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Centuries of Continued Attacks against African Identity

11/19/2025

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Since the first European invasion into Africa centuries ago, and the institutionalization of colonialism and slavery in the process, the logic of African people understanding and identifying with Africa has always been under attack.  As Europe normalized stealing and selling Africans into slavery while also controlling African territories to exploit the human and material resources there, a vicious assault against the ability of African people to connect with our true history and culture has been relentlessly perpetuated.

Many Africans in French colonial territories like Senegal, Guinea, Mali, Benin, Burkina Faso, Niger, etc., identified as French.  Their highest aspirations becoming visiting and/or living in France and advancing through the highest stages of French life available to them.  For Africans in the British, Portuguese, Dutch, Spanish, etc., colonial territories, the same reality exists whether in Africa, Europe, the Caribbean, or wherever.

The U.S. is somewhat of a unique situation because unlike Africa and the Caribbean nations, Africans within the U.S. have always been a numerical minority to the Europeans.  Consequently, the efforts by Europeans to disconnect Africans in the U.S. from everything Africa was a much more effective process then similar efforts elsewhere in colonies in Africa, or throughout Central, South America, and the Caribbean. 

As a result, Africans everywhere on earth are systemically encouraged through political, educational, faith, and social institutions to relinquish any connection to Africa and this is even more true within the U.S.  Despite the ill refutable truth that the first organizations Africans established within the U.S. proudly expressed African identity i.e. the Free Africa Society (one of the first documented social justice organizations for African people in the U.S. which formed immediately following the so-called American Independence war in the 1700s) and the African Methodist Episcopalian Church (AME), which was the first organized and documented church organization established by African people in the U.S. in 1816, today in 2025, there are a number of African people in this country who flat deny any connection to Africa whatsoever.

Presently, one of those trends are Africans who claim to be Native to the Americas.  This argument takes bits and pieces from African historical documentation of Africans who traveled to the Western Hemisphere before colonialism and slavery to formulate a position that a significant portion of Africans here today are direct descendants of people who have been in the Americas always or at least are distant descendants of people who immigrated from Africa thousands of years ago to the Americas.

Besides the historical efforts to sabotage our connection to Africa, there are other reasons why people advance these types of notions.  In the case of the claim of being Indigenous to the Americas, there is a hope by some that the possibility of legal recognition as Indigenous people will bring qualifications of tribal monies from the federal government.  For the people hoping for this to happen, the concept of monetary reparations for Africans being enslaved is still just a conversation while monies for so-called recognized Indigenous ethnic groupings is already a current reality.   

A larger reason for this is simply shame at being African.  The capitalist/imperialist/colonial system has done such a masterful job painting Africa as a hapless, ineffective, useless, burden on the European world.  And, Africans have, at least up to this point, demonstrated little desire to engage in the type of collective study necessary to deconstruct those mythical narratives.  Consequently, there are many Africans today who see value in creating fictitious identities rather than acknowledging their real one.

The latter statement is easily verified because the overwhelming majority of Africans within the U.S. have direct ties (literally no more than one or two generations removed) to Southern slave states within the U.S.  With family from Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama, Georgia, Tennessee, etc., all slave states, and surnames that are French, British, German, etc., there isn’t a logical argument that refutes a connection to slavery ala to Africa.  Plus, DNA testing is popular within the U.S., including among Africans.  Scores of people are getting, or have received, results confirming their physiological connection to Africa.  Even the “we’re Native American” crowd hasn’t produced rebuttals to challenge any of this strong evidence.

For those genuinely interested in the forward progress of African people everywhere, this problem must be understood within context.  Anyone reducing a connection to Africa to purely a psychological desire demonstrates a complete lack of understanding of why colonialism and slavery happened in the first place.  Similar to how the zionist movement uses faith as a cover to justify the theft of Palestinian land, the subjugation of Africa, and the chattel slave system that it produced, serves to justify the continued exploitation of Africa’s human and material resources.  This is the reason why reactionaries keep talking about the “benefits” of slavery and colonialism.  Its also the reason such consistent efforts have been systemically applied within every institution within these capitalist countries, to drive Africans to look in all directions except at their mother.  That is an essential element of their strategy because Africans being conscious about who we are threatens to create a vision for us about where we want to go.  That type of vision greatly challenges the capitalist system because instead of demeaning and fighting each other, many Africans will start to ask why we come from the richest land base in the world, yet we are some of the poorest people in the world?  This is the question imperialism cannot risk African people connecting the dots around.  That’s why a simple scroll through Facebook, Instagram, Tik Tok, produces so many anti-African identity videos, aimed exclusively at Africans in the U.S.  There are 50 million Africans living within the most powerful capitalist country in the world.  We are well positioned to engage in active sabotage against this system once we have the consciousness to see doing so as our role and responsibility (as opposed to integrating into the capitalist system). 

The good news for conscious Africans in the U.S. and everywhere is that this latest confusion about being Native to the Americas, although completely disrespectful to the real Indigenous people of the Western Hemisphere, and our African ancestors, is nothing more than the latest stage of these attacks against our culture and identity.  In the 1920s and 30s, after economic collapse in this country, the militancy and African focus of the Garvey movement was largely replaced by the escapist evangelism of the Daddy Grace and Father Devine periods.  In the 1980s and 90s, the 5% Nation of Islam did a great job influencing hip/hop culture/music thus launching constant claims that Africans were not Africans, but were instead Asiatic Black people.  Ten years ago there was the proliferation of the Foundational Black American (FBA) and American Descendants of Slaves (ADOs) xenophobic identities. 

Like the Asiatic Black identity, ADOs, FBA, etc., the Native to America identity will play for a while, but it won’t last.  It won’t because like the others, its not based in reality for the masses of our people i.e. there are certainly a handful of us who can trace back thousands of years in this Hemisphere, but without question, the overwhelming majority of us are descendants from Africa and all the evidence clearly points to that. 

The capitalist generated identity that has lasted in various forms through all of these periods, and will continue to be the most important threat aimed at convincing our people that we are Americans above all else.  This one is much trickier because it has a much stronger basis than the others.  Its rooted in the concept that we have been here for centuries (true).  And, we have done a lot to contribute to this society (also true).  And, since the U.S. is still the strongest country on earth, there is always going to be that emotional desire from oppressed people to relate to the winner.  So, because of these factors, unlike the others, this American question will not just play for a while and begin to fade.  This one will require a much more dedicated, sustained, and consistent propaganda effort to demonstrate to our people that where Africa goes we go.  That, not only should we not see ourselves as consistent with U.S. identity, but we shouldn’t even want to go where this country goes because each and every time, this country is on the wrong side of history where it will stay because of its foundation of theft and repression.  The class struggle over American identity overwhelms all of other false identities combined.  The struggle for African identity must continue and it must be refined and clarified to mean a connection to the land base, whether we live there or not, whether we like the name Africa or not.  The land and what happens to her is our salvation. 
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Its no coincidence that over the centuries since Africans have been in the U.S. the two identities we have struggled around the longest has always been some variation of  – “are we Africans or are we Americans?”  Although class drives everything, this identify contradiction is the strident one i.e. who’s interests do we identify with, Africa’s or the U.S.?  The American versus African is a simple question.  Are you for the masses of our people everywhere or are you only for empire?  And, unlike the other cursory/false identities, this one every African everywhere is already being forced to choose a side.

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Kwame Ture and the Battle for Collective Consciousness

11/10/2025

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Kwame Ture at Democratic Party of Guinea HQ in 1997 in Guinea-Conakry with other A-APRP cadre who also belong to other Pan-African formations in Africa like the PAIGC, the Pan African Union of Sierra Leone, Convention People's Party of Ghana, etc.
November 15, 2025, commemorates 27 years since the physical disappearance of Kwame Ture (formally known as Stokely Carmichael).  If one is to seriously use Kwame’s life to reflect on what lessons we should learn from his example, one of the most critical ones is his often stated quote – “power only comes from the organization of the masses of the people!”  Although its going on 30 years since Kwame himself was able to utter that phrase, the comment is often repeated and shared in articles and throughout social media platforms.  Still, there isn’t a logical argument to be made that people today have any greater understanding of what Kwame meant by that statement than they had during the 1990s when he made it.

The capitalist system drills individualism into our heads 24/7/365.   By individualism we mean the core belief that our interests, perspectives, philosophies and actions only need to be guided by what we perceive to be our personal vison of the world, not the interests of the masses of humanity.  As a result, individualism requires that we don’t see ourselves as a part of a collective.  Instead, we see our accomplishments as solely the result of individual initiative.  We define advancement as individual representation within the capitalist system.  This dysfunction explains why celebrity culture is so dominant within the capitalist system because celebrities portray the myth of individualism better than anything else.  In other words, the capitalist system relies on individualism because as long as people continue to see the world through that backwards vision, they will never see collective victory as realistic.  And, despite the fact that the capitalist system understands clearly that collective struggle is the sole approach that can effectively dismantle capitalism and build something better, they also know that they have so effectively convinced so many of us to worship individualism that provided they can continue to promote this lie, they need not worry about a serious threat to their dominance.

We believe one of Kwame’s most significant contributions was to advance the notion that individualism is a trap of the capitalist system and that collective consciousness and action is truly what we must strive to achieve.  Kwame knew this lesson firsthand.  As a young man in the Student Non-Violent Coordinating Committee (SNCC) he was unfortunately able to consistently witness and experience the brutality of the capitalist system against the masses of Africans in the Southern U.S. who were simply fighting for basic human rights.  From that critical work, he learned that the masses were truly the key to any meaningful work towards achieving power.  Any study of his life and work during his Stokely Carmichael years in the 1960s will illustrate this.  Kwame knew that no one in the civil rights movement, not even Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. was more important than the masses of people.  In fact, Kwame understood that without the masses, Dr. King would have been nothing more than another African Baptist preacher in the South.  Kwame articulated this understanding when he recounted the story of when the Montgomery Improvement Association was founded in 1955.  At its inaugural meeting, the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) used the meeting to announce its plans to lead a one day bus boycott of Montgomery buses.  Ms. Rosa Parks, an NAACP member, had fulfilled an NAACP strategy (that actually was tested with other women who refused to give up their “whites only” seats on buses before Ms. Parks) by refusing to relinquish her seat in the “whites only” section of the bus.  After the one day boycott, and its perceived success, a second meeting was called and E.D. Nixon issued a nomination of Dr. King to become president of the association.  Kwame Ture’s consistent point about this is the inspiration for the expanded bus boycott came from the collective actions of the people of Montgomery and Dr. King being thrust into leadership was a manifestation of that, not the reason for it.  Quoting Ture – “if Dr. King wasn’t there, the people were ready.  They would have chosen Dr. Smith, or Jones, etc., to lead the organization!”

This perspective provided by Kwame Ture flies in the face of the capitalist interpretation of history that people like Dr. King are exceptional and no one else could play the role that he played.  Certainly, he demonstrated great skill, courage, and intellect in his leadership capacity, but it would be ahistorical and undialectical to suggest that the movement only moved because he was in it.  That type of individualistic interpretation of history has always been brought to us by this capitalist system which wants you to believe that if you are not King, Malcolm, Nkrumah, Sekou Ture, Franz Fanon, Assata Shakur, Cabral, Carmen Peirera, Imbalia Camara, Huey P. Newton, etc., then you cannot make the level of contribution that they made so why even try?

The truth of Kwame’s analysis is that each of our contributions may not be exactly the same as those historical African giants, but each of us has a contribution to make and once we make it, we find that it has value and is very necessary.  It was this level of consciousness that led Kwame Ture to embark on the work which, although much less known than his work in the U.S. civil rights and Black power movements, was in our view much more consequential and important. 

Kwame spent from 1961 through 1968 in SNCC, seven years.  He spent approximately one year in 1968 in the Black Panther Party.  In 1969, he moved permanently to Guinea-Conakry, West Africa, where he worked and lived until his physical transition in 1998.  He spent that last 29/30 yeas of his life organizing within the Democratic Party of Guinea (PDG), the party of Sekou Ture.  He served as a political secretary to Kwame Nkrumah who was living in Guinea-Conakry as co-president (until his physical transition in 1972) after being illegally overthrown as president of Ghana by the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) in 1966.  As a citizen militant of the PDG, Kwame Ture shed the name Stokely Carmichael in 1977, choosing to honor his political mentors Kwame Nkrumah and Sekou Ture.  He accepted the assignment asked of him by Nkrumah to carry out the mission of Nkrumah’s “Handbook of Revolutionary Warfare (1968) to unite revolutionary Pan-African formations on the ground in Africa under the All African Committee for Political Coordination and All African People’s Revolutionary Party (A-ACPC/A-APRP – pages 56 to 60 in the Handbook).  Kwame Ture took the assignment seriously, working feverishly within the PDG, eventually becoming a lead coordinator for the youth of Guinea and then a member of the PDG Central Committee.  All the while, being a Central Committee member of the A-APRP as well.  Kwame used his political contacts and relationships to help move A-APRP cadre into neighboring Guinea-Bissau to join the Amilcar Cabral founded African Party for the Independence of Guinea-Bissau (PAIGC), following the work example Kwame illustrated in Guinea in Guinea-Bissau and several other countries in Africa. 

The other aspect of Kwame’s assignment from Nkrumah was to help build the A-APRP in the Western Hemisphere.  This was the reason he returned to the U.S. annually to conduct speaking engagements.  Many people, unfamiliar with revolutionary organizing work mistakenly assessed that Kwame’s speaking engagements didn’t produce the type of mass mobilizations that happened in the 1960s so, in their eyes, his mission was unsuccessful.  What they missed is his work was designed to recruit and create revolutionary Pan-African cadre within the A-APRP who would be committed, disciplined, and dedicated to continuing to carry out Nkrumah’s vision after Kwame Ture was no longer walking the earth.

We see that his work in Africa after the 60s was his most important because as great as SNCC and the Black Panthers were, they are no longer operational in 2025.  Kwame has been away from this earth for the last 27 years, but the A-APRP cadre that he helped establish the foundation for continue to organize today in every corner of the African world.  This is the highest expression of collective work.  It was this level of political activity that ushered in Kwame’s political maturity beyond his 1960s activism, where some SNCC comrades referred to him as “Stokely Starmichael” based upon their criticism that he didn’t work collectively with staff.  Within the A-APRP and PDG, Kwame helped institutionalize criticism/self-criticism, the antithesis of the criticisms against him in SNCC.  And most impressively, his work those last 29/30 years demonstrated without a doubt his commitment to mass empowerment over individual advancement. 

After the 1960s, virtually every major civil rights and Black power movement figure who was not murdered or imprisoned leveraged their position within the movement for individual positions of visibility.  Andrew Young, Jesse Jackson, John Lewis, Bobby Rush, Marion Barry, the list goes on, but unlike all of them, Kwame never ascended to U.S. politics.  He never wanted to be mayor of New York or some other major city.  He didn’t want to be chancellor of some large university.  Certainly, since his notoriety was as large, if not larger, than all the others around 1970, he could have pursued those interests had he desired to do so.  We would argue (without disparaging any of those aforementioned civil rights workers turned politicians) that although their names were more popular than Kwame who abandoned U.S. capitalism at the height of his personal popularity , none of their works will have the long lasting and critical impact of Kwame Ture’s work to build revolutionary cadre operational on the ground, all over the world. Cadre who do the work everyday to build the type of collective consciousness and organization that we are convinced will led us to the victory that our most sincere warriors gave their lives for.  This is Ture’s biggest gift to his people and to humanity.  And, even if the cadre he spawned are somehow unsuccessful in our mission, he has helped demonstrate that the collective organizing approach is the correct model.  It’s a living testament to Ture’s statement that he only ever wanted “the power of the organized masses!”


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    I don't see disagreement as a negative because I understand that Frederick Douglass was correct when he said "there is no progress without struggle."  Our brains are muscles.  Just like any other muscle in our body if we don't stress it and push it, the brain will not improve.  Or, as a bumper sticker I saw once put it, "If you can't change your mind, how do you know it's there?"

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