The Year of Return, my turn
E. Ablorh-Odjidja
January 09, 2020
I thought “The Year of Return” was first going to
be a pilgrimage to the continent, in a manner of a
search for “roots” for Africans in the Diaspora. It
turned out to be something else.
It was highly commercial.
A perception of commercial exploitation of the
very people in the Diaspora, who are offspring of the
slavery enterprise will do nobody good.
We must be careful here.
As much as the returning idea was appropriate,
part of me was rankled when assessments and comments on
the commercial exploitation of the enterprise started
coming in.
“The Return,” such as staged in 2019 and seen in
the eyes of many, turned up as a trading venture or an
investment ploy by the nation of Ghana.
Such must not be the case.
“The Return” must not be seen as gamesmanship or
cleverness on the part of our government to suck people
in the Diaspora to come to Ghana for commercial reasons!
Properly defined, “The Return” must be a goal and
the fulfillment of a sacred wish.
A wish that if done right, could transform the
transgression of the past into the cultural
right of a return.
The effort to reconnect the Diaspora to the entire
continent of Africa
and to restore the spirit of the people
within the shortest time possible is a moral must.
The idea itself is a gold mine for progress.
Think about the brains that left since slavery.
The Diaspora today has ideas as much as it has
assets that can benefit Africa.
A serious compact to bring some of these assets
back is a moral imperative for Africa.
Therefore, an invitation for those who want to
come back, and are so equipped to do so permanently for
countries in Africa to receive them, is worthy of
pursuit.
“The Return” as was seen in Ghana in 2019, had no
such intent.
It was entirely a vehicle for tourism, instead of an
emphasis on welcoming, reclaiming, restoration of
rights, and redemption from what went wrong in the past.
Missing in the promotions of “The Return” was the
right mindset towards a true return.
The narrative on Nkrumah’s “Consciencism,” and
the Pan African spirit that drove his movement in the
60s was suppressed and was not allowed as the driving
force behind the 2019 Return, even though this
initiative came from his country Ghana.
Neither was the excuse of a “major landmark
spiritual and birth-right... to mark 400 years of the
arrival of the first enslaved Africans in Jamestown,
Virginia," that was used in the advert for “The Return”
movement in 2019.
In reality, this movement turned out to be a
roaring celebration for tourism in Ghana, during
December 2019.
And since then, it is being described by some,
including the government of Ghana, as a very successful
tourism venture.
Thus, a return to heritage first to heal the
cultural (spiritual) void caused by the traumatic event
of slavery has been turned into a pocketbook affair.
"One of the main goals of the Year of Return
campaign is to position Ghana as a key travel
destination for African Americans and the African
Diaspora," said one of the promotion points on
government-issued literature on "The Year of Return."
Not so my friends. The promotional positioning
should have been for Ghana as a home to correct past
wrongs from the continent and the invitation for other
countries to do so too.
A clear statement, with devotion to the redemption from the wrongs
of the past should have been the theme.
Then,
an invitation for those who have the fit mindset
to come can seal the deal.
It should not have been a mad dash for the tourist
dollar as happened.
For the lack of cultural positioning, in
preference for the dollar, some now presume the event to
be a sham and abuse of a noble concept.
They now raise questions about the genesis of the
entire venture; whether it was driven by pure
commercialism or a grand political move to cement the
chances of the government in power for the 2020
elections.
For, immediately after the event and to entice the
electorate, the government of Ghana announced its
intention to raise "3 billion from the Diaspora,“ wrote
VenturesAfrica.
Right there, an acknowledgment of the commercial
intent within days after the celebration, some remarked.
True, we cannot rule out commercialism or
political nature as by-products of a “Return.”
Yet still, we must not put the redemptive,
unification motive and the racial benefits thereof for our
people in second place for the promotion of such an
event.
But, apparently not so for the officials in Ghana
, a place where the concept of a “Return” strongly originated in
the 60s.
In the promotion of this year’s Return, there
wasn't a single mention of this antecedent awareness
from the 60s; not even concerning building on the
concept, the goodwill generated in past efforts, or did
the officials
mention any of these in the promotional materials
produced.
Some historical models and activists who
participate in the past “Return” could have been
promoted.
The cases were many; from Garvey, DuBois, Padmore, and
Nkrumah.
These could have offered strong attractions.
Indeed, the concept of a Return is Pan Africanist
in nature and an organic growth that manifested itself
with the Marcus Garvey movement, the Universal Negro
Improvement Association (UNIA) of the 1920s, with a
membership of some 2 million people in the Diaspora at
that time.
Garvey and his group advocated “and sought to
establish independent black states (for “separate but
equal” status for persons of African ancestry…., notably
in Liberia on the west coast of Africa,” according to
History.com.
Garvey never made it to Africa. But Nkrumah
brought a refined version of the idea to Ghana.
In the 60s, the approach by Nkrumah to “The
Return” was different.
It was mostly geared to recruit and welcome
talent for nation-building, not tourism nor separate
states for the Diaspora.
This attracted men like W.
E. B. Dubois, Padmore, and many others to make their
homes in Ghana in the 60s.
These men were not carpetbaggers, but men and
women who had conviction and commitment for a “Return”
before they arrived.
Dr. Dubois came to work on the Encyclopedia Africa
project.
He announced on arrival, on September 26, 1960,
that Kwame Nkrumah "had invited him to repatriate to
Ghana, where he would serve as the editor in chief of
The Encyclopedia Africana, according to the website
Black Past.
Dubois died and was buried in Ghana in 1963, aged
93 years.
Shirley Dubois, his wife, under whom I worked, was
the Managing Director for Ghana Television in the 60s.
George Padmore, a constant freedom fighter from
Trinidad, was also invited by Nkrumah to live in Ghana.
He was an advisor to Nkrumah in the fight against
colonialism.
At Padmore’s death in 1959, C. L. R. James wrote,
that “it was in Ghana that his ashes were interred and
everyone says that in this country, famous for its
political demonstrations, never had there been such a
turnout as that caused by the death of Padmore.”
Dr. Robert Lee and his wife Sara, both dentists,
Maya Angelou, and others settled in Ghana in the 60s.
A Return to Africa for all these folks was not for
the promotion of tourism.
For them, it was a spiritual homecoming to help
free and develop Africa. And to build the foundation for
a real “Return” that would sustain all - both within the
Diaspora and Africa.
There were intellectual, political and moral
giants who came because of “The Return” call in the 60s.
But guess the caliber of characters who came this
time to celebrate in 2019? Not a single personality
that could measure up to DuBois or Padmore.
Instead, we had the entertainment celebrity types
and many buccaneers who came to promote themselves and
not to spark a drive for a real Return.
In the process, the whole capital of Accra was
turned into one big party space, such as never seen
before; not even during the Joseph Project celebrations
of the same Return under Kufuor.
The crowds grew bigger into 2020 but were the
commitment for “The Return” on par with that of the
silent few that came in the 60s? Not so.
For the Diaspora of the 60s, “The Return” was akin
to a journey to a Mecca moment, with all the spiritual
attractions.
But they also came to provide the incremental motivation
for a buildup for others to follow; a recruitment
hub for talent and merit from the Diaspora to service and advance Africa.
Cardi B. of Gansta “Bitch” Music can answer the
purpose of her call to Ghana. I
can't.
Popcaan, the rap artist, who answered when he
boasted, “Over Africa wicked man ting. Mi jus buy mi
brand new house over Ghana. Yuh haffi have house
everyweh!”
One can extract from Popcaan's utterance the
entire misunderstanding of the original intent of the "Return" and
the need of such to advance Africa.
And it just happened in
2019.
But don't blame him.
E. Ablorh-Odjidja, Publisher, www.ghanadot.com,
January 09, 2020
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