Descendants of African Ancestry Connect

WASHINGTON - Many people of African ancestry feel a strong tie to the continent, and there are a number of efforts to help them realize that connection. One was a recent conference in Hamilton, Bermuda. The keynote speaker was Nigerian author and Nobel laureate Wole Soyinka. VOA English to Africa Service reporter Angel Tabe asked him why such a conference was needed. He said, “Africans in the Diaspora tend to look in the direction of Europe, Asia, before the African continent, to spend their vacations, where they want to relate to in terms of expanding their cultural horizon, and I have always felt that members of the African family should have priority.”Soyinka argues that those who can afford the cost should be able to travel to whatever countries they choose. “…The first direction one should go is [to] one’s roots if you’ve been separated from them, [especially] in this age of DNA, when people are finding what part of the African country they come from. …Oprah Winfrey, female astronauts, musicians, the famous Rev. Jakes, who turns out to be an Ibo…. Prominent people…are finding out through DNA’s scientific methods, not the whimsicality of history.” Soyinka says curiosity drives people to try to find out what their people looked like, whatever their material status. “It doesn’t matter whether it is a one-horse or one-hut village, so it’s a way of structuring the possibility of fulfilling that hunger which had been there long before the famous ‘Roots’ by Haley. You know, any initiative to facilitate that is beautiful.”

In a related development, the African Union (AU) has created a sixth region in its organizational structure to accommodate foreigners of African ancestry, and the United States has already appointed its regional representative. Soyinka describes it as a quite a bold move, adding that these days, world politics and relationships between nations have eroded physical geographical boundaries through technology. But he says that there may be some complications. He also believes that the idea would have more impact if it had been born of the grassroots, not leadership. “Nobody should think for a moment that the very launching of the idea makes it viable…. These are people who have identified themselves with another sense of belonging; many African Americans …have come to Africa and considered it a disaster…so there is a lot for them to learn, a lot. Otherwise, I think it’s a marvelous idea.”

Source:  VOA News



 

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Author: editor editor's website editor's email
Post Date: Wednesday, December 20th, 2006
Categories: Genealogy
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