Spokes of the Wheel

When Are We Going To Rebuild A Pan-Afrikan United Front?

At one time in the City of Baltimore, Maryland, there was an effort to build coalitions between Pan-Afrikan organizations.  The most recent one I can remember that was relatively successful was the Tubman City Alliance, which was promoted (and possibly conceived) by activists in Reality Speaks, Solvivaz Nation and other committed Pan Afrikan activists.

Over the years, however, a combination of personal tragedies, conflicts and organizational inertia have plunged much of the Baltimore, Maryland area, including parts of the activist community, into apathy, dysfunction and ineffectiveness.  The Tubman City Alliance, and other efforts at building a Pan-Afrikan United Front before that, would have kept the community together, active, relevant and growing if they had been sufficiently supported to continue to build.

There is a serious need to rekindle such a coalition.  If you are interested in taking a hand in the resurgence of true Pan-Afrikan Unity in the Baltimore area and the forging of a more unified, coordinated effort among our many and varied organizations, then either leave a comment here or send an email to me at cliff@kuumbareport.com.  Or just read on, and you will learn about another such effort that is being launched in the Baltimore area right now.

A Road to Pan-Afrikan Unity
By Bro. Cliff Editor, KUUMBAReport Online
cliff@kuumbareport.com

I’ve been reading a lot of emails and other communication that, thankfully, have started to move away from personal arguments to what I believe is a principled discussion of the ideas we all have for organizing Afrikan people in the Afrikan Diaspora as well as in the Mother Continent.  While I agree with many of us that immediate concerns such as jobs and wealth are important, they will be nothing but band-aids for a sucking chest wound unless we put together a real organizing model from top to bottom that will work to bring the Pan-Afrikan World to total freedom.  I’d like to share with you one piece of such a model, as well as a few thoughts on how it could work as part of a much larger and more comprehensive plan, based on what I believe is (or at least should be) a familiar conceptual model for organizing the Afrikan Diaspora and Afrikans in the Continent.

I want to start by telling you about an organization known as the Sixth Region Diaspora Caucus (SRDC, https://srdcinternational.org).  It is primarily based in the United States, but in realizing that the Afrikan-American population comprises only about 45 million of a total of 500-million-to-one-billion Afrikan Descendants around the world living outside the Mother Continent, SRDC has dedicated itself to the organization and uplift of the entire Afrikan Diaspora, and recognizes the need for the Afrikan Diaspora itself to control its own method of organization and uplift.

SRDC: One Major Plan for Organizing the Afrikan Diaspora

Since the African Union (AU) added Article 3[q] to its Constitutive Act in 2003, which invited the Afrikan Diaspora to participate “in the development of the African Continent and the building of the African Union”, the effort on the part of the Afrikan Diaspora to respond to that invitation has been pursued.  In April 2006, a Pan-Afrikan Roundtable was held in Los Angeles, California, at which the AU’s definition of the Afrikan Diaspora as “people of African descent and heritage, living outside the Continent, regardless of their country of citizenship, who are willing to assist in the development of the African Continent and the building of the African Union” was accepted (though it was acknowledged at that time to be in need of review in the future) and the effort to organize the Afrikan Diaspora began in earnest.

The first objective of the Afrikan Diaspora, according to the African Union’s “roadmap” for our incorporation in the AU, is representation in the AU’s Economic, Social and Cultural Council (ECOSOCC), a council of Representatives from civil society organizations, activists, the general public, the “people on the ground” as one might say.  The AU’s requirement is that the Afrikan Diaspora develop “modalities for election of Representatives” to ECOSOCC (as stated in the Statutes of the Economic, Social and Cultural Council, available on the AU’s website). In other words, Representatives to ECOSOCC cannot be anointed, appointed or self-proclaimed. They must have been elected by their people, and the Afrikan Diaspora must develop a means to accomplish this and submit that method to the AU for their review and approval.  Because the Afrikan Diaspora currently has only been designated to receive 20 seats out of the 150 total in ECOSOCC, that means that we have to make those 20 seats count by finding serious, quality Representatives in our communities around the world while adhering to the standard that they must be elected positions.  But how do we do that?

SRDC, in partnership with a number of other Pan-Afrikan organizations in the US, Canada, Central America, the Caribbean, South America, Canada, Afrika and Europe, has developed a plan in which we begin by organizing our communities at the local level.  In the US, that means state-by-state, while in other parts of the Afrikan Diaspora, this may mean organizing province-by-province (as in Canada), subregion-by-subregion (Brazil or Australia) island-by-island (say, in the Caribbean or Oceania) or country-by-country (Central America, South America or Europe).

Each local organization determines an area Facilitator, a Community Council of Elders and two (2) Elected Representatives; that is, they are elected through a process in which the community in that local area is invited to several public forums where they learn about the effort, develop their own set of needs and ideas (a “Pan-Afrikan Agenda”), and nominate and elect people from their own community to take the needs as well as the ideas of that community to the national, and even to the international level.  The Council of Elders is needed to provide their guidance and wisdom, and to make sure that those who are nominated to be Representatives are indeed qualified, serious activists, thinkers and workers and not opportunists or manipulators as happens too often when our collective guard is down.

Once a reasonable number of local organizations are formed in a large country (like the US) or a sub-region (several smaller countries in a common area), a National or Sub-Regional Summit is held to allow local organizations to share information, develop a more consistent organizing strategy and determine who the best Representatives from that sub-region, from among the local Representatives who were elected by their own communities, will be.  Those national and sub-regional Representatives would then meet in a Full Diaspora Summit which would lead to a group of Representatives who take the combined Pan-Afrikan Agenda (the needs, issues and constructive ideas of all the communities in the Afrikan Diaspora) to the African Union in this case, but this model could also be used to develop Representative Councils outside the AU (such as the United Nations, Organization of American States, UNIA-ACL, or an independent global organization such as the Pan African Federalist Movement) if need be.

SRDC is currently in the process of building this model and putting it into practice in the US, while affiliated organizations are doing similar work in Canada, Central America, South America and Europe.  The African Union African Diaspora Sixth Region High Council (AUADSHC) is working to coordinate these regional and sub-regional efforts into a global “quasi-governmental” structure for the Pan Afrikan Diaspora so we can more effectively interact with the African Union from a position of unity and strength.  AU member nations are also pursuing a process whereby similar Representative assemblies are being developed in the Continent, though all of these efforts have proven more time-consuming and difficult than expected.  SRDC’s method for organizing the Afrikan Diaspora has been submitted to the AU since 2007, and the AU’s official assessment of the proposed method has yet to be made; we continue to press the AU to make the promised assessment and help us determine how we can move that process forward according to the AU’s own plan and objectives.  In the meantime, though, SRDC realizes that it cannot wait on the bureaucratic process to unfold before implementing this method.  If necessary, adjustments to that method will be made, but in the meantime, the work to organize the Diaspora must move forward.  As of 2025, SRDC has held fifteen (15) International Summits since the fall of 2007, which have included contingents from several US states, and affiliates from Canada, Central America, Europe, the Middle East, the Caribbean and the Afrikan Continent, as well as members of other Pan-Afrikan organizations.  SRDC’s work continues apace, and they invite you to come and work this model with them.  Contact SRDC by emailing info@srdcinternational.org or cliff@kuumbareport.com if you want to connect with an SRDC organization where you are, or if you want to create one if there isn’t one where you live.

A Part of The Bigger Picture

This portion of the discussion is based entirely on my personal opinions as a Pan-Afrikan activist, and does not necessarily represent the positions of the Sixth Region Diaspora Caucus or other organizations with which I have worked.

The work of creating a Representative-based method and strategy for organizing the Afrikan Diaspora is only a part of the whole picture we all must paint together.  There are clearly other means and avenues we must pursue if Afrikan people are to fully realize the freedom, self-determination, justice and prosperity we all need and deserve.  Businesspeople who have an Afrikan-centered worldview are needed to help us pursue economic development, but not simply Western European development in blackface; rather, it must be culturally and spiritually relevant to Afrikan people, and must be pursued in a way that will not oppress and exploit us or defile the environment of the Continent and planet which we all call home.  We also need our Spiritual Community, which must include the Christian, Muslim and Hebrew elements but also ancient Afrikan spiritual traditions such as the Yoruba, the Akan, the Vodou, the Santeria, the MDW NTR and others, to find a way to come together in a true Spiritual Alliance.  We need our Cultural and Artists Community to help keep us inspired creatively and to remind us of what and who we are working, building and fighting for.  Our Revolutionary and Direct-Action Groups in the Diaspora and in the Continent that are all fighting for the people must find a way to work cooperatively if we are to reach our full potential for Pan-Afrikan Unity.  We need Legal Warriors and Prison-Outreach Advocates who are ready to defend us, our activists and our interests in domestic and international courts.  Our Scientists, Doctors, Agriculturalists, Engineers, Economists and Educators must work together more effectively so that we will have and develop the knowledge base we will need to chart our course of independence from the West as well as the East.  Among our Grassroots Activists and Community, we need those who can reach out to our Elders, our Women and our Youth, as well as build greater strength of will and strength of morality among our Men.  A better understanding of how governments and heads of state function means strong Political Organizers, who are not controlled by capitalist or communist political parties but are truly dedicated to the will of the people, will be required.  We need a strong Pan-Afrikan Media to ensure that our people are properly informed about what is happening in the world around us.  We need those who work in the area of International Pan Afrikanism to connect us effectively to the World Stage.  And we need a strong moral center to help guide it all from an ethical standpoint; I personally think the Ancient Afrikan moral system of Ma’at would be perfect there.

There are so many different areas in which the work needs to be done, but they must all find a way to work cooperatively toward the total goal of Afrikan Unity, Afrikan Self-Determination, Afrikan Prosperity, Afrikan Morality and Afrikan Justice.  At a recent gathering in Baltimore, I noted that the “good news” was that there are many activists on the ground working to lift up our community in these various areas described above, but the “bad news” is that there are many organizers and activists who are working alone.  History tells us that groundbreaking and historic achievements such as Black Wall Street (1920-21), the “Fusion” Government of Wilmington, North Carolina (1897) and the Black Panther Party (1960s-1970s) were ultimately undone not because their ideas were flawed but because they did not have enough allies around them to defend them against military-style attack, right-wing terrorism or media and legal prosecution, respectively.  In other words, they were working alone.

While some may see the missions of the different organizations as a series of roads that cross each other (and thus lead to a spirit of rivalry and competition, since everyone wants their “traffic light” to be green always), I prefer to see our various organizations as occupying spots on the rim of a large circle, with the objective of a free, prosperous and just Afrika in the center of that circle and their missions as lines that extend from the rim of the circle to the center.  The conceptual image thus generated is that of a spoked wheel.  A spoked wheel is strong only when all the spokes are strong, the wheel is straight and even, and it can roll smoothly, allowing us to ride it to victory.  But when spokes are cut, that wheel bends and is unable to roll smoothly, and ultimately will break down and collapse.  The result is exactly what we have been getting: we crash on the side of the Road to History while other committed efforts that have not allowed themselves to be disrupted (politically conservative groups, socialist/communist organizations, LGBTQ advocates, women’s groups, Latino organizations, Asian organizations and White Male organizations) pass us by.

It’s long past time for Afrikan People to work together in a more cooperative and effective way.  In 2009, a “Super-Coalition” was proposed on the international level that pursued a vision of Pan-Afrikan Cooperation based on the principle of “Unity Without Uniformity”.  It was called the Pan Afrikan Diaspora Union (PADU).  PADU is currently inactive, but efforts to move its initial objective of building true, cooperative Pan-Afrikan Unity forward are continuing.  In Maryland, where I live in the United States, we are working to build the Maryland Pan Afrikan Cooperative Coalition (MPACC), based on the conviction that we must learn to truly work cooperatively before announcing anything as grandiose as a Pan-Afrikan United Front.  (Ancestor Amilcar Cabral had warned us all to “tell no lies … claim no easy victories.”)  And there certainly are, or will be, other honest efforts by principled activists to build cooperative coalitions among our organizations.  If you want to find out more about PADU and the Maryland Pan Afrikan Cooperative Coalition, feel free to contact me by email at cliff@kuumbareport.com and I can tell you more about them and how to contact them officially.

The mindset we have too often insisted upon following until now, that of rivalry and competition, has been the equivalent of taking a saw to the spokes of that Wheel of Pan-Afrikan Unity.  This is a large part of why our organizing efforts have failed so many times, and that mindset has frankly got to stop.

Why do we seem to gravitate toward the politics of competition and rivalry instead of the politics of teamwork, mutual respect and Ujima?  Why have we apparently insisted upon following such a failed concept for so long?  I chalk it up to a Western-influenced mindset, an I-Have-The-Answer, My-Way-Or-The-Highway philosophy that is based largely on individual and organizational ego.  We have to move away from ego (Some people say “EGO” stands for “Edging God Out”) and toward coalition-building and the realization that none of us has all the answers.  We also tend to hold on to personal beefs and arguments, based on something that someone did or said in the past, that quite frankly are small compared to what our true enemy has done and continues to do to us.  We have to learn to atone for those misdeeds we have done to others and to forgive others for those things they have done to us that we didn’t appreciate.

We need to finally decide that truly coming together in a spirit of Pan-Afrikan Unity is something we really want to do.  Every time we fail to answer that call is another way in which we disrespect our Ancestors and Elders, we leave our struggling Brothers and Sisters in deprivation and danger, and we betray our children and those unborn.  Let’s start, today, to chart that course toward Pan-Afrikan Unity, Prosperity, Freedom, Truth, Justice and Righteousness.

Peace and Power,
Bro. Cliff
Editor, KUUMBAReport Online
https://kuumbareport.com
cliff@kuumbareport.com