May 25: The day Africa was born

24 May, 2015 - 00:05 0 Views

The Sunday Mail

Ibo Foroma

Rastafarian Perspectives

IT is no less important that we know whence we came. An awareness of our past is essential to the establishment of our personality and our identity as Africans.

This world was not created piecemeal. Africa was born no later and no earlier than any other geographical area on this globe. Africans, no more and no less than any other men, possess all human attributes, talents and deficiencies, virtues and faults.

Thousands of years ago, civilisations flourished in Africa which suffer not at all by comparison with those of other continents. In those centuries, Africans were politically free and economically independent. Their social patterns were their own and their cultures truly indigenous.

The obscurity which enshrouds the centuries which elapsed between those earliest days and the rediscovery of Africa is being gradually dispersed. What is certain is that during those long years Africans were born, lived, and died.

Men on other parts of this earth occupied themselves with their own concerns and in their conceit, proclaimed that the world began and ended at their horizons.

All unknown to them, Africa developed in its own pattern, growing in its own life and in the nineteenth century, finally re-emerged into the world’s consciousness. The events of the past 150 years require no extended recitation from us. The period of colonialism into which we were plunged culminated with our continent fettered and bound; with our once proud and free peoples reduced to humiliation and slavery; with Africa’s terrain cross hatched and chequer-boarded by artificial and arbitrary boundaries.

Many of us, during those bitter years were overwhelmed in battle, and those who escaped conquest did so at the cost of desperate resistance and bloodshed. Others were sold into bondage as the price extracted by the colonialists for the ‘protection’ which they extended and the possessions of which they disposed.

Africa was a physical resource to be exploited and Africans were chattels to be purchased bodily or, at best, peoples to be reduced to vassalage and lackey-hood. Africa was the market for the produce of other nations and the source of the raw materials with which their factories were fed.

Today, Africa has emerged from this dark passage. Our Armageddon is past. Africa has been reborn as a free continent and Africans have been reborn as free men. The blood that was shed and the sufferings that were endured are today Africa’s advocates for freedom and unity.

Those men who refused to accept the judgment passed upon them by the colonisers, who held unswervingly through the darkest hours to a vision of an Africa emancipated from political, economic, and spiritual domination will be remembered and revered wherever Africans met.

Many of them never set foot on this continent. Others were born and died here. What we may utter today can add little to the heroic struggle of those who, by their example, have shown us how precious are freedom and human dignity and of how little value is life without them. Their deeds are written in history.

Africa’s victory, although proclaimed, is not yet total and areas of resistance still remain. Today we name as our first great task the final liberating of those Africans still dominated by foreign exploitation and control.

With the goal in sight and unqualified triumph within our grasp, let us not now falter or lag or relax. We must make our final supreme effort now, when the struggle grows weary. When so much has been won that the thrilling sense of achievement has brought us near satiation.

Our liberty is meaningless unless all Africans are free. Our brothers in the Rhodesias, in Mozambique, in Angola, in South Africa, cry out in anguish for our support and assistance.

We must urge on their behalf their peaceful accession to independence. We must align and identify ourselves with all aspects of their struggle. It would be betrayal were we to pay only lip service to the cause of their liberation and fail to back our words with action.

To them we say your pleas shall not go unheeded. The resources of Africa and of all freedom-loving nations are marshalled in your service. Be of good heart, for your deliverance is at hand.

As clearly illustrated here, Zimbabweans must know and cherish the Emperor’s personal sentiments and uncompromised efforts towards liberating our country from colonial exploitation.

Indeed the Lion of Judah literary broke every chain and all Africans must celebrate this fact. The next step is removing those artificial and arbitrary boundaries, establish one currency, common language or in short, simply follow after the United States of America. Only this time, it is to be known as the United States of Amharic, Ethiopia’s official language. A better substitute for colonial English, French, Portuguese and so forth.

One love, one God, one aim, one destiny, one Africa, selah.

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