The Diplomacy of Theodore Brown and the Nigeria-Biafra Civil War. Keith A. Dye

Чтение книги онлайн.

Читать онлайн книгу The Diplomacy of Theodore Brown and the Nigeria-Biafra Civil War - Keith A. Dye страница 8

The Diplomacy of Theodore Brown and the Nigeria-Biafra Civil War - Keith A. Dye

Скачать книгу

currents, to be discussed shortly, of not only previous decades but arguably previous centuries throughout the Atlantic World were background to the above-mentioned terminologies that fomented a relationship between Africa and African Americans. Rather than present an assemblage of facts to showcase the big picture, this chapter seeks to point to a few important links on a chain of events that helped place the later activities of the American Negro Leadership Conference on Africa in a chronological framework to better consider why the group pursued its negotiations course. Beginning this first chapter with the encounter between the ANLCA and Nigeria in 1967, therefore, would evade the necessary transition of eras that helped establish the climate for a contested post-colonial war, and an invitation to the ANLCA to participate in conflict resolution discussions. By reviewing select secondary sources, this prelude more than anything else attempts to tie what may appear to be unrelated ←21 | 22→occurrences together onto a larger portrait of empire, peoples and its aftermath in a contracting Atlantic World.

      It might be asked how African Americans as distant relatives to the victims of European colonialism were impacted by the breakup of western empires following World War II. Nigeria prior to independence in 1960 would provide an answer to this question of empire.1 That large West African territory had been a location where a significant percentage of African American ancestors originated during the trans-Atlantic slave trade that began in the fifteenth century. Nigeria came into existence as a sizeable territory when Great Britain imposed its colonial order onto a region that in its broadest configuration became West Africa in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. Equally important to an understanding of the role Nigeria would have in anti-colonial activism was its prominence as a pro-independence leader. These aspects of Nigeria nurtured the idealization African Americans had for a trans-Atlantic union with the land and its people, a sentiment that later resulted in the American Negro Leadership Conference on Africa. Post-war disintegration of the colonial order, it was thought, could lead to a reunification that might restore to African Americans and Africans a self-determination severed generations previously by European interstate battles for power and security.

      Other assets seemed to enhance this hopeful enterprise of African Americans as the years advanced. Nigeria by the mid-twentieth century had a large population, was reasonably productive, and had a thriving economy compared to its neighbors. The territory also had enough suspected oil reserves to lure any wildcatter. With the country commanding respect both regionally and from its international supporters, it seemed only a matter of time before the transitioning of Nigeria to indigenous statehood would help accelerate the pace of the African American freedom movement. There were challenges, but none preventing a first-time opportunity for African Americans to engage Nigeria as a leader among an emerging region of nations. This improvement to the African ←22 | 23→American capability for power was a departure from the pattern of previous African American relations with African organizations, these having lacked the advantage of sovereign authority. Liberia, Ethiopia and Sierra Leone were nominally free and inconsequential states within the colonial universe, barely capable of exercising the last word in their foreign affairs, though adamant about correcting this deficiency.2

      Adjustments in World War II-era relations between African Americans and Africa were born of earlier African American opposition to the European empire system. One benefit was a more visible international profile. African American attacks on oppression in the broader arena became bolder as the decades advanced. Such endeavors often emphasized institutional development alongside written and verbal expressions of protest. All would combine as political investment with Africans when a post-colonial world was in sight. It might be fair to consider, then, that African American assistance to Africa had by the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries assumed the profile of special interest foreign affairs.

      In the second half of the nineteenth century, these internationalist endeavors of African Americans included emigration societies headed by Martin R. Delany, Alexander Crummell, Edward Blyden, and Henry M. Turner of the African Methodist Episcopal Church, and others who hoped to provide an African nationality for African Americans. This growing movement included the “civilizing” missionary projects of Althea Maria Brown; the industrial educational programs offered by the Tuskegee Institute and led by Booker T. Washington; and the first pan-African conference (congress) organized by Trinidadian Henry Sylvester Williams in 1900.3 Essayists and poets moved in and out of their genre by producing reams of turn-of-the century anti-imperialist literature. Small-scale business collaborations between African Americans and Africa were founded or advertised as having great potential, with indigenous Nigeria among the traversed areas. The record of these activities indicated they were not aimless thrashings about for immediate political favors, obvious since dates for independence were indeterminate. Perhaps a better understanding would have it that these undertakings were crusades that would accrue later as ←23 | 24→credentials for more substantive interactions with Africa charting its own course in world affairs.4

      African American and African cooperation expanded after the turn of the twentieth century. Their joint intentions defied imperial conquest, upheaval in Europe, and prosperity turned into Depression. These destabilizing occurrences slightly loosened the controls stronger nations had on colonized peoples, drawing the similarly afflicted African American population closer to the oppressed. The cross-Atlantic operations against colonialism of the generation before would now be accompanied by more strident attacks, with West Africa a major beneficiary. Campaigns demanding release of captive peoples were noticeably more aggressive for the next contingent of liberationists. These included the agitations of the Marcus Garvey African redemption movement through his Universal Negro Improvement Association that, according to one author, was “strongest in West Africa,” as compared to other regions of the continent.5 Added to this were the W.E.B. DuBois-led pan-African congresses of 1919, 1923, and 1927. The decades-long cultural exposition famously known as the Harlem Renaissance ushered in a torrent of creativity in music, dance, theater, literature, painting, and film that linked African Americans with Africa. In some instances these protest, too, were against colonial constrictions. More voices raged against the Italian invasion of Ethiopia in 1935, inspiring a contingent of African Americans to fight alongside Ethiopian forces. Collaborations by the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP), the Council on African Affairs, and Nigerian and other African activists in Africa and the Americas increased during the interwar and war years.6

      All of this started without the cooperation of Great Britain, of course, the dominant colonizing nation engaged in the Atlantic slave trade and who stood to lose more than her imperial neighbors. For it was the objective of the British to retain their colonial possessions as proof of their continued sway over world affairs and resources.7 Maintaining this control was not easy for the British, as witnessed by the onslaught of the Axis powers that made “the good war.”8 Immediately following this military conflict was an equally volatile Cold War political contest primarily between the United States and the Union of Soviet Socialist ←24 | 25→Republics (USSR). Both were eager to become reigning superpowers years beyond what historian Eric Hobsbawn labeled the “Age of Empire,” 1875 to 1914.9 Hobsbawn’s declaration, therefore, was not the final word to such pursuits. The United States climbed further up the ladder of world power as an exhausted Great Britain sought recovery from the war.10 As if that wasn’t enough distress for the British, agitation for independence by India, Asia, the Middle East, the Caribbean, and other parts of Africa would top off the Empire’s troubles. African American activists assisted these colonized peoples whose plight they believed resembled their own, a view generally shared by leaders of colonial movements. African Americans and other peoples under the weight of the colonial system stood to benefit from its collapse. All of this meant that the British Empire, originally conceived of as a global construct, could no longer outpace the enlarging shadows of a setting sun.

      Predecessors to the ANLCA realized, and later the group itself, that World War Two-era pronouncements about an insecure Atlantic World were a reminder of that region’s

Скачать книгу