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20
-C538
1994
We
UE
The African World Revolution?
and other speeches
John Henrik ClarkeJohn Henrik Clarke
Who Betrayed the
African World
Revolution?
and. Other Speeches —
With an introduictionby Kwame Naritambu
a
Third World Press
P.O. Box 19730
Chicago, IL 60619DT.
-C 538
| j 4 f Copyright © 1994 John Henrik Clarke
Allrights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced,
stored in retrieval systems or transmitted in any form, by any means,
including mechanical, electronic, photocopying, recording, or
otherwise, without prior written permission of the publisher.
Second Edition
Second Printing 1995
ISBN: 0-88378-183-2 (cloth)
0-88378-136-0 (paper)
Cover design by Angelo Williams
Manufactured in the United States
Third World Press
P.O. Box 19730
Chicago, IL 60619O840.9A4
hee
Die Oe
Dedication
To Sybil Williams, for all the right reasons.
And in celebration and appreciation of the fact
that you are a part of my humanity
and I am a part of yours.Table of Contents
Introduction
Chapter One
‘Who Betrayed the African World Revolution?
Chapter Two
The True Light of African History
Chapter Three
The Contribution of
Nile Valley Civilization to World Civilization
Chapter Four
Pan-Africanism in Transition:
Looking Toward the Twenty-First Century
Chapter Five
The Historical Basis of Africancentricity
Chapter Six
Education for a New Reality
in the African World
Chapter Seven
Unblemished, Uncorrupted Leadership
137Afterword 147
Notes 169.
Bibliography 217Introduction
i thy, ty, Li,
Since the fifteenth century, etnocentrism, ethnocentrism,
and xenophobia have permeated, fashioned, and conditioned
the policy/attitude/mind-set of Europeans toward African peo-
ples. Europeans believed then, as they do now, that it is their
Divine Right to rule and govern African peoples, ad infinitum.
And as part of "the manifestation of the evil genius of Europe,”
Europeans not only proceeded to colonize the world but more
importantly, they also colonized information about the world.
Ergo, Europe became the SUBJECT of world history and Africa
thus became the OBJECT of HIS-STORY, HlS-racist-Eurocentric-
STORY.
Eurocentric history, therefore, has deliberately promulgat-
ed the myth that Africa was a “Dark Continent’ replete with
cannibals, savages, and inferior, uncivilized, backward, primitive
peoples, devoid of knowledge and culture and possessing evil
traits and desires. The erudite Afrocentric historian John Henrik
Clarke, however, completely destroys this Eurocentric myth by
correctly asserting that
Civilization did not start in European
countries and the rest of the world did not wait
in darkness for the Europeans to bring the light
... Most of the history books in the last five
hundred years have been written to glorify
Europeans at the expense of other peoples... .Most Western historians have not been
willing to admit that there is an African history
tobe written about and that this history predates
the emergence of Europe by thousands of
years. It is not possible for the world to have
waited in darkness for the Europeans to bring
the light because, for most of the early history
of man, the Europeans themselves were in
darkness, When the light of culture came for
the first time to the people who would later call
themselves Europeans, it came from Africa
and Middle Eastern Asia ...
It is too often forgotten that, when the
Europeans emerged and began to extend
themselves into the broader world of Africa
and Asia during the fifteenth and sixteenth
centuries, they went on to colonize most of
mankind Later, they would colonize world
scholarship, mainly to show or imply that
Europeans were the only creators of what
could be called a civilization in order to
accomplish this, the Europeans had to forget, or
pretend to forget, all they previously knew
about Africa ...
For the past 500 years, therefore, the world has been ruled/
molded in the image and likeness of Europe. European history
now becomes world history and the European experience now
becomes the universal experience. One of the primary
‘weapons Europeans have used to ossify, perpetuate, and
maintain the myttvBig Lie of European supremacy, invincibility,
and originality coterminous with the myth/Big Lie of African
inferiority and nothingness is education, albeit, miseducation.
Euro-colonial education was designed to produce people
‘who would participate in the process of colonial rule; people
who would participate in the process of their own oppression
and in the oppression of their fellow colonialized people
(neocolonialism), moreover “colonialized schooling was educa-
tion for subordination, exploitation, the creation of mental
10 Who Betrayed The African World Revolution?confusion, and the development of underdevelopment, power-
lessness and dependency. It also reinforced the "notion of
Privilege” and the "notion of alienation” (divide and conquer}? In
other words, colonial and neocolonial education ossified the
psychological dependency complex of the African colonized/
oppressed to the extent that In the era of what Dr. Clarke terms
“flag independence,” the African "wasn't preparing to be a
sovereign nation” but instead was only "preparing to imitate his
slave master's ruling of a nation” Ipso facto, Africans not only:
.. dake for granted the validity, truth, and
superiority of the culture of the (European)
colonizer but (also) assume that the behaviors,
Culture, values, life-styles, moral preferences,
and definitions of morality of the colonized as
invalid, wrong. false, or inferior. . . (Moreover,
they) have been infected and conditioned to
invalidate and reject their own being and own
Culture, value and philosophical individuality ..
. (They) tend to evaluate their behaviors in
terms of whether or not they are acceptable to
the (European) colonizer. (They accept) the
colonizer as the standard ..{and) crave to be like
their colonizers ...*
In his book, Dr. Clarke suggests that European scholarship
has darkened "The True Light of African History” and as a result,
we are braindead, braindamaged, and culturally comatose.
‘What African people need to do as we approach the twenty-first
century is to deEuropeanize, demystify, de-toxify, and de-
brainwash their subconscious mind of this invisible drug called
Eurocentric miseducation. In this way, we can relocate our
subconscious mind-set to its original locus/reference
point—Mother Africa. Dr. Clarke warns that
...We have to realize that education has
but one honorable purpose ... one alone ...
Introduction ueverything else is a waster of time: that is to
train the student to be a proper handler of
power. — Being black and beautiful means
nothing until ultimately you're black and
powerful The world Is ruled by power, not
The central theme in Dr. Clarke's book is the sad tragedy
of the betrayal of the African world revolution by its own people.
He concludes, quite equivocally, that the African revolution was
betrayed in three major arenas) in Black America, in the
Caribbean Islands, and in Africa itself. He elucidates by
suggesting that
. . The main thing needed in Black
America was a movement that went beyond
religious, political, and cultural boundaries and
that unified African people on an all-class basis.
From what we had learned from the Civil
Rights Movement, from Martin Luther King, Jr,
from Malcolm X and Elijah Muhammad, and
from what we knew about the need of common.
folk in the United States, we could have
organized such a movement and related African
people to the struggles of the African people of
the world, especially Africa, the Caribbean
islands, the Pacific islands, and the people of
African descent scattered throughout Asia
The Civil Rights Movement could have become:
the basis of a world movement of African
people based on the theories of Pan-African
Nationalism. In my opinion, the movement was
betrayed by confused ideologist, middle-class
fakers and just plain sellouts.
For one moment in history, the Africans
in the United States had more attention than
any Africans in all the world. They could have
used that moment to call attention to the needs
of the African people all over the world, not
only call for Pan-Africanism, but an African
2 Who Betrayed The African World Revolution?world community.
The tragedy is not that the Caribbean
People have betrayed their aspect of the
African world revolution. The deeper tragedy
Is that most of them have not been aware of it
In examining the betrayal of the African world revolution
in Africa, Dr. Clarke suggests further that
... (Kwame) Nkrumah's grammar and the
moment in history caused a lot of people to
rally behind him who really didn't believe in
him. They would ultimately betray him and
desert him later on. The United States did not
want to see the role model of a well functioning
African state in place in Africa. Because if you
Produce one, you can produce ten. If youcan
produce ten, you can produce fifty. So the
Whites made up their minds between French
intelligence, British intelligence, and United States
intelligence that nation had to be destroyed.
They had to knock off a few nations after
Ghana before the independence fever started
growing...
Itis indeed a universally accepted truism that Mother Africa
is the cradie/origin of world culture and civilization and that
Africans are the pioneers in science, religion, chemistry, math-
ematics, education, astrology, philosophy, architecture, agricul-
ture, medicine, iron and steel smelting, the concept of beauty,
masonry, moral codes of ethics, etc. It is also a universally
accepted truism that "high culture commerce, and civilization
originated along the Nile Valley river, Egypt, in the BCE.
Indeed, for the first 10,000 years of human/world history,
ONLY African people inhabited this planet earth No European
EXISTED, They were NOT yet created. Yet Eurocentric history,
HIS-STORY, has the arrogant audacity to write in their history
Introduction 13textbooks that during these 110,000 years, African peoples did
nothing, created nothing, contributed nothing, and discovered
nothing. African peoples are painted as a do-nothing people.
Nothing could be further from the truth. In fact, a correct analysis
of history shows that it took Europeans about 20,000 years to
defrost, unthaw, and to be metamorphasized from the original
advanced global majority African people to a contemporary
global minority European people. The bottom line is that we are
the ancestors/predecessors of Europeans. We created them.
According to RR. Palmer and Joel Cotton in their book A History
of the Modern World:
... Europeans were by no means the
Pioneers in human civilization. Half of man's
recorded history had passed before anyone in
Europe could read or write. The priests of
Egypt began to keep written records between
4000 and 3000 BC. While the Pharoahs were
building the first pyramids, Europeans were
creating nothing more distinguished than
In a fascinating and revealing chapter entitled "The Contri-
bution of Nile Valley Civilization to World Civilization’ Dr. Clarke
not only debunks the miyth of the African "nothingness, but also
carefully delineates the dynastical contributions of Africans
along the Nile Valley to world civilization.
in looking toward the twenty-first century and the troubling
transitional aspect of Pan-Africanism, Dr. Clarke opinions that “it
is ironic that the concept of Pan-Africanism was a Caribbean
creation and the Caribbean people have made the least use of
it” He recalls such Pan-Africanist pioneers as Henry Sylvester
‘Willams, a lawyer from Trinidad, who called a protest confer-
ence in London, England in 1900 on the conviction that the
“problems of black folk in England were largely based on
4 Who Betrayed The African World Revolution?racism. It was Williams who coined the term Pan-Africanism.
Other pioneers include CLR. James and George Padmore, both
also from Trinidad. Along with WEB, Du Bois, these individuals
“gave the concept of Pan-Africanism form and substance.”
Dr. Clarke defines Pan-Africanism "as any effort on the part
of African people to reciaim any portion of Africa that has been
taken away, mutilated, misunderstood, or misinterpreted by a
non-African to the detriment of Africa” But to this reviewer, the
uniqueness of Dr. Clarke's further definition of the historical
origins of Pan-Africanism lies in his seminal and path-breaking
‘Statement that
When 1 look back at the historical role and
the historical manifestations on Pan-Africanism,
1 deal with the first organized society in the Nile
Valley, when the people of the South and the
people of the North .. came together to form a
country now known to the world as Egypt...
The unification of the Upper Nile and the
Lower Nile was an act of Pan-Africanism,
Putting a portion of Africa together for the
whole of Africa to be together... .
This historical Africa-centered connectedness is nothing
but genuis at its cultural zenith. As we move toward the twenty-
first Century, Dr. Clarke's advice is that "we have to understand
{that} we have to make certain radical changes in our lives and
our attitudes” We have to build from within. We have to reach
out to Africa and Africa has to reach out to us. The poignant
message Is simply: "Weare African People, One Nation at Home
and Abroad Only through Pan-Africanism will the African
Nation be redeemed" Or in the words of the late Osagyefo
Kwame Nkrumah:
... All people of African descent, whether
they live in North or South America the
Introduction 56Caribbean, or in any other part of the world are
Africans and belong to the African nation ...4
In terms of linkage analysis, this book Is right at the cutting
edge of a significant time in the history of Africans in America a
time when there Is serious and acerbic debate in higher
education as to the authenticity, viability, and applicability of
Afrocentricity. For while there are as many definitions of
Afrocentricity based on as many individuals as one may
interrogate, Dr. Clarke again provides a unique and path-
breaking perspective on the concept of Afrocentricity.
In his chapter entitled "The Historical Basis of
Africancentricity” Dr. Clarke is quick to apologetically point out
that he “dofes) not have a fight with (Molefi Asante)” the putative
progenitor of the concept; however, he does have "a fight with
his generation” because "his generation has failed to see the
latitude and the longitude of the subject that was already old
when . . . Asante’s parents were born” Dr. Clarke defines
Africancentricity as follows:
... any sincere effort on the part of
African people (literally or militarily) to regain
what slavery and colonization took away and
torestore the nation as you originally conceived
it to be... We are talking about something that
is very broad ...
A translation or interpretation of this definition immediately
brings to the fore the notion that Dr. Clarke focuses on all aspects
of the African life experience it represents a multifaceted,
historical analysis of the African struggle. As such, Dr. Clarke
discusses in detail the revolutionary, literary, religious, folklore,
Cultural, intellectual, etc, manifestations of Africancentricity. His
beef with the word "A frocentricity’ is that ‘itis a compromise with
the world Africa” Dr. Clarke argues that since there is no "fro"
16 Who Betrayed The African World Revolution?in Africa, then from an African historical perspective, there
MUST NOT be any hyphenation of the word African. This
debate will not end with the publication of this book.
Who Betrayed the African World Revolution? and Other
Speeches represents in one volume all the information readers
‘would need so as to ascertain why the African revolution has
not occurred throughout the world The book assidously
discusses the covert collusion between the European powers
and their African contemporary house-servants to thwart the
revolution. This collusion has occurred both in Africa and the
Caribbean. In fact, the only reason why Europeans have been
able to rule the planet for the past 500 years is because they
have divided African peoples so that they can rule (conquer)
them. And they have been very successful But the book does
more than that.
It teaches that the blood that unites us is thicker than the
disparate water and culture that separates us. It also teaches that
we might have come from the "Old World” (Africa) to the "New
World” (Europe) in different European slaveships but we MUST
achieve total liberation in the same Pan-African Nationalist
freedom boat. The fundamental message of the book is that it
is time for African people to stop rehearsing and get the show
on the road to total liberation and freedom so that we can ossify
our ranks to create our own common Pan-African nationalist
HomeyFortress Africa 2100 in order to challenge European
NationalismyFortress Europe 2100 in the twenty-first century.
KwameNantambu
Kent State University
June 19, 1994
Introduction 17Chapter One
i, ty, Ly, Li,
who Betrayed the African World Revolution?
June 10, 1992
Attorney Alton Maddox opened up an interesting door in
history and he teased you by letting you peep Inside of that door
for a minute. Then he closed the door. | just want to open that
door a little wider. Then I'll go to the subject.
He mentioned the closing years of the nineteenth century,
the birth of Black politics in New York City, and the United
Colored Democrats under Ed Lee who was called the Chief. Ed
Lee was the kind of politician we don't have anymore. Ed Lee
‘was the chief bellhop at the old Warwick Hotel where the
Tammany bigwigs went for extracurricular activity, not neces-
sarily with their wives, of course.
He knew which room to send the Scotch, the blonde, and
the brunette, He knew the dirt on everybody. The then head
of Tammany Hall (Ed Coker) was complaining that the Harlem.
community was Republican. Ed Lee told him the reason why
it was Republican. Coker said, ‘1 will not only give you funds to
Start a Democratic branch in Harlem, I will put a Negro in every
branch of government in New York City” This Is one of the few
Promises that was made to us that was almost kept.
The whip that brought It forward was Ed Lee and the
United Colored Democrats. When | talk about Ed Lee, tm talking
‘Who Betrayed the African World Revolution? 9about a "real black politician. Most black politicians talk and don't
deliver anything but wind. Ed Lee got us jobs as assistants to
this and assistants to that. Finally, Ed Lee said, ‘Tm tired of the
little crumbs. | want the big crumbs. | want two judgeships”
They told him he had to be crazy.
The Democrats chose a Judge Watson. His son Is a federal
Judge right now. And the Republicans chose one named
Toney. Watson was of Caribbean descent and Toney was a
Black American. The head of the Black Democrats was a
Harvard-educated man from the ghetto who had developed
new curse words. His name was Ferdinand Q Morton.
Ferdinand Q. Morton was in opposition to Charlie Anderson who.
was then Collector of Internal Revenue, First District, Wall Street.
He had a ninth grade education He had enough nerve to go
and tell JP. Morgan, "Mr. Morgan, you are delinquent in your
taxes.” Morgan said, "who the hell is that n—." and who gave
him an appointment to see me?/
His secretary is supposed to have said, "I didn’t think that
the Collector of Internal Revenue of the First District needed an
appointment’ He got fired from the First District, of course, and
‘Started in the Second District This man had a special nerve.
People don't have any nerve like that today. He could open a
"nerve/ store and sell some.
Now Ferdinand Q. Morton was the head of the Civil Service
workers, and when they appointed him this is Ed Lee's
manikpulation; he's asking for the big crumbs now these are first
two big crumbs. The white civil servants said they would not
‘work under that n—t. Ferdinand Q. Morton, who had gone to
Harvard and could speak all those low languages with a
Harvard accent, said, *l know a whole lot of unemployed n—rs
who are well educated. If any of you think youre not going to
work under me, | can have them down here in your jobs
tomorrow morning. They want the jobs, need the jobs, and will
take them" The next day those Whites were right in their seats
20 Who Betrayed The African World Revolution?working under Ferdinand Q. Morton. For the next twenty-seven
years, that's what they did.
‘What were talking about Is the beginning of Harlem politics.
Now, Ed Lee wanted two judges. Watson and Toney were
chosen. When Ed Lee asked for this, he was told youdon't have
qualified people to be judges. Ferdinand Q. Morton, who made
some of the choices, tokd Watson, "You just go down there and
Judge something. Youre Just as. good as all those wops, kikes,
and everything else.”
‘Watson was from the Caribbean, where he had seen his
people perform as judges. He had seen them as schoolmasters
and in other petty power arenas. Toney had never had that
experience, and he didn't even believe that they were going to
accept him. So, according to the Harlem mother. When he came.
back, Ferdinand Q. Morton had some new curse words for him,
and he became a judge. That's how we got our first two judges.
These two men Ed Lee and Ferdinand Q. Morton opened
the door for the career of Adam Clayton Powell, Jr. They created
the first Harlem political Renaissance, There's a literature on it.
There's a literature on everything on it. There's a literature on
everything, you now. Roi Ottley, in the Book, New World A
Coming, has written on it. Gilbert Osofsky, in his book, Harlem:
The Making of a Ghetto, 1890-1930, has written in detail on it. The
book, Harlem on My Mind, has information on it, including
Pictures. Also, if you forgive the modesty, the Introduction to my
book, Harlem: A Community in Transition and another book,
Harlem, U.S.A, has a capsule history of this political emergence
of the Harlem community?
1 have emphasized this because history sometimes tells
you where you've been, in order to tell you where you are, so
you can estimate where you still have to go. Because fm a
Classroom teacher, when someone throws a Subject out, | want
to broaden the subject | want to tease you just a little more. Im.
golng to open the door a little wider. Now, Im going to close the
Who Betrayed the African World Revolution? 2door to that subject and go on the subject for tonight.
We first have to define what exactly is a revolution. Our
aisis today is that we do not seem to understand that a
revolution means a complete change. In a revolution you do not
patch an old society. Youreplace an old society. When a society
has grown old, weak, fat, and flabby and fails to serve its people,
the conscious role of those who have suffered from that society
is not to prop up that society, but to change that society in such
a way that it will never be the same again?
When that society was originally built on your sweat, your
life, the tears of your mother and father, you not only have the
right to change the society, you have the responsibility to do so.
First, let's look at the revolution of the nineteenth century in the
African world and find out who betrayed that revolution in the
twentieth century. You cannot fight to become a part of the
apparatus of your slave master. If you do, you will re-ensiave
yourself. Your job is to destroy that apparatus.
Early in the nineteenth century in Africa the chattel slavery
system (another form of slavery was turning into the colonial
system. Remember slavery is never abolished. Slavery is
transformed. Now it is computerized Only the slave can
destroy slavery. You cannot destroy slavery by becoming a
part of your slave master’s Cultural incubator*
You have to understand what happened to you in this
transfer from one society to another. You developed a cultural
incubator that was collective and homogeneous by virtue of
being collective. The people who enslaved you put you into
another cultural incubator which lacks humanity and used
religion as a utility to move things from one place to the other.
They could not even afford to mend democracy or Christianity.
The very existence of that power and the way it existed was
anti-Christian and anti-democratic. So they had to preach about
it in order to try to convince themselves that they believed in it$
Now when you go back to the original culture that you had.
22 Who Betrayed The African World Revolution?before the interference, you didn't preach about It. You lived it
Out When you created a religion, you didn't say, ‘1 am my
brother's keeper: If you are genuinely your brother’ keeper, you
don't shout It out You Just keep him. You live out the culture.
However the ensiaver proclaims the culture and betrays the
culture. When you get confused between the incubator that
created you and the one that enslaved, you have a problem
which is our present-day problem. How did that problem come.
about? We have misunderstood the nineteenth century black
activists and black ministers. We have misunderstood their
connection in the African world of the nineteenth century.
‘When that chattel slavery system began to disappear
because of its being unwieldy—and not because of the
goodness in anyone’s—heart you will discover (if you read it
well) that most of the White abolitionists were fakes and phonies.
Granville Sharpe said, in his own literature, Though I am a
Christian, | have found it difficult to put my hand in the hand of
another African Christian and call him brother” He was talking
about Equiano, the greatest author of the African Christian slave
narratives. Equiano was more Christian than he.
Yet when we look at Granville Sharpe's life—while he was.
against slavery as an unwieldy system—every legislative act
against child labor in England he voted against. Every act to
improve the lot of women he voted against it. When the British
‘wanted to use colonies as a dumping ground for unwanted
‘women in the population, he voted for it. He had no humanity
for even the Englishman of his own kith and kin.
This man with the greatest reputation as a British abolition-
ist was a liar and a faker. The Africans began to understand this
fakery early in this nineteenth century and started a series of
wars to break the British and French hold on their countries. In
‘South Africa, a series of Zulu wars would last 254 years. They
began with the entry of the Dutch in 1652 and ended with the
last Zulu War in 1906. In West Africa, a series of Asante wars
Who Betrayed the African World Revolution? 23‘Started in 1800 and ended in 1900 with the last Asante War being
fought by a woman, Yaa Asantewa, who was exiled. That war
was finally broken by the famous West Indian regiment That
requires a whole lecture so I won't get into that tonight If I got
into that lecture fully, | would need a six-pack and six handker-
chiefs*
There were wars motivated by the spirit of African Islam.
This Is difficult for you now because youre so hung up with
Arabic Islam, you don't know that there's another Islam. African
Islam began to set these wars in motion in West Africa against
the French—Sekou Toure'’s grandfather, Samory Toure; in the
Sudan a man named Muhammed Ahmed and called the Mahdi
(which means the holy man). He was the one who fought with
his famous "fuzzy wuzzy" warriors who were not Moslems.
However, he unified the whole Sudan”
Farther to the South, a war was started by another devout
Muslim, Mohammed bin Abdullah. He was called the "Mad
Mullah” of Somaliland. In North Africa, a war started against the
French by Abdul Krem continued with another African who did
not lose power until 1956, Glaoui Pasha®
My point is that all Africa was at war throughout that
nineteenth century. In the Sudan, we have the British going back
to avenge the fact that the Africans had driven them out of the
Sudan. They went back with a superior army under General
Wingate. This was reported by a young British reporter, Winston
‘Churchill His was one of the finest jobs of war reporting since
Caesar came home for Gaul Its called The River-war. The
same Churchill would report on the last of the Zulu wars ina
book called A Roving Commissioner. He would recall that
Africa had out-generaled some of the finest military men in
Europe, and these Africans never wore a store-bought shoe or
heard of a military school®
This nineteenth century war in Africa would set the
twentieth century in motion. Near the end of the nineteenth
24 who Betrayed The African World Revolution?century, missionary Africans began to appeal to the conscience:
of the colonialists only to discover that In a game of power,
conscience is absent from the makeup of the European.
Now in the Caribbean, early in the nineteenth century, they
had already fought some of the best strategized slave revolts
in history. Haiti had become free. Jamaica had fought harder
without becoming free. There were revolts in South America
such as Palmares and the Berbice Revolt in Guyana. These
revolts happened before the American Revolution. The revolt
in Palmares gave the Americas its first republic, before the
American revolution. Yet these Africans got left out of history
because they weren't on Europe's side”
Haiti furnished a haven for South American activists,
especially Simon Bolivar. Once he established South American.
freedom, he would turn on the very Haitians who had helped
him. In dealing with the Caribbean revolts, Caribbean
people—even today in their self-congratulation—misunderstand
this aspect of their heritage. They do not understand that if
they've had the most successful slave revolts of Africans
outside of Africa, it had nothing to do with them being braver
than other Africans.
Caribbean slave masters bought in large lots and kept the
lots together. They thought they could work them better that
way. They were right. But they could revolt better that way, too.
They had linguistic continuity, cultural continuity, and joy
continuity. Therefore, when that one beat the drum, the other
one over there knew what the drums were saying. They could
maintain a system of communication. In the United States,
where they bought in small lots, broke them up, outlawed the
drum and outlawed their religion, they destroyed their loyalty
system.
In the final analysis, the Caribbean people did less with the
loyalty system than anyone else. But they did have it. They did
have the finest example of an African cultural continuity of any
Who Betrayed the African World Revolution? 25people living outside of Africa. It was preserved toa great extent
in Brazil and other parts of South America, but it almost
disappeared from the Caribbean islands except briefly with the
Rastas, who sometimes became rascals, who misused African
nationalism. It is unfortunate that In some parts of the Caribbean
islands, Rastafarianism became a fashion and a fad with no
connection to the original African nationalism. Some Rastas,
who exploited Rastafariansim for personal use, are still doing so.
When you goto the beaches of Jamaica and see Rastas roaming
the beach, satisfying these unfulfilled white ladies, | think some
of them missed the point. If Rastafarianism had a mission, this
is not part of its mission.
(Quaddafi, in sending some Libyans to Europe for educa-
tion, was supposed to have said a very crude and correct thing,
He said, 1 am sending you to Europe to get technical education
to lift up Libya, to come home and be good Muslims and good
Arabs. Remember, you cannot make a good Muslims and good
Arabs between the legs of a European women" Now that's
cruel and crude when you should have the right to go with
anyone you need to. But have you asked, “who will your
daughter marry? What is the future of your daughters?/
I was asked recently in a lecture in Canada by a girl whose
Parents are divorced, her father Is black and her mother is white.
‘She stood up and asked, "Well, what Is going to happen to people.
like me7 I said, "1 don't have any answer.” But I remember once
making this remark, ‘If you take a Clear glass of water and put
a few drops of Ink In it, you can't use it as ink and you cant drink
it as water?
I maintain that confusion set in during the twentieth century
when people spoke of the Maroon Revolt but they spent the
greatest amount of their time aping British mannerisms. They
spoke of Mansong. Tacky. Gordon, and Paul Bogle, the great
Jamaican rebels, But they were trying to give themselves a
verbal revolutionary heritage while living conservatively. Colo-
26 Who Betrayed The African World Revolution?nized Jamaica Is the most stratified along color, class, and
economic lines of any nation in the Caribbean. This kept it from
becoming the great island nation that it still can become if it
moved beyond its own mythology. This is the nation that
created a Marcus Garvey and denied a Marcus Garvey. Yet,
when we look at the golden opportunity that community sent
forth to the world, Trinidad gave the African community the
three major Pan-Africanists: H. Sylevester Williams, CLR. James,
and George Padmore. The Irony of this revelation Is that they
could never unify Trinidad, let alone the African world. Trinidad
also gave the African world the brilliant political scientist and
historian, Eric Williams and the Civil Rights activist, Stokely
Carmichael, now known as Kwame Ture!"
‘The Virgin Islands gave the great internationalists, Edward
Wilmot Blyden and Hubert Henry Harrison. From Jamaica again,
the great consolidators like Marcus Garvey and J.A. Rogers who
introduced the idea of accentuating the role of the African in the
history of the world Rogers spent most of his life digging up
this information from libraries, documents, and files all over the
‘world. He died broke and today most Jamaicans don't know that
JA. Rogers was a Jamaican.
Isn't it ironic that from the Caribbean islands would come
a literature of African awakening and African awareness? Yet
you would go there today and find no awareness of conse-
quence. "Everybody trying to be those things most unlike
themselves ... feeding grist into other people's mills” as Edward
Blyden said in his famous Inaugural Address at Liberia College
in 1881, over 100 years ago. “Nothing comes out" he said, “except
what has been put in”
Therefore, when they came down to the end of the
nineteenth century, they began to discover that their boasting
about emancipation coming in the Caribbean islands thirty years
before it came to the United States was so much rubbish. It was
a fake over there and it was a fake over here. Both of us were
who Betrayed the African World Revolution? 27still slaves.
Yet the Pan-African Congress of 1900 called for all of us to
forget these divisions and become one people. Marcus Garvey
said we had, "One God, One Aim, One Destiny.” When he said,
"Up, up you mighty race, you can accomplish what you will” he
didn't divide them based on Islands. He didn't say those for
Georgia. He said all of you Up, up you mighty people, you can
accomplish what you will He was trying to restore belief in
one's self?
During the whole of the nineteenth century in the United
States—ihat first half was more magnificeni—we saw the
bringing into being of men like Frederick Douglass and Henry
Highland Garnet, and during the end, great preachers like Henry
McNeal Turner. On the eve of the Civil War, we saw African
people fighting for themselves, not waiting to be freed. The Civil
‘War wasn't about the defeating of slavery anyway. If you think
any White people fought four years over you, then that wasn't
water you've been drinking. They were fighting to unify the
United States*
Now this brings us to that second half of the nineteenth
century in the United States: the betrayal of Reconstruction. The
period of betrayal from the Reconstruction (1876) to the emer-
gence of Booker T. Washington Is called the Nadir, the period
of our lowest ebb. By 1895, the Whites had gotten tired of dealing
with a multiplicity of black leaders, so they chose one for us.
They chose and anointed Booker T. Washington. They gave
him publicity and they gave him the means, Some people were
for him and some people were against him. In spite of the fact
that he was "chosen, he did some innovative things in education
which are still good for us. However, because we didn't like
some of the things he did, we turn against some of the useful
things we still need*
Thus, all of us came into the twentieth century. The
Caribbean islands came angry and fighting over constitutions,
238 Who Betrayed The African World Revolution?The Africans came during the end of the warrior/nationalist
period and the beginning of the missionary-trained, political
activists. In this country, we were beginning the end of the
physical struggle and the beginning of another great struggle.
We have the great black journalists: T. Thomas Fortune,
William Monroe Trotter. We were in the midst of the Du Bois
period, the Booker T. Washington period. There was a fight for
education. There was a fight to bulld independent black
institutions and a fight over their name. All of this as we came
with us into the twentieth century.
The political and cultural transition of Black America from
1875 to the emergence of Booker T. Washington and the decline
of Blacks in elected politics is ably described by Professor
Rayford W. Logan of Howard University in his book, The
Betrayal of the Negro. There were some betrayals and some
institutional building concurrent with institutional decline. Black
America began to be plagued by some misconceptions of the
body politic of the American nation, that was not cleared up to.
this very day. Africa was nearing the end of its 100 years of anti-
colonial wars. The slave revolts in the Caribbean islands were
over. Throughout the African world activists were now
petitioning and appealing to the alleged Christian conscience of
our oppressors. With these illusions, we came into the twentieth
century.
This is the African Revolution that was the preface to the
twentieth century revolution that we betrayed Why did we
betray this revolution? We have to look at the years in Africa,
the United States, and the Caribbean islands. Because who was
in charge, who were the spokesmen in the main during those
years? They were people who thought our greatest hope was
to be like our oppressor instead of destroying our oppressor.
Though they fought for a new society, they would model that
society on the corrupt and dying society of the oppressor.
‘When the Africans began to ask for a new society, they
Who Betrayed the African World Revolution? 29were asking for an African-dominated society. But most of the
Africans asking the questions were trained by the oppressor.
They had forgotten their own methodology of rule, and so the
methodology of running a state was borrowed from the
oppressor. The oppressor never develops the methodology for
the liberation of the slave. Powerful people never educate
Powerless people in he kind of special education they need in
order to take the power away from them. *
The aim of powerful people Is to stay powerful by any
means necessary. If they have to buy up the wheat they but
up the wheat. They know something which you have illusions
about the meek will not inherit the earth. The strong will inherit
the weak, and status quo will remain the same. The earth will
always be ruled by strong people. And if you want to rule it,
become strong. Stand on your own turf.
‘When we look at those years in Africa after World War |
and before World War Il the people that they looked for to bring
a government into being were nearly all trained in European
schools. There was nothing wrong with them being trained in
European schools. So were the Japanese. But the Japanese got
proper instructions before they went to the European schools:
"Your job is to come back and make a Japanese nation that can
defy those people, out-produce those people, and remove the
humiliation inflicted by those people” They came to American
schools with their little cameras and they took pictures. Amer-
icans were insulted by the picturetaking Everybody was
saying. "Oh, those silly little Japanese.” By the time they went
home, they could make everything they took a picture of.
If they took a picture of a train, they could go home and
make a train. The African didn't do that; the African was too busy
being the imitator instead of an innovator. He wasn't preparing
to be a sovereign nation. He was preparing to imitate his slave
master's ruling of a nation And his slave master's apparatus
would never fit him. The revolution was being betrayed before
30 ‘Who Betrayed The African World Revolution?the revolution ever occurred. | don't mean just in Africa. The
same thing was happening in the Caribbean.
People were moving into place who would play a color
game, an economic game, and a class game. No one was
speaking directly for the ordinary people who worked and
labored. Everybody with an education had their nose in the air.
The common people had no advocate. Until the common
people have an advocate, you have no revolution.
After World War Il they were fighting for constitutional
government and land reform because the British had Crown
lands (reserved land) Anything to keep the land out of the
hands of the people. They would pull this trick all over Africa
They couldn't exactly pull it in West Africa Land tenure would
remain intact thanks to a man named Casely Hayford. Hayford,
from Ghana, wrote an excellent book on It, The Truth about the
West African Land Question. Jomo Kenyatta wrote a good book
about the East African land tenure—very few people have read
it—Kenya, Land of Conflict”
‘When you take away a people's land, you take away their
nation. You take away their birthright. You might as well take
away a woman's womb and tell her, "Go ahead and have some
more children” It's impossible. No land, no nation. The land was
being lost In Africa and the land was being fought over in the
Caribbean Islands. They made a better fight over it in most
cases, and some of the land was being returned to the people.
They did have some redistribution of the land. But the elite who:
Participated in the redistribution of the land ended up buying up
some of the land They exchanged a British landowning
aristocracy for a black island-owning land aristocracy. Power
changed faces, but power did not change methodology. Again,
power remained out of the hands of the people.
in1945, Kwame Nkrumah—who had been In America—was
back in England to attend the Pan-African Conference in
Manchester, England, along with Padmore. This was the
Who Betrayed the African World Revolution? 31theoretical beginning of the African independence Explosion. In
1947 he was called back home to be secretary to Joseph B.
Danquah, who headed the United Gold Coast Convention.
Nkrumah pulled the young people out of the United Gold Coast
Convention and founded the Convention People's Party. It was
under the banner of the Convention People's Party that he led
Ghana to independence.
Nkrumah's grammar and the moment in history caused a
lot of people to rally behind him who really didn't believe in him.
They would ultimately betray him and desert him later on. The
United States did not want to see the role model of a well-
functioning African State in place in Africa, because if you
produce one, you can produce ten. If you can produce ten, you
can produce fifty. So the Whites made up their minds—between
French. intelligence, British intelligence, and United States
intelligence—that nation had to be destroyed They had to
knock off a few nations after Ghana before the independence
fever started growing”
As the independence fever started growing, the traitors
grew just as fast. The Joseph Mobutus, the murder of Patrice
Lumumba, Moise Tshombe, the African Uncle Toms. Then
Africa was in shambles. There were different cleavages In
Africa based on who was a Moslem, who was a Christian, and
who was an Animist. Freedom isn't about religion. Freedom is
freedom. You can be free under any of them or a slave under
all of them. Religion should never have been part of the issue.
But they were hiding behind it
Now you have the Caribbean Federation concept propa-
gated, but falling apart because of inter-island rivalry. Norman
Manley was of the opinion that Jamaica would have to end up
paying taxes for some of the smaller islands. He had some
questions about Jamaica's role in the Federation. while this talk
was going on, the best intellect of the talking group was Eric
Williams. Finally Eric Williams went home and discovered he
32 Who Betrayed The African World Revolution?had some oil. He told the Federation to go to hell and went "his/
way. So the concept began to fall apart.
In the United States, a fight for equal pay for teachers was
converted into a fight for equal education. What called the larger
issue to the attention of people previously unaware of the
significance of the situation was the Montgomery bus boycott
and the emergence of Martin Luther King. Jr. King emerged into
asituation which was created before he arrived. He was drafted
and placed into a situation. A very common man named ED.
Nixon was really in charge, and he chose Martin Luther King, Jr.
to head the movement Nixon was a common, ordinary man,
Pullman porter-type. He not only split infinitives. He created
some new ones*
All of us have to remember that English Is not our mother
tongue and if we want to chop it up once in a while, that's our
privilege. Just don't chop up Yoruba, igbo, and Hausa. These
are our mother tongues. We should speak them correctly when
we get around to speaking them. As for English ... well, we
werent born with it. It was forced upon us.
Tm trying to point that out because we sent students to
school without giving them a nation-mission, when they came
out of school they didn't understand the nature of their
commitment to us. So in the Caribbean they become "English"
In the United States, they become "Im an American. Im an
American” The only way that you can find out whether you're
an American very easily is to try to catch a cab downtown. If
you can't pass the “taxicab test,” forget it. The cab driver doesn't
care where youre from. That bigoted cab driver is a better Pan-
Africanist than most of us. He looks at all of us as the same.
Once the Civil Rights Movement began, it moved by leaps
and bounds. It took on a different meaning after the Emmett Till
case. Seriously study the impact of the Emmett Till case and the
events leading up to the March on Washington, where the
movement began to stagnate. The Whites threw out some
Who Betrayed the African World Revolution? 33money—almost a million dollars—between six organizations
with an agreement that theyd all work together. Working
together killed their creativity and soon the money was gone.
Nothing was happening. Then came the killing period—Kennedy,
then Malcolm, then King—the politics of assassination. The
same kind of politics of assassination is happening in Africa and
the Caribbean: the politics of exile and banishment®
Keith Henry has written a PhD. thesis called, “Tigers
Abroad and Meek Moses at Home: Conservatism, Radicalism,
and the Caribbean Mind” He deals with the conservative factor
of the Caribbean mind at home and the radical factor away from
home. Its a phenomenon that deserves at least two or three
more PhD. theses. My radical orientation in my early years in
New York City came from Caribbean radicals to a great extent
On the street corners of Harlem, stepladders of Harlem—Raphael
Powell, JA. Rogers, Richard B. Moore, Petion and all these
groups were fighting for the Independence of their respective
islands.
Some of the best debates | ever heard were calling
attention to the writings of some of the finest Caribbean scholars
whoare forgotten now. I never hear anybody mention T. Albert
Marryshow of Grenada and his Cycles of Civilization. He was
one of the few radicals that stayed on in the Caribbean. He did
not migrate. He died there. 1 saw his son in Barbados. He has.
totally disgraced his father. He's nothing but a white woman.
chaser. That's a tragedy that pops up in the most unusual
Places”
In conclusion, in the United States during the Civil Rights
Movement, young people who worked for ten dollars a week
and wore blue jeans opened up the door for a generation of
Blacks to go to schools that they never would have been able
to go to. A generation later, those same Blacks began to look
down their noses at the very people who had opened those
doors. Some of them began to advocate the closing of the doors
“4 Who Betrayed The African World Revolution?in the face of those who had opened the doors. An army of
traitors appeared in the whole African world. They are paid
traitors. Some of them are In government. Some of them are
called chiefs. Some of them are heads of states. Some of them
are on the periphery. All they have gotten out of it have been
Mercedes-Benzes, some Swiss bank accounts, and the premi-
um of the European women (which Is very easy to get)”
The years between the March on Washington and the
assassination of Malcoim X and Martin Luther King, Jr. need 10
be seriously studied. These were the years when a lot of people
throughout the African world were selfishly betraying the ideas
of the Black revolution and making peace with the enemies of
African people the world over. These fakers and traitors had
fought very litte, if they had fought at all, and announced through
their actions that they were tired of fighting The African
revolution had been betrayed on all points.
Our mistake Is that we did not take the Japanese approach.
This Is where you line up the young men and say, “Sociology
for you, engineering for you, oceanography for you" You
understood what went into the making of a nation and you
trained at least ten men for every item, and you did not say
“please.” A case in point Is that the Japanese, formerly an
agrarian nation, by 1905 was technically efficient enough to kick
the Russians in the behind and demand respect in what is called
the SinoJapanese War. People began to talk about "The Yellow
Peril or “the Yellow Danger”
We shouted "nation-+ime" too soon. We shouted “nation-
time” before we understood what a nation Is. To have a nation
you must know everything that goes into the maintenance of the
nation. If you shout "nation-time” and you do not produce the
safety pin that holds your child's diaper together, then you have
shouted prematurely. You aren't ready for nation-time. If you've
got to depend on someone else's food to eat and are producing
none for yourself, then you are not a nation. A Mercedes-Benz
‘Who Betrayed the African World Revolution? 35will not make you a nation. A limousine will not make you a
nation. Youre just an inadequate fool with a chauffeur?
The next time, if fate is kind enough to present us with a
next time, we'd better know what makes a nation. We'd better
deal with our traitors. | advocate the re-establishment of the old
African Blood Brotherhood with an accompanying
sisterhood—an internal security force. We won’ take you to the
white man to be punished. We will punish you so well that we
won't have to do it too many times. When you do wrong and
see us coming youll run to the white man because his
punishment will be much less than ours. If you talk nation-time,
you've got to think nation-time. There is no salvation for this
people except some form of Pan-African nationalism.
You've got to stop worrying about those ‘little specks of
dust’ in the Caribbean where the slave ships put you down and
‘worry about where slave shops took you from. The common
denominator must be Africa. This does not rule out your being
proud of what particular island you came from. However, the
priority over this is that we are all African people. If there are
a billion of us on the face of the earth, we better learn how to
speak with a single voice. We must reach out to the Africans
in the Pacific Islands, India, and Sri Lanka. Maybe a third of all
Africans in the world live outside of Africa. Africa might have
the lock to the future, but I think we have the key. We've got to
get that lock and that key together. We have to deal with
Africans who now have their noses in the air and are saying,
"1 am the descendant of a pure African and you are the
descendant of a slave.” If you are that stupid, you are the slave,
menially.
We have to build a world where we will not only refuse
to be a slave, but we will refuse to be a slavehoider, also. We
will build a common humanity for ourselves that will benefit the
whole world. But first and foremost, we willl build it for ourselves,
for our children and their children still unborn. However, we
36 Who Betrayed The African World Revolution?have to deal with people who betray our revolution and we
have to identify them and punish them in sucha way that others.
‘would have second thoughts about betrayal.
We have to find partners for our revolution. | suggest you
Start with yourself and a mirror and don't move until you like
what's staring back at you Then unify with those people
throughout the world Recently through every lecture and
question & answer period, this keeps popping up—the contro-
versy around interracial marriage and interracial dating.
I have said he is the descendant (the great-grandchild) of
the same people who brought you over on those filthy ships.
You betray these Africans who suffered by laying down with
him, when no people have made amends to us for what
happened to us. Maybe after they pay us Compensation over
and above their national treasury and help us to restore our
sovereignty, | might think about it as a conversation. But who
told you that the people you look like weren't good enough to
sleep with? If you've got a problem about who to sleep with,
then you've got a problem with the people who produced you.
How did your mother look, and how did your father look?
‘You mean to tell me they were wrong in bringing you into the
world the way you look? Why do you assume that you have
to go to the former slave master to get a mate? Have you no
respect for your image? No people will be free until they love
themselves so much that they rise above slavery, even at the
risk of death. We have to stop shouting to the world about being
black and beautiful, because if you believe it, you wouldn't have
to shout it. You would walk into a room and everybody would
know that beauty is there because you are there.
I have often said we can change the world if at first we
change ourselves. We must remember the world is not ruled
by blackness or beauty. It's ruled by power. Black and beautiful
means nothing unless, ultimately, you are black and powerful.
In. conclusion, the African revolution was betrayed in three
‘who Betrayed the African World Revolution? 37major arenas. In Black America, in the Caribbean islands, and
in Africa, itself. There Is now a need to examine, in some detail,
the nature of this betrayal if we are to recover form Itand prevent
its recurrence in the future.
Black Americans emerged form the Second World War
ssomewhat.cynical and frustrated over the Jim Crow treatment
of black soldiers, over the lack of Jobs in war industries, and the
continuation of the system of segregation. Many black soldiers
had fought a war to make the world safe for other people
without finding any safety for themselves and their respective
families. The fight for equal pay for black teachers was
gradually turned into a fight for equal education. This fight led
to the Supreme Court decision of 1954 outlawing discrimination
in schools. In our assessment of this event, we immediately
‘went wrong because we did not sit down in community after
community, organization after organization, and strategize. In-
stead we celebrated. We made no assessment of our still
Prevailing enemies. Those who erected the Jim Crow system
‘were not going to change overnight, if at all The Ku Klux Klan.
and other racist organizations had no plans to change at all. Too
many Black Americans interpret integration as meaning amal-
gamation. They began to dismantle or neglect susiaining
institutions in the black community. There was a decline in
entrepreneurship, a general decline in black store ownership.
The black community was partly self-contained with Its own.
barbershops tallor shops, restaurants, small but clean hotels that
kept the community intact, free of total white dependency.
Some Blacks were so joyful about being able to use the
same facilities as Whites, they neglected their own facilities to the
detriment of the community. The approach of the NAACP, that
had rendered great service in the legal arena, was disastrous in
the socialarena: Our children were bussed into white schools
to create an alleged racial balance without either white or black
Student being explained how to get along with each other. Many
38 Who Betrayed The African World Revolution?white teachers and students who resented this sudden move,
Psychologically cut some of our students to pieces and scarred
them for life. Both Blacks and Whites went about integration the
wrong way. The how and the why were not explained ahead
of time.
The Montgomery bus boycott of 1955 and the emergence
of Martin Luther King, Jr. solidified the basis of the Civil Rights
Movement. The embryo of this movement was set in motion
by the Freedom rides, defying Jim Crow and buses, the Sitin
Movement at lunch counters, and the demand for equal
education on the college level as weil as the primary level
Leaders were coming forth faster than people were
coming forth to be led. Some were able. Some were interesting
Charlatans. Because most of them spoke well, sometimes it was
difficult to distinguish one from the other. The Movement was
centered in the South with strong influence in the North.
Because of the mass media and white liberalism, the Movement
‘was beginning to get world attention. Some Whites abroad
genuinely sympathized with the plight of Black Americans.
Others pretended because of some reasons unrelated to Black
Americans. They disliked the United States. The important point
here ts that the Black American Movement in the US. was
beginning to get world attention. At the center of this attention
was the personality of Martin Luther King, Jr.
The unfortunate murder of Emmett Till August 1955,
heightened the drama and the seriousness of this movement,
and Increased its nationwide followers. The organization of
CORE (Congress of Racial Equality), SNCC (Student Non-Violent
Coordinating Commitee)” and the Southern Christian Leader-
ship Conference comprised the main part of the consortium that
Projected the Civil Rights Movement The NAACP was the legal
‘arm of the Movement and remained firm in this position until the
aftermath of the March on Washington, 1963. The creation of the
Anti-Poverty Program siphoned of some of the most able
Who Betrayed the African World Revolution? 39personalities in the Civil Rights Movement The Urban League
was the employment arm of it Some unemployed college
graduates and executives without jobs in the Civil Rights
Movement now had well-payling jobs in the Ant-Poverty
Program. Some former activists, who previously sang, "We Shall
Overcome,” got the impression that they personally had already
overcome. Some of them toned down their criticism of what
they called The Establishment and joined The Establishment
The Civil Rights Movement was in the process of dynamic
change. The common folks and the students were still
boycotting, still picketing, still going to Jall Some members of
SNCC were wearing blue jeans and making ten dollars a week.
Massive suffering still went on in spite of the fact that some of
the original members of the Movement had quit the fight.
The March on Washington was a high point in the Civil
Rights Movement The world attention that was given the
Movement gave some people the illusion that the Movement
was moving forward when, in actuality, in effectiveness it began
to decline. The March on Washington was controlled by forces
outside of the Movement Six large black organizations,
including the major civil rights organizations, were told to come
together to cooperate and were given considerable large sums
of money. Because each one had their own style of operation,
the attempt to come together ended in stagnation and a decline
in their effectiveness. Gradually they drifted apart. At the March
on Washington, Martin Luther King, Jr. made his most famous
and least effective speech. In my opinion, it was a gokden
opportunity, tragically missed. He had a dream, but he did not
have a plan. While he had the attention of the world, he was.
expected to announce a dynamic plan for change, not a dream.
It might or might not be realizable. Although it was not noticeable
at the time, the effectiveness of Martin Luther King, Jr. began to
decline after the March on Washington and the "| Have a Dream"
speech. The people were turning more and more to another
40 who Betrayed The African World Revolution?voice that was stronger, clearer, and more dynamic. It was the
voice of Malcolm X, who was calling on Blacks to believe in
themselves again, to understand their enemy and to lose their
fear of the enemy. He was also calling on them to reclaim their
manhood and their womanhood and once more to have the
confidence and the skill to rule nations.
Martin Luther King, Jr. had no difficulty with adversaries,
black or white, so long as he was preaching non-violence.
‘When he began to criticize the war in Vietnam, the misuse of the
resources in the U.S, and began to advocate the Poor People's
March on Washington, black, white or otherwise, he was on a
collision course with the powerful forces in modern-day history.
In my opinion, the decision to kill Martin Luther King, Jr. was
made at this moment
The assassination of Malcolm X on February 21, 1965 and
the assassination of Martin Luther King, Jr. on April 4, 1968
removed the two greatest spokesmen for black liberation in the
twentieth century, with the exception of Marcus Garvey. Now
without specific direction, Blacks could retreat into middle-
classism. Some hid behind color gradations, fraternities and
sororities, and other social organizations. The common folk,
‘who at least had the illusion of having champions in Martin
Luther King, Jr. and Malcolm X, felt that they now were without
achampion. The movement led by Elijah Muhammad was still
functioning. though it was never a part of the Civil Rights
Movement. It was a pseudo-religious uplift movement whose
mass appeal was limited The main thing needed in Black
America was a movement that went beyond religious, political,
and cultural boundaries and that unified African people on an
all-class basis.
From what we had learned from the Civil Rights Move-
ment, from Martin Luther King, Jr, from Malcolm and Elijah
Muhammad, and from what we knew about the need of
common folk in the United States, we could have organized
Who Betrayed the African World Revolution? 4such a movement and related African people to the struggies
of the African people of the world, especially Africa, the
Caribbean islands, the Pacific Islands, and the people of African
descent scattered throughout Asia. The Civil Rights Movement
could have become the basis of a world movement of African
people based on the theories of Pan-African Nationalism. In my
opinion, the Movement was betrayed by confused ideologist,
middle-class fakers, and just plain sellouts.
For one momentin history, the Africans in the United States
had more attention than any Africans in all the world They
could have used that moment to call attention to the needs of
the African people all over the world—not only to call for Pan-
Africanism, but an African world community.
The uniqueness about the Caribbean aspect of the African
world revolution is that It was Continuous until near the end of
the nineteenth century, when it became more verbal than
military. The uniqueness about the people of African descent
in the Caribbean islands Is that the organized revolt of the
Africans away from home started in the Caribbean islands. The
first recorded revolt of the African people against slavery was
a revolt in Cuba, 1527. These revolts were continuous through-
out the Caribbean Islands, parts of South America, and Brazil.
Africans in the Americas, especially in the Caribbean islands and
in South America, were fortunate enough to use African cultural
continuity as a part of the revolt. A large number of slaves in
these areas spoke the same language and came from the same
culture areas in Africa. Those who did not understand the same
tonal language understood the same drum language, a means
of communication. In the US, through sale and re-sale, broke the
Africans’ cultural continuity and their loyalty system,
In Brazil a large number of Portuguese men married
African slave women with the permission of the Church. These
‘women became free and were the mothers of the first families
of Brazil. This kept down some slave revolts but not all of them.
42 ‘Who Betrayed The African World Revolution?Some of the most successful slave revolts in what is referred
to as the New World were in Brazil Because of the Maroon
revolts and others, the Caribbean people could keep the military
aspect of their cultural continuity Intact for more than 200 years.
Haiti and Jamaica furnished more economic resources for
Europe than any colonies in the Americas. That Is the reason
why absentee overseers pushed the slaves beyond human
endurance to make still more profits. The most continuous and
the most successful slave revolts were in Jamaica and Haiti By
the middie of the nineteenth century these revolts were
declining and the period of negotiation had set in. At that time
England had created a second army in Jamaica and some other
islands. They had created generation of mixed breeds—bastards
who had questionable loyalty. Some enjoyed a status over the
Blacks, but not as good as that of the Whites. Another factor to
be taken into consideration is the creation of the Caribbean
freeman: the British and other colonists the British had brought
over, wheelwrights, boat menders, and repairers of sugar mills
and their equipment. These technicians, who had no appre-
lable status in their home countries, found that they had status
away from home in a sea of African faces over and above any
Status they had at home. Their whiteness alone gave them
Status, Life on tropical islands was too rich for most of them.
Some became exhausted by saying yes to every temptation.
Some drank themselves to death, Some gambled and lost
Plantations. Some returned to England The main point here is
- that the Africans learned the basic technologies the white
technicians had brought to the islands to practice. The status of
these Africans improved because they became essential to the
maintenance of the plantation system. As blacksmiths, they
often made the cutlass for the sugarcane and, when not being:
Closely watched, they made stabbing knives and secretly gave
them to the slaves in the field
After the middie of the nineteenth century, the mulattos in
‘Who Betrayed the African World Revolution? 43Jamaica and some of the other islands wanted to legalize their
special status. They couldn't be white. They did not want to be
Classified black. In Jamaica, when they could not get this special
Status, they threatened to join the Blacks Some joined the
Blacks. Some became spies among the Blacks. But they never
gave up the idea of special status. This could be the beginning
of the idea of stratification in Jamaica along color, economic, and
classlines. By 1865 the Africans on Jamiaca and the other islands
began to discover that the emancipation which had come thirty
years before was another form of slavery. Most former slaves
‘were now working on the same plantation for a small salary and
with the responsibility of buying his own clothes and furnishing
his own home. They discovered that they had changed their
position without changing their condition. In the first half of the
nineteenth century, the Caribbean freemen, especially those in
Jamiaca, had made contact with the free black activists in the
United States. Prince Hall, who grew up in Barbados, had
founded the first Black Masonic Lodge that he called the African
Lodge. Peter Ogden of Antigua had participated in founding the
lodge now known as the Odd Fellow. John B. Russwurn, also
a Jamaican, had been one of the editors of Freedom's Journal.
He later went to Liberia as the governor of one of the provinces,
as the founder and editor of The Liberian Herald, which is still
in existence.
Also in the middie of the nineteenth century, Robert
Campbell of Philadelphia, formerly of Jamaica, accompanied
Martin Delany in search of a place for settlement in Nigeria a few
years after the settlement of Liberia Cooperation between
African American freemen and Caribbean freemen continued
until after Emancipation (i865) and down to the end of the
nineteenth century.
The most notable Caribbean figure to go to Africa in the
middle of the nineteenth century was Edward Blyden. Blyden.
tried to build a three-way bridge between Africa, the Caribbean
44 ‘Who Betrayed The African World Revolution?islands, and Black America But he was refused entry into
American schools. He returned to Liberia where he became
President of Liberia College and on another occasion Liberian
ambassador to England
My point here is that humane dialogue existed between
African Americans and Caribbean Americans throughout most
of the nineteenth century. We did not think of ourselves as a
separate people with separate problems. At this time the color
factor did not interfere with our relationships.
Near the end of the nineteenth century, a Trinidadian
lawyer, H. Sylvester Williams, founded the Pan-African League.
He called a Pan-African conference in London in 1900 and set
in motion the Pan-African congresses that would ultimately be
the basis of the African demand for independence. The
Caribbean Federation concept came into being concurrently
with the African Independence concept. This was a merger of
ideas from Africa, from Black America, and from the Caribbean.
Again, it is ironic that the concept of Pan-Africanism was
a Caribbean creation and the Caribbean people have made the
least use of it. The finest minds and personalities developed in
the Caribbean islands have not found comfort in trying to live
out their lives in the Caribbean islands. Marcus Garvey was a
failure twice in Jamaica. There is no extensive Garveyism in the
Caribbean islands today, except among the Rasta, whose
adherence to Garveyism would be superficial The books of
Edward Blyden, in most cases, are not in the libraries of the
Virgin Islands where he was born. The political conservatives
in the Caribbean islands and the color conscious permanent
residents have found no place for the Caribbean radical
thinkers.
Noone of the three major Pan-Africanists from Trinidad (H.
Sylvester Williams, CLR James, and George Padmore) are
widely known in the island of their birth where they grew to
early manhood. Walter Rodney of Guyana, one of the finest
Who Betrayed the African World Revolution? 45thinkers the Caribbean people produced in the twentieth
century, taught in Africa, Jamaica, and in the US, and had a
difficult time finding employment at home, where he was
Subsequently assassinated. Richard Moore of Barbados re-
turned to his home island after forty years when he was old and
ill and subsequently died. T.A. Marryshow of Grenada, one of
the few Caribbean writers who stayed in the Caribbean, is
unknown to this generation of people.
The tragedy here is not only that the Caribbean people
have betrayed their aspect of the African world revolution. The
Geeper tragedy Is that most of them have not been aware of it.
Caribbean people in general, both at home and abroad,
though they deny this with voices like thunder, are in retreat
from their blackness. Most of them are quick to teil you about
their English blood, their Scottish blood, without reference 10
their basic blood, which is African. Too many times they are not
only divided along color lines, they are divided along gradations
of color. | have found that Caribbean people who have been
colonized by England have a fascination for Whites that is
downright sickening. Though the Carribean people created a
clear revolutionary heritage in the fight against the brutality of
slavery by bringing off some of the most successful slave
revolts the world has ever known, including the most success-
ful in Haiti. However, presently too many Caribbean people still
act as though slavery did not occur in the Caribbean islands at
all
All too often, Caribbean people, African Americans, and
Africans engage in conversation that is a comparative study of
oppressors without any judgement against oppression or
oppressors. Sometime what they are saying, in essence, Is that
my oppressor was less severe than your oppressor, therefore,
my Status Is higher than yours.
What Is forgotten here Is that If you are against any form
of oppression or slavery, you are against all of it and its variations
46 ‘Who Betrayed The African World Revolution?based on time, condition, or who's practicing it. If you are against
all evil, you never choose the lesser between two evils. There
is a common denominator that should unite the entire African
world All African people were oppressed. All African people
‘were Conquered and colonized by Europeans and Arabs one
‘way or the other. You are either against all of them or you
approve of all of them. Sometime to make a comparison is
tantamount to comparing the venom from two poisonous
‘Snakes without understanding that both poisons will kill you.
In the 1950's the whole of the African world was on the
march one way or the other. The rise of anticolonial movements
in Ghana affected people in the Caribbean islands and in the
United States. This was an opportune time to structure a union
of all African people based on the interests they had in
common—a single enemy, mainly with its origin in Europe and
Western Asia, mistakenly called the Middle East. The intellects
of the African world missed a golden opportunity in not using
this occasion to call for a union of the African people of the
world Because many of the ideas about Pan-African national-
ism, African awakening and the reidentification with Africa were
Started by Caribbean activists, idealistically they should have
joined African and African American activists in calling for
Cooperation in the formation of an African world community.
One of the most significant parts of this African world
community, unified by pan-African world nationalism, could
have been a strong federation of Caribbean states. This was not
brought about because of the overwhelming influence of the
former colonial master, who was still manipulating Caribbean
People behind the scene and sometimes overtly on the scene.
They did not feel economically and politically strong enough to
make this important decision. Had this decision been made and
had a true federation been founded or developed, there could
have been a Caribbean defense force, economic union, and a
federation of educational systems in the Caribbean on all levels.
Who Betrayed the African World Revolution? 47Caribbean scholars could have thrown out the British, Spanish,
Dutch, French, and Portuguese textbooks used in their schools
and developed textbooks more relevant to Caribbean people In
their relationship to the African people of the world. A federation
of this nature might have been in a position to prevent the tragic
invasion of Grenada (October 25, 1983) and Panama (1989). These.
invasions, stripped of their rationale and military romanticism,
‘were nothing but one colonial master taking over from another.
There is a small library of writing on the subject. Here |
refer you to a few Important pleces from the writings of CLR.
James. A History of Pan-African Revolt. Washington DC:
Drum and Spear Press, 1969, The Case for West-indian Self
Government. London:. Hogarth Press, 1933; Party Politics In the
West Indies. San Juan, Trinidac CLR. James (approx. 1962; and
"Federation" a lecture delivered to the Caribbean Society,
Kingston, Jamaica in November, 1959.
In the final analysis, it must be clearly realized that
Caribbean people of African descent are part of the total African
world And they have no long+ange future outside of the
ultimate participation in an African world community. Their
former slave masters and their former colonial masters have no
formula for their salvation. The large presence of European
blood in their veins will not change their predicament one iota.
The white father that created a large number of them has made
No room in his house for any of them. Caribbean people who.
are in retreat from African people because of their degree of
European blood are retreating into oblivion. There is no future
for the Caribbean islands until there is a collective realization that
these islands are a part of the universal house of Africa. All
Caribbean people, irrespective of color gradation and European
parentage, either have a permanent home in this house,
figuratively speaking, or no home in the world at all.
The embryo of the African side of the world revolution
against slavery, colonialism, and oppression began inthe 1700's
48 Who Betrayed The African World Revolution?BC with visitors from Wester Asia and later invaders who had
colonial aspirations. The collaboration between the initial visitors
and the invaders, referred to in history as the Hyksos and
sometimes as Shepherd Kings, set in motion an assault on
African culture and ways of life that would continue in different
forms until this day. The African recovery from this initial assault
renewed the energy of North and Northeast Africa, basically Nile
Valley civilizations. Africa enjoyed a thousand years of peace
before another invader, the Assyrians, now called Syrians, came
in 666 BC. Like all invaders, they did Africa more harm than
good and opened the door for still another invader in what Is
now Iran, then referred to as Persia in 550 BC. A lot of the
soldiers of this Invasion married into African families and began
the mulattoization of Nile Valley cultures to the point that some
Of the former invaders, now married to African women, joined
their respective wives in a complaint against the invaders from
Persia. While in Africa, some of the soldiers switched loyalty
because of their relationship to African women and some
because of their admiration of the great achievements, spiritual
and material, in the country that they had invaded. The
weakness that set in by the disruption of this invasion opened
the door for the first truly European invasion, the invasion of the
Greeks by Alexander of Macedon, 332 B.C. The Greeks did not
understand African culture and tried to alter it and make it their
own. Alexander was bold enough to acknowledge that Africa
‘was the home of the Greek gods. His stay in Africa was not long.
Still with a hunger to conquest, he and his army would move
toward mainland Asia where he dissipated too much of his
energy and subsequently died.
The significance of the above referenced note is in a
Statement that | have repeatedly made to both students and
general audiences over the last fifteen years: Africa has been
under siege for over 3.000 years. The enemies of Africa have
either been at the door, in the house, or in the African's bed. The
Who Betrayed the African World Revolution? 49