Sunday, April 8, 2018

Stop Trying To 'Save' Africa

By Uzodinma Iweala

The Washington Post - Sunday, July 15, 2007 

Last fall, shortly after I returned from Nigeria, I was accosted by a perky blond college student whose blue eyes seemed to match the "African" beads around her wrists.  "Save Darfur!" she shouted from behind a table covered with pamphlets urging students to TAKE ACTION NOW! STOP GENOCIDE IN DARFUR!  My aversion to college kids jumping onto fashionable social causes nearly caused me to walk on, but her next shout stopped me.  "Don't you want to help us save Africa?" she yelled.  It seems that these days, wracked by guilt at the humanitarian crisis it has created in the Middle East, the West has turned to Africa for redemption. Idealistic college students, celebrities such as Bob Geldof and politicians such as Tony Blair have all made bringing light to the dark continent their mission. They fly in for internships and fact-finding missions or to pick out children to adopt in much the same way my friends and I in New York take the subway to the pound to adopt stray dogs.

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Notes on the History of Modern Africa


1960: Robert Mangalso Sobukwe, with 21 other leaders of the Pan-Africanist Congress of Azania (PAC), was put on trial in Johannesburg for organising the Positive Action Campaign against Pass Laws that resulted in the ruthless Sharpeville-Langa massacres

[Walter Rodney] was assassinated in Guyana in 1980, at the age of 38 and remarkably, he accomplished so much in so little time. It is a very central feat that Martin Luther King, Malcolm X, Bob Marley, Frantz Fanon, none of whom reached the age of forty." — Horace Campbell

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