Théophile Obenga
“No people in the world living today ignores or pretends to ignore its past, its history. Every people of the world living today lives with its cultural memory. It is necessary and useful to know its history, the cultural evolution of its people, in time and space, in order to better grasp and understand the incessant progress of humanity, and also contribute to it, in all lucidity and responsibility.”
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Indigo Waves and Other Stories : Re-Navigating the Afrasian Sea and Notions of Diaspora
The exhibition brought together thirteen contemporary artists, historians, filmm
Chronicle of a fervent defender of African culture: Aimé Césaire
What would we be without the heroes of old who dedicated their lives to the libe
Amadou Hampâté Bâ, the Bandiagara library
Amadou Hampâté Bâ, born in 1900 in Bandiagara in Mali and died in 1991 in Abi
The Namibian Genocide: The Forgotten Crime of the 20th Century?
If Namibia is today a beautiful peaceful country endowed with an exceptional fau
African Democratic Rally: major role in the process of decolonization in French-speaking Black Africa
Founded in 1946 at the Bamako Congress, the African Democratic Rally is a former
The Berlin Conference: The Sharing of Africa by Europeans
The desire for Africa does not date from today, even if it seems to be consolida
Marcus Garvey, for the love of the black cause
It was in Saint Ann’s Bay, Jamaica, on August 17, 1887, that Marcus Mosiah
Agojie – Forces spéciales au cœur du Dahomey
« Tuer sans se soucier de sa propre vie », telle est la règle à laquelle
Kwame Nkrumah
Né le 21 Septembre 1909 à Nkroful, village situé au sud-est du Ghana à l’