This quote is an opportunity to ask yourself a number of questions:
- Are we really free?
Before answering this question, we must understand what we have called "missions civilizing ”. To leave one's country to civilize a population is a totally racist step. Why? Because that implies that you consider that your people are, and that you deny to another people, their capacity to build a civilization to apply yours to them.
This report forces the colonized to admire a culture to the detriment of his own and to believe that there is only one way to “civilization”.
Since 6 centuries, the tutelage has mutated: slavery, colonization, departmentalization, neo-colonization, globalism
What is needed is the end of the guardianship and not its transfer, so no, we are not free!
- Are we worthy ??
To answer this question, we must observe our different behaviors today:
Some are working to reconnect physically and spiritually with the culture of our ancestors in order to have an African paradigm: it is honorable.
Others will say that they are Belgian, French, Italian, English and will fight all their lives to be accepted by their former executioners. They are so bathed in a hostile environment that they will say that they no longer pay attention to racism, in other words: they Accepted the Unacceptable just as the slave accepted slavery as long as it was not whipped. As long as they can work, and buy Louis V and companies, they think they are free.
Where have today's Sékou Touré gone ???
It is not for nothing that Africa finds itself at the center of the world. Indeed, even in France, many people live in suffering ... Since we serve as a mirror, any difficulty of this continent is a serious global problem at bottom, because we are all on the same Planet Earth ... If slavery has contributed to weaken this land by bringing out its own and colonialism to help weaken our alma mater by keeping it in cages at home, part postponed: imperialism weakens the whole world by imposing a unique will, often equivocal on various peoples ... However, the resolution or contribution... Read more »