October
9 , 2008 - Issue 294 |
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Pan
Africanist Press: Proudly Celebrating 400 Issues of Pambazuka News By Walter Turner BlackCommentator.com Guest Commentator |
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The following words were highlighted on the front page of the first African American owned and operated newspaper in the United States - Freedom’s Journal in 1827. “We wish to plead our own cause. Too long have others spoken for us.” The founders of Freedom’s Journal, Samuel Cornish and John B. Russwurm, published 52 issues of Freedom’s Journal that were distributed in more than 11 states. One of the most distinguished writers for Freedom’s Journal was David Walker, a leading spokesperson for resistance and abolition, who in 1829 penned David Walker's Appeal. More than a
statement of rights, or a historical survey of the African American
experience, David Walker’s Appeal was a mobilizing tool for the
growing early 19th century militant resistance of the African American
community. The appeal so frightened the slave holding establishment
that a bounty was placed on the life of David Walker. David Walker’s
Appeal was not the first salvo in the African American struggle
for human rights but one of the most forthright. By the end of the Civil
War in 1865 there would be more than 40 African American owned and operated
newspapers in the Pambazuka follows the same tradition as Freedom’s Journal. Taken from the Kiswahili words meaning “the dawn” Pambazuka is a tool for liberation and information. In the same way that Freedom’s Journal signaled the rise of militant black nationalism in the 19th century so, too, does Pambazuka provide a voice for a growing Pan African community. In the same way that the Chicago Defender and the Negro World signaled a voice of resistance so does Pambazuka echo an organized and visionary African global community. Much like the words and spirit of Muhammad Speaks and the Black Panther Newspaper, Pambazuka is a philosophy, a vision ,and a movement. The timing of
the press is crucial in providing a platform for movements of social
change and activism. When Freedom’s Journal was launched in the
early 19th century it was able to catalyze the movements for Black Nationalism
and the development of separate independent African American institutions.
When the Chicago Defender began publishing in 1905 it spoke to
a movement of African Americans migrating from the southern states to
the urban cities of the North. The Defender became the most influential
African American newspaper in the Pambazuka
News was officially launched at the end of 2001. As we
go to press Pambazuka has more than
15,000 subscribers and more than 500,000 readers. The list of writers
is more than 1000 and includes and eclectic blend of academics, activists,
journalists, civil society representatives, policy makers, and community
people from around the world. Pambazuka’s
news coverage is not limited to Africa but seeks to cover the broader
global community with an emphasis on Marcus Garvey’s
Negro World was produced in New York beginning in 1918 and had
a worldwide distribution of several hundred thousand up until its’ end
in the early 1930s. While primarily intended as the voice of the Universal
Negro Improvement Association the “Negro World” reported on individual
branches of the UNIA, UNIA enterprises, and the politics of African
people at home and aboard. Much like Pambauzka,
the Negro World reached the The African/African
American press has served as a steady influence in providing information
that could be used to build movements of social and political change.
The work of Edward Wilmot Blyden (Liberian
Herald ), and Duse Mohammed Ali (African Times and Orient Review) were forerunners
to the contributions of Namdi Azikwe, the first President of Nigeria and the founder of
the West African Pilot. On the other side of the
The People’s
Translation Service from The founding
of Muhammad Speaks in 1961 represented the growth of the Nation
of Islam in the The many issues
facing the global African community today demand our collective attention
and action. AFRICOM must be opposed in all shapes and formats. There
must be a total cancellation of the odious debt that has been imposed
on African peoples. The voices of women must be respected and their
exploitation in all forms must be ended. We need to re-strength our
global links by forging new alliances of information and exchange between
African peoples in the Our task as subscribers and readers of Pambazuka is to ensure the future of Pambauzka and its umbrella FAHAMU. Many of the newspapers and journals that led the charge of media for our movements of human rights and social justice were not able to sustain the finances and the labor needed in order to continue to provide information and analysis. Our collective celebration of this 400th issue is tempered with the reality of the tasks ahead and the need to respect the legacy of an activist media that laid the foundation for Pambazuka. BlackCommentator.com Guest Commentator Walter Turner is host of Africa Today, KPFA Radio, co-author of Africa Liberation and American Activists over a Half Century, 1950-2000 and Chairperson of the Social Sciences Department, College of Marin. Click here to contact Mr. Turner. |
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