A place open to everybody. A real compound, you know. Iād think to myself: āAh-ah! What is this city shit-o? One man, one wife, one house isolated from everybody else in the neighbourhood? Is an African not even to know his neighbours?ā Man, even the Bible says, āKnow thy neighbour!ā So why all this individualism shit? This āmineā. That āyoursā. That ātheirsā. Whatās that shit? Is it African?
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What did that mean, an African city? Why? Because Joburg was soundtracked by the maquamba beat? There was nothing un-African about Cape Town. He felt the old sentences begin to take shape, the old argument begin to coalesce. This city and all its fucked-up divisions and casual cruelties was the way it was because of slavery and colonialism and you donāt get more African than that.
Who are these āworld leadersā? Destroyers, man. Not builders. Not creators. But destroyers. You see, I canāt accept that my fate be in the hands of such fucked-up people. Does that seem normal to you? Do you accept the idea that your fate, your last hour on this earth, might depend on some motherfucker sitting up in the White House in Washington or up in the Kremlin in Moscow? Should the fate of the whole world depend on whether or not one of those bastardsā pricks couldnāt get hard one night? Is that normal? Not to me, man! You see what Iām getting at? A handful of unnatural, unbalanced people are ruling this world. Thatās why when I hear that the non-aligned bloc is trying to be a third solution, I can only shake my head. āCause those people who call themselves non-aligned are unbalanced. Do you know what something which is non-aligned means? It means something which aināt straight, man. Something crooked, unbalanced, an out-of-line people, you know!
I also told them that Africans have to start by feeling that we belong to any part of the continent. We should not limit our area of belonging to that small enclave cut out for us at the Berlin Conference of 1884ā5. Africa has to open her doors to every Black man in the world. Until Africa sees it that way, she wonāt have made it yet, man.
Talk of comedy! Yesterday, Friday, I was here in Kĩambu to collect the largest wages of my life. I was with friends. Now I am back in the same town, without the money, and nobody knows me. The prison guards shake their heads to every question concerning the fate that awaits us. A Saturday in ruins, I note in my mental diary.
And as for what my father said about Africa, as much as I wanted to belong to Africa or to any place for that matter, I knew that I didnāt. Not really. Not completely. In countless ways and for countless reasons, I loved growing up in many countries, among many cultures. It made it impossible for me to believe in the concept of supremacy. It deepened my ability to hold multiple truths at once, to practice and nurture empathy. But it has also meant that I have no resting place. I have perpetually been a them rather than an us. I have struggled with how to place myself in my family histories.
To the entire African diaspora and all marginalized peoples everywhere: Together we can create a movement. Together we can smash injustice. Love makes us capable of both things.