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To: LucyT
The Rise & Fall & Rise of Pan-Africanism

Kenyan Student Airlift. The Frank Marshall Davis Network.Obama Snr. US expats/Ghana

GHANA POST IDEPENDENCE POLITICS.

GHANA. NKRUMAH.DU BOIS.

THE HOTEL THERESA STORY.

SOMETHING ABOUT MALCOLM X

Malcolm X continued

-----------------END RECAP. STORY CONTINUES:

Pages From History: Malcolm X When He Came To Ghana In 1964

Malcolm X of the Muslim Mosque, Inc. and Shirley Graham DuBois, Director of Ghana National Television, at her villa in Accra, Ghana during Malcolm's visit in May 1964. DuBois had thrown a reception in his honor.

The Making Of A Pan-African: Kwame Nkrumah In America

"...In his autobiography, Ghana, Nkrumah recalled that he acquainted himself “with as many political organizations that I could”—that is, groups concerned with black rights and Africa—including the National Urban League and the NAACP.

It was the latter’s special research office that would prove most significant to his pan-African future. It was headed by the brilliant scholar Dr. W. E. B. DuBois, a co-founder of the NAACP, founder and longtime editor of its organ, The Crisis.

Du Bois has been called the “Father of Pan-Africanism” in the 20th century (though Trinidadian barrister Henry Sylvester Williams, convener of the first Pan-African Conference in 1900, has a better claim to the title).

Nkrumah met DuBois near the end of his sojourn in America, about the time the elder intellectual returned to the NAACP after breaking with it a decade earlier over his advocacy of temporary “self-segregation.” Keenly interested in the possibilities for colonial freedom in the wake of the Second World War and the creation of the United Nations, DuBois considered the special research office as “sort of a foreign affairs department of the NAACP.”

Nkrumah also worked with the Council on African Affairs, co-founded by African American social worker Max Yergen and the renaissance man of the 20th century, Paul Robeson...

~SNIP

"...In April 1945, he helped the venerable DuBois organize an international “Colonial Conference” at the old Schomburg Library in Harlem. This little-known conclave was something of a dress rehearsal for the historic Fifth Pan-African Congress, which both men helped to mount in Manchester, England, in October of that year.

One of the continental Africans who assisted them would become yet another father of an African nation: Jomo Kenyatta, known as Mzee (“wise old man”), later the first president of independent Kenya.

Synthesis

Though close to DuBois, Nkrumah also found inspiration in one of his mentor’s old nemeses—the president-general of the Universal Improvement Association and the African Communities League of the World (UNIA-ACL), the largest black mass movement in modern times, a man considered by millions to be a “Black Moses.”

In a famous passage from his autobiography, Nkrumah recalled: “But I think that of all the literature that I studied, the book that did more than any other to fire my enthusiasm was Philosophy and Opinions of Marcus Garvey. Garvey, with his philosophy of ‘Africa for the Africans’ and his ‘Back to Africa’ movement, did much to inspire the Negroes of America in the 1920’s.”

Thus, this young continental African embraced the two great streams of Western pan-Africanism: Garvey’s global nationalist vision of “Africa for the Africans, those at home and those abroad,” and DuBois’ continental vision of a socialist Africa.

In time, Nkrumah would achieve something that neither of these historic rivals would likely have contemplated or approved—a novel synthesis of their competing, yet not wholly uncomplimentary, visions of a free, united, and socialist African nationality.

African American Imprint

After Ghana became independent, Nkrumah expressed his profound debt to Garvey and DuBois.

He resurrected and made ubiquitous the UNIA’s black star symbol. Ghana’s capital square, the old polo grounds, bore its name, and the symbol sat in the center of the nation’s flag. Moreover, the flag’s colors were based on the UNIA’s red, black and green standard.

An even more direct link was the Black Star Steamship Line, named after Garvey’s ill-fated attempt to link the black world in commerce...

Kwame Nkrumah, founder of modern Ghana

Dr. Kwame Francis Nwia Kofie Nkrumah, was a pan-Africanist, and a member of the activist group known as 'The Big Six', and one of the founders of the United Gold Coast Convention. In 1957, Nkrumah became the first President of Ghana after independence from colonial rule from Britain, serving until February 1966, when he was removed from power in a coup d'etat.

Kwame Nkrumah (far left) with the other founders of the UGCC, who became known as 'The Big Six' - after Nkrumah (from left to right) stands Emmanuel O. Obetsebi-Lamptey, Dr Ebenezer Ako-Adjei, Nana William Ofori Atta, Dr Joseph Boakye Danquah, & Edward Akufo-Addo. Ironically, despite this picture of unity against colonial rule, the other five men would all eventually be imprisoned during Nkrumah's administration, with two dying while in custody.

However, by the mid-1960s, despite his accomplishments in developing the African community, Nkrumah's domestic rule had became negative, and later, almost despotic & dictatorial. At the time he ascended to power, the newly independent Ghana had one of the strongest economies in Africa, but by the time he lost power, Ghana was heading towards economic ruin, as a combination of corruption & inefficiency, and his attempts to industrialize Ghana came at the expense of the previously strong-performing cocoa-producing sector. Costly, and largely unsuccessful public works programs also took their toll on the economy...

70 posted on 07/19/2009 10:35:34 PM PDT by Fred Nerks (fair dinkum!)
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To: Fred Nerks; Beckwith; David; arasina; newfreep; null and void; stockpirate; george76; PhilDragoo; ..

Thanks again, Fred Nerks, for all your photos and additions to this important thread. Bookmarked.

Ping to # 70:

>>>> The Rise & Fall & Rise of Pan-Africanism

Kenyan Student Airlift. The Frank Marshall Davis Network.Obama Snr. US expats/Ghana

GHANA POST IDEPENDENCE POLITICS.

GHANA. NKRUMAH.DU BOIS.

THE HOTEL THERESA STORY.

SOMETHING ABOUT MALCOLM X

Malcolm X continued

-————————END RECAP. STORY CONTINUES:

Pages From History: Malcolm X When He Came To Ghana In 1964 <<<<


71 posted on 07/19/2009 10:53:44 PM PDT by LucyT (If it isn't on Free Republic, it didn't happen. -- Jim Robinson)
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To: LucyT
“The Madness of Marcus Garvey”

"...He imagines miserable failures to be great successes and a credit to him. He confesses the loss of nearly a million dollars of poor people’s money and that there is nothing left but debts. He confesses the utter loss of every vessel of his, “Black Star Line,” and then boasts of the success of his shipping line. In one breath he says that all three of his ships are gone; that there is nothing left out of nearly $1,000,000 but debts. In another breath he states that “if it hadn’t been for our enemies, we would now have twenty vessels instead of three.” He still seems under the delusion that he has three. He has a court reception, divides Africa in which he or his movement hasn’t one foot of ground into duchies and makes “knights” and “ladies” and “dukes.” Those presented to him must bend the knee before him. Arrayed in royal garb, he and his court assemble on an elevated dais while the common people are below, kept away from him by armed guards. Here is clearly a case of delusions of grandeur. Could a symptom be more characteristic?...

Kwame Ture on Kwame Nkrumah

"...But as soon as Nkrumah won independence and drove the British out of Ghana, one of his first acts was to sign the Black Star Line into being. Nkrumah told them, "You laughed at Garvey, but you will never laugh at us." And he signed in the Black Star Line, which was to travel the world as the the ocean-going fleets of Ghana, which still exist even today despite all the attacks, internal and external, that it has undergone...

Ghana, John La Rose and African revolution

ON March 6 this year, the people of Ghana marked the 50th year of their independence from British colonial rule. Ghana, the former Gold Coast, was the first British colony in Africa to achieve that revolutionary feat. That epochal event occurred in 1957, three years to that of Nigeria in 1960 and 10 years after India set the pace in 1947. The political forces and movements that facilitated the anti-colonial struggle in Africa were initiated by African-Caribbean and African-American radical thinkers and activists in the early 20th century. They included W.E.B. Du Bois, Marcus Aurelius Garvey, Sylvester Williams, George Padmore, C.L.R. James, and John La Rose.

~snip

"...At Ghana's independence, Nkrumah paid tribute to Garvey by choosing the black star symbol for the nation's flag and naming Ghana's football team, The Black Stars. Padmore from Trinidad and Tobago did not only coordinate the anti-colonial movement from London. He came to reside in Ghana after 1957 and until his death in 1963, Padmore was adviser to Nkrumah. C.L.R. James, the world renowned Marxist scholar, was virtually a consultant to Nkrumah and he visited Ghana many times to give talks and address political rallies. James warned Nkrumah of the dire consequences of sacking a chief judge who gave judgement against the government.

Radical thinkers and artists from North America and the Caribbean were regularly hosted by Ghana. Among them were Malcom X Shabazz, James Baldwin, and Maya Angelou from the US...

74 posted on 07/19/2009 11:38:08 PM PDT by Fred Nerks (fair dinkum!)
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To: Fred Nerks

Wow, you did all this?

Great Stuff! I missed this the first time around!


493 posted on 02/17/2010 3:51:50 AM PST by RaceBannon (OBAMA'S HEALTH CARE IS SHOVEL READY...FOR SENIORS!!:: NObama. Not my president.)
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