Museum of Black Civilisations aims to ‘decolonise knowledge’


A large museum will open in Dakar, 52 years after Senegal’s first president presented a post-colonial cultural vision.

Dakar, Senegal – In April 1966, Senegal’s first president and a poet, Leopold Sedar Senghor ascended the steps of the National Assembly in Dakar to declare his country the temporary capital of Black Civilisation at the launch of the World Festival of Black Arts.

In the following weeks, African luminaries such as Emperor Haile Selassie of Ethiopia and writer Wole Soyinka would converge on the Senegalese capital, as would others from the wider African diaspora: Jazz great Duke Ellington, the Martiniquan poet Aime Cesaire, Barbadian novelist George Lamming and American writers Langston Hughes and Amiri Baraka.

Dakar would briefly play host to some of the leading black movements of the day. African liberation, the Harlem Renaissance, Jazz, and the negritude movement, of which Senghor was also a leading figure, were represented. Despite their differences, they shared an optimism that people of African descent, wherever they were, would define their own futures.

The museum was built with the help of Chinese funds [Courtesy: Museum of Black Civilisations] […]

Source: Museum of Black Civilisations aims to ‘decolonise knowledge’

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About agogo22

Director of Manchester School of Samba at http://www.sambaman.org.uk
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1 Response to Museum of Black Civilisations aims to ‘decolonise knowledge’

  1. This is very important I think. I can only agree with “the biased assumptions held by many Eurocentric scholars and found in school textbooks that Africa was dark and savage, devoid of civilisation.”
    I have mentioned it before, but when I still lived in Germany, all we ever saw of African countries were the homelands with huts made of straw and clay and without electricity. Women stomping the moimoi in large wooden containers. My Nigerian friends were furious when they saw that. First when my then fiancee gave me a book about Nigerian history, I learned about the empire of Benin in the south and the kingdom of Kano in the north of nowadays Nigeria.
    Later I learned about the Mali empire and saw the movie “Kanga Mussa”, which I can recommend.

    None of this was in our history books …

    Liked by 1 person

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