WEB DuBois: The African Roots of War...prefatory notes and link

 

Semper novi quid es Africa. Always, Africa gives us something new.

So wrote W.E.B. DuBois in his oft- forgotten article, "The African Roots of War", published in the May 1915 Atlantic Monthly, nine months after the beginning of the so-called War to End All Wars.

The article is about the imperial scramble for African territory, and the resources on and under the land. It tells of near-wars, and actual wars that took place on the continent in the three decades leading up to World War 1. Present in this article are Britain, France, Germany, Italy, Portugal and others, all angling for political leverage. We are given accounts of Britain and France almost going to war over who is going to control Fashoda, a strategic location on the Nile River; of the Boer Wars between the British and Dutch-descended Afrikaners about who will control the gold and diamond riches of South Africa. There is Kinng Menelik of Ethiopia rendering a mighty blow to the italian invaders at Adwa. And the Mahdi wiping out the British garrison at Khartoum. 

These conflicts pale [the pun is intended!] in comparison with an ongoing contradictions conflagrations that, since DuBois wrote this article, has yet to run its course almost 100 years later. This war is [DuBois] "the result of jealousies engendered by the recent rise of armed national associations of labor and capital whose aim is the exploitation of the wealth of the world mainly outside of the European circle of nations".

Here in this essay is also to be found the history of how the European slave trade segued into colonialism based upon the seizure and exploitation of gold, diamonds, ivory and other inventory, small pickings compared with what has been discovered in Africa since the 1870s.
In the past two decades alone there have been millions of violent deaths, torture, rape, and maiming of African non-combatants, caught up in civil wars in the mineral- rich Central African Republic and the Democratic Republic of the Congo ... just two of some fifty-plus nations on the African continent.

In reading DuBois's article, i had to pinch myself several times to remind myself: he is writing in 1915 and not 2011. We have witnessed this past year, struggles for democracy in North Africa, in Tunisia and Egypt, U.S.- led military intervention in Libya and the targetted assassination of its president, Moammar Ghadafy, the increased military ventures of AFRICOM and other U.S.military entities. The increasing collusion and contention... mostly the latter... of U.S. and Chinese presences on the continent.

Ninety six years after the publication od DuBois's article, the night is dark. And we are still far from home.  
 
 
 


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  • It is this type of article, which will begin to bridge the gap between the literary and journalistic legacy of the great Du Bois, his intellectual and political pursuits. The thousands and thousands of students, who systematically study Du Bois, will have to come face to face with the practical political side of his activities, at and around Harvard University, the University of Berlin, and the extremely valuable activities in the Atlanta University system.
    Quietly, Du Boisian thought and political influence has founded historic monuments in these racist, genocidal United States(that is what M L K was telling us at the 1968 Freedomways dinner, just months before his assassination). These, both institutional monuments and physical monuments(note the new M L K monument and the N A A C P).
    As anthropologist and historian, Du Bois was the rare intellectual jewel, who would successfully challenge established racist anthropological notions and prove the error therein with research and evidence-while at the same time mounting political and social movements to counter and outflank the lies of history, anthropology and sociology.
    More on this later from this author, many thanks to brother Gary Hicks for resurrecting the enduring, and one of the greatest communist ever, our very own African American, who exposed colonial imperialism early on, in The African Roots of War, reminiscent of the great Lenin, the singular, William Edward Burghardt Du Bois.

    Posted by E.E.W. Clay, 01/10/2012 6:38am (12 years ago)

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