Responses to “Africa: This Year’s “Entertainment””
January 14th, 2009 at 5:37 pm
ABW, you can probably tell from how I’m commenting that I’m reading through your blog post by post. It’s too frigid to go outside but honestly, reading your posts is a fantastic way to spend the time. You said: “Let’s be clear. Africa shouldn’t be “forgiven” for any “debts” because, from a historical perspective (and even from our present-day perspective), Africa owes the world NOTHING. Not one euro, not one pound, not one dollar, NOT ONE PENNY. And, yet the world owes Africa EVERYTHING.”No truer words spoken. Since I was about 12 and realized that so many African nations were literally being suffocated by all this debt, I wondered . . . how can Africa be in debt? In a child’s mind, basically it was this question: how can you take and steal from me and then turn around and say I owe you? Of course, I grew up and learned about the World Bank and IMF and learned the technicalities but the sheer wickedness of Africa being in debt still boggles my mind. Will the rich and wealthy folks upholding White supremacy never get tired of slavery? I always wondered as a child what would happen if one African leader just decided one day that they would no longer pay the debts? I still wonder . . .
January 14th, 2009 at 8:19 pm
Africa’s image is one of glorified/romanticized human suffering. The wealthy “care” because they can say “I know about suffering, I’ve helped”. Its similar to “I have a black friend, I’m not racist”. The recent rise in adoption of African babies points to this issue. Adopting asian babies has been commonplace for decades, yet adopting African babies had to become recently popularized by Angelina Jolie and Madonna for others to follow. Suddenly -its trendy to have one on your hip, especially an orphan. As an African I’m glad they adopt, just wish the thought process behind it was more informed and less trendy.On the can of worms, I share your apprehension that our presidential hopeful risks becoming, in my words, “commercial”. To win, he seems forced to pander to the same masses that are quick to donate to starving children and extra-slow to see that slavery/ its devastating legacy warrant reparations or some systemic change. Everyone is taught to be so “politically correct”, yet they still hold on to the privilege they’ve been afforded as descendants of slave owners. It seems not recognizing the effects of slavery by default shifts the blame to black people for their social condition.
January 14th, 2009 at 11:46 pm
Interesting you mention the VF covers. I just came home from the drugstore, which featured the cover with Obama and Brad Pitt. I mean, things like that make me seriously rethink how I’ve been responding to our Presidential hopeful, but I guess that’s a whole new post, if I care to open up THAT can of worms…
January 15th, 2009 at 5:02 am
ABW, I’ve got to admit, I looked at all those covers and most of the people on them and thought–seriously, what do half of these jokers have to do with Africa? Meanwhile, it continues the trend of privileged people being all (supposedly) committed to ending injustice halfway around the world, but unwilling to confront the injustice in their own back yards, where they can see themselves as direct beneficiaries of someone else’s oppression.
January 15th, 2009 at 7:53 am
You’re exactly right, Huey. All this talk of Africa is just smoke-and-mirrors, perhaps a grand gesture of white/colonial guilt that was never interested in dismantling global white imperialist power - here or abroad.
January 15th, 2009 at 10:27 am
ABW, don’t you think that the reason people and other “philanthropists” are quickly to donate money, clothes, etc. (using a dollar as a “band-aid” to mend a gunshot wound) and not commit any deeper to aid the African continent back to prosperity, because being committed to doing it is to unabashedly admit that folks (particularly those of European descent) benefitted from chattel slavery and colonialism and bloodshed over goods like diamonds, which eventually will lead into talking about the subject of the support of slavery reparations?Africa as a whole is in dire need of help, but as long as people keep treating the continent as one big Jerry’s Kid and committing to only sending just loose change and second-hand clothes, the donations will be as futile as “No Child Left Behind,” and FEMA helping post-Katrina New Orleanians over here.And if it actually gets news coverage, I doubt Faux (Fox) News will lead the charge in showing it in an unbiased, (and self-proclaimed) “fair and balanced” POV.
January 15th, 2009 at 4:21 pm
beautiful post. you gave voice to the feeling i’ve had about bono (and his ilk of celebrity do-gooders) for awhile that i didn’t have the knowledge to articulate. i think it’s “good” on a very basic level that he brings attention to aids and debt forgiveness, but it definitely does have this tinge of “in my spare time i care about africa, and you can care in your spare time too” - without having to make any kind of long-term commitment to fighting the global/historical processes that you identified in your post. thank you for writing it.
January 15th, 2009 at 7:16 pm
What really gets me, Miss Prof, is that the Africa relief efforts continues a particular positionality from colonialism - the “missionary position” - and I can’t tell you how many times our generation and the generations before us have been called upon to reach into our purses and pockets over images of poor, starving children with big bellies and flies hanging around their eyes. Interestingly, as I type this, I just saw on NBC Nightly News a featured story about young college kids who made their own video to heighten awareness about refugee children in Uganda, which looks like it’s starting a whole movement among our American youth as they raise funds to start schools for these orphans. Don’t get me wrong, I will always rejoice when our youth take up global activism. However, their political consciousness is so in need of deepening to encompass a historical consciousnessness. I wouldn’t be surprised if the same white American youth who are moved to action by images of suffering African children would also bristle if they were told 1)to support slavery reparations, 2)to boycott products they they consume, which are tied to the same wars in countries like Uganda, which led to the suffering of the same children over whom their hearts bleed and which also are waged over the same global economy producing their products, and 3)to challenge the racism and colonialism that they surely have learned while growing up in this world, so that they can better respond to the situation of crises in Africa.
January 16th, 2009 at 12:42 am
ABW, I appreciated your deconstruction of the Vanity Fair cover, Bono, and the entire Africa relief effort. Your astute analysis highlights a point-of-view that individuals need to recognize, for then only authentic relief for Africa can occur, and not one “made-up” in Hollywood style.
January 16th, 2009 at 3:20 am
“Africa doesn’t owe the world, the world owes AFRICA!” Love it!! We should make T-shirts out of that.
January 16th, 2009 at 9:55 am
Bravo! You need to read this blog article on camera and send it to YouTube or dailymotion or somewhere. This was right on the money.Aside from gold, cocoa, coltane (that’s the first time I’ve ever heard of that mineral/element/substance) and diamonds, let’s not forget the uranium where USA, the former USSR (on the verge of nuking each other during the Cold War), India, Pakistan, Israel, Iraq (according to W) and even North Korea use to create and shoot off their nuclear WMDs, also come from the African continent.That should be the slogan for slavery reparations: “Africa doesn’t owe the world, the world owes AFRICA!”
January 14th, 2009 at 11:25 am
I thought y’all might be interested in this: http://leninology.blogspot.com/2006/09/sudan-and-lurid-morality-tales-for.html