African
people throughout the world are uniformly under the yoke of white
supremacy. This has created tremendous problems for us as a people.
There are solutions to these problems that we must be reminded of
time and time again. These solutions have come from the wisdom of the
ancestors and their deep thought.
Our
thinkers and activists of the nineteenth and twentieth-centuries have
set forth many of the solutions to the problems and crisis of African
people. From time to time, movements have unfolded that have picked
up on the ideas of these thinkers and activists. When this has
occurred serious challenges to breaking the yoke of white supremacy
seemed within reach. However, due to internal and external
manipulations of these movements they became short lived. For
example, one of the most successful of these movements was the Garvey
Movement of the 1920s.
As
African people in the twenty-first-century, it is imperative that we
collectively join and participate in the Reparations Movement as we
seek to dismantle white supremacy.
Let
us briefly examine some of the ideas our leaders presented in the
nineteenth and early twentieth centuries that should be the
foundation for establishing the framework for the growing Reparations
Movement at this critical juncture in the history of African people.
Jean
Jacques Dessalines, one of the leaders of the Haitian Revolution in
the late eighteenth and early nineteenth-centuries said, “Never
again shall a colonist, or European, set his foot upon this territory
with the title of master or proprietor. This resolution shall
henceforward form the basis of our constitution.”
Henry
Highland Garnet, a min-nineteenth-century Black Nationalist thinker
and organizer explained, in the following statement that African
people need “…a grand center of Negro nationality, from
which shall flow the streams of commercial, intellectual, and
political power which shall make colored people respected
everywhere.”
Martin
Robeson Delany, Harvard trained physician of the
mid-nineteenth-century and leading Black Nationalist espoused, “We
must act for ourselves—We are a nation within a nation; as the
Poles in Russia, the Hungarians in Austria, the Welsh, Irish, and
Scotch in the British dominions. But we have been, by our oppressor,
despoiled of our purity, and corrupted in our native characteristics,
so that we have inherited their vices and but few of their virtues,
leaving us really a broken people.”
Edward
Wilmot Blyden, a leading educator and Pan Africanist of the mid and
late nineteenth-centuries said, “We need some African power,
some great center of the race where our physical, pecuniary, and
intellectual strength may be collected. We need some spot where such
an influence may go forth in behalf of the race as shall be felt by
the nations. We are now so scattered and divided that we can do
nothing… So long as we remain thus divided, we may expect
imposition… An African nationality is our great need…
We must build up Negro States; we must establish and maintain the
various institutions.”
One
of the greatest Pan Africanist and Black Nationalist leaders of the
twentieth-century, Marcus Mosiah Garvey succinctly states, “Africa
for the Africans at home and abroad.”
Another
great Black Nationalist leader of the twentieth-century, the
Honorable Elijah Muhammad challenged that “we must do for
self.”
Professor
Joseph Harris in commenting on the work of William Leo Hansberry, one
of our leading authorities on African History in the
twentieth-century said, “Hansberry realized that the African
students not only had to contend with life in this racist country,
but that they also had the obligation to return to their countries
with both the skills acquired at Howard and an Afrocentric
perspective of their heritage.”
Finally,
the editorial commentary in the Afrocentric World Review, Vol. I,
No. I, Winter 1973, explained, “In this crucial world wide
scramble for Africa, African minds and African bodies, we must
proclaim in our own right African interest first… Blacks must
cease becoming a vest pocket people for other national interests and
world pursuits, and hasten to revive the age old traditional quest
for a World African Center that will make us once again masters in
our own house.”
In
this spirit, let us listen to the wisdom of our ancestors as we
continue to forge ahead in strengthening our Black Liberation and
Reparations Movements. Our challenge is to study our history, listen
to the wisdom of our ancestors, and take appropriate action. Long
live the Spirit and Wisdom of our Ancestors!
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