It often seems as if the African continent has come a long way
since posters were sent out, as colonial policy, to invite settlers to
East Africa. One poster with a drawing of a train surrounded by wild
animals titled “The Highlands of British East Africa as a Winter Home
for Aristocrats,” has become a collectors’ item.
But the umbrage-causing job description circulated by The New York Times for its Nairobi bureau chief is a worrying reminder that we still have a long way to go.
Africa’s
written history is often framed as part of other dominant histories.
It’s about mountains and rivers our ancestors lived next to discovered
by and named after European explorers; African savages engaged in tribal
warfare in deserts, seas and forests until democracy saved them from
themselves; after Independence, democracy came under threat from
authoritarian African despots in a conflict-ridden Africa available for
the taking and African history taught in foreign languages, reducing a
continent of storytellers to those whose stories are told by others.
The
history of Europe that we studied described decolonisation as based on
agreement, with no mention of independence freedom fighters. We learnt
about Emperor Menelik II leading Ethiopian forces to defeat the Italian
army in 1896 at the Battle of Adwa from other sources. It was not for
nothing that independence movements in India and Africa fashioned proper
history lessons among their cadres as a resistance tool.
'PAINTS BUREAU CHIEF AS SAVIOUR'
The New York Times
job description speaks of deserts, pirate seas, forests, terrorism,
scramble for resources, authoritarianism, conflict and paints the bureau
chief as a saviour documenting unexpected stories of hope.
The colonial 1900s advert and the New York Times job description share a commonality. They do not mention the human beings who live here – the Africans.
In 2007, Africa Focus raised the alarm over the December 31 New York Times
dispatch from Nairobi, that the Kenyan electoral crisis “seems to have
tapped into an atavistic vein of tribal tension that always lay beneath
the surface in Kenya.” Africa Focus complained the New York Times terminology was unusually explicit about the assumption that such divisions were rooted in primitive identities.
It
was not a sentence that would describe the Mafia or Chicago gang wars,
for example. It was a sentence only applicable to Africa.
Carol Sicherman, Professor Emerita at Lehman College, wrote to the public editor of the New York Times to complain about their use of the word “tribe” when describing Africans.
An
online petition launched during the DusitD2 2019 terrorist attack filed
with the Media Council of Kenya protested the bias of New York Times’s coverage of Kenya in featuring dead bodies as opposed to First World reportage. The New York Times provokes reactions because it is a much-read and respected paper.
NEO-COLONIAL FRAMES
Colonialism inflicted many traumas. It exploited resources and was based on culture — and identity-killing racial subjugation.
The New York Times job description sounds like a call for a colonial settler, not a professional journalist.
To
recognise history repeating itself in neo-colonial frames, Africa needs
to crowd-source a list of historical things every African should know,
including the Berlin Conference of 1884, when Europeans carved out
Africa for themselves; the role temperate weather in East and Southern
Africa played in the decision of the colonialists to not only exploit
the people and land but to settle here, and the mosquito’s role in
making the colonialists focus on exploitation in West Africa with no
appetite for settlement.
African
history writers can encompass disciplines such as urban studies on the
formation of cities before colonialism, climate change patterns over
centuries, the economics and population trends of Africa…
Africa
needs Third World peers to cite in a field overflowing with Global
North “expertise.” A comprehensive history of Africa by Africans,
spanning all geographical areas and periods, needs to be written. Is
this too much to ask of our universities, governments and the African
Union?
Wairimu Nderitu is the author of Beyond Ethnicism, Mukami Kimathi: Mau Mau Freedom Fighter and Kenya: Bridging Ethnic Divides. E-mail: info@mdahalo.org
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