Category Archives: Business and Trade

Ideas on the establishment, running, linking and coordination of businesses in the African and African Diaspora community, including their interaction with the overall community.

The Fifth State of the Black World Conference in Baltimore, Maryland

The Institute of the Black World (IBW) hosted the Fifth State of the Black World Conference (SOBWCV) at the Baltimore Convention Center from April 19-23, 2023.
The theme for the Conference was “Global Africans Rising: Empowerment, Reparations and Healing”. As the IBW Web site (https://ibw21.org/sobwcv/) states, “Convened by the Institute of the Black World 21st Century, the State of the Black World Conference is an international gathering of people of African descent to assess the condition of Black people in the U.S. and globally with working sessions around key issues.”

The following details are from the Web site of the State of the Black World Conference V, https://ibw21.org/sobwcv/.

Dr. Ron Daniels.

SOBWC-V 2023 Goals, from the Web site, were as follows:

  • Reassessing the Impact and Implications of the historic 2022 Mid-Term Election on the State of Black America and the Pan African world.
  • Expanding the Multifaceted U.S. and Global Reparations Movements to empower and heal Black families, communities and nations.
  • Advancing strategies and models to effectively address issues of vital concern to Black America and the Pan African world, e.g., the War on Drugs, mass incarceration, gun violence and fratricide, gentrification, environmental justice, climate change, safe, clean and accessible water.
  • Advancing strategies and models for socially responsible, human-centered, democratic and sustainable entrepreneurial business/economic development in Black communities in the U.S. and the Pan African World.
  • Mobilizing/organizing the Global Black Diaspora to engage Africa to foster the development of interdependent, self-reliant, business/economic, social and cultural enterprises, institutions and initiatives.
  • Promoting a consciousness and commitment to Black self-support, self-reliance and self-determination to consolidate, expand and empower Black organizations, agencies and institutions for the survival and development of Black families, communities and nations.
  • Promoting cross-generational dialogue and engagement to advance strategies and models to empower and heal Black families, communities and nations
    Programmatic Features were highlighted on the first day of the Conference.
  • Pan African Institute: The State of Democracy and Development in Africa, the Caribbean Central and South America
  • National/International Town Hall Meetings: The State of Black America and the Pan African World, The State of the Global Reparations Movement

The Honorable Dickon Mitchell, Prime Minister of Grenada, made a video tribute to the late Grenadian leader Maurice Bishop.

Two-hour Issue Area Plenary and Working Sessions were held on Thursday, April 20 and Friday, April 21, which focused on the following issues, each of which was explored in concurrently-running sessions all day Saturday, April 22:

  • Environmental Justice, Climate Change and Water as A Human Right (which highlighted the poisoned water in Flint, Michigan and Jackson, Mississippi, the struggle of the Afrikan-American population of Sandbranch, Texas and issues of rural environmental racism)
  • Displacing Black People and Black Culture: Gentrification as a State of Emergency in Black America (which cited examples from Texas, California and other urban and rural areas as examples of gentrification and Black land loss)
  • Socially Responsible Black Business/Economic Development
  • Combating Gun Violence and Murders/Fratricide in Black Communities: A Public Health Crisis
  • Reimagining Public Safety and Law Enforcement (this session also dealt with police brutality and misconduct)
  • Making Black Lives Matter
  • Building the U.S. and Global Reparations Movements

Participants were asked to sign up for one of the above Issue Sessions so they could participate in the “deep dive” on Saturday. The Thursday and Friday sessions served as an “introduction” to the specific issue and to allow all attendees to get a feel for all of the issues.

Another important focus group that met on Saturday was a special panel dealing with the struggle of the people of Haiti (or “Ayiti” as some activists and scholars cite as the proper name).

Sis. Kim Poole of the Teaching Artist Institute (TAI) addresses the audience.

A side-event to the Conference was the Hip Hop Caucus, moderated by Sis. Kim Poole and Bro. Haki Ammi of the Teaching Artist Institute (TAI), which explored The Role of Hip Hop in the Black Freedom Struggle as part of the observance of the 50th anniversary of Hip Hop. A special panel during the Hip Hop Caucus featured international Pan-Afrikanist Dr. Barryl Biekman from the African Union African Diaspora Sixth Region Facilitators Working Group and Tiye International in The Netherlands, as well as former Ugandan Member of Parliament and former presidential candidate Bro. Robert Kyagulanyi Ssentamu, more famously known as Afrikan musician Bobi Wine.

Reparations activist Kamm Howard and attorney Nkechi Taifa.

Special guest speakers included, but were not limited to, the following:

  • Honorable Dickon Mitchell, Prime Minister of the Republic of Grenada (by video from Grenada)
  • Honorable P.J. Patterson, former Prime Minister of Jamaica
  • Dr. Julius Garvey, son of The Honorable Marcus Mosiah Garvey, serving as the Honorary Master of Ceremonies and Chairman of the Conference
  • Marc Morial, former mayor of New Orleans and current President of the National Urban League
  • Professor Hilary Beckles, considered the world’s foremost scholar and champion for Reparations
  • David Comissiong, Ambassador to the Caribbean Economic Community (CARICOM)
  • Dr. Leonard Jeffries, venerable Pan-Afrikanist, historian, activist and scholar
  • Dr. Julianne Malveaux, longtime author, teacher and media political commentator
  • Mel Foote, Chairman of the Constituency For Africa (CFA)
  • Robert Kyagulanyi Ssentamu, also known as Bobi Wine, musician, former Member of Parliament and former presidential candidate in Uganda
  • Rev. Lennox Yearwood, co-coordinator of the Hip Hop Caucus
  • Ronald Hampton, veteran law enforcement officer and longtime critic of police misconduct
  • Kareem Aziz, local educator and IBW Board Member
  • Dr. George Fraser, veteran business person, author of Success Runs In Our Race, Mission Unstoppable and other important books
  • Dr. Claire Nelson, founder and president of the Institute of Caribbean Studies
  • Makani Themba, Chief Strategist at Higher Ground Change Strategies based in Jackson, Mississippi
  • LaTosha Brown co-founder of Black Voters Matter
  • Tarana Burke, civil rights activist who started the Me Too Movement
  • Mirelle Fanon Mendes France, daughter of iconic Pan-Afrikanist Dr. Frantz Fanon
  • Don Rojas, Vice President of IBW and Media Director
  • Milton Allimadi, author and columnist
  • Kim Poole, founder of Teaching Artist Institute (TAI)
  • Haki Ammi, president of Teaching Artist Institute (TAI)
  • Maryland State Senator Jill P. Carter
  • Kobi Little, President, Baltimore NAACP
  • Bill Fletcher
  • Attorney Nkechi Taifa
  • Kamm Howard, longtime Reparations activist
  • Emira Woods
  • Dr. James Early

The Young Leaders Panel.

Special Sessions included the following:

  • Global Black Leadership Summit Breakfast
  • Global Black Women’s Leadership Summit Breakfast
  • Global Black Mayors and Elected Officials Roundtable Breakfast
  • Crisis in Haiti: The First Black Republic
  • The Black World Media Network
  • Opening and Closing Ndaba Plenary Sessions, including Cultural/Spiritual Rituals, Welcome, Greetings and Solidarity Statements and Keynote Presentations
  • Legacy Award and Cultural Extravaganza, including Presidential Legacy and Pan African Service Awards to Outstanding Leaders from the Global Black
  • Community and Cultural Presentations
  • African Market Place where a variety of vendors presented cultural and informational items for sale, featuring an exquisite variety of Black arts, crafts, apparel and other products, Exhibits by African and Caribbean Travel and Tourism Bureaus, Informational Booths by Civil Rights, Social and Civic Organizations, and Informational Booths by Conference Sponsors

CARICOM Ambassador David Commissiong.

There are several articles on the Web site of the Institute of the Black World (IBW) about the Conference, including:

SOBWCV concludes with calls for stronger global Black connections by Dr. Julius Garvey and Dr. Ron Daniels
https://ibw21.org/news/press-release/sobwcv-concludes-with-calls-for-stronger-global-black-connections/

Vantage Point: Report Back From State of the Black World Conference V
https://ibw21.org/video-audio/vp-radio-posts/042423-vantage-point-dr-ron-daniels-sobwcv/

Dynamic New Generation Speak on Final Day of the State of the Black World Conference V in Baltimore, By Don Rojas
https://ibw21.org/news/initiative-posts/sobwc-posts/dynamic-new-generation-speak-on-final-day-of-sobwcv/

Post SOBWCV message from Dr. Ron Daniels
https://ibw21.org/news/post-sobwcv-message-from-dr-ron-daniels/

More reports from the Conference are expected to be added to the IBW Web site in the coming days and weeks.

Dr. Barryl Biekman, speaking on the Reparations Panel.

Our Personal Impressions of the State of the Black World Conference V

We would like to congratulate the Institute of the Black World for holding the Fifth State of the Black World Conference (SOBWCV). I thoroughly enjoyed my time at the Conference, from learning at the plenaries and breakout sessions to interacting with the vendors, presenters and other attendees. A conference of this scope is exceedingly difficult to pull off successfully, and in my opinion this was, on the whole, a successful one.

Most conferences I have attended, including some conferences of organizations I belong to, constantly must deal with running the risk of devolving into “talk shops” where invited speakers and dignitaries spend more time rehashing the issues we face ad nauseam or bragging repeatedly about their plans and their seminal role in meeting these issues and helping “save the Black Race” than figuring out specifically what we will do about them and how we will make the “saving of the Black Race” a reality in the real world. Many conferences never get past the “whereas” part of the discussion (where the problem is re-stated) to reach the “now therefore” part where the solutions and responses are developed, presented to the public and implemented for all to see. This conference strove to be different, and I appreciate that. The “deep-dive” breakout sessions that were the main feature of the Saturday activities showed IBW’s commitment to “drill down” on these issues to work on finding those solutions, and to enlist the ideas of conference attendees to help bring these solutions out. The two-hour sessions on Thursday and Friday allowed all of the conference attendees to get a “snap-shot” of what all of the breakout sessions were going to concentrate on during the Saturday “deep-dive” sessions.
That being said, there were some areas where I personally felt the Conference did miss opportunities to go even further in the development and implementation of those solutions. I will list them here:

  • There was not sufficient time in the Sunday open session, where the different “deep-dive” breakout groups were to make their reports to the general body, for those groups to present truly comprehensive (though summarized) reports that could have helped produce a Conference Declaration. I believe the breakout groups could have benefited from more time to present their points more fully. I am aware that the written summaries from these groups are going to be made available on the IBW Web site, but not everyone will go to the Web site to read those reports, and the conference attendees would have benefited from seeing and hearing all of the different breakout groups’ ideas for follow-up discussed in greater detail in open public session.

    Pan-Afrikan Author and analyst Milton Allimadi.

  • It was often noted in many of the breakout sessions that media exposure was important, and that we could not depend on the current “mainstream” corporate media to tell the world (or even just the Black World) about injustices such as Sandbranch, Texas, or the poisoning of the air in rural areas of North Carolina due to the apparently unregulated hog farming industry, or even honestly report on the poisoned water in Jackson, Mississippi and Flint, Michigan. It was clear to us that we needed to better mobilize our own Black Media to ensure that at least our community was made aware of the issues we face with regard to environmental racism and lack of access to drinkable water. Thus, a Saturday “deep-dive” breakout session on Building a Black Media Cooperative would have been most helpful, or even a mandate to end the conference that such a Cooperative be established. The brief media panel on Friday was important but there needed to be a focused “deep dive” similar to the other sessions on Saturday. IBW does have its own media outlet in the Black World Media Network, but the fact is that this multi-faceted issue is much larger than any one Black media organization, and a true Black Media Cooperative needs to be built that would include (but not be dominated by) Black World Media, Black Agenda Report, The National Black Unity News (who had a vendor’s table at the conference), Black-run Internet radio stations and every serious activist or organizer with a Web site (such as https://kuumbareport.com), a Facebook page, a Twitter feed, an Instagram account, a mic and a mouth, a YouTube channel or a Tik Tok, or who knows anyone connected to Black Media in any way, shape or form. Such a cooperative could establish standards of journalistic integrity, behavior, rigor and truth in research and reporting (to combat misinformation, baseless conspiracy-theories and rumor-mongering), and develop a means by which important stories can be documented, shared and propagated to all members of the cooperative and attract more members.

    Baltimore City NAACP Director Kobi Little.

  • Another comment that was made in many of these breakout sessions was the need for us to get together with other Pan-Afrikan/Black organizations, including those whose specific missions are different from ours. The Environmental group had several points of commonality with the Gentrification and Land Loss group, for example, since environmental racism is often a tactic used to force us to abandon our communities so corporations can enter them and perform their resource-extraction or land-expropriation missions relatively undisturbed. The Black Farmers in North Carolina (the hog farming capital of the world) and Georgia must grapple with environmental destruction (the poisoning of their ground, water and air by the industrial hog farmers) as well as the taking of their land by unscrupulous lawyers, mendacious politicians, corrupt Administration officials and racist financiers who impose usurious loans on them or deny them financing altogether. They all continue to suffer in part because they are not connected to effective legal counsel, political activists, grassroots organizers, business opportunities or media outlets who can make their struggle more visible to the public. Certainly, other breakout groups at some point made mention of the need to come together with the other groups to formulate a comprehensive, cooperative plan for Black People (though they probably didn’t say it quite that way). Thus, there needed to be a “deep dive” breakout session on Building Coalitions. It’s clear that most of our various organizers and activists are either not incentivized to build coalitions with each other or that they simply lack the knowledge and skill to pull it off. In either case, an attitude adjustment is required across the board, and a conference such as this one was an opportunity to offer just such an attitude adjustment. History is replete with examples of efforts that have failed, some disastrously, such as Tulsa, Oklahoma’s Black Wall Street in 1921, the progressive “Fusion” government in Wilmington, North Carolina in 1898, the Black Panther Party in the late 1960s-1970s and more. These efforts did not fail because they “didn’t work” as some critics have insisted. They failed because they were working alone. An economic enclave like Black Wall Street had no chance against a military-style attack led by the police. A political organization like Wilmington’s “Fusion” government could not withstand the wanton, merciless violence of right-wing White vigilante terrorism that had the governor of North Carolina himself afraid to ride a train that ran through the area. And the Black Panthers were unable to weather a coordinated assault that featured infiltration by FBI COINTELPRO agents-provocateur, military-style police assaults, media demonization and simultaneous prosecution of Panther leadership from coast to coast. The fact is, when you are surrounded on all sides, you cannot afford to armor yourself and shoot back in only one direction. If we are to succeed as a people in our struggle, we will have to actually learn from the past (instead of just acting like we have), bring together a variety of Pan-Afrikan activists and organizers from diverse organizations (artists, spiritual leaders, grassroots activists, educators, media, lawyers, political activists, scientists, businesses, international organizers, prison activists, Elders, women, men, youth, revolutionary activists and more) and persistently push them to overcome their philosophical differences about how to unify us so they can learn to first be in the same room without fighting and then start working on ways to combine their efforts into an overarching, comprehensive, cooperative strategy to move all of us forward based on the time-honored principle of Unity Without Uniformity. This will require us to loosen up some of our own ideological rigidity, put away our egos, let go of our sense of organizational entitlement and ownership of The Struggle, resolve our personal beefs and start having frank, honest, sincere and respectful conversations with each other. (The need to find ways to confront what differences we do have was exemplified by an argument between the Pan-Afrikan activist Irritated Genie and the Black Lives Matter panel that was sparked by an ill-advised libation that featured no Black men but began to move to other issues. To me, the issues of fighting homophobia at the same time that we fight against the emasculation and effeminization of Black men and the encroachment of Western cultural norms into Afrika were brought into stark focus, and the inability to discuss these issues without our emotions getting the better of us is something we must deal with if we are to move forward together.) We need to be able to reconcile our differences, whatever they may be, and realize those ways in which we are engaged against the same intractable White Supremacist enemy. We must also overcome this I-Have-The-Answer, Black-People-Must-Unify-Under-My-Leadership attitude that too many of us hold (even if we don’t admit it) and that keeps us from coming together and truly unifying. This is the objective of the Maryland Pan Afrikan Cooperative Coalition (MPACC, https://kuumbareport.com/spokes-of-the-wheel/maryland-pan-african-cooperative-coalition-mpacc/), which seeks to achieve just that mission by intentionally bringing different Pan-Afrikan organizations together. We are working to build a Pan Afrikan Cooperative Coalition in Maryland, and perhaps inspire similar efforts elsewhere and even on a global scale, by proposing an organizational structure that I call “Spokes of the Wheel”, which, as it turns out, gets its inspiration from Ancestor Mary McLeod Bethune’s National Council of Negro Women, which organized itself in a “spoked-wheel” structure back in 1935. My hope is that such a Cooperative Coalition could not only serve the interests of the organizations I belong to (Pan African Federalist Movement, https://pafmuas.org or https://www.pafm-northamerica.org; and Sixth Region Diaspora Caucus, https://srdcinternational.org), but also help to build a means by which the different Pan-Afrikan and pro-Black organizations in Maryland can start to make better progress in their own missions by acting interdependently as opposed to just independently. If we are going to call for unity, then we must do what we can to bring that unity about. If we are going to urge our activists to come together, we must explore and create the atmosphere and the means by which they can do that, often in spite of themselves.

The Democracy in the Black World Panel.

Those are my suggestions for moving forward to make the State of the Black World Conferences, as well as any Pan-Afrikan conference that seeks to help Afrikan People make progress in our common global struggle, more impactful in the future. I wish to reiterate that I found the Fifth State of the Black World Conference to be a rewarding experience. The opportunity to meet with local comrades and allies, reconnect with friends from the Struggle I had not seen in some time, make new friends through our roles in this shared struggle and interact with such luminaries as Dr. Julius Garvey, Attorneys Mama Efia Nwangaza and Mama Nkechi Taifa, Dr. Leonard Jeffries, Kamm Howard and Mama Iyafin Amiebelle Olatunji (wife of the late, great Afrikan drummer Babatunde Olatunji), among other committed Pan-Afrikan activists and organizers, was a special treat. My comments and suggestions are in no way intended to detract from my expression of enjoyment of the Conference or my belief that this was an important and worthwhile effort. It is my hope that my personal comments will be taken in the spirit in which they are given, and that future conferences by IBW and other Pan-Afrikan/Black organizations will continue to make strides toward that point at which the Pan-Afrikan struggle for truth, justice and righteousness can take flight and bring victory within our grasp at last.

Africa’s “Green Revolution” in the Hair & Beauty Industry on Africa 500, Wednesday, February 15, 2023

The Wednesday, February 15, 2023 edition of Africa 500 features African Women Entrepreneurs who are helping to drive the Continent’s “Green Revolution”. Show hosts Sis. Tomiko and Bro. Ty welcome African Women “agripreneurs” Lindiwe Ntombikazulu Somo, Kudirat “Ayo” Ayomide Tijani and Joyce Apoasaan Jambeidu.

Lindiwe Ntombikazulu Magubane Somo

Lindiwe Ntombikazulu Magubane Somo lives in South Africa. She is the founder and CEO of Ntombi and Rano Trading, which is an umbrella which holds few other companies beneath it. Three Sister’s Poultry deals in farming, poultry and vegetables. She has Diploma in Marketing Management at Stanford College, Advanced Diploma in Agriculture, Certificate in Supply Chain Management with Cape Peninsula University, Certificate with Nosa in Health and Safety Management, Advanced Diploma in Media Studies from an Institute in Ireland.

In the year 2021 she was nominated amongst 1500 applicants around Africa as a leader for the program called Ignite by Guzakuza in Ghana partnered with London Academy in the UK. Lindiwe is also a Woman in Agriculture Award Nominee for the year 2022. Lindz Nature’s Lick manufactures organic skin care products and also deals in clothing.

 

Kudirat Ayomide Tijani aka Ayo

Kudirat Ayomide Tijani aka Ayo lives in Kwara State in Nigeria but was born in Lagos. She graduated in Agricultural Economics from Obafemi Awolowo University Osun state.

After school, she managed an Organic farm to gain experience in the real world. During her stay, she learned the importance of Organic Agriculture and its impact on the world. Organic Agriculture in Nigeria is just gaining ground and to fast-track its growth it’s important to leverage technology in order to make it attractive to the youth. Ayo is an evangelist when it comes to organic Agriculture because of its effect on the well-being of humans. If food is going to be medicine for mankind then it must be healthy.

She is a Social Media Manager & Marketer, and Creative Director of Cityoftayhairhub a hair care brand. City Of Tayhairhub is a hair care brand totally focused on helping Men and Women of the curly & kinky hair type embrace their curl patterns through informational materials and effective organic hair care products thus making them confident through their hair and passing the baton to the incoming generation. Her products can be found at IG @cityoftayhairhub

Joyce Apoasaan Jambeidu

Joyce Apoasaan Jambeidu is Ghanaian from Garu in the Upper East Region. Her dream is to inspire women to make an impact in their chosen fields, to reduce poverty among women through creation of decent jobs.

She has a BA in Integrated Development Studies, an MBA in Project Management and awaiting her thesis Defense for Mphil in Community Health and Development. She is also pursuing a PHD in Project Management with Taxila American University. Joyce currently works as a Governance Lead with USAID RING II, before joining RING II she worked with USAID Advancing Nutrition as an Early Childhood Development Specialist, she has also worked with Lively Minds Project, ActionAid – Global Platforms, USAID SPRING – Ghana and World Vision Ghana.

Joyce is the Founder of Wellam’s Shea Investment a shea-based company based in Garu in the Upper East in Ghana. Wellam’s Shea in collaboration with women groups produces quality food grade shea butter and shea-based skin care and hair care products which are sold in Ghana and worldwide. As a Development worker, she had the privilege to work in many rural communities with women groups with the aim to reduce malnutrition among children and women in reproductive age. She is also the Executive Director of Tieltaab Ghana – an NGO operating in the area of Food and Nutrition Security, Early Childhood Development, Gender and Social Inclusion, WASH and Environmental Protection. Tieltaab Ghana operates The Empowered Woman Hub with the aim to ignite and inspire women to make an impact in society through various initiatives.

Wellam’s Shea was formed to economically empower girls, women and entire communities which will contribute to improved nutritional status of children under 5 and women of reproductive age through decent job creation in the shea value chain. Her hair and beauty products can be found at IG @wellamshea and FB Wellam’s Shea

Listen to the February 15, 2023 show here:

Africa 500 broadcasts every Wednesday at 3:00 PM (Eastern Time, United States) on HANDRadio (https://handradio.org). After the Wednesday broadcast, the audio of the show can be listened to in an updated version of this post and on the Audio-Visual Media Pages of KUUMBAReport Online (https://kuumbareport.com), KUUMBAEvents (https://kuumbaevents.com) and the Sixth Region Diaspora Caucus (https://srdcinternational.org).

POSTPONED: Pan African Global Trade and Investment Conference

The Pan African Global Trade and Investment Conference, which had been announced on this Web site for January 14-16, 2022, has been postponed.

The Conference convener and Executive Director of the Africa-USA Chamber of Commerce & Industry, Mr. Al Washington, has issued the following statement:

An Update from us on COVID-19 Postponement

It is with considerable disappointment that the 10th Pan African Global Trade and Investment Conference has made the difficult decision to postpone our forthcoming conference that was to be held in Atlanta, Ga. January 14-15, 2022 until the Spring 2022.

This decision has been reached to Protect the Public’s Health as Omicron COVID-19 Variant surges in Atlanta and the State of Georgia. According to the CDC, Fulton and DeKalb counties remain areas of high transmission for the COVID-19 virus. In Fulton County alone, the seven-day average of COVID-19 cases has surged to 1430 from the previous seven-day average of 407—the highest rate of change since the beginning of the pandemic.

Our conference website panafricanglobaltradeconference.com is currently available to provide ongoing information about the conference as it is being rescheduled and developed.

Sincerely,
Al Washington
Conference Coordinator
panafricanglobaltradeconference.com
626.200.5985

Check out the page https://panafricanglobaltradeconference.com for more information, or contact Mr. Al Washington, Executive Director of the Africa-USA Chamber of Commerce & Industry and the Conference Organizer, at 626.200.5985, or by email at alwashington@africa-usa.org.

Africa400 Goes on Hiatus; Check Out Classic Shows on Our Media Page

Africa400, the weekly Pan-Afrikan radio show hosted by Mama Tomiko and Baba Ty, with Special Episodes guest-hosted by Grandmother Walks On Water (“Mothership”) and Baba Francois Ndengwe (“Fresh News From Africa”), is taking a break from broadcasting as they make plans for the coming year.

Africa400 has discussed issues of children’s education (with a variety of guests including Dr. Jawanza Kunjufu), women’s issues, political prisoners (especially Imam Jamil Al-Amin), Afrikan-centered business ventures, Afrikan and Afrikan-American history (significantly, with historian Dr. Gerald Horne), culture, music (most notably highlighting pioneering jazz bagpiper Ancestor Rufus Harley and singer-rapper-songwriter Sis. Maimouna Youssef), health and spirituality (with health and spiritual experts such as Mama Ayo Handy-Kendi), among other compelling topics and guests.

While we will not have live shows for the immediate future, we are certain our readers have not had the opportunity to listen to all the shows of Africa400.  To remedy that problem, you are invited to visit our Media Page, which features every Africa400 episode from the show’s inception on traditional radio (WFBR in Baltimore) and even the show’s predecessor that was briefly broadcast under the Little Africa title.  All of these shows are available, with written introductions to the shows’ topics and guests, on our Media Page.

And keep visiting this site for updates on when Africa400 will resume live broadcasts.

Constituency For Africa (CFA) Ronald H. Brown Africa Affairs Series September 12-19, 2020

Every year for at least the last decade or more, Mr. Mel Foote, founder and CEO of the Constituency For Africa (CFA) has held the Ronald H. Brown African Affairs Series in Washington, DC.  The Series features several panel discussions and presentations including a combination of Afrikan dignitaries, Afrikan and US political figures, scholars, community activists, and members of the general public.
I’ve seen Mr. Foote at many of the Africa Policy Forum events that have been held over the years by Congress Member Karen Bass (D-California), who is also the current leader of the Congressional Black Caucus (CBC).  Mr. Foote has been engaged in lobbying US government officials and international businesses to take a more Afrika-friendly approach to their activities for several decades, choosing to do much of his work “on the inside” to influence policy and practice.  Mr. Foote has always approached discussions with Pan-Afrikan activists and fellow concerned Afrikan Diasporans in a positive and cordial manner, and he has often been receptive to a variety of viewpoints regarding the liberation and uplift of Afrikan people.  Though he has interacted with more political and corporate types than many activists would care to, he has been a committed, hard-working advocate for Afrikan people for the decades I have known of him and his work.

A Virtual Series for 2020

Unlike the usual setting for this Series, when panel discussions and presentations were held in hotel ballrooms or Congressional auditoriums where activists, businesspeople and government officials have often rubbed shoulders, this year the CoVID-19 Pandemic has forced them, like many of us, to go virtual“.  The 2020 Ronald H. Brown African Affairs Series will be held on September 12-19 on a virtual platform, centered on a variety of locations. 

The general public is invited, of course, to attend.  Different Pan-Afrikan organizations might want to make a plan to contact Mr. Foote as well to participate and share their perspectives on certain of the issues explored by the panels. This, of course, is up to the leadership of these organizations to determine your interest in, or extent of, participation.

To contact the Constituency For Africa, write to them at:

2001 L Street NW, 5th Floor
Washington, DC 20036

or phone them at (202) 255-8893,

or email them at info@cfa-network.org.

Constituency For Africa’s Web site is http://www.cfa-network.org/.

Below is the Draft Program for the Series, with descriptions of the various panel discussions:

2020 Ronald H. Brown African Affairs Series
September 12 – 19, 2020

“Advocating for Africa in the Mist of the Pandemic”
Saturday, September 12, 3 pm to 5 pm (Virtual): 

As part of the second annual “Day of Resilience” in Cambridge, Maryland, CFA will partner with local partners to organize the “Harriet Tubman Town Meeting on Africa”.  The Day of Resilience will feature the unveiling of a new sculpture of the great abolitionist Harriet Tubman, who of course, was from Cambridge.  The Ambassador of Rwanda has been invited to keynote the Harriet Tubman Town Meeting, and Dr. Julius Garvey, the Foreign Minister of Togo, the Honorable Robert Dussey, Izmira Aitch, Legislative Assistant to Congresswoman Gwen Moore (D-Wis.), are amongst the speakers.

In addition, from 2 pm to 2:45 pm, CFA will organize a meeting for the young leaders in Cambridge, the “Youth Ambassadors”, to follow-up on a similar meeting last year, and the visit to Washington in February by a 30 person youth delegation, that were taken to the embassies of Mali, Ghana and Rwanda for briefings.

 

Tuesday, September 15, 10 am to noon (Virtual):

CFA in partnership with the African Diaspora in Canada, will organize the “U.S. – Canada African Diaspora Partnership Forum”, to discuss issues of cooperation, partnership and unity!  The theme for this forum is, “Canada-US Diaspora:  Building an Operational Strategy for Unity”.  This meeting will be a follow-up to an initial forum that was held on July 14th, with Dr. Julius Garvey as the keynote speaker, with special remarks from the Foreign Minister of Togo, the Honorable Robert Dussey. 

The keynote speaker for this September 15th forum will be the Honorable Vera Songwe, the Executive Secretary for the United Nations Economic Commission for Africa, based in Addis Abeba.  Ms. Songwe will be introduced by the Hon. Rosa Whitaker, the President of the Whitaker Group, based in Accra, Ghana and Washington.  The forum will also feature the acclaimed scholar, Dr. Molefi Kete Asante, Professor and Chair, of the Department of Africology at Temple University in Philadelphia, and the Co-Founder of the Afrocentricity International.

 

Tuesday, September 15, 6 pm to 8 pm (Virtual)
“The Role of African-Americans in the Post Pandemic Peace Corps”:

As was the case with all other U.S. government agencies, the Peace Corps was brought to a screeching halt in March 2020, as a result of the rapidly spreading Coronavirus pandemic!  Over 7,000 US Peace Corps Volunteers from around the world, were uprooted from their sites and evacuated back to the United States!  This also coincided with the murder of George Floyd in Minneapolis, which was seen around the world via news reports and social media, and the subsequent “Black Lives Matter” massive protest that have taken place across the United States and around the world!

The Peace Corps which was founded by President John F. Kennedy sixty years ago, sends young Americans to developing countries to promote good will and to address development challenges.  Lots of questions have been raised over the years about the Peace Corps, and its mission and programs.  As an outgrowth of the Black Lives Matter protest, questions have also been raised about issues of racism and diversity in the Peace Corps as well as in other U.S. government agencies!

CFA is organizing a panel discussion featuring African-Americans who served in the Peace Corps, to discuss ideas for increasing the recruitment of African-Americans and other minorities into the Peace Corps, and to offer perspectives and recommendations for policy changes, as Peace Corps re-emerges after the COVID-19 pandemic abates.

Congresswoman Karen D. Bass (D-CA), who is the Chair of the Congressional Black Caucus, and the Chair of the House Sub-committee on Africa and Global Health, has been invited to provide remarks.  Also invited to speak is Dr. Darlene Grant, who has been recently hired by the Peace Corps as the Senior Advisor to the President, to assist with strategic planning and to address issues of diversity in the organization.

 

Wednesday, September 16, 10 am to noon (Virtual):
Trade and Investment: “Beyond the Year of Return:  Opportunities for Wealth Expansion for African-Americans and the Diaspora in Africa”

The President of Namibia, H.E. Hage Geingob, has been invited to keynote this important forum, aimed at encouraging African-Americans and others in the Diaspora to invest and to do business in Africa.  The panel for this discussion will be comprised of African-Americans who are currently living and doing business in Africa.

 

Thursday, September 17, 10 am to noon (Virtual):
“Update on the Africa Response to the Challenges of COVID-19 in Africa”

CFA in partnership with Harvard University and Johns Hopkins University, are organizing this panel, which is a follow-up to a major forum that CFA and Harvard organized on July 14th, to introduce the Africa CDC and to discuss how Africa is preparing to respond to COVID-19.  The principal speaker for this forum will be Dr. John Nkengasong, the Director of the Africa CDC, who will update on the response in Africa, in view that the continent has now recorded its 1 millionth case!

 

Thursday, September 17, 7 pm to 9 pm (Virtual):
“CFA African Diaspora Media Caucus”:

CFA will partner with African-American and African-Canadian journalists and media experts, to organize a leadership caucus aimed at increasing partnership and dialogue, in a effort to improve coverage of stories in Africa and in the African world!  This meeting is a closed-door session by invitation only.

 

Friday, September 18, 2 pm – 4 pm (Virtual):
African American Unity Caucus (AAUC) Forum:  “African-Americans and Diaspora Recommendations for the Next Administration on Africa and Diaspora Affairs”

CFA will convene a closed-door meeting of leading African-American and Diaspora experts, to propose recommendations for the next administration on issues of Africa and the Diaspora.  This meeting will be limited to 40 participants, to allow for maximum dialogue.  CFA will share the recommendations coming from this meeting with the next administration following the elections.

 

Saturday, September 19, 2 pm – 5 pm (Virtual):
“CFA Town Meeting on Africa in Philadelphia”

CFA is partnering with the Mayor’s Commission on Africa and the Caribbean Immigrant Affairs, the African and Caribbean Business Council of Greater Philadelphia, and the African American Museum in Philadelphia, to organize a “Town Meeting on Africa”, focused on issues of trade and investment, the response to COVID-19 in Africa, and African Diaspora organizing matters.  The forum will especially focus on positioning today’s youth to assume leadership roles on U.S. – Africa relations.  The forum will feature high level guests from Africa and across the United States.