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Not African Enough in Africa

When I was 10 or so, my father won an all-expense paid trip to Senegal. “We’re going to Africa!” my mother gleefully exclaimed. So we took the Amtrak train to New York to fly out of JFK and ignored the warnings of a pending Nor’easter, thinking the sheer and desperate determination of three Black Americans to make it to Africa would hold off the worst of the snow until we were airborne.

It didn’t. New York City was shut down for three days, and by the time the airports opened, it didn’t make sense to fly out. We pushed the trip back indefinitely, and never made it. And so began my obsession with Africa, the place my even-tempered mother spoke of like it was some sort of Disneyland for Black people.

Some Black Americans, and I’m referring mostly to those that call Mississippi, Georgia, and South Carolina their “Old Country,” tend to be awe-struck at the idea Africa, like Nas at the end of Belly. Once we get a full picture beyond what we’re taught in school, where the largest continent and birthplace of all mankind is reduced to being the starting point for the Atlantic Slave Trade, there becomes an eagerness to migrate back across the Atlantic. The yearning is not unlike some immigrants who seek entrance to American shores. Except we’re not seeking the opportunities and streets of gold that Fievel and his family expected; we’re seeking the “home” that the Middle Passage erased.

I get why. For many American Blacks, the overall American experience has never really felt like a place where you can kick up your feet and recline all the way back. You get moments where that happens, of course, but then you also get a startling awakening— like when people are surprised you don’t have any children out of wedlock, or you happen to be “so articulate,” or despite carrying a purse while you shop, you find yourself explaining “No, no, actually I don’t work here.” Those things remind you not to get too comfy. America is home in the sense of being the devil you know, a bit like a stereotypical step-child, the one you tolerate but don’t really love like your own.

In recent weeks those feelings have surfaced again for many who struggle to make sense of the injustice of Trayvon Martin’s killer walking around freely, the ignorance displayed in conservative columnist John Derbyshire’s piece for The National Review where he wrote of advising his children to avoid Black folk, and the obnoxiousness of those Twitter-racists who found outrage in a sympathetic book character being Black or Awkward Black Girl landing the Shorty Award for best web-series. I find, similar to Cinderella, we dream of an escape to a place where we fit, like a glass slipper on the correct foot. For me, that place was Africa, any country, any part.

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  1. Youre overthinking it…..Africa is yours- if you want it to be….just like any other place on the planet…you are human -you can thrive anywhere any other human beings do.

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    • I have to agree, we are people of the world. And with that, maybe we should learn to speak languages along side English. My son speaks Japanese and French. Made me pursue learning French and improving my Spanish speaking skills.

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  2. I saw a mini doc about 1s gen Asian Americans living in China. They got that same treatment. Same for Italian Americans in Italy. South Africa where our ancestors come from anyway so its okay to approach it like you would Japan or the UK.

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  3. I saw a mini doc about 1s gen Asian Americans living in China. They got that same treatment. Same for Italian Americans in Italy. South Africa isn’t where our ancestors come from anyway so its okay to approach it like you would Japan or the UK.

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  4. I feel very American when I visit Haiti, especially not being fluent in the language, but here I don’t quite 100% fit in as well…It doesn’t bother me really but that’s because I never expected to fit in a country that I wasn’t born nor raised in. I appreciate the differences and similarities and keep it moving.

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    • Totally agreed Pema! It amazes me that American Blacks assume you can just go to Africa and fit right in (maybe some can), but we don’t even share the same cultural identity or language. So there will be barriers, no different then if I were to go to France with my limited French. It would be a similar experience if you didn’t speak Spanish and you went to Brazil –where there is a large portion of Afro-Brazilians–and assumed you would fit right in because they are dark as you. Many Hispanics and Latino’s have the same issues. If they don’t speak Spanish and are around Spanish speakers, they feel very uncomfortable, and based on stories from my non-Spanish speaking Hispanic and Latino friends…they are also ridiculed for it. Honestly, I would assume more Canadian and British Blacks would find an easier fit in Africa because some of them are 2nd and/or 3rd Generation and have similar African roots and cultural upbringing (since their parents and grandparents are actually from Africa). Sadly, we just don’t have those roots here in America.

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