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Unification of All Africa: My Take on it

There is a calling for the unification of all Africans. The same way under Christ we'll all be one some day, there is a truth in Africa being united.

Away from Africa - many Africans remember their home land, but we also like to live confortably outside of Africa for those of us that have gone away for various reasons. The hardship encountered in our home continent does not encourage us to go back. The political climate of inequalities and unstability makes us stay away from Africa.

So there is a cry we chant - it is Africa Unite where we hope that one day Africa will be at peace and in prosperity, that is where and when we can go back and enjoy our cultures and our land with our people.

I have dreams of an United Africa but it will take all Africans to build this future. We as expatriated Africans have an economic power and we should strive to revive our home land. We should strive to denounce corrupted government and challenge them to let the younger generation come to power and drive the continent to a new future.

Having an African Unification movement driven by old and corrupted leaders that have had their hands stained with the blood of innocent people is not the answer - and it discredit the effort of us the younger generations. We have to organize and start working on the unification of our minds beyond our ethnicity.

What I do not read in the Pan-Africanism litterature, like this article on thsi same page, is the true look at ourselves African people. We have a bloody habit of killing each other on the continent for racial reasons. This is maybe because the movement was born intellectually from individual victim of slavery where African still leaving on the continent do not relate to that issue in the same way.

When we meet African and Africans descendant from slaves we relate without really relating. They are now way beyond economically where most Africans are nowdays. Some still identify but they are victims of an American or Latin American class struggle, which make them impossible to relate with their African continent ancestors.

In reality, the same weakness that brought on the exploitation of our ancestor as slaves ,sold by their kings (I know since my ancestors did that), that same weakness is causing us to kill each other again today in Africa.

There is a cry that needs to be heard by the strong powers like the US and Europe as well as ourselves for Freedom and Peace on our continent. We need to stop selling ourselves to the highest bidder and start planning a true movement and execute and negociate with a strong backer to retain our independance while participating in this world wide economy.
Looking introvertly, and creating a self introvert Africa is not an answer for me; but protecting our continent is a must while still participating in the world economy.

It is to the world's interest to save Africa because like Asia or Latin America or China, we are all in this together. If Africa becomes such a burdain it will affect the rest of the world too.

It's time to start a new movement of reunification. Any young leader out there ? Like Bob did - we shall do it. This time let's see the dream realized - in peace and not blood shed. The people of Africa have to know they are united and One Now, under One God, and not Man.

Peace in Christ,
Anguile

Africa Unite - Words of Bob

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Africa unite - By Bob Marley

´Cause we´re moving right out of Babylon,
And we´re going to our Father´s land, yea-ea.

How good and how pleasant it would be before God and man, yea-eah! -
To see the unification of all Africans, yeah! -
As it´s been said a´ready, let it be done, yeah!
We are the children of the Rastaman;
We are the children of the Iyaman.

So-o, Africa unite:
´Cause the children (Africa unite) wanna come home.
Africa unite:
´Cause we´re moving right out of Babylon, yea,
And we´re grooving to our Father´s land, yea-ea.

How good and how pleasant it would be before God and man
To see the unification of all Rastaman, yeah.
As it´s been said a´ready, let it be done!
I tell you who we are under the sun:
We are the children of the Rastaman;
We are the children of the Iyaman.

So-o: Africa unite,
Afri - Africa unite, yeah!
Unite for the benefit (Africa unite) for the benefit of your people!
Unite for it´s later (Africa unite) than you think!
Unite for the benefit (Africa unite) of my children!
Unite for it´s later (Africa uniting) than you think!
Africa awaits (Africa unite) its creators!
Africa awaiting (Africa uniting) its Creator!
Africa, you´re my (Africa unite) forefather cornerstone!
Unite for the Africans (Africa uniting) abroad
Unite for the Africans (Africa unite) a yard!
[fadeout

News provided by All Africa

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Africa United: What does it mean?

The following is by Dr. Motsoko Pheko, Deputy President of the Pan Africanist Congress of Azania and a member of the South African Parliament:

Road to Pan-Africanism
Motsoko Pheko
Johannesburg (The Sowetan, November 15, 1999)

Following the dark cloud of slavery and colonialism in Africa, visionary African leaders realised that it was imperative that all Africans - wherever they might be - should unite to end their holocaust which began with the 'European Renaissance' in Italy in 1400.

In 1900 Sylvester Williams, a lawyer of African descent, named this coming together of Africans 'Pan-Africanism'. But as a movement, Pan-Africanism began in 1776.

It was, however, the fifth Pan-African Congress held in Manchester, England, in 1945 that advanced Pan-Africanism and applied it to the decolonisation ofthe African continent politically.

Some African leaders involved in this noble cause were giants such as Kwame Nkrumah, William du Bois, Jomo Kenyatta, Robert Sobukwe and Patrice Lumumba.

Pan-Africanism includes the intellectual, political and economic cooperation that should lead to the political unity of Africa. The Pan-African alternative provides a framework for African unity.

It also fosters radical change in the colonial structures of the economy, and the implementation of an inward-looking strategy of production and development. It calls for the unification of financial markets, economic integration, a new strategy for initial capital accumulation and the design
of a new political map for Africa.

Contemporary Africa is beset with difficulties rooted in its inability to unite territorially. The consequences have been national economies incapable of developing because of geographical, economic and political reasons.

We must accept this truth, and take it as our prime duty, if the restoration of Africa is to become a reality.

As South Africa prepares for the ratification of the Southern African Development Community (SADC) protocol on trade, we need to look beyond trade integration and analyse regional integration.

The artificial borders that separate the national territories in the region are divisive of people united by history and divisive of regions united by geography to the extent that they are the subject of disputes and conflicts between African states. SADC must strive for a community that transcends the economic level and strive for the territorial and political unification of Africa. This is the only way for the continent to become a great modern power. This is the only protection against neo-liberalism and globalisation.

Africa provided leadership of the world for 600 000 years before its enslavement began about 1400. Monotheism was first taught in Africa by Emperor Akhenaton and his wife Nefertiti, before the so-called three major religions of the world taught this doctrine.

Historical evidence reveals that Africa had its renaissance centuries, if not millenniums, before Europe. Some of Africa's past civilisations were in the Nile, Zimbabwe, Congo and Ghana. It was the trans-Atlantic slave trade and colonialism which destroyed Africa and underdeveloped it. In his book How Europe underdeveloped Africa, Dr Walter Rodney gives a vivid picture of this African tragedy.

Slavery and colonialism were made possible by the so-called European Renaissance. The authors of this renaissance used the compass and gunpowder. These Chinese inventions for peaceful purposes were used by Europeans to steal the land and wealth of Africans.

Pan-Africanism demands that the riches of Africa be used for the benefit, upliftment, development and enjoyment of the African people. Pan-Africanism is a system of equitably sharing food, clothing, homes, education, healthcare, wealth, land, work, security of life and happiness. Pan-Africanism is the privilege of the African people to love themselves and to give themselves and their way of life respect and preference.

Pan-Africanism was developed by outstanding African scholars, political scientists, historians and philosophers living in Africa and the diaspora. It was conceived in the womb of Africa. It is a product made in Africa by Africans.

Pan-Africanism is the oldest vision in Africa. No other ideology has successfully challenged Pan-Africanism intellectually.

That is why, in the midst of confusion caused by the so-called 'African renaissance', Colonel Muammar Gaddafi echoed the pan-African call for a United States of Africa when he opened the fifth summit of the Organisation of African Unity in Libya in September.

In August a prominent Nigerian political scientist reminded participants at the fifth Pan-African Colloquium in Ghana of the historical context of the 'European Renaissance', from which the so-called 'African renaissance' is trying to borrow and transpose its rationale.

He pointed out that the 'European Renaissance' was the foundation of slavery, colonialism and racism. Africa has nothing to gain from this decadence, which was responsible for the worst holocaust of the African people in memory.

The inheritors of this inhuman 'renaissance' are still working hard to perpetuate the holocaust of the African people and the underdevelopment of Africa, which they inflicted through slavery, colonialism, apartheid and racism.

Today these forces have their Pan-Europeanism through their European Union, making them a powerful economic bloc. They are integrating socially and politically, and working for a borderless Europe.

On the other hand, Africa is wallowing in the quagmire of underdevelopment, poverty, endless border wars, economic domination and the dictatorship of the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank.

This is because African leaders are dragging their feet on the implementation of Pan-Africanism and have made Africa a perpetual beggar of foreign 'aid'.

Some of these leaders have become agents of neo-liberalism and neo-colonialism, whose instrument is 'globalisation'. Globalisation is just a new form of recolonising the African continent.

There will continue to be an ideological and intellectual crisis in the African world until Africans understand Pan-Africanism, its value and benefits, and apply it to their many problems.

These include 'foreign debts', reparations, repatriation of African intellectual property from the museums of Europe, lack of continental railroads and air routes, intra-trade, communication and technological development among the African people and states.

The triumph of Pan-Africanism, the only way Africans can survive the foreign onslaught and live as a truly liberated people, will come out of the sweat and blood of the African people themselves.As Nkrumah put it:

'Only a united Africa can redeem its past glory, renew and reinforce its strength for the realisation of its destiny.

'We are today the richest and yet the poorest of continents, but in unity our continent could smile in a new era of prosperity and power.'

(The writer is deputy president of the Pan Africanist Congress.)

Link to Pan African Perspective

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