This book of 100 essays written over the last three post-apartheid decades provides profiles of pan-African figures, mostly from Africa and its diaspora.
‘This is a powerful, precise, passionate, and painful anthology that will stand the test of time for its truthfulness. It is a work that erupts like a monument to the sacrifice and heroism of that humanity which flows through black civilization like the never-ending Nile in the night.'
- - Sir Hilary Beckles, Vice-Chancellor, University of the West Indies
‘With his quintessentially Pan-African worldview, Adekeye Adebajo has deftly rendered the kaleidoscopic landscape of African achievement. It is not without crippling threats and disappointing reversals. But resistance to tyrants and female empowerment make visible the resilience to bounce back.’
- - Professor Pearl T. Robinson, Tufts University, Massachusetts
‘Immensely fluent, readable, and accessible. Adekeye Adebajo’s scholarship is impeccable, his reading of multiple sources is evident, and the historical perspective he provides is essential for an analysis of the contemporary era. This book is unique in its scope and broad canvas. I do not know of a collection of profiles that is similarly expansive.’
- - Maureen Isaacson, Former books editor, the Sunday Independent, South Africa
Acknowledgments
Foreword
Introduction
I. HISTORICAL FIGURES
Cecil Rhodes’s Crumbling Legacy
Was Mahatma Gandhi a Racist?
Revisiting Woodrow Wilson’s Liberal Legacy
II.POLITICAL FIGURES
Kwame Nkrumah: Africa’s Philosopher-King
Albert Luthuli: The Nobel Black Moses
Nelson Mandela: Pan-African Prophet
Thabo Mbeki: Africa’s New Philosopher-King
Thabo Mbeki: Remembering the Renaissance Man
Thabo Mbeki’s Xenophobia Denialism
Thabo Mbeki and Nelson Mandela: The Policy Wonk and the Patriarch
Thabo Mbeki and Jacob Zuma: The Lion and the Jewel
Kenneth Kaunda: Farewell to Zambia’s Founding Father
The Fall of Robert Mugabe
F.W. de Klerk: A Nobel without Honour?
Olusegun Obasanjo: The Emperor’s New Clothes
Jerry Rawlings: The Death and Deification of ‘Junior Jesus’
Ellen Johnson Sirleaf: The Iron Lady of Liberia
Meles Zenawi: Philosopher-King or Pragmatic Autocrat?
Abiy Ahmed: Ethiopia’s Nobel Intellectual Soldier
Mobutu Sese Seko: The Sick Man of Africa
Idi Amin: The Making of a Warrior God
Daniel arap Moi: A Ruthless Dictator
Paul Kagame and Wole Soyinka: The President and the Playwright
Qaddafi’s Monarchical Delusions
Obama, Clinton, and Africa
Obama’s Six Deadly Sins
Obama, Gandhi, and Egypt
Obama’s Africa Legacy
Tweedledee and Tweedledum: Donald Trump and Boris Johnson
Trump’s African ‘Shithole’ is Commonplace in America
Margaret Thatcher’s Black Mischief
The Trial of Tony Blair
The Strange Reappearance of Nicolas Sarkozy
Madeleine Albright: Remembering the First Female American Secretary of State
Colin Powell: The Reluctant Jamaican-American Warrior
III. TECHNOCRATS
Boutros-Ghali’s Huge Contribution to Egypt and the World
Boutros Boutros-Ghali: Afro-Arab Prophet, Pharaoh, and Pope
Kofi Annan: African Prophet or American Poodle?
Adebayo Adedeji: Farewell to Africa’s Cassandra
Adebayo Adedeji and Jean Monnet: The Fathers of African and European Integration
Raúl Prebisch and the Building of Latin America
Ibrahim Gambari: The Aristocratic Scholar-Diplomat
Lakhdar Brahimi: An Algerian Troubleshooter
Augustine Mahiga: A Tanzanian Peacemaker
Margaret Vogt: Africa Loses an Unflagging Peacemaker
Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala: Nigeria’s Iron Lady
Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala: A Super-Technocrat in Geneva
Nkosazana Dlamini-Zuma: The Alchemist
Naledi Pandor: South Africa’s New Diplomatic Troubleshooter
Mamphela Ramphele: Defender of the Status Quo at UCT
Eloho Otobo: Farewell to a Pan-African Peacebuilder
IV. ACTIVISTS
Remembering Martin Luther King Jr
John Lewis: The Last of the Mohicans
Wangari Maathai: Kenya’s Earth Mother
A Wreath for Saro-Wiwa
Denis Mukwege: Ennobling ‘Doctor Miracle’
Ruth First’s Pan-African Martyrdom
Mahlangu’s Moving Martyrdom
Kaye Whiteman: Ode to an Obituarist
Tor Sellström: A Cosmopolitan Swedish Freedom Fighter
V. WRITERS
A Tale of Two Continents: Dickensian Africa
Chinua Achebe: Farewell to Africa’s Griot
Soyinka’s Horseman: Who’s Afraid of Elesin Oba?
Wole Soyinka v. Caroline Davis: The CIA Controversy
James Baldwin: The Strange Persistence of Racism
Remembering Maya Angelou
Toni Morrison: America’s Black Bard
Bell Hooks: The Iconoclastic Feminist Scholar-Activist
Buchi Emecheta: Africa’s Literary Mother Courage
John Pepper Clark: Africa’s Protean Pioneer
VI. PUBLIC INTELLECTUALS
Ali Mazrui: Farewell the Trumpets for Prophet of Pax Africana
Edward Said: Pioneer of Post-Colonial Studies
Abiola Irele: The Last Prophet of Négritude
Chris Wanjala: Kenya’s Pan-African Griot
Thandika Mkandawire: The Afropolitan Intellectual
Raufu Mustapha: An Organic Intellectual
Angela Davis: A Life of Struggle
Three Prophets of Reparations: Randall Robinson, Hilary Beckles, and Ade Ajayi
VII. ARTISTS
Abami Eda: Fela’s Enduring Legacy
Bob Marley: Rebel with a Cause
Michael Jackson: The Strange Disappearance of the Moonwalker
Burna Boy: The Afropolitan Troubadour
Asa: Nigeria’s Songbird
Measuring Sidney Poitier’s Life
Cynthia Erivo: Building Bridges to the Diaspora
VIII. SPORTING FIGURES
Muhammad Ali: King of the World
Pelé: The Greatest Footballer of All Time
Eusébio: The King is Dead, Long Live the King!
The Rise, Fall, and Resurrection of Diego Maradona
George Weah: The Genius of King George
Samuel Eto’o: Cameroon’s Indomitable Lion
The Ivorian Pearl: The Life and Times of Didier Drogba
Africa’s Golden Generation: Salah, Mané, and Aubameyang
The Golden Age of West Indian Cricket
Jesse Owens’s Race
Jonah Lomu: Rugby’s First Global Superstar
The Greatness of Rafa Nadal
The Age of Hakeem
Flaming Flamingo: The Life and Times of Israel Adebajo
Notes
Index
Adekeye Adebajo is senior research fellow at the University of Pretoria’s Centre for the Advancement of Scholarship (CAS) in South Africa. He is the author of eight books including The Curse of Berlin: Africa after the Cold War; and editor/co-editor of 10 books including The Pan-African Pantheon: Prophets, Poets, and Philosophers. He holds a doctorate from Oxford University in England where he was a Rhodes Scholar, and is a columnist for Business Day (South Africa), the Guardian (Nigeria), and the Gleaner (Jamaica).
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