent. He was one of the first  to articulate a notion of "African Personality".   A lot of their ideas and actions would be  considered outdated or plain wrong today,   like Crummel’s colonization efforts in Liberia and  Blyden’s support of Zionism. Nonetheless the works   and ideas of all three of these men would still go  on to inspire countless future Pan-Africanists.   The 1900s - 1920s Pan-Africanism really began to take   shape with the beginning of the first Pan-African  conference in London in 1900. It was organized by   Trinidadian barrister Henry Sylvester Williams,  just before the Paris Exhibition of the same year.   It was attended by 37 delegates and 10 other  participants from across the diaspora. One notable   attendee was W.E.B. DuBois, who played a leading  role in drafting a letter to European leaders   appealing to them to struggle against racism, to  grant the right to self-government to the colonies   in Africa and the West Indies, and demanding  political and other rights for African Americans.   It was the first time in history that Black  people had gathered from all parts of the world   to discuss and improve the condition  of their race. After the conference,   chapters of the Pan-African Association were set  up in Jamaica, Trinidad, and the US. Eventually   they would begin to meet under the banner of  the Pan-African Congress. More on that later.   Onto a rather controversial figure, let’s talk  about the so-called Negro in the Hat: Marcus   Garvey. He founded the Universal Negro Improvement  Association (UNIA). Born in Jamaica in 1887,   Garvey was a Black nationalist in the Pan-African  scene who advocated for racial pride and the   building of institutions for the African diaspora.  However, it would be more accurate to describe   him as a dictatorial Black separatist, as he  envisioned a unified Africa as a one-party state,   governed by himself, that would enact laws  to ensure Black racial purity. He believed   America was a white man’s country and he described  himself as the first fascist and Black capitalist.   Although he was staggeringly ignorant  about the diversity present in Africa,   considered it backwards, and never visited  the continent himself, he was big in the   Back-to-Africa movement and ran the Black Star  Line shipping and passenger company to help   transport Americans to Liberia. He glorified many  Western ideas, and even gave prominent supporters   British titles like “Lords” and “Knights”. He  was convicted of mail fraud and blamed Jewish   people for conspiring against him because, and  buckle in for this one, he collaborated with   the Ku Klux Klan. He was deeply anti-socialist,  anti-miscegenation, and anti-racial integration.   His organization did design the Pan-African flag,  which is cool, but naturally, he alienated a lot   of fellow Pan-African thinkers, as his ideas were  so utterly divergent from the rest of them.   One thinker in particular that he frequently butt  heads with was William Edward Burghardt Du Bois,   born in 1868, who described Garvey as a  “demagogue” that he tried his best to ignore.   In fact, they seemed to hate each other.  Du Bois is more openly recognized as a   father of Pan-Africanism, although he started  with the unfortunate title “Pan-Negroism”.   Throughout his life, he contributed to a vast  array of ideas, including Black Existentialism,   and consistently advocated for the study  of African history. He founded the National   Association for the Advancement of Colored People  (NAACP) and was an ardent proponent of equal   rights. He was among the first African-Americans  to highlight the colonial condition in Africa,   and was deeply opposed to Garvey's notion  of African-American rule over Africa.   Du Bois also understood the deep connections  between capitalism and racism, and believed   that socialism may be a better path towards  racial equality. He was forced out of the NAACP   due to his praise for Karl Marx and communist  sympathies. Later in his life, he fled the US   and found refuge in Ghana, under the leadership of  Kwame Nkrumah, and died the day before Dr Martin   Luther King’s March on Washington in 1963, which  he himself tried to organize 60 years before.   The 1920s - 1940s By now we cooking. In the 1920s,   30s, and 40s, a whole wave of thinkers and  ideas came into the fold of the movement. The   development and propagation of Pan-African ideas  would spread even further, and it had tremendous   influence on the Harlem Renaissance of the 1920s,  which Du Bois had helped promote. The first four   Pan-African Congresses took place during this  time. In 1919 in Paris, 1921 in London, 1923   in London again, and 1927 in New York City. At the first Congress, there were 57 delegates   representing 15 countries, including Du Bois  and Ida Gibbs, who represented Pan-Africa.   The focus of this Congress in Paris was the  petitioning of the Versailles Peace Conference,   demanding that The Allies collaborate in the  administration of former territories in Africa   and that Africa be granted home rule. At the  second Congress, Du Bois described the attendance   of 26 different groups of people from all across  Africa, Europe, The Caribbean, and The Americas,   as well as fraternal organizations from Asia.  The focus of this Congress, which took place in   London, Brussels, and Paris, was the issuance of  a declaration that criticized European colonial   domination in Africa and lamented the unequal  state of relations between white and Black races,   calling for a fairer distribution of the  world’s resources. At the third and fourth   Congresses in London and New York City,  the delegates again demanded self-rule   and an end to European profiteering of the  continent, and addressed problems in the Diaspora   related to lynching and white minority rule. There were also activists and writers like   CLR James that gained prominence in this  time. CLR James, born in Trinidad in 1901,   made bold contributions to Black radical thought,  blending Pan-African and Marxist ideas. He notably   challenged the false dichotomy of “Pan-African  Nationalism” or “Labour Internationalism” and   therefore synthesized his opposition to racial,  colonial, and class-based oppression. He   deserves a video of his own. Other thinkers  of this time include American Paul Robeson,   Trinidadian George Padmore, Senegalese Léopold  Senghor, Martiniquan Aimé Césaire, and Kenyan Jomo   Kenyatta. You could call it a Pan-African,  Black Atlantic intellectual community,   as ideas traded freely across the diaspora. The 1940s - 1960s   In the late 1940s, amidst the Red Scare in the  US, the rather socialist Pan-Africanist movement   receded and Africans began to take the helm  where African-Americans had before. In this era,   I’d like to highlight the 5th Pan-African  Congress and the rise of Kwame Nkruma.   At the 5th Pan-African Congress in Manchester  in 1945, in the presence of 200 members,   the foundations of contemporary Pan-Africanism  were laid. The goal was to draw up a general   outline of a practical programme for the  political liberation of Africa. They were far   more militant than previous Congresses, desiring  a free federation of African socialist states.   As we will soon see, the results in the latter  half of the century were a bit of a mixed bag.   The Congress made demands for Independence,  called for solidarity among all oppressed and   exploited peoples, and condemned imperialism,  racial discrimination, and capitalism. The 5th   Congress would produce a diverse crop of African  intellectual and political leaders who would go on   to influence the continent in a variety of ways,  including Obafemi Awolowo, and Kwame Nkrumah.   Nkrumah, born in 1909, was a pan-African  Marxist-Leninist who led the Gold Coast   independence movement that created the nation of  G hana in 1957 and co-founded the Organization of   African Unity in 1963. He was deeply influenced by  Marcus Garvey, W. E. B. Du Bois, George Padmore,   CLR James, and Edward Blyden, looking to them for  guidance on how Africa can build itself to become   a force for good in the world. With independence,  he became Ghana’s first Prime Minister.   Ghana under his leadership was basically a social  democracy with a strong welfare state, education,   healthcare, and some nationalized industries. He  also worked to rapidly industrialize the country.   Nkrumah promoted a Pan-African  culture, decried Euro-centric norms,   promoted traditional clothing, and opened  museums and other cultural institutions.   He also banned tribal identification in an  effort to suppress the influence of local chiefs,   with little success, and slowly  grew his autocratic abilities,   banning other political parties and becoming  President for life. He was also criticized for   building up a personality cult. Eventually he  was overthrown in 1966 via Western-backed coup   and the National Liberation Council that took  control privatized national industries under   the supervision of multinational corporations. He  never returned to Ghana again, and spent the rest   of his days in Guinea, as honorary co-president of  Ahmed Sékou Touré, a fellow “president for life”.   The 1960s - 1980s By now, Pan-Africanism was beginning   to decline outside of Africa. In the US, The Black  Panther Party became active between 1966 and 1982,   militantly advocating for Black Power and  organizing community social programs and   cop-watches. The FBI considered the Black Panther  Party “the greatest threat to the internal   security of the country” and worked to infiltrate  the structure of the Party, assassinate and jail   members and leaders, and drain resources. More  than any previous Black political organization,   the Black Panther Party emphasized class  struggle, even over Pan-Africanism,   leading to an eventual split with Kwame Ture  and other more black nationalist members.   The organization was far from perfect, with  many internal divisions and tensions, due to   the leadership’s hostility towards dissenting  perspectives and alternative ideologies.   Meanwhile in Africa, the 6th Pan African  Congress commenced in 1974 in Dar es Salaam,   Tanzania. Unlike previous Pan-African Congresses,  it took place outside of the Western imperial   core. It was at this stage that Pan-Africanists  identified the threat of neocolonialism,   considering the overthrow of various African  governments and the use of Africans to assist   in their downfall. Thus there was more emphasis  amongst Pan-Africanists on class struggle against   Western, Eastern, and African capitalists.  However, they also, slowly, began to realize   the failure of the various bureaucratic forms of  socialism, and that the masses needed to be more   involved to defeat elitism and autocracy. They  also finally openly addressed the issue of women   and decided to give support to political  struggles for equality undertaken by black women.   This period also saw the rise of religiously  zealous state capitalists like Robert Mugabe   and Muammar al-Gaddafi, and the  rise and fall of Thomas Sankara.   Mugabe was the corrupt and ideologically vague  Prime Minister and then President of Zimbabwe   for three decades, starting in 1980. Gaddafi  was an anti-Semitic Pan-Arabist and Pan-African   who ruled Libya for 42 years starting in  1969 and advocated for the “United States   of Africa”. Thomas Sankara was the so-called Che  Guevara of Africa who launched largely positive,   radical programmes for social, ecological, and  economic change in Burkina Faso beginning in 1983.   Of course, he also suppressed striking workers,  banned unions, and restricted media freedom so...I   have mixed feelings about him. Perhaps I’ll talk  about it some other day. He was assassinated and   his government was seized in 1987. The 1980s, onward   The last decades of the 20th century dealt with  the question of what Pan-Africanism should look   like as the new millennium approached. Scholars  began to develop the body of Afrocentrism,   which emphasized African modes of thought,  culture, and historical perspective as a   corrective to the long tradition of European  cultural and intellectual domination.   With the end of the Cold War, a new era of  globalization began, yet Africa remained   vulnerable to external intervention and neo  colonialism. However, this period also saw   some wins against settler colonialism, such as  in South Africa with the end of Apartheid. The   question of reparations for the impact of slavery  and colonialism was reinvigorated at the First   Pan-African Conference on Reparations in Abuja,  Nigeria, in 1993. The Seventh Pan-African Congress   was held in Kampala, Uganda, in 1994 and the  Organization for African Unity was replaced by   the African Union in 2002, which declared that it  would encompass the entire African diaspora. The   relevance of socialism in Pan-Africanism was now  being questioned by post-Cold War era capitalist   African leaders. Pan-Africanists and Black  Africans also began to question who counts as an   African in order to best create the conditions for  African liberati on and unity, as the enslavement   of Black Africans by Arabs continues even to  this day, especially in Libya and Mauritania.   So what’s happening now? Pan-Africanism Today   There’s so much more I could’ve gone into  concerning the past century of Pan-Africanism.   What is clear is that while there may  be agreement on the need for change,   there are many differing views as to the nature  of this change and how it might be brought about.   Pan-Africanism isn’t discussed as often these  days, even in radical diasporic circles, despite   ongoing issues of corruption and oppression  on the continent. Racism, Eurocentrism, the   consequences of enslavement, colonialism and its  legacies, a capital-centred world, and imperialism   are all still relevant. Yet celebrities,  opportunists, liberals, and memes have seized   popular consciousness. A lot of people seem to  have forgotten about international solidarity,   but things might start changing soon. Black Lives Matter Global Network might be   considered by some to be a Pan-African movement,  but is it? The Network states that its “intention   from the very beginning was to connect Black  people from all over the world who have a shared   desire for justice to act together in their  communities.” But can it truly be considered   Pan-African without a central concern with Africa?  Is BLM Global something different altogether?   What is the future of Pan-Africanism? The Future of Pan-Africanism   I’m not a seance, but through this  journey exploring Pan-Africanism,   certain lessons have been made abundantly clear. Firstly, Pan-Africanists need to delve much deeper   into African history in order to avoid the errors  of early thinkers, who homogenized African peoples   and did not understand or reconcile divisions  between nations, communities, and countries on   the continent and in the diaspora. We are united  in our struggle, but struggle isn’t all there is.   We are still a diverse and multifaceted  people, with different needs and   interests that need to be taken into account. Secondly, petitions don’t work. Electoral and   liberal strategies for Pan-African liberation are  time consuming ventures with very little payoff.   The first Pan-African Congresses were focused  on appealing to the governments of the world   to respect African rights and freedoms,  but it mostly fell on deaf ears.   Even when such efforts did succeed, the rulers  of the world still found ways to exploit us,   through neo-colonial practices facilitated by  the Black faces in high places they set up.   And speaking of Black faces in high places, it’s  clear that centralized, top-down organization   based on elitism and cult of personality,  as well as statist ventures as a whole,   are a dead end. As the saying goes, “The Master's  Tools Will Never Dismantle the Master's House.”   At best, such leaders have become mere  social democrats in a still stratified, neo   colonized society, like Nelson Mandela. At worst,  they’ve become corrupt, opportunistic autocrats,   violently forcing their will onto  the people, like Robert Mugabe.   Or they’ve ended up imprisoned/assassinated  like the Black Panther Party leaders,   resulting in the demise of the whole organization.  None of these attempts have led to the autonomy,   free association, and self-realization of the  masses. None of them have prefigured anything   close to the freedom of African peoples that  Pan-Africanism espouses. Pan-Africanism needs to   move past leader-centric organization and focus on  the full involvement and consensus of the people   through horizontal organization based on  local autonomy and global solidarity.   Pan-Africanists must also understand  that there can be no Pan-Africanism   that maintains sexism, colourism, texturism,  homophobia, transphobia, queerphobia, ableism,   or any other mode of oppression. Previous  movements have failed to include and uplift some   of the most vulnerable in our community. We can’t  change the past but we can learn for the future.   The Anarkata philosophy and movement is  particularly skilled at this, as it draws   from a number of revolutionary frameworks,  including Black Marxism, Pan Africanism,   Black feminism, Social Ecology, Anarchism,  and Queer liberation to build an inclusive,   horizontal, anti-imperial, and eco-focused  movement without being invested in hierarchy,   centralization, or a “Pan-African State” as  the means to achieve global Black liberation.   There’s still a deep hunger for freedom.  There’s still a need to unite. We’re still   being subjugated and exploited by nations and  capitalists of all flags. Africa & Africans,   and oppressed peoples across the Global South,  remain the pillars that hold up the capitalists   of this Earth. Pan-Africanism is just one of many  tools at our disposal as we make our way forward   with knowledge of our history and ambition for our  future. Our ecologically grounded, horizontally   organized, decentrally planned, locally focused,  globally minded, and socially centered future.   Peace. Outro   Thank you for watching. I have a new Patreon  post up, a poem about Anarkata. Thanks once   again to the Famalay, Ongrad, Coby Tamayo,  John Vechey, Ori Shimony, and Suavacado Jones.   You can join these beautiful humans and support  me too on Patreon.com/saintdrew. Or you can give   a one time donation on ko-fi.com/saintdrew.  Please like, comment, subscribe, and share   with your fellow Pan-Africanists. Feed the  algorithm. Check out my previous videos for   other fascinating topics. You can follow me  on Twitter @_saintdrew. Thanks again, peace!
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Length: 25min 56sec (1556 seconds)
Published: Wed Feb 17 2021
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