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- Why Africana History?
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- Dr. John Henrik Clarke
- 1915-1998
- by Professor John Henrik Clarke
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- Africa and its people are the most written
about and the least understood of all of the world's people.
This condition started in the 15th and the 16th centuries with
the beginning of the slave trade system. The Europeans not only
colonialized most of the world, they began to colonialize information
about the world and its people. In order to do this, they had
to forget, or pretend to forget, all they had previously known
about the Africans. They were not meeting them for the first
time; there had been another meeting during Greek and Roman times.
At that time they complemented each other.
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- The African, Clitus Niger, King of Bactria,
was also a cavalry commander for Alexander the Great. Most of
the Greeks' thinking was influenced by this contact with the
Africans. The people and the cultures of what is known as Africa
are older than the word "Africa." According to most
records, old and new, Africans are the oldest people on the face
of the earth. The people now called Africans not only influenced
the Greeks and the Romans, they influenced the early world before
there was a place called Europe.
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- When the early Europeans first met Africans,
at the crossroads of history, it was a respectful meeting and
the Africans were not slaves. Their nations were old before Europe
was born. In this period of history, what was to be later known
as "Africa" was an unknown place to the people who
would someday be called, "Europeans." Only the people
of some of the Mediterranean Islands and a few states of what
would become the Greek and Roman areas knew of parts of North
Africa, and that was a land of mystery.
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- After the rise and decline of Greek civilization
and the Roman destruction of the city of Carthage, they made
the conquered territories into a province which they called Africa,
a word derived from "afri" and the name of a group
of people about whom little is known. At first the word applied
only to the Roman colonies in North Africa. There was a time
when all dark-skinned people were called Ethiopians, for the
Greeks referred to Africa as, "The Land Of The Burnt-Face
People."
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- If Africa, in general, is a man-made mystery,
Egypt, in particular, is a bigger one. There has long been an
attempt on the part of some European "scholars" to
deny that Egypt was a part of Africa. To do this they had to
ignore the great masterpieces on Egyptian history written by
European writers such as, Ancient Egypt. Light of the World,
Vols. I & II, and a whole school of European thought that
placed Egypt in proper focus in relationship to the rest of Africa.
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- The distorters of African history also
had to ignore the fact that the people of the ancient land which
would later be called Egypt, never called their country by that
name. It was called, Ta-Merry or Kampt and sometimes Kemet or
Sais. The ancient Hebrews called it Mizrain. Later the Moslem
Arabs used the same term but later discarded it. Both the Greeks
and the Romans referred to the country as the "Pearl Of
The Nile." The Greeks gave it the simple name, Aegyptcus.
Thus the word we know as Egypt is of Greek Origin.
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- Until recent times most Western scholars
have been reluctant to call attention to the fact that the Nile
River is 4,000 miles long. It starts in the south, in the heart
of Africa, and flows to the north. It was the world's first cultural
highway. Thus Egypt was a composite of many African cultures.
In his article, "The Lost Pharaohs of Nubia," Professor
Bruce Williams infers that the nations in the South could be
older than Egypt. This information is not new. When rebel European
scholars were saying this 100 years ago, and proving it, they
were not taken seriously.
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- Queen Kiya
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- It is unfortunate that so much of the
history of Africa has been written by conquerors, foreigners,
missionaries and adventurers. The Egyptians left the best record
of their history written by local writers. It was not until near
the end of the 18th century when a few European scholars learned
to decipher their writing that this was understood.
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- The Greek traveler, Herodotus, was in
Africa about 450 B.C. His eyewitness account is still a revelation.
He witnessed African civilization in decline and partly in ruins,
after many invasions. However, he could still see the indications
of the greatness that it had been. In this period in history,
the Nile Valley civilization of Africa had already brought forth
two "Golden Ages" of achievement and had left its mark
for all the world to see.
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- Slavery and colonialism strained, but
did not completely break, the cultural umbilical cord between
the Africans in Africa and those who, by forced migration, now
live in what is called the Western World. A small group of African
American and Caribbean writers, teachers and preachers, collectively
developed the basis of what would be an African Consciousness
movement over 100 years ago. Their concern was with African,
in general, Egypt and Ethiopia, and what we now call the Nile
Valley.
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- In approaching this subject, I have given
preference to writers of African descent who are generally neglected.
I maintain that the African is the final authority on Africa.
In this regard I have reconsidered the writings of W.E.B. DuBois,
George Washington Williams, Drusilla Dungee Houston, Carter G.
Woodson, Willis N. Huggins, and his most outstanding living student,
John G. Jackson.
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- I have also re-read the manuscripts of
some of the unpublished books of Charles C. Seifert, especially
manuscripts of his last completed book, Who Are The Ethiopians?
Among Caribbean scholars, like Charles C. Seifert, J.A. Rogers
(from Jamaica) is the best known and the most prolific. Over
50 years of his life was devoted to documenting the role of African
personalities in world history. His two-volume work, World's
Great Men of Color, is a pioneer work in the field.
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- Among the present-day scholars writing
about African history, culture and politics, Dr. Yosef ben-Jochannan's
books are the most challenging. I have drawn heavily on his research
in the preparation of this article.
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- He belongs to the main cultural branch
of the African world, having been born in Ethiopia, growing to
early manhood in the Caribbean Islands and having lived in the
African American community of the United States for over 20 years.
His major books on African history are: Black Man of the Nile,
1979, Africa: Mother of Western Civilization, 1976, and The African
Origins of Major Western Religions, 1970.
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- Our own great historian, W.E.B. DuBois
tells us, "Always Africa is giving us something new . .
. On its black bosom arose one of the earliest, if not the earliest,
of self-protecting civilizations, and grew so mightily that it
still furnishes superlatives to thinking and speaking men. Out
of its darker and more remote forest vastness came, if we may
credit many recent scientists, the first welding of iron, and
we know that agriculture and trade flourished there when Europe
was a wilderness."
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- Dr. DuBois tells us further that, "Nearly
every human empire that has arisen in the world, material and
spiritual, has found some of its greatest crises on this continent
of Africa. It was through Africa that Christianity became the
religion of the world . . . It was through Africa that Islam
came to play its great role of conqueror and civilizer."
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- Egypt and the nations of the Nile Valley
were, figuratively, the beating heart of Africa and the incubator
for its greatness for more than a thousand years. Egypt gave
birth to what later would become known as "Western Civilization,"
long before the greatness of Greece and Rome.
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- This is a part of the African story, and
in the distance it is a part of the African American story. It
is difficult for depressed African Americans to know that they
are a part of the larger story of the history of the world. The
history of the modern world was made, in the main, by what was
taken from African people.
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- Europeans emerged from what they call
their "Middle-Ages," people-poor, land-poor and resources-poor.
And to a great extent, culture-poor. They raided and raped the
cultures of the world, mostly Africa, and filled their homes
and museums with treasures, then they called the people primitive.
The Europeans did not understand the cultures of non-Western
people then; they do not understand them now.
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- History, I have often said, is a clock
that people use to tell their political time of day. It is also
a compass that people use to find themselves on the map of human
geography. History tells a people where they have been and what
they have been. It also tells a people where they are and what
they are. Most importantly, history tells a people where they
still must go and what they still must be.
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- There is no way to go directly to the
history of African Americans without taking a broader view of
African world history. In his book Tom-Tom, the writer John W.
Vandercook makes this meaningful statement: A race is like a
man.
Until it uses its own talents, takes pride in its own history,
and loves its own memories, it can never fulfill itself completely.
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- This, in essence, is what African American
history and what African American History Month is about. The
phrase African American or African American History Month, taken
at face value and without serious thought, appears to be incongruous.
Why is there a need for an African-American History Month when
there is no similar month for the other minority groups in the
United States. The history of the United States, in total, consists
of the collective histories of minority groups. What we call
'American civilization' is no more than the sum of their contributions.
The African Americans are the least integrated and the most neglected
of these groups in the historical interpretation of the American
experience. This neglect has made African-American History Month
a necessity.
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- Most of the large ethnic groups in the
United States have had, and still have, their historical associations.
Some of these associations predate the founding of the Association
For The Study of Negro Life and History, (1915). Dr. Charles
H. Wesley tells us that, "Historical societies were organized
in the United States with the special purpose in view of preserving
and maintaining the heritage of the American nation."
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- Within the framework of these historical
societies, many ethnic groups, Black as well as white, engaged
in those endeavors that would keep alive their beliefs in themselves
and their past as a part of their hopes for the future. For African
Americans, Carter G. Woodson led the way and used what was then
called, Negro History Week, to call attention to his people's
contribution to every aspect of world history. Dr. Woodson, then
Director of the Association For the Study of Negro Life and History,
conceived this special week as a time when public attention should
be focused on the achievements of America's citizens of African
descent.
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- The acceptance of the facts of African
American history and the African American historian as a legitimate
part of the academic community did not come easily. Slavery ended
and left its false images of Black people intact. In his article,
"What the Historian Owes the Negro," the noted African
American historian, Dr. Benjamin Quarles, says:
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- "The Founding Fathers, revered by
historians for over a century and a half, did not conceive of
the Negro as part of the body of politics. Theoretically, these
men found it hard to imagine a society where Negroes were of
equal status to whites. Thomas Jefferson, third President of
the United States, who was far more liberal than the run of his
contemporaries, was never the less certain that "the two
races, equally free, cannot live in the same government."
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- I have been referring to the African origin
of African American literature and history. This preface is essential
to every meaningful discussion of the role of the African American
in every aspect of American life, past and present. I want to
make it clear that the Black race did not come to the United
States culturally empty-handed.
- The role and importance of ethnic history
is in how well it teaches a people to use their own talents,
take pride in their own history and love their own memories.
In order to fulfill themselves completely, in all of their honorable
endeavors it is important that the teacher of history of the
Black race find a definition of the subject, and a frame of reference
that can be understood by students who have no prior knowledge
of the subject. The following definition is paraphrased from
a speech entitled, "The Negro Writer and His Relation To
His Roots," by Saunders Redding, (1960): Heritage, in essence,
is how a people have used their talent to created a history that
gives them memories that they can respect, and use to command
the respect of other people.
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- The ultimate purpose of history and history
teaching is to use a people's talent to develop an awareness
and a pride in themselves so that they can create better instruments
for living together with other people. This sense of identity
is the stimulation for all of a people's honest and creative
efforts. A people's relationship to their heritage is the same
as the relationship of a child to its mother. I repeat: History
is a clock that people use to tell their time of day. It is a
compass that they use to find themselves on the map of human
geography. It also tells them where they are, and what they are.
Most importantly, an understanding of history tells a people
where they still must go, and what they still must be.
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- Early white American historians did not
accord African people anywhere a respectful place in their commentaries
on the history of man. In the closing years of the nineteenth
century, African American historians began to look at their people's
history from their vantage point and their point of view. Dr.
Benjamin Quarks observed that "as early as 1883 this desire
to bring to public attention the untapped material on the Negro
prompted George Washington Williams to publish his two-volume
History of The Negro Race in America from 1619 to 1880.
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- The first formally trained African American
historian was W.E.B. DuBois, whose doctoral dissertation, published
in 1895, The Suppression Of The African Slave Trade To The United
States, 1638-1870, became the first title to be published in
the Harvard Historical Studies. It was with Carter G. Woodson,
another Ph.D., that African world history took a great leap forward
and found a defender who could document his claims. Woodson was
convinced that unless something was done to rescue the Black
man from history's oversight, he would become a "negligible
factor in the thought of the world. " Woodson, in 1915,
founded the Association for the Study of Negro Life and History.
Woodson believed that there was no such thing as, "Negro
History. " He said what was called "Negro History"
was only a missing segment of world history. He devoted the greater
portion of his life to restoring this segment.
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- Africa came into the Mediterranean world,
mainly through Greece, which had been under African influence,
and then Africa was cut off from the melting pot by the turmoil
among the Europeans and the religious conquests incident to the
rise of Islam. Africa, prior to these events, had developed its
history and civilization, indigenous to its people and lands.
Africa came back into the general picture of history through
the penetration of North Africa, West Africa and the Sudan by
the Arabs. European and American slave traders next ravaged the
continent. The imperialist colonizers and missionaries finally
entered the scene and prevailed until the recent re-emergence
of independent African nations.
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- Africans are, of course, closely connected
to the history of both North and South America. The African American's
role in the social, economic and political development of the
American states is an important foundation upon which to build
racial understanding, especially in areas in which false generalization
and stereotypes have been developed to separate peoples rather
than to unite them. Contrary to a misconception which still prevails,
the Africans were familiar with literature and art for many years
before their contact with the Western World. Before the breaking-up
of the social structure of the West African states of Ghana,
Mali and Songhay and the internal strife and chaos that made
the slave trade possible, the forefathers of the Africans who
eventually became slaves in the United States, lived in a society
where university life was fairly common and scholars were held
in reverence.
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- To understand fully any aspect of African
American life, one must realize that the African American is
not without a cultural past, though he was many generations removed
from it before his achievements in American literature and art
commanded any appreciable attention. Africana, or Black History,
should be taught every day, not only in the schools, but also
in the home. African History Month should be every month. We
need to learn about all the African people of the world, including
those who live in Asia and the islands of the Pacific.
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- In the twenty-first century there will
be over one billion African people in the world. We are tomorrow's
people. But, of course, we were yesterday's people, too. With
an understanding of our new importance we can change the world,
if first we change ourselves.
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- Beyond Words Village
- Give us your
thoughts and opinions!
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- The late Professor John Henrik Clarke,
was the pre-eminent African historian, is author of several volumes
on the history of Africa and the Diaspora. He was head of the
Department of Black and Puerto Rican Studies at Hunter College
of the City University of New York. Professor Clarke was an advisor
to Malcolm X and was recognized as an influential thinker and
who has overturned established assumptions about 5000 years of
African history.
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