Who/What did we Celebrate in Africa in 2014?

Beji Caid Essebsi, new President of Tunisia
Beji Caid Essebsi, new President of Tunisia

Like every year, I have to tell you about the good things that happen in Africa, and all the things we celebrated. Here are 10 of them.

1. I have to say it again: Blaise Compaore’s demotion. Blaise Compaoré was booted out of office in 2014. Thomas Sankara‘s murderer taught that he will be eternal in power, and on October 30th 2014, the people of Burkina Faso said ENOUGH!

2. Presidential Elections finally took place in Tunisia, 3 years after Ben Ali‘s toppling at the beginning of the ‘Arab Spring’, and the election of the people’s choice as president: Beji Caid Essebsi. We are glad the people of Tunisia’s choice was respected.

Some members of the South African Team - MTN Qhubeka(Source: bicycling.co.za)
Some members of the South African Team – MTN Qhubeka(Source: bicycling.co.za)

3. Mrs Catherine Samba-Panza was sworn in as interim president of the Central African Republic on 23 January 2014. She was chosen as a neutral person to lead the country of the conflict that rages in the area; she is the first woman appointed in such a position in the history of the country.

4. For the first time in the history of Cycling, there was an African team competing in a great race. 6 Africans (two Erithreans and 4 South Africans) ran in Spain for the South African team, MTN-Qhubeka.

5. Two African teams advancing into the last round of 16 at the Brazil 2014 FIFA World Cup for the first time in the history of the FIFA World Cup: namely, Nigeria and Algeria. Even though both teams were eliminated in the last round of 16, Algeria particularly put up a good fight against Germany (who went on to win the World Cup) and made us proud.

6. The African version of Robocop designed by two female engineers in the Democratic Republic of Congo, one of them being Thérèse Inza.  This is a traffic cop who regulates the traffic, and even gives tickets to the cab drivers, and those who do not want to follow the code of the road.

Lupita Nyong'o
Lupita Nyong’o

7. There were 3 Africans nominated at the Oscars in main categories this year: Chiwetel Ejiofor(Nigeria) in the ‘Best Actor’ category, Barkhad Abdi (Somalia) in the ‘Best Actor in a Supporting role’ category and Lupita Nyong’o (Kenya) in the ‘Best Actress in a Supporting role’ category. Lupita made us proud by winning the Academy Award for ‘Best Actress in a Supporting role’ for her role in 12 Years a Slave. She was also named the ‘Most beautiful Woman’ by People magazine (I never really understood that People Magazine award: as if they had searched through the 3.5Billion women in the world before giving this award!) and ‘Woman of the Year’ in Glamour, and was announced as the ‘New Face’ of Lancôme, a first for a Black woman.

8. Nigeria became Africa’s # 1 economy after rebasing its Gross Domestic Product (GDP) from 1990 to 2010 constant prices. Nigeria just surpassed South Africa as Africa’s top economy, and the world’s 26th largest economy.

9. U.S President Barack Obama hosts 50 African Heads of State and government officials at the historic US-Africa Leaders Summit.

George Weah
George Weah

10. George Weah, the only African to have won a FIFA World Player of the Year (in 1995) and won Ballon d’Or, won a senate seat in Liberia yesterday Dec. 29th. The 2005 presidential contender (he had won the first round of the elections then) of Mrs. Johnson-Sirleaf won the senate elections against Robert Sirleaf (President Johnson-Sirleaf’s son). This was a landslide victory; it is a step forward, and progress is always to be acclaimed!

Who/what did we say goodbye to in Africa in 2014?

Burkina Faso
Burkina Faso

I have to do a recap of the year 2014. You already know that the number one person we said goodbye to was the dictator and murderer Blaise Compaoré, who was booted out of office the tail between his legs.

1. Blaise Compaoré, booted out of office in 2014. Thomas Sankara‘s murderer taught that he will be eternal in power, and on October 30th 2014, the people of Burkina Faso said ENOUGH!

2. Michael Sata, the President of Zambia, passed on in office on October 28, 2014. He was replaced by Guy Scott, the first white president (albeit interim president) of Zambia since independence.

President Joyce Banda
President Joyce Banda

3. Joyce Banda, President of Malawi, who lost the elections this year. She became president of Malawi after Bingu wa Mutharika passed away in 2012. She is succeeded in office by Peter Mutharika. She had been Africa’s second female Head of State.

4. Nadine Gordimer, South Africa’s first Nobel prize of literature, passed away at the age of 90, on 13 July 2014. She was called the one of the great “guerilla of imagination” by poet Seamus Heaney.

Lapiro de Mbanga
Lapiro de Mbanga

5. Lapiro de Mbanga, the voice of the voiceless, the great Cameroonian musician, and activist, left us this year, in March. Lapiro sang for the people, talked about the youth’s shattered dreams, the division, the tribalism, the corruption, the decadence, and the ills of the country. So long Ndinga Man!

6. Abel Eyinga and Charles Ateba Eyene, both of Cameroon, passed away. These were strong outspoken voices of Cameroon, and will forever be remembered.

7. King Kester Emeneya, the king of la Rumba, passed away on 13 February 2014. I had just recently gotten reacquainted with his music, and danced to Nzinzi again. So long King.

8. Mama Gbagbo, the mother of Laurent Gbagbo, passed away this year. Gbagbo who is currently detained by the CPI at the Hague was refused the opportunity to bury his mother. She was over 90 years old.

Maya Angelou
Maya Angelou

9. The world said goodbye to Maya Angelou in May of this year. Dr. Maya Angelou was one of the world’s best poets. My two favorite poems by Dr. Angelou are ‘Phenomenal Woman‘ and ‘Still I Rise.’ Her African roots are very deep as she was a journalist in Egypt and Ghana. Her life was an embodiment of Truth, and passion.

10. More than 160 immigrants were feared dead after a boat carrying about 200 African immigrants sank off the coast of Libya. How many Lampedusa shipwrecks are we going to have until the world realizes that feeding and destabilizing countries does not help global equilibrium?

Happy Holiday Season 2014

I just wanted to wish you all a Happy holiday season 2014. Merry Christmas and Happy new year. May this holiday season be full of joy, happiness, abundance, and blessings. Enjoy the picture below as a present from Dr. Y.,  Afrolegends.com, for a happy holiday season.

Happy Holidays 2014 (Illustration by Osee Tueam, for Dr. Y, Afrolegends.com)
Happy Holidays 2014 (Illustration by Osee Tueam, for Dr. Y, Afrolegends.com)

African Presence in India

Siddi girl
Siddi girl

Last week, an exhibition organized by the Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture of The New York Public Library, in Delhi recently showcased the “forgotten” stories of Africa’s role in India’s history.  The exhibition reminded me a lot of the article I wrote about the Siddis, a tribe of Indians of African descent.

Nawab Sidi Mohammed Haider Khan (The Kenneth and Joyce Robbins Collection)
Nawab Sidi Mohammed Haider Khan (Source: The Kenneth and Joyce Robbins Collection)

Well it turns out, that many Africans travelled to India either as traders or as slaves centuries ago; their presence dates as far back as the 4th century AD. They mostly came from the horn of Africa and were referred to as Abyssinians, Siddis, or Habshis (Ethiopians), or Zangis (East Africans). They really flourished as traders, artists, rulers, architects and reformers between the 14th Century and 17th Century. They played an important role in India’s history or kingdoms, conquests, and wars, and rose through the ranks of society, some becoming generals or rulers. Due to their fighting prowess, many became soldiers in the armies of conquerors and sultans all over India’s princely states.  The most important one of them is Malik Ambar (1548-1626) of Ahmadnagar, in Western India, who was an important ruler, and military strategist. His mausoleum still exists in Khuldabad, near the Aurangabad district; somehow, Indian history forgot to mention that he was African. There was also Nawab Sidi Haidar Khan, ruler of the African-ruled state of Sachin established in 1791 in Gujarat; the state had its own cavalry and state band which included Africans, its own coat of arms, currency, and stamped paper.

Ibrahim Rauza Tomb, designed by architect Malik Sandal
Ibrahim Rauza Tomb, designed by architect Malik Sandal

Other Africans flourished as artists, reformers, and architects, such as Malik Sandal who designed a funerary complex after 1597 in Bijapur, the Ibrahim Rauza tomb (in present-day southern Karnataka state).

Painting of a Sidi couple of Bombay (by M.V. Dhurandhar, from the book 'By-Ways of Bombay', 1912)
Painting of a Sidi couple of Bombay (by M.V. Dhurandhar, from the book ‘By-Ways of Bombay’, 1912)

Africans not only rose to prominence in the Deccan Sultanates of southern India, but also on the western coast of India. They sometimes seized power for their group like they did in Bengal – where they were known as the Abyssinian Party – in the 1480s; or in Janjira and Sachin (on the western coast of India) where they established African dynasties. They also took power on an individual basis, as Sidi Masud (also written Siddi Masud) did in Adoni (in southern India), or Malik Ambar in Ahmadnagar (in western India).

The main African figures of the past have not been forgotten but their ethnicity (as in many places in the world) has been erased, consciously or unconsciously. How many more prominent Africans are there in Indian history, whose ethnicity was erased?  Please enjoy this photojournal of the Schomburg exhibition from the BBC, Africans in India: From Slaves to Rulers, and if you get a chance, do attend the exhibition, the pictures are simply amazing.

So much for that clove in your food!

Cloves
Cloves

I really enjoyed this week’s BBC Photojournal on the harvesting of cloves in Tanzania. I did not know that so much was involved in getting that tiny spice that I often add to my sauces. Harvesting the flower buds, drying them, and then taking them to weighing stations is not an easy labor, for that spice to find its way into plates around the world, food, drinks, cosmetics, wine, and medicine. The photojournal focuses on the harvest of cloves on the archipelago of Zanzibar in Tanzania, and particularly on Pemba island.  Zanzibar was once known as the Spice islands, and was once the world’s largest producer of cloves. Next time you use that tiny spice, remember Zanzibar. Enjoy BBC Photojournal on the harvesting of cloves!

Proverb on expecting a trial for wrongdoing / Proverbe sur l’attente d’un procès

Punaise / Bug
Punaise / Bug

One cannot blame a bug you crushed for smelling bad (Ovimbundu proverb – Angola). – When one has wronged someone, one can expect a trial.

Feet / Pied / Pe
Feet / Pied / Pe

On ne peut reprocher à la punaise que tu écrases de sentir mauvais (Proverbe Ovimbundu – Angola). – Quand on a fait du tort à quelqu’un, on peut s’attendre à un procès.

Podemos culpar o bug que você esmagar sentir mal (Provérbio Ovimbundu – Angola). Quando alguém o ofendeu alguém, podemos esperar um julgamento.

Why the Name: Luanda?

Map of Angola
Map of Angola

I often wondered where the name of Luanda, the capital and largest city of Angola, came from. After the African Cup of Nations was organized in Angola in 2010, I had started thinking about it: was it a Kimbundu word, or Umbundu, or Kikongo? or did it have Portuguese roots?

Map of Luanda in the 1700s
Map of Luanda in the 1700s

Well, it turns out that, on 25 January 1576, Portuguese explorer Paulo Dias de Novais founded Luanda under the name of “São Paulo da Assumpção de Loanda”.  When he arrived on the Ilha do Cabo (Cape Island), he found an indigenous population, the Axi-Iwanda people, a subgroup of the Ambundu people which were tributary to the Kongo Empire.  The island was an important location to collect zimbo, shells used as currency by the Kongo king before the arrival of Portuguese in the area. Novais established a Portuguese settlement of about 700 people: 350 soldiers, missionaries, merchants, and officials, and families, to first gain control of the currency, before establishing himself on the mainland, opposite the island. They started to use the name of the Axi-Iwanda inhabitants as a name for the island and the town, spelling it first “Loanda, then “Luanda“.

Queen Nzingha sitting on the back of her servant
Queen Nzingha sitting on the back of her servant, during her audience with the Portuguese governor in Luanda

In 1618, the Portuguese built the fortress of Fortaleza São Pedro da Barra, and they subsequently built two more in 1634 and 1765: Fortaleza de São Miguel and Forte de São Francisco do Penedo , respectively. Of these, the Fortaleza de São Miguel is the best preserved. In 1622, Queen Nzingha had an audience with the Portuguese governor in Luanda (this was before she became queen). The city of Luanda has been the administrative center of the colony of Angola since 1627, except from 1641 to 1648 when it was under the control of the Dutch Company of West Indies.  From 1550 to 1836, Luanda was an important center for slave trade to Brazil. When Angola became an actual Portuguese colony, the city was divided between white neighborhoods and indigenous ones, as was tradition in almost all European colonies. The white colonialists lived in huge villas with servants, while the local populations lived in huts. The majority of the local population present in Luanda were Ambundu and Bakongo.  The colonial army would constantly guard the entrance to the European neighborhoods.

View of Luanda in 1883
View of Luanda in 1883

After the slave trade was abolished in 1836, Angola’s ports were then opened to foreign shipping in 1844. By 1850, Luanda was one of the greatest and most developed Portuguese cities in the vast Portuguese Empire outside Continental Portugal, full of trading companies, exporting palm and peanut oil, wax, copal, timber, ivory, cotton, coffee, and cocoa, among many other products. Maize, tobacco, dried meat, and cassava flour were also produced locally. In 1889, Governor Brito Capelo inaugurated an aqueduct which supplied the city with water, laying the foundation for major growth. After the establishment of the republican regime in Portugal in 1910, colonialism entered a new phase. The new Portuguese government started building schools in Angola. The first high school, Liceu Central de Luanda, was created in 1919. During the authoritarian Estado Novo years, Luanda was also used as a penitentiary colony, used to host convicted criminals.

Agostinho Neto
Agostinho Neto, first president of Angola

A few months after independence from Portugal in 1975, with Agostinho Neto becoming Angola’s first president, civil war broke in the country when the city of Luanda was attacked by the FNLA forces supported by Portuguese mercenaries. This assault was pushed back by the governmental army (MPLA) supported by Cubans in the battle of Kifangondo. Throughout the years, the civil war forced many people across the country to seek refuge in Luanda. After the death of  Jonas Savimbi, UNITA‘s leader in 2002, a ceasefire was reached, and Angola finally arose from over 25 years of civil war.

Flag of Angola
Flag of Angola

Today, Luanda is the siege of the country’s principal companies: Angola Telecom, Unitel, Endiama, Sonangol, Linhas Aéreas de Angola, and Odebrecht Angola (Brazilian company). Back in 1972, it was already called the “Paris of Africa.” Manufacturing is big in the city. Petroleum found in nearby off-shore deposits is refined in the city. Luanda has an excellent natural harbor. The city also has a thriving building industry, an effect of the nationwide economic boom experienced since 2002, when political stability returned with the end of the civil war. Large investments, along with strong economic growth, have made Luanda one of the fastest growing cities of Africa, and of the world. Surrounded by beautiful beaches, and rich through its culture, Luanda is truly an African pearl. Please enjoy this video of one of the jewels of Africa, Luanda.

Blague: L’Horloge au Paradis / Joke: The Clock in Paradise

Horloge / Clock
Horloge / Clock

Un mort arrive au paradis et demande à St Pierre : “pourquoi il y a beaucoup d’horloges ici ” ?  St Pierre lui dit : “chaque horloge répresente une personne et chaque fois qu’elle ment sur la terre, çà tourne.  Regardes celle de la Vierge Marie , elle est sur 00h car elle n’a jamais menti.  Celle de simon est sur 03h car il a rénié Jesus 3 fois”.  Le mort lui dit : “Mais où est celle de N’zuéba ?”  St Pierre lui répond : l’horloge de N’zuéba-là, Jesus a pris pour faire ventilateur, tellement çà tournait.

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A dead man arrives in paradise and asks St Peter: “Why are there clocks here?”  St Peter tells him: “every clock represents a person, and each time that person lies on earth, it turns.  Look at that of the Virgin Mary, it is on 00h because she never lied.  That of Simon is on 03h, because he denied Jesus 3 times.”  The dead then asks: “but where is N’Zueba’s clock?”  St Peter replies: “N’Zueba’s clock, Jesus took it to use as a fan, as it was turning so much.”

The Hunter’s Bride

Here is a story from: Ethiopian Folktales.  You can read the full story there.

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Afar Girl
Afar Girl

Once there was a very beautiful Afar girl and one young man fell madly in love with her. So he sent people to her father’s house to ask for her hand in marriage.

But her father said, “I’ll only bestow my daughter if he gives me all his wealth, his camels, his cows, everything.”

So they went back and said, “Look, her father’s asking for the impossible. He wants all your wealth.”

The young man said, “That’s OK. She’s everything in this world. You can take all my animals.”

And he married the girl.

But he had nothing to feed her and therefore he had to become a hunter and he fed her.

San (Basarwa/Bushmen) hunters
San (Basarwa/Bushmen) hunters

Then one day her father decided to go and visit his son-in-law and daughter and he came over to their house. Of course a guest has to eat, so she brought in her father and made him sit down and she started boiling water hoping her husband would soon come in with the kill, but all the water in the pot boiled away. So she put in more water, but it too boiled away. She filled it again and it boiled away. By this time she was desperate and she looked out of their hut and saw another man walk by with a bush buck he had just killed.

So she went to him and said, “Look mister, I have an unexpected guest and my husband, who is a hunter, has gone out, so please give me one of the legs of the bush buck so I can feed my guest. When my husband comes back, I’ll repay you in kind.”

And he said, “No way. I’ve got enough meat for myself, therefore I don’t want the leg of meat that your husband is going to bring. But since you are so beautiful, I want to make love to you.”

She said, “OK, but the guest is in my house right now, so go and come back after dark.”

So she took the leg of meat and went in and started cooking it. Then her husband came, having killed a zebra, so there was plenty of meat and he gave it to her and he sat down and started eating with his father-in-law.

Zebras
Zebras

When it became dark the other hunter came and he threw a pebble on to the roof so that she would come out. But she just sat down and went on cooking the zebra meat. He threw a second pebble, but she pretended not to notice. Then he threw a third pebble and she burst out laughing.

Her father turned round and said, “What are you laughing at?”

She said, “I’m laughing at three fools.”

Her father said, “What do you mean?”

She said, “I’m laughing at three fools. The first fool is my husband, who gave away all his wealth for the sake of a woman. The second fool is my father, who took away all the wealth of his child, his son-in-law, then comes to have a meal and where does he expect the meat to come from? And the third fool is the man outside who gave me a leg of his bush buck and expects me to make love with him.”

So the moral is: (i) men are foolish over women and wealth; (ii) wealth is necessary for people to live well besides love.