This means
the movement of all African people all over the world demanding for the
liberation of their fellow Africans in their home land, the movement originated
in the United States, the term is closely associated with Afrocentrism,
an ideology of African American identity
politics that emerged during the civil rights movement of the 1960s to 1970s.
"Pan-African" unity is especially important in African American identity
politics, because the African ancestry of Afro-American community cannot be
derived from any identifiable African people. Therefore it has become necessary
to minimize the differences between the various peoples
of Africa in favour of a generalized "African" heritage. As a
philosophy, Pan-Africanism represents the aggregation of the historical,
cultural, spiritual, artistic, scientific and philosophical legacies of
Africans from past times to the present. Pan-Africanism as an ethical system
traces its origins from ancient times, and promotes values that are the product
of the African civilization and the struggles against slavery, racism, colonialism,
and neo-colonialism.
Pan-Africanism
can be seen as a product of the European slave trade. Enslaved Africans of
diverse origins and their descendants found themselves embedded in a system of
exploitation where their African origin became a sign of their servile status.
Pan-Africanism set aside cultural differences, asserting the principality of
these shared experiences to foster solidarity and resistance to exploitation.
Alongside
a large number of slave insurrections, by the end of the eighteenth century a
political movement developed across the Americas, Europe and Africa
which sought to weld these disparate movements into a network of solidarity
putting an end to this oppression. In London, the Sons
of Africa was a political group addressed by Quobna Ottobah Cugoano in the 1791 edition
of his book Thoughts and sentiments on the evil of slavery. The group
addressed meetings and organised letter-writing campaigns, published
campaigning material and visited parliament.
They wrote to figures such as Granville
Sharp, William Pitt and other members of the white
abolition
movement, as well as King George III and the Prince
of Wales, the future George IV.
Modern
Pan-Africanism began around the beginning of the twentieth century. The African
Association, later renamed the Pan-African Association, was organized by
Henry Sylvester-Williams around 1887, and
their first conference was held in 1900.
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