By: Kenneth Walker:
 
Relations with black South Africans have sunk since the heady days of the anti-apartheid movement.

CAPE TOWN, SOUTH AFRICA -- Most African Americans who visit Cape Town around the New Year are initially shocked by what is traditionally known here as The Coon Festival--a weeklong reverie of parties and parades where mixed race or "colored" people dress up in costumes and blackface to perform minstrel shows.
The Coon Festival, more recently renamed the Minstrel Festival, has been an annual affair in Cape Town for over 150 years and may be the most public manifestation of an engagement between African Americans and black South Africans that goes back to the U.S. Civil War.
The interaction between the two groups has ebbed and flowed at critical moments in history, and recently, it has been near its nadir. But an esteemed group of South Africans and African Americans living in South Africa have joined to reclaim that history and to plot a way forward that will expand a frayed relationship.
The newly minted South African American Partnership Forum (SAAPF) held a recent day-long symposium at the University of Johannesburg to explore the history and future prospects of the relationship in the areas of education, arts and culture, business, the media and politics.
The symposium was part of a week-long series of activities called USA Week produced by Kennedy Khabo, a South African and American resident. Khabo also produces a South Africa Week in Washington, D.C., every September. The goal of both organizations is to increase the number of people-to-people contacts. There are an estimated 3,000 African Americans living in South Africa--which appears to have overtaken Ghana as African Americans' preferred point of return to the continent.
Moeletse Mbeki, a businessman and deputy chair of the South African Institute of International Affairs, kicked off the day with brief history of the relationships between South Africans and African Americans. "One could argue that without African Americans, the South African liberation struggle could not have been born when it did, or unfolded the way it did," said Mbeki, one of the founding organizers of SAAPF who is also the brother of ex-President Thabo Mbeki.
"Just before the turn of the 20th century, black South African Christians began to express a desire to control their own churches," Mbeki said. "So they reached out to the African Methodist Episcopal Church in America. They sent missionaries who proved much too radical for white South Africans and the British, who complained bitterly about them.
"When the Brits defeated the Boers in 1902," Mbeki continued, they formed a commission to investigate the effect of African-American radicalization on black South Africans. AME Bishop Henry McNeal Turner was very much involved the formation of the leadership of the black liberation movement. It was the AME priests who brought the phrase 'Africa for the Africans' to South Africa."
Mbeki believes "there are huge opportunities that need to be exploited on both sides. The kind of cooperation we saw between the two peoples in the anti-apartheid struggle seems to have fallen by the wayside. SAAPF wants to revive this."
Dr. Sibusiso Vil-Nkomo, an official at the University of Pretoria, spoke of the need for much greater cooperation with African Americans on education issues in South Africa. Vil-Nkomo was one of about 8,000 black South Africans who studied in the United States in order to escape the apartheid system. He holds degrees from Lincoln University and the University of Delaware.
Vil-Nkomo said, "we must learn from U.S. programs like Upward Bound that help black children perform in school and get ready for university. We need a kind of GI bill for the liberation veterans. We need black think tanks. We must open up the top five South African universities to African-American professors. More South African students must attend black U.S. universities. We need the historically black colleges in the U.S. to participate with us--both in educating South African students and using their expertise in helping us educate South Africans here."
Clara Priester--an African-American educator who has lived in South Africa for 12 years, now lectures at Witswatersrand University, and is the U.S. State Department education adviser for Eastern and Southern Africa--was charged with the responsibility of helping Africans apply to U.S. universities. Currently, she said, there are only 1,700 South Africans studying in the United States--this out of a total of 617,000 foreign students in America. "We need to do much better."
Julialynne Walker, who describes herself as an African-American repatriate, gave a history of the Coon Festival. "There were two inspirations for that," she said. "black American sailors--many of whom jumped ship to stay in South Africa starting just after the civil war--used to perform minstrel shows in South Africa. And Orpheus McAdoo, a former slave from Greensboro, N.C., brought a group he founded, the Virginia Jubilee Singers to South Africa in the 1880s--performing before black and white audiences initially."
McAdoo's group traveled through South Africa and is regarded as having profound influences on chorale music among the Zulus and the Xhosa peoples.
Hotep Idris-Galata, one of South Africa's noted jazz pianists and historians, left the country at the age of 21. "There are many areas in need of closer cooperation with African Americans," he said. "South Africa badly needs unionization here so that artists can protect their work with access to royalties. The Soweto Gospel Choir is owned by an Australian. We need African-American business investment in arts and culture here. Black South Africans produce a lot of content, but that is mostly owned by whites. We need the hip-hop artists and the Spike Lees to bring their investments and business models here."
Francis Kornegay, a Detroit native who moved to Johannesburg and married a South African almost 20 years ago, said it now seems inevitable that the people-to-people movement between the two countries would have died after the end of apartheid.
"Resistance to apartheid gave rise to a wide range of engagements, " said Kornegay, who worked as a staffer on Capitol Hill--first for Michigan Rep. Charles Diggs and later for Congressman Walter Fauntroy, where he helped craft the financial sanctions bill. "There were linkages between churches, students, civil society," Kornegay added. "The post-apartheid situation radically changed that. There was a normalization of government and business relations and the anti-apartheid movement was marginalized. "
There was a consensus that business relations between African Americans and black South Africans are the most distressing. Gabby Magamola is chairman of Thamanga investments, and the author of From Robben Island to Wall Street. After spending five years on Robben Island for his political opposition to apartheid, Magamola went on to become a Fulbright Scholar and spent many years in exile in the United States. "There is not really a culture of entrepreneurship among black South Africans, and that is where we really could use some help and collaborations, " he says.
But many African Americans tell of tremendous difficulty in reaching out to black South Africans. Eugene Jackson describes himself as "the largest African-American investor in South Africa." Jackson earned his fortune in the United States in cell phone, radio and cable TV. "I had the American Dream," he says. "But I gave it all up for the African Dream. But the business relationship between African Americans and black South Africans is very bad. We don't know each other. We have a relationship problem."
Many South Africans acknowledge the estrangement but attribute it to a general black South African wariness to all foreigners who come to their country seeking their fortunes--which of course was what led to colonialism and apartheid. "This could be the single greatest, Promised Land on earth for African business people," Jackson continued. "If we talk together, we could take over this country from the whites who own the economy."
The new organization resolved to create committees in these core areas and move forward with implementing new forms of cooperation. Jackson and Magamola even agreed to consider forming a new South African African American Chamber of Commerce to facilitate greater business cooperation.

Kenneth Walker is an American journalist based in South Africa.

The Discomfort of African Americans in South Africa
By: Kenneth Walker
Posted: April 20, 2010 at 7:24 AM
Published on The Root (http://www.theroot. com/ )

Republished through: paoc-usa@yahoogroups.com
Submitted by Line HILGROS


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  • Africa
    As happens with many activities, a selective process allows for only a few key points to be made that supports an overall thesis. I am a bit disappointed though; that my main thought was neglected for a “cute” highlight. We were all asked to present on several points, the main one being “What has been the perception of Americans in South Africa since 1994?” I began my presentation by stating that I was specifically addressing the African American repatriate experience in South Africa since 1880, an experience rooted in individual and group contributions which have resulted in the basis for institutional and nation-building since 1994. My discussion began with McAdoo who brought two groups to South Africa, led the development of local choirs, and who encouraged his performers to stay permanently in South Africa. My discussion of the Coon/Minstrel Festival was in the context of other musical contributions which have occurred over the last 130 years. I also stressed the presence of African Americans repatriates who were active in the church, the military, politics and other areas in the field of entertainment. I ended with a series of questions which I believe are relevant to all global Africans and to which repatriate African Americans could contribute from our unique vantage point. My concern is that without an understanding of what has gone before, African-American repatriates as well as South Africans will initiate a post-1994 discussion in a vacuum.
    I am sorry that the overall tone of the seminar has resulted in a perception of “discomfort” as that is neither the historical experience that I attempted to portray nor my own experience. Most of the morning presentations (I had to leave due to a domestic emergency) did not address the perceptions of Americans in South Africa but rather the experiences of South Africans in America. My experiences as a repatriate, and many of those with whom I am familiar, would also reflect on a level of comfort that has allowed for significantly involved in individual lives, and at the institutional and ideological level. This has only occurred because of the perception by South Africans that African-American repatriates had something positive to contribute in a fundamental way. Briefly, I am aware of numerous individuals who have held high positions in government, corporations and NGOs. They have contributed to policy development in each sphere that has resulted in positive changes for millions of South Africans. I am currently involved with the development of a directory of service providers that could positively impact on every single child in South Africa. And I would be extremely pleased if only 1% were so affected. I am also on the board of a business that focuses on the matric re-write to enable young South Africans to acquire the minimum certification to be recognized in the job market. I have served as a political commentator for SABC, SABC International, CNBC Africa and e-tv. And I am not unique. One sister has headed two development organizations that addressed basic needs for millions of South Africans. Another sister’s contributions have significantly strengthened the role of the media and the specific skills of individuals while several brothers have successfully served as professors and lecturers at different universities. Yes, many African Americans may experience difficulties but many others do not. It would have been good to hear their voices.
    Recently South Africa celebrated its Freedom Day and a commercial was flighted showing a series of relevant images, one of which showed Nelson Mandela voting for the first time. How many people knew the woman who walked beside him? Who can begin to understand why an African-American sister played such a symbolic role? We all have much homework to do as the people-to-people movement has not died between South Africans and African Americans but changed character and we could all use a better understanding of why.
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