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	<title>Clutch Magazine &#187; Sylvia Arthur and Oriyomi Isot</title>
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		<title>Did You Really Just Say That? Listen to Yourself!</title>
		<link>http://www.clutchmagonline.com/2012/05/did-you-really-just-say-that-listen-to-yourself/</link>
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		<pubDate>Tue, 15 May 2012 12:40:51 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Sylvia Arthur and Oriyomi Isot</dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[<p>Top myths/stereotypes about Africa that we all would love to see go away.
</p><p>The post <a href="http://www.clutchmagonline.com/2012/05/did-you-really-just-say-that-listen-to-yourself/">Did You Really Just Say That? Listen to Yourself!</a> appeared first on <a href="http://www.clutchmagonline.com">Clutch Magazine</a>.</p>]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img class="alignright size-full wp-image-37550" title="africa-map" src="http://clutchmagonline.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/01/africa-map.jpg" alt="" width="407" height="504" /></p>
<blockquote><p><em>Top myths/stereotypes about Africa that we all would love to see go away.</em></p></blockquote>
<p>Most of us have probably taken geography in school and been bored as hell hearing the teacher explain latitude and longitude. Though we took it for granted then, we gained a lot of global knowledge that is now considered common knowledge. For instance, Australia is a continent and a nation; Portuguese, and not Spanish, is the national language of Brazil; and my favorite, the capital of Djibouti is Djibouti. But somewhere along our formal education, misinformation snuck in; whether it was through television specials that were supposed to be educational or teachers who were reading straight from the textbook without processing the information first. Y’all know where we’re going with this, as the title says there are many untrue ideas about Africa, the continent. Much of this is due to a dearth in interest/research which leads to fabrication, and of course our good friend Euro-centrism. What we tried to do here is come up with the top ten myths about Africa that are insulting and, if taken as fact, will make you look like a fool.</p>
<p><strong>Africa  <em>is</em> a Continent?</strong><br />
Let’s  clear this up first and foremost. I know all you Clutchettes know this  one, but we need to start schooling more people. Africa is not an Island,  colony, or a nation. It is a vast continent with diverse ecosystems,  biomes, cultures, and people. With hundreds of languages spoken, the  Sahara, and multiple time zones, no one person, place or thing is the  same.</p>
<p><strong>Everybody  Speaks <em>African</em></strong><br />
Though  English and French are the primary languages spoken in African nations,  each ethnic group has its own unique language and among them various  regional dialects. But somehow, many people in the West get the idea  that <em>African</em> is one language composed of mainly click ‘noises’.  First off, these foreign sounds are consonants that are likely used  for letters C, Q, and X; they do not make up entire languages. Languages  with click consonants are found in the region of East Africa and South  Africa (<em>i.e. Xhosa, Zulu, Sesotho</em>). You can find such tongues being  taught at premier universities and learning institutions around the  world.</p>
<p><strong>Everyone  Lives in a Jungle</strong><br />
Living  situations might vary from place to place depending on the landscape,  but people got to live someplace. Contrary to popular belief, most Africans  do not live in those save Africa commercials. Although still dependent  on agrarian/rural lifestyles, Africa is undergoing an explosion of urbanization.  High rises, shopping malls and new housing developments are springing  up with regularity in a concerted effort to cater to Africa’s growing  middle classes. Cities like Lagos, Nairobi, Accra, Mogadishu, and Johannesburg  are crowded with millions of people in search of education, jobs, or  just a good time; such locations behold striking sky scrapers, lush  beaches, and a colorful nightlife.</p>
<p><strong>Egypt Was  the Only History Maker</strong><br />
Being  that history is one person’s account of controversial events of the  past, a great deal of integral information often gets left out. Like how Africa had many nations and empires prior to colonization that  thrived in culture, scholarship, and commerce (<em>check any Nas album for  musical commentary</em>). We often get this idea that Africa’s greatness  rests in Egypt where fair skinned pharaohs surpassed the entire continent.  But let’s not forget the Songhai, Ashanti, Zulu, Igbo, and Shona empires  that have made vast contributions to all of human history. (<em>FYI: Those were just a few ethnic groups, please share any others you have come across in your studies)</em>.</p>
<p><strong>Africa is  All about Poverty</strong><br />
Enough  with the starving Ethiopian jokes! Such comments are simplistic and  insensitive to one of Africa’s (and the world’s) more serious issues.  Africa is rich in natural resources and mineral wealth and so it goes  without saying that, theoretically, it’s a wealthy place. But exploitation  by outsiders – corporations and governments &#8211; and power hungry leaders  have robbed the land dry. Sierra Leone, Congo, the Great Lakes region,  the list goes on.  African creativity is at its peak, from fashion and  music to art and culture, the continent’s creative talent is in abundance.  Websites like Jamati, Naija Bella and Mimi showcase what the continent  has to offer while Charlayne Hunter-Gault’s <em>New News  Out of Africa </em>subtitled<em> Uncovering Africa’s Renaissance </em> does all it can to prove beyond doubt that the basket case scenario  that’s often presented in the media is unfair and unbalanced. The  (soccer) World Cup in South Africa in June will be a chance to show  the world that Africa can put on a global event on a massive scale and  do it well. It will be Africa’s chance to party to the world, something  the continent is rarely allowed to do in the Western media.</p>
<p><strong>The Whole  Continent is at War/There’s No Democracy </strong><br />
Contrary  to what you see and read, Africa has a number of thriving democracies.  Ghana is often heralded as a beacon of hope for democracy on the continent  with President Obama offering a personal seal of approval on his visit  to the country last year. Botswana, the world’s biggest diamond producer,  has also been hailed as an example to its continental peers. Let’s  also not forget, that the majority of African nations have been independent  for roughly 40 or 50 years, meaning we have a ways to go, but as you can  see many of us are on a great start.</p>
<p><strong>Women are Repressed</strong><br />
This  is so not the case. Women have traditionally been held in high-esteem  in African society as the matriarchs and foundations of a community.  A case in point, Rwanda has the highest number of female parliamentarians  in the world while all over the continent women sit in positions of  high power e.g. Ellen Johnson-Sirleaf and Luisa Diogo.</p>
<p><strong>Everyone Practices Voodoo</strong><br />
Contrary  to popular belief, modern day missionaries didn’t bring Christianity,  in particular, and religion, in general, to Africa. In fact, the roots  of Christianity on the continent can be found in the Bible and Ethiopia&#8217;s  last remaining Jewish community, the Falash Mura trace their roots back  to the biblical King Solomon. Today, Christianity is the most widely  practiced religion in Africa, with Islam and traditional religions following  closely behind. While church attendance in some parts of the world continues  to decline, in Africa, the opposite is in fact true. Mission analysts  at the Free Methodist Church of North America say their African churches  are the fastest growing in their denomination and the largest Anglican  province in the world is in Nigeria. That’s not to say that Christianity  civilized the so-called ‘the dark continent’ (<em>see below</em>). African  Traditional Religion has been demonized as being evil and destructive  but, as with all faiths, there’s the good and the bad, the literal  and the figurative. Many Africans, though defining themselves as Muslim  or Christian, incorporate some elements of traditional religion in their  faith.</p>
<p><strong>Africans Can’t Help Themselves/Every African Wants to Leave Africa</strong><br />
The  saying “out of adversity comes opportunity” rings particularly  true in Africa and while the recession continues to cripple the West,  African stock markets remains relatively unscathed. Big business is  thriving in Africa as is individual enterprise. Carole Pinaud’s<em> </em> award-winning film <em>Africa: Open for Business </em> shows a different side to the continent, highlighting the entrepreneurial  spirit that is striving to take care of itself and finding African solutions  to African problems.</p>
<p>What  Africans want is equality of opportunity. CNN’s <em>African Voices</em> is full of Africans doing big things both at home and abroad. And if Africans  want to leave Africa, many people from outside the continent choose  to make it their home. The largest numbers of African-Americans living  outside of the USA are in Ethiopia and Ghana. Surely, there must be  something drawing them there in their numbers.</p>
<p><strong>Most Africans are Backwards and Unrefined</strong><br />
African  nations are some of the few in the world, where indigenous groups still  thrive and live their lives. For those of us who have grown up in Evangelical  churches, we have heard the grave accounts of missionaries who went  to remote parts of the world to share the Gospel and rescue such people  from their primitiveness. Wait…isn’t that exactly what was done  a couple hundred years ago with colonization?  Just like the Amish choose  to live their lives separate from the modern world, so do some African  groups. Most Africans live in this century, but others have chosen to  preserve their traditional way of life. So What?</p>
<p>These are some  of the notions that attempt to undermine the continent of Africa and  thus people of African descent. We are not trying to make it seem as  though African nations are perfect, but they are definitely far from  what is constantly portrayed in the media. All we ask you to do is think  for yourselves and evaluate information thoroughly; so the next time  you hear some deceptive fact about Africa, ask yourself, “did they  really just say that?”</p>
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<p>The post <a href="http://www.clutchmagonline.com/2012/05/did-you-really-just-say-that-listen-to-yourself/">Did You Really Just Say That? Listen to Yourself!</a> appeared first on <a href="http://www.clutchmagonline.com">Clutch Magazine</a>.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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