Pambazuka News Fahamu Pambazuka News

Search Pambazuka

Book Launch: Yash Tandon's Ending Aid Dependence

Tuesday 4 November 2008, 17:00-18:00
At: Chatham House, 10 St James's Square, London, SW1Y 4LE
Speaker: Yash Tandon, Executive Director, South Centre, Geneva.

If you wish to attend the book launch, please register via Donald Temple.

Ending Aid DependenceIn his new book Ending Aid Dependence, Yash Tandon reviews the possibilities for change in the architecture of aid. The author explores the extent to which many developing countries reliant on aid wish to escape dependence, and yet are constrained from doing so. Proposing that moving away from dependence should be at the top of the political agenda of all developing countries, this timely book cautions countries of the global South from falling into the aid trap and endorsing the collective colonialism of the OECD.

NEW AWARD

For the fourth year running, with your help, Pambazuka News was voted one of the top 10 who are changing the world of Internet and politics!
Once again the only Africa-related website to have been shortlisted, Pambazuka News is described by Politics Online as
'..a pan-African community of over 1000 citizens - academics, social activists, women's organizations, writers, artists, poets, bloggers, and commentators who together produce insightful and thoughtful analyses that make it the most innovative and influential sites for social justice in Africa... Pambazuka has become the source of authentic voices of Africa's social analysts and activists.'
With thanks to all those who voted for us,
Editors
Pambazuka News

PoliticsOnline

Fahamu Books

Ending Aid DependenceYash Tandon (2008) Ending Aid Dependence.
New book from Fahamu
Developing countries reliant on aid want to escape this dependence, and yet they appear unable to do so. This book shows how they may liberate themselves from the aid that pretends to be developmental but is not.

China’s New Role in Africa and the SouthDorothy-Grace Guerrero and Firoze Manji (ed) (2008) China’s New Role in Africa and the South: A search for a new perspective.

Visit the full list of Fahamu books

Pambazuka News Broadcasts

Pambazuka broadcasts feature audio and video content with cutting edge commentary and debate from social justice movements across the continent.

See the list of episodes.


AU MONITOR

This site has been established by Fahamu to provide regular feedback to African civil society organisations on what is happening with the African Union.

Vacancy Advertising rates on Pambazuka News

The rates shown below are for a four week advertisement

Band A - Charities, NGOs and Non-profit organisations with turnover of less than $200,000: $50.00
Band B - Charities, NGOs and Non-profit organisations with turnover of $200,000 - $1,000,000: $150.00
Band C - Charities, NGOs and Non-profit organisations with turnover of more than $1,000,000: $350.00
Band D - Government or Private Sector companies: $500.00

To place an advertisement email: info [at] fahamu [dot] org.

We are willing to waive the charges for not-for-profit organisations in Africa with limited income.

Donate To Help Pambazuka Continue!

Help make sure that subscribers in Africa get Pambazuka News free: every $5.00 helps to ensure a subscription for one year. So donate generously to ensure Africa's best social justice newsletter gets to where it's needed.

Subscribe

Pambazuka News reaches approximately 60,000 people every week. Join the struggle for social justice in Africa - subscribe now!

del.icio.us

Vist Pambazuka News@del.icio.us. Our page on the del.icio.us social bookmarking website.

Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 3.0 Unported License.

Comment & analysis

Joseph Ki-Zerbo: The Historian and His Struggle

Amy Niang (2006-05-25)

http://www.pambazuka.org/en/category/comment/34532

Printer friendly version

There are 4 comments on this article.


Graduate student Amy Niang meets well known history professor Joseph Ki-Zerbo at his home in Burkina Faso.


There is an incommensurable gap between the old and younger generation of Africans. We - African youth - have grown up, been made to believe that anything ‘traditional’ or ‘old’ is necessarily retrograde, often ‘unreliable.’

Young Africans, especially children of the Diaspora, do not have the advantage of communicating with their past, a handicap that inhibits a corrective study of African history and deepens their incapacity to take their destiny in hand. According to an African proverb, “he who is lost doesn’t know where he comes from.”

I had the immense honor to meet the first African to qualify as professor of history, Joseph Ki-Zerbo, at his house in Ouagadougou, Burkina Faso (West Africa). At 84 today, weakened by age and sickness, Ki-Zerbo still draws amazing strength and vitality from his deeply-rooted convictions. He may have been preaching in the desert for decades but men like him live by their principles and his writings find resonance. African and world scholars have understood his message.

Ki-Zerbo deplores the increasing extinction of African identity. According to him, the curse of Africa is not the chronic poverty of its countries but the ignorance of its children of the true history and the true values of the continent. Unless Africans start learning about their own continent, their own thought system and the essence of its traditions, they will remain locked into the stranglehold of cultural identity.

It’s high time Africans liberate themselves from cultural asphyxiation, high time they went in search of what it is to be African, to draw the necessary lessons from their own traditional history in order to apprehend the future with confidence. The approach will consist, for Africa, in re-conquering its confiscated identity for, according to Ki-Zerbo, “without identity, we are just a mere object of history, a prop in the play of globalization, an instrument used by the others. A utensil.”

Ki-Zerbo narrates African past not in the way of a nostalgic chronicler who wallows in past glory or dwells into an imaginary fantasyland of pre-colonial Africa. He uncovers the history he was not taught at La Sorbonne University in France.

According to Ki-Zerbo, throughout history strong beliefs in simple principles such as the importance of family over the individual, the respect of elders, the spirit of sharing and good neighborliness, human communion in joy and sadness, etc, have been the bedrock of existence for Africans. Unfortunately, the degradation of these principles has blighted prospects for Pan-Africanism and development. But Ki-Zerbo warns us that “liberation for Africa will be Pan-African or will not be.”

Today, the debate over Africa is enmeshed in endless and ineffectual squabbling over the legitimacy of pseudo-democracies and misleading conflicts. But Ki-Zerbo argues that “the conception of power as well as its management in today’s Africa has nothing African to it.” In fact, political formations in pre-colonial Africa are rich with institutions based on a division of power with the greater possible number of people.

Africans, he says, “believe that power should be divided among its incumbents. They also believe that stability could be preserved in the multiplication of power.” He debunks misconceptions about African history and dominant theories that deliberately confine the history of the continent to the slave trade and the colonial experience. He adds that historical knowledge is a condition to collective liberation as the linkage between historical knowledge and self-worth is undeniable. In Africa, the lack of this knowledge has greatly contributed to underachievement and ‘mental underdevelopment.’

Ki-Zerbo is a man of vision and a soothsayer but he does not read Africa’s future in the sand of its drying soil; he uses the dialectical process of history as an investigative method to uncover the true past of the continent in order to understand the underpinnings of Africa’s value systems. He then tells us what a de-structured society can expect to see: the import and application of values that do not fit its peoples, which eventually will lead to the destruction of cultural identity.

His unsparing analysis and sharp, perceptive, riveting, pertinent, careful and thorough study of Africa’s history as well as its relations with the West has yielded a great number of articles and monographs, among which have been the comprehensive “History of Black Africa” (1972) that laid the foundation of a lifetime of scholarship and commitment to restoring the history of Africa by Africans. He also supervised the publication of two of the monumental eight-volume “General History of Africa” (Méthodologie et Préhistoire Africaine, 1981) as a member of the Scientific Committee for UNESCO.

He explores Africa’s past, drawing from oral tradition that is, in essence, the source of history and traditions for many African writers such as Mali’s late Amadou Hampaté-Bâ, who once said: “When an old man dies in Africa, it is like a whole library burning down.”

Ki-Zerbo’s life struggle and relentless social and political activism are not just a message of hope for Africa. It is the deep conviction of a man who knows that African development cannot be elusive forever and that it will be ‘African’ in conception and application or will not be. This knowledge is what he wishes young Africans to oppose against heavy odds and unacceptable immobilization, against institutionalized ignorance and empty rhetoric.

* Amy Niang is a Senegalese graduate student at the University of Tsukuba in Japan. E-mail her at amy_niang@yahoo.com

* Please send comments to editor@pambazuka.org or comment online at www.pambazuka.org


Readers' Comments

Let your voice be heard. Comment on this article.

A good article indeed. Before anything else, the African diaspora has got to wake up and realize its identity - - and perhaps then we won't be a workshop, an entity and a continent used only for extraction.

Chiedza Sigauke

This is a great article. The history of Africa has been covered up for the most part and individuals that are from the diaspora have not been able to easily learn about their history. When you learn about your history and are able to get in touch with your roots, no matter what your culture, you are able to grow up and walk around with a sense of pride, a sense of ownership, a sense of purpose, inclusion and entitlement that says my ancestors and I have played an important part in this world and that I, my peers and our offspring have an obligation to continue to do so.

Chuka Agugua

Excellent article! There's nothing more to be said. As a fellow child of the Diaspora, I feel it is imperative that we retrace our footsteps, and incorporate the forgotten & lost teachings of our history into our children’s lives NOW! There are too many Africans abroad who become engulfed by Western culture and know little to nothing of the beauty and depth of their history. Thank you Amy, Dr. Ki-Zerbo, and Pambazuka News!

edward kwabena ntiri

Yea, we need to know our African value system and what Africa is. Thank you Amy, great article.

Anonymous




ISSN 1753-6839 Pambazuka News English Edition http://www.pambazuka.org/en/

ISSN 1753-6847 Pambazuka News en Français http://www.pambazuka.org/fr/

ISSN 1757-6504 Pambazuka News em Português http://www.pambazuka.org/pt/

© 2008 Fahamu - http://www.fahamu.org/