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Ghana's Uneasy Embrace of Slavery's Diaspora
By LYDIA POLGREEN
New York Times, December 27, 2005
Ghana hopes descendants of enslaved Africans will think of Africa as their
homeland - to visit, invest, send their children to be educated and even retire.
CAPE COAST, Ghana - For centuries, Africans walked through the infamous "door of
no return" at Cape Coast castle directly into slave ships, never to set foot in
their homelands again. These days, the portal of this massive fort so central to
one of history's greatest crimes has a new name, hung on a sign leading back in
from the roaring Atlantic Ocean: "The door of return."
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Michael Kamber for The New York Times
A former slave-trade fort in Cape Coast, Ghana, is a popular destination for
African-American tourists.gift to return after Christmas; this
Michael Kamber for The New York Times
A tour guide describing the conditions once faced by captives before they were
shipped as slaves from the Elmina Castle fort in Ghana.
Ghana, through whose ports millions of Africans passed on their way to
plantations in the United States, Latin America and the Caribbean, wants its
descendants to come back.
Taking Israel as its model, Ghana hopes to persuade the descendants of enslaved
Africans to think of Africa as their homeland - to visit, invest, send their
children to be educated and even retire here.
"We want Africans everywhere, no matter where they live or how they got there,
to see Ghana as their gateway home," J. Otanka Obetsebi-Lamptey, the tourism
minister, said on a recent day. "We hope we can help bring the African family
back together again."
In many ways it is a quixotic goal. Ghana is doing well by West African
standards - with steady economic growth, a stable, democratic government and
broad support from the West, making it a favored place for wealthy countries to
give aid.
But it remains a very poor, struggling country where a third of the population
lives on less than a dollar a day, life expectancy tops out at 59 and basic
services like electricity and water are sometimes scarce.
Nevertheless, thousands of African-Americans already live here at least part of
the year, said Valerie Papaya Mann, president of the African American
Association of Ghana.
To encourage still more to come, or at least visit, Ghana plans to offer a
special lifetime visa for members of the diaspora and will relax citizenship
requirements so that descendants of slaves can receive Ghanaian passports. The
government is also starting an advertising campaign to persuade Ghanaians to
treat African-Americans more like long-lost relatives than as rich tourists.
That is harder than it sounds.
Many African-Americans who visit Africa are unsettled to find that Africans
treat them - even refer to them - the same way as white tourists. The term "obruni,"
or "white foreigner," is applied regardless of skin color.
To African-Americans who come here seeking their roots, the term is a sign of
the chasm between Africans and African-Americans. Though they share a legacy,
they experience it entirely differently.
"It is a shock for any black person to be called white," said Ms. Mann, who
moved here two years ago. "But it is really tough to hear it when you come with
your heart to seek your roots in Africa."
The advertising campaign urges Ghanaians to drop "obruni" in favor of "akwaaba
anyemi," a slightly awkward phrase fashioned from two tribal languages meaning
"welcome, sister or brother." As part of the effort to reconnect with the
diaspora, Ghana plans to honor the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., W. E. B.
DuBois and others it calls modern-day Josephs, after the biblical figure who
rose from slavery to save his people.
The government plans to hold a huge event in 2007 to commemorate the 200th
anniversary of the end of the trans-Atlantic trade by Britain and the 50th
anniversary of Ghana's independence. The ceremonies will include traditional
African burial rituals for the millions who died as a result of slavery.
Estimates of the trade vary widely. The most reliable suggest that between 12
million and 25 million people living in the vast lands between present-day
Senegal and Angola were caught up, and as many as half died en route to the
Americas.
Some perished on the long march from the inland villages where they were
captured to seaports. Others died in the dungeons of slave castles and forts,
where they were sometimes kept for months, until enough were gathered to pack
the hold of a ship. Still others died in the middle passage, the longest leg of
the triangular journey between Europe, Africa and the Americas. Of the estimated
11 million who crossed the sea, most went to South America and the Caribbean.
About 500,000 are believed to have ended up in the United States.
The mass deportations and the divisions the slave trade wrought are wounds from
which Africa still struggles to recover.
Ghana was the first sub-Saharan African nation to shake off its colonial rulers,
winning its independence from Britain in 1957. Its founding father, Kwame
Nkrumah, attended Lincoln University, a historically black college in
Pennsylvania, and saw in African-Americans a key to developing the new nation.
Ghana's Uneasy Embrace of Slavery's Diaspora
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"Nkrumah saw the American Negro as the vanguard of the African people," said
Henry Louis Gates Jr., chairman of the African and African-American studies
department at Harvard, who first traveled to Ghana when he was 20 and fresh out
of Harvard, afire with Nkrumah's spirit. "He wanted to be able to utilize the
services and skills of African-Americans as Ghana made the transition from
colonialism to independence."
Many African-Americans, from Maya Angelou to Malcolm X, visited Ghana in the
1950's and 60's, and a handful stayed. To Nkrumah, the struggle for civil rights
in the diaspora and the struggles for independence from colonial rule in Africa
were inextricably linked, both being expressions of the desire of black people
everywhere to regain their freedom.
But Nkrumah was ousted in a coup in 1966, and by then Pan-Africanism had already
given way to nationalism and cold war politics, sending much of the continent
down a trail of autocracy, civil war and heartbreak.
Still, African-Americans are drawn to Ghana's rich culture, and the history of
slavery.
Ghana still has dozens of slave forts, each a chilling reminder of the brutality
of the trade. At Elmina Castle, built by the Portuguese in 1482 and taken over
by the Dutch 150 years later, visitors are guided through a Christian chapel
built adjacent to the hall where slaves were auctioned, and the balcony over the
women's dungeons from which the fort's governor would choose a concubine from
the chattel below.
The room through which slaves passed into waiting ships is the emotional climax
of the tour, a suffocating dungeon dimly lit by sunlight pouring through a
narrow portal leading to the churning sea.
"You feel our history here," said Dianne Mark, an administrator at Central
Michigan University who visited Elmina Castle, six miles from Cape Coast castle,
in early December, tears welling in her eyes as she gazed across the massive,
buttressed walls to the ocean. "This is where our people are from. That is a
deep, deep experience. I look at everyone and wonder, 'Could he have been my
cousin? Could she have been my aunt?' "
Like any family reunion, this one is layered with joy and tears. For
African-Americans and others in the African diaspora, there is lingering
hostility and confusion about the role Africans played in the slave trade.
"The myth was our African ancestors were out on a walk one day and some bad
white dude threw a net over them," Mr. Gates said. "But that wasn't the way it
happened. It wouldn't have been possible without the help of Africans."
Many Africans, meanwhile, often fail to see any connection at all between them
and African-Americans, or feel African-Americans are better off for having been
taken to the United States. Many Africans strive to emigrate; for the past 15
years, the number of Africans moving to the United States has surpassed
estimates of the number forced there during any of the peak years of the slave
trade. The number of immigrants from Ghana in the United States is larger than
that of any other African country except Nigeria, according to the 2000 census.
"So many Africans want to go to America, so they can't understand why Americans
would want to come here," said Philip Amoa-Mensah, a guide at Elmina Castle.
"Maybe Ghanaians think they are lucky to be from America, even though their
ancestors went through so much pain."
The relationship is clearly a work in progress. Ghanaians are still learning of
their ancestors' pivotal roles in the slave trade, and slave forts on the coast,
long used to thousands of foreign visitors, have in recent years become sites
for school field trips.
When the United States and the United Nations gave Ghana money to rehabilitate
and restore Cape Coast castle, the government agency responsible for the castle
repainted it white. Residents of Cape Coast were thrilled to see the
moisture-blackened castle spruced up, but African-Americans living in Ghana were
horrified, feeling that the history of their ancestors was being, quite
literally, whitewashed.
"It didn't go over too well," said Kohain Nathanyah Halevi, an African-American
who lives near Cape Coast.
A recent African-American visitor to Cape Coast castle took the emotionally
charged step through the door of no return, only to be greeted by a pair of
toddlers playing in a fishing boat on the other side, pointing and shouting, "obruni,
obruni!"
William Kwaku Moses, 71, a retired security guard who sells shells to tourists
on the other side of the door of no return, shushed the children.
"We are trying," he said, with a shrug.
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