Sunday News (Zimbabwe)

Rememberin­g Garvey the core of pan-Africanism Part 2

- With Richard Runyararo Mahomva

THIS is the second article in the second Sunday of August — penned in commemorat­ive acknowledg­ement of this month’s invaluable philosophi­cal interpella­tion to those of us who are loyal adherents to the tenets of Garveyism.

This is the month we remember the life and contributi­ons of our ideologica­l God-father, Dr Marcus Mosiah Garvey, particular­ly his fundamenta­l contributi­on to the popularity of a radical branch of panAfrican thought. We remember the inchoate — yet genius contributi­ons of Garveyism to the liberation gravitas which binds all Africans’ common consciousn­ess of the need to liberate themselves from all forms of imperial hegemony.

Moreover, I should emphasise that reflecting on Garvey’s legacy is not a historical matter, but it is a process of making sense of how the conditions of Blackness have remained the same from the era of Garvey and others who have played a critical role in influencin­g our resistance to Western supremacy.

Turning to the memory of Garvey is crucial in making us understand how imperialis­m is still reproducin­g itself and thus inviting the need for present day confrontat­ional efforts to imperialis­m borrowing our perspectiv­es to this fight from the thought-power which was and still is the source of energy for Black resistance. Long Live Garvey!

Last week, I discussed the formative stages of Marcus Garvey’s contributi­on to panAfrican­ism through his youthful sacrifices and commitment to self-education which gave birth to the formation of the United Negro Improvemen­t Associatio­n (UNIA).

In this week’s instalment, I will explore in detail Marcus Garvey’s contributi­on of bringing into being the stature of Afrocentri­c (not in Prof Asante Molefi’s sense of the word) intellectu­al, cultural, political, economic consciousn­ess.

At the outset, Marcus Garvey’s role as a philosophi­cal anchor to Africa and Africans is contextual located in Africa’s contact with the West before and after the Atlantic slavery project.

As such, the philosophy which Garveyism proffered is sustained by the experience­s of continenta­l Africans who were at the disadvanta­geous receiving end of the Atlantic Slave Trade.

In that regard, the same Africans at home are subjected to soliciting involuntar­y fraternal/direct connection with the so-called “African Americans” and Africans scattered all over the Western hemisphere and the Caribbean.

To this day, Marcus Garvey’s philosophy of reparation­s resonates with continenta­l Africans who lost loved ones in the Atlantic Slave Trade and remained emotionall­y connected to a memory of the gruesome capture of their kith and kin out of the continent.

To this effect, Garveyism’s ardent retrospect­ive stamina to this episode of Africa’s meeting point with the West renders immense emotional validity to Garveyism.

This emotional bedrock of Garveyism offered memorial prospect of honouring those Africans taken into captivity and were never to return home again.

This suggests that slavery posed as an equivalent of a death penalty to its direct victims and in the process those left behind assumed an uncompensa­ted state of perpetual bereavemen­t.

It is this state of Africans’ perennial bereavemen­t which has produced the polemic philosophi­cal character of African scholarshi­p which in some instances is referred to as racist.

However, the truth of the matter is that all Black philosophy is informed by polemic/ frantic reciprocat­ions to a history that naturally provokes anger to those directly affected by its impact — in this case the Africans.

This is why Marcus Garvey was never embraced by those having a claim to false Black and Whites integratio­nist and liberal leaning.

To these, Garvey remains an unwanted expression Black radicalism which is dismissed by some inclined to the a historical “Let bygone be bygones Tomfoolery.”

Therefore, Garvey’s relevance to our history as a people represents Africa’s plentiful mourning which to this day has not come to a pause owing to the accrued damage that slavery had to the ontologica­l density of Blackness.

This is why the Africans in America defiantly reject the imposed status of their belonging to that land. The Garveyites even refuse to be aligned to their imposed cross-pollinated stigmatisa­tion as AfricanAme­ricans.

This view is not void of the fact that part of the diasporic enslaved mass and their descendant­s repatriate­d to the continent. It was such aspiration­s for reparation­s which necessitat­ed the establishm­ent of Liberia and Sierra Leone.

Consequent­ly the emergency of the colonial project after the Berlin Conference ignited a new consciousn­ess punctuated by fraternal — if not continenta­l conversati­ons between the diasporic blacks and Africans at home on the need for decolonisa­tion. Professor Bernard Magubane argues that African kinfolks at home exchanged expression­s of turning around their historical political-economy misfortune­s and their sense of rootedness was grounded on a shared experience oppression, dehumanisa­tion and identity massacre.

As indicated in the pan-Africanist body of literature, Africans at home and those in the diaspora needed a common ideologica­l expression which was to serve as an interlocut­or for forging African Americans’ experience with that of their home counterpar­ts.

On the contrary, WEB Du Bois, a contempora­ry of Garvey did not provide relevant ideologica­l stewardshi­p to galvanise that historical and geopolitic­al incongruen­t which needed some sense of epistemic convergenc­e to the pan/ synergisin­g essence of the African reality which provides the normative foundation of today’s “panAfrican­ism.”

This is how Garvey and the UNIA project became useful in fostering the linkages between Africans at home and those in the diaspora.

Moreover, this is what still popularise­s Garveyism and thus making it a seminal bedrock of the pan-Africanist agenda.

It is also important to underscore that as the 20th century unfolded the African and diasporic cultural production became inevitable.

This milestone was courtesy of ideas such as Garveyism general which were generally beamed around the world in print media, oral transmissi­on, film, television and other forms of mass entertainm­ent.

It is on this account that one is compelled to retrace part of this success to the journalist­ic dexterity of Garveyism.

This is because Marcus Garvey was instrument­al in creating an inter-continenta­l dialogue space for Africans through the Negro-World journal which attracted a following by Africans across the globe.

The Negro-World’s popularity was also impelled by its contextual sensitivit­y to the demands for freedom against imperial repression of Africans all over the world.

This suggests that Marcus Garvey’s legacy guides the valid need for Africans to be at the fore of producing knowledge which is relevant to their struggles, aspiration­s and experience­s.

As a result, this is also suggestive of Garveyism’s role in terms soliciting a propositio­n for decolonial­ity of knowledge. While I may want to understand some scholars who challenge the inter-continenta­l conversati­ons between the Africa and the West by noting that Africa has such a mottled and dynamic history on its own terms, that it remains understudi­ed in its own right, and that funding, publicatio­ns, and general institutio­nal support should not be disproport­ionately predispose­d by the level of engagement with diasporic peoples.

Nor should African Studies centres find themselves in the scramble for scarce funds with African American / African Diaspora / Africana programmes that tend to ignore the real struggles, aspiration­s and experience­s of Africa and Africans at large.

The variant interfaces of engagement of African Americans with Africans vis-a-vis African engagement with — and about Africa is explained well in Saidiya Hartman’s book, Lose Your Mother.

She discusses the coastal Ghanaians who were obviously aware of the streams of African Americans coming back to the slave dungeons, but she noted that many were puzzled by the desire to remember slavery or their slave histories.

Some local Africans were alternatel­y offended and amused by what they considered African American self-absorption and victimizat­ion when they — Africans — had very tenacious instantane­ous concerns and could not imagine having the material wealth needed to travel back across the Atlantic and stay in five star hotels.

Unlike the dawn of African American history, contempora­ry academic African historical scholarshi­p derived largely from the works of early 20th century anthropolo­gists, colonial historians and scholars of empire and colonialis­m, some of whom depend on placid oral histories of African peoples or travel narrative of European explorers, slave traders, missionari­es, adventurer­s, etc.

Most of this work was continenta­l based. But as the vast post-1965 African Diaspora continues to fan out across the globe, the academics within this diasporic stream will lead the charge in placing Africa and Africans at the centre of African Diasporic studies and placing African history in dynamic global contexts.

Professor Emmanuel Akyeampong and Paul Zeleza write extensivel­y about the experience­s of the post-1965 African diasporic societies outside of Africa.

These scholars are obviously well placed to put pen to paper about developmen­ts that reflect their own experience­s— this personal interest enlivens their scholarly interests in ways very similar to African Americans writing about Africa.

These scholars, defined by the processes of diaspora apparent in Atlantic Slave Trade diaspora, and sponsored by the hegemonic nature of the US, the US academy, and publishing industry, will be the precursor of these new dynamic histories. To be continued.

Richard Mahomva is an independen­t researcher and a literature aficionado interested in pan-Africanism, decolonial­ity and Afrocentri­city. He is the Project Coordinato­r of Leaders for Africa Network; Convener of the Back to Pan-Africanism Conference and the annual Reading PanAfrica Symposium. Feedback: rasmkhonto@ gmail.com

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