Friday, June 18, 2010

Pambazuka - African American identity and the impact of the ‘New Diaspora’

Kwame Nkrumah, W.E.B. Du Bois, Shirley Graham Du Bois in Ghana


By Msia Kibona Clark


Africans and African Americans have always had a delicate and intricate relationship that has been influenced by history and perceptions. Phillipe Wamba, himself bi-cultural, once described the “fascination” Africans and African Americans have for each other as two groups which have been “gazing at each other across the Transatlantic divide like a child seeing itself in the mirror for the first time”. Well, today that “Transatlantic divide” is getting narrower. More and more Africans are coming to the United States, and these “distant cousins” are forced to, at the very least, acknowledge each other.

This acknowledgement, however, is not translating into a family reunion. African and African American social relations are dysfunctional at best and hostile at worst. The tensions that exist between Africans and African Americans in the US promise to reach a boiling point. In fact, there have been random cases of conflicts between African and African American students in American middle and high schools, as well as workplace conflicts over the hiring and promotion of one group over the other. While there are bright spots of cooperation and interaction, Africans and African Americans tend to segregate themselves from each other while harboring stereotypes and misconceptions that have prevented wide scale social interactions.

Every year Africans are entering American cities in larger numbers. In 1989, over 25,000 Africans immigrated to America. In 2001 the number of African immigrants doubled to more than 53,000. Over 75% of the African immigrants in the US today, in fact, arrived after 1985. And these numbers don’t include the more than 10,000 African students that enter US universities every year. In fact, many historians estimate that more Africans have immigrated to the United States since 1980 than came to the United States during the entire period of the Trans-Atlantic slave trade. 


Read more @Pambazuka

image: umass library

tags: diaspora, identity, pan african

No comments:

Post a Comment