PAPERBACKS COUN LEGUM *. A SNORT POUTICAl 6010E i[VISID EDITION COLIN LEGUM PAN-AFRICANISM A SHORT POLITICAL GUIDE REVISED EDITION FREDERICK A. PRAEGER, Publishers NEW YORK - WASHINGTON - LONDON Acknowledgments The works of all writers quoted have been fully acknowledged. But my special acknowledgment and thanks are due to the following authors and publishers: Ras Khan, The Poetry of Dr. R. E. G. Armattoe (Presence Africaine, Paris); Mr. Harold R. Isaacs; Langston Hughes, The Langston Hughes Reader (Braziller, New York), Selected Poems (Alfred A. Knopf, New York), Tambourines to Glory (John Day, New York); Olumbe Bassir, An Anthology of West African Verse (Ibadan); Miriam Koshland for her translations in Black Orpheus (Ibadan); David Diop, Les Temps du Martyr (Presses Universitaires de France, Paris); Aime C6saire, Four Poems and The Return of the Native (Black Orpheus, Ibadan, and Presence Africaine, Paris); Leopold Senghor, Anthologie de la Nouvelle Podsie Negre et Malgache (Presses Universitaires de France, Paris); Michael Dei-Aneng, Wayward Lines from Africa; Claude McKay, Out- cast (Twayne, New York); Leon Dalmas (Presence Africaine, Paris). FREDERICK A. PRAEGER, Publishers 1ti Fourth Avenue,NewYork 3, N.Y., U.S.A. 7'7-79 CharlotteStreet, London W.i, England Publishedin theUnited Statesof Americain 1965 byFrederickA. Praeger, Inc., Publishers This is an enlarged and revised editionof the book first published in 1962 byFrederickA. Praeger, Inc. Second printing,1965 Allrights reserved ©1962, 1965 byColinLegum LibraryofCongress CatalogCard Number: 65-1564,1 Printedin theUnitedStates of America PREFACE TO THE REVISED EDITION I concluded the first edition of this book with the following observation: `Nowhere in this book have I made any claims about Pan-Africanism. I have tried to describe it as objectively as I can. I have no views of my own aboutwhether it will succeed or fail in the end. I am more concerned at this stage to understand it, to be "with it" (in the modern phrase), than to pass judgments on it. Thatit is a dynamic movement nobody can deny. That it is evolv- ing new ideas and methods with great rapidity is plain. But who can say with any degree of confidence where it will lead?' Although muchhas happened sincethat edition appeared, I have no reason to revise that open-ended conclusion. Pan-Africanism has maintained its dynamism and its flexibility. Its fortunes have fluctuated with a rapidity that has made keeping pace with them difficult, let alone attempting to make durable evaluations of them. As one concerned primarily with contemporary history I do not regard it useful at this stage to attempt a serious evaluation of the episodes I record. Thisisnot the sameassaying that I have adopted an uncritical attitude in the way I have recorded the growth of Pan-Africanist ideas and movements. However, I have tried to avoidtakingsides between the rival leaders and the contesting ideas and viewpoints within the Pan-African movement. `Fission and Fusion'-Chapter VIII of this new edition-is a record of developments between 1962 and 1964- I have found it more convenient to adopt this method than to revise each section. The only important exception is Chapter V-`Africa's Divided Workers'-which my wife has made more comprehensive. Finally, to avoid an unhandy expansion of the book I have omit- ted anumber of appendices: `The Idea of an African Personality' (extracts from an address by Dr. Edward W. Blyden), Chief Awolowo's `Statement on African Affairs', and Dr. Azikiwe's ad- dress, `The Future of Pan-Africanism'. Students interested in these documents will be able torefer to themin library copies of the first edition. In their place I have introduced four new appendices: the 5 (cid:9) 6 PREFACE Charter of the Organisation of African Unity, the OAU Protocol on Mediation, Conciliation and Arbitration, the principal resolu- tions of the first summit meeting of African Heads of State at Addis Ababa, 1963, and those of the first Assembly of the Heads of 1 Stateand Governmentofthe OAU, Cairo, 964. COLINLEGUM London. November, r964 PREFACE TO THE FIRST EDITION This book is dedicated to the work of the Africa Bureau. In an abbreviated form it was delivered as the Africa Bureau's 1961 Annual Address. I am grateful to the Chairman, Lord Hemingford, and to the Executive for agreeing that the Address should be published in this expanded form. The book is in two parts; the first might be more readable, but the second is more useful. In the first part I have tried to trace briefly the origins and growth of Pan-Africanism, and its subse- quent impact on Africa after its transplantation in 1958. In the second part I have provided a documentary guide to Pan- Africanism, the absence of which I personally have felt to be a great handicap in the past. This is only a start; much more work requires to be done by our academic colleagues who have so far largely neglected this field of study. Although I must accept sole responsibility forthe views expressed in this book, I am nevertheless greatly indebted to Dr. George Shepperson ofEdinburgh University, and Professor St. Clair Drake ofRoosevelt University, Chicago, for having read and criticised this work at various stages; to Mr. Harold R. Isaacs of the Center for International Studies, Massachusetts Institute ofTechnology, whose studies on Negro literature have been particularly valuable to me in afieldinwhichhehas donesomuch workand ofwhich I knowcom- paratively little. Finally I must mention my wife who has worked almost as hard as I have in revising the manuscript and who wrote the chapter on `Africa's Divided Workers'. COLIN LEGUM London. November, rg6r CONTENTS Page PREFACETOTHE REVISEDEDITION PREFACE TO THE FIRSTEDITION 6 CHAPTER I THE ROOTS OF PAN-AFRICANISM 13 CHAPTER II GROWTH IN THE DIASPORA, I900-1958 24 CHAPTER III BACK TO AFRICA, 1958-1962 38 CHAPTER IV AFRICAN REGROUPINGS 65 CHAPTER V AFRICA'S DIVIDED WORKERS 81 CHAPTER VI CULTURE AND POLITICS: THE RIFT IN THE LYRE OFBLACK ORPHEUS 93 CHAPTER VII MODERN POLITICAL IDEAS 112 CHAPTER VIII FISSION AND FUSION, 1962-1964 131 APPENDICES 151 REFERENCES 309 INDEX 317 Amap by W. H. Bromage indicating some of the groupings mentioned in the text will be found on pages 70-71. (cid:9)(cid:9)(cid:9)(cid:9)(cid:9)(cid:9)(cid:9)(cid:9)(cid:9)(cid:9)(cid:9)(cid:9)(cid:9)(cid:9)(cid:9)(cid:9)(cid:9)(cid:9)(cid:9)(cid:9)(cid:9)(cid:9)(cid:9)(cid:9)(cid:9)(cid:9)(cid:9)(cid:9)(cid:9) ABBREVIATIONS USED IN TEXT AAPC All-African Peoples' Conference AAPO All-African Peoples' Organisation AATUF All-African Trade Union Federation AEF Afrique Equatoriale Fran~aise AFRO African Regional Organisation AOF Afrique Occidentale FranCaise ATUC AfricanTradeUnion Confederation CGTA Confederation Generale des Travailleurs d'Afrique FLN National Liberation Front (Algeria) ICFTU International Confederation ofFree Trade Unions ICTUF International Federation ofChristian Trade Unions ILO International Labour Organisation NAACP National Association for the Advancement of Col- oured Peoples NATO NorthAtlantic Treaty Organisation OAC Organisation forAfrican Community OAMCE Afro-Malagasy Organisation of Economic Co-opera- tion OAU Organisation of AfricanUnity PAFMECA Pan-AfricanMovementforEast andCentralAfrica PAFMECSA Pan-African Movement for East, Central and South- ernAfrica RDA RassemblementDemocratique Africain SEATO South-East Asia Treaty Organisation UAR United Arab Republic UAS UnionofAfrican States UGTAN Union Generale desTravailleurs d'Afrique Noire UNIA Universal Negro ImprovementAssociation UNO United Nations Organisation UPA Unionofthe Peoples ofAngola UPC Unionofthe Peoples of the Cameroons UPS Union Progressiste Senegalaise USSR seeSoviet Union WFTU World Federation ofTrade Unions (cid:9)(cid:9)(cid:9)(cid:9)(cid:9)(cid:9)(cid:9)(cid:9)(cid:9)(cid:9)(cid:9)(cid:9)(cid:9)(cid:9)(cid:9)(cid:9)(cid:9) APPENDICES Page 1. The Pan-African Congress, Paris, rgrg 151 2. The Pan-African Congress, Manchester, 19¢5 153 3. The BandungDeclaration, 1955 156 4. The First Conference of Independent African States, Accra, 1958 157 5. The Second Conference of Independent African States, Addis Ababa, rg6o 167 6. Declarationofthe Ghana-Guinea Union, 1959 178 7. The Sanniquellie Declaration, 1959 180 8. Statement on the Sanniquellie Declaration by Osagyefo Dr. Kwame Nkrumah, rg6r 182 9. The Monrovia Conference ofForeign Ministers ofInde- pendent African States, 1959 183 to. Extracts from the Statement by the Ghana Minister of ForeignAffairs, the Hon. Ako Adjei, at the Second Con- ferenceofIndependentAfricanStates, rg6o 188 11. Extracts from theStatementoftheLeader oftheNigerian Delegation, the Hon. Y. M. Sule, at the Second Con- ferenceofIndependentAfrican States, rg6o tgo 12. Declaration by Ghana-Guinea-Mali, rg6o 193 13. The Brazzaville Declaration, rg6o 194 14. Charter for "The Union of African States", rg6r 201 15. The Casablanca Conference, rg6r 205 16. The Protocol ofthe African Charter, rg6r 211 17. The Monrovia Conference, rg6r 216 (cid:9)(cid:9)(cid:9)(cid:9)(cid:9)(cid:9)(cid:9)(cid:9)(cid:9) APPENDICES Page 18. African Conferenceon the Rule ofLaw, Lagos, 1961 220 Ig. First ConferenceofNegro Writers and Artists, Paris, 1956 230 2o. Second Conference of Negro Writers and Artists, Rome, 1959 232 21. The All-African Trade Union Federation, rg6r 239 22. The All-African Peoples Conference, 1958-6r 241 23. Charter ofthe Organisation of African Unity 281 24. Protocol of the Commission of Mediation, Conciliation andArbitration 288 25. Resolutions of the Summit Conference of Independent African States, Addis Ababa, May 1963 294 26. Resolutions of the First Assembly of the Heads of State and Government of the Organisation of African Unity, Cairo, 1964 303 PAN-AFRICANISM A short political guide
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