OUT OF AMERICA DENIED
A Critique of the 1997 book OUT OF AMERICA
By E. Ablorh-Odjidja
Perhaps, it is not by coincidence that this book is
titled "Out Of America", and it is equally not by
accident that I feel compelled to critique it.
The writer, Keith B.
Richburg, is African American and I am African. We
both shared a common ancestry until this book.
The book is based on Richburg's experience in
Africa, between 1991 and 1994, covering the war in
Somalia and Rwanda as a reporter for the Washington
Post.
Richburg's account is riveting, provocative and sad.
Just as we think we have seen enough carnage in
Somalia, we turn a page to meet more in Rwanda.
The stories become more
depressing even from areas not touched by war. In
the end, his travels in Africa become an
extraordinary journey of discovery for him.
He has come to Africa
naive about what to expect, and returns completely
disenchanted, at least so
he says.
But for the theme of an African American rejecting
his ancestry, this book would have stirred modest
commercial interest.
The stories of Somalia
and Rwanda have already gained worldwide press
notoriety.
And the cyclical
epidemics of disease and starvation on the continent
have long since become the public face of Africa,
years before the publication of this book, and
unfortunately may continue to be the case for years
to come.
The difference, however,
is that for the first time in recent memory, and in
bold print, an African American turns his back on
mother Africa!
The book "Out of America" is not about journalism.
It is about moral judgment. Richburg has seen
Africa, and walks away disenchanted: The slaughter
of Africans by Africans, the anarchy, the
corruption, and the bizarre tribal politics are all
too much for him.
"Thank God" he concludes
"that my nameless ancestor, brought across the ocean
in leg irons, made it out alive."
Richburg must be commended for the brutal honesty of
his appraisal. He also deserves an award for the
avoidance of the brotherly orthodoxy trap that
allows praise for all things African; saints,
dictators and miscreants and all.
True, his insight about
the problem in Africa, "what is happening in Africa
isn't about food.... it is about power and control
in a country where security has broken down" is good
and on the mark.
His description of
military thugs "who take power and thwart the
continent's fledging efforts to move towards
democracy" cannot be stated better. Absolutely,
there is something wrong about governance in Africa.
It must be condemned. And Richburg has done that
well. But must he reject his ancestry too? Certainly
not.
No matter how heavy the burden of life in Africa is
today, one must not allow that to give slavery
respect. Unfortunately, Richburg jumps over reason
to do so.
The Africa of
Richburg's experience is one of turmoil, and the
logic of turmoil is chaos. No excuse intended here.
But, not to recognize
that the continent has also been shaped by other
influences, in addition to those of her own, is to
over extend the arrant nature of some clowns on the
continent.
Furthermore, to
conclude, as he does, that slavery has proven to be
a redeeming factor, because of the mess in Africa
now, is despicable.
Why was Richburg asked by the Washington Post to go
to Africa?
Obviously, he is a
competent reporter. But at the time of the offer he
seemed very little prepared for Africa.
For briefing and inspiration for the trip, he had to
travel to Thailand to seek out Kevin Cooney, "a big,
hard-drinking Irish American reporter ...who had
spent several months working in the Reuter office in
Nairobi." -- almost like a character conjured up
from the movie "African Queen".
The Africanists, whose counsel Richburg sought, were
only acknowledged as an after- thought.
The opinion of his alma
mater, the University of Michigan, "where prominent
Black professors taught, including Dr. Ali Mazrui,
perhaps the best-known African scholar in the West,"
was never invited.
Obviously, Richburg's
preliminary preparation does not show much affection
for the subject Africa.
In Nairobi, Kenya, when Richburg meets Africa,
his first remark is to ask "What's that smell?"
Other writers, like
Robert Klitzgaard who wrote "Tropical Gangsters"
about Equatorial Guinea, have been more circumspect,
though equally critical.
The wonder is how
Richburg can miss all else on a first day in a
strange land. The exotic, the new, even the layout
of the land from miles up in the sky.
For most writers,
disenchantment sets in, if at all, only after the
new has faded. But it is not to be for Richburg. He
gets his right in the nose just moments after
arrival.
Richburg's competence as a writer is obvious. Easy
style. Strong narrative skills. However, his lack of
previous attachment to Africa, emotional or
intellectual, is also very evident.
It is not as if he is a Marcus Garvey or a Dubois
before he sets foot in Africa.
And on location at
Goree, the last port for departing slaves in the
past, and perhaps, the most haunting ground in the
history of the Diaspora, he finds himself
emotionally sterile.
What then gives him the
moral right to say, "Talk to me about Africa and my
Black roots and my kinship with my African brothers
and I will throw it back in your face, and then I'll
rub your nose in the images of the rotting flesh."?
This outburst must
raise some concern about motive. But note that in
America the sensational sells.
This book must definately have attraction for some
readers.
To those who see Africa
as the sinkhole of human existence, where the
exigencies of life have more primordial and sinister
meaning than any other place or time in human
history, Richburg's outburst gives a lot of comfort.
And for this impact, regretfully, Africa must thank
some of her arrant sons and daughters, including
Richburg.
Richburg's rejection of his ancestral land confirms
in the mind of the skeptic, the hopelessness of the
Black man's cause.
True, there is carnage
in Africa. And, there has been carnage in other
areas of the world; Bosnia, Belfast, Cambodia,
Rosewood, Lebanon, Auschwitz etc. But, is
there another writer, from any part of the world,
who has rejected his ancestry in terms more vehement
than Richburg?
By the time Richburg finishes his tour, slavery has
gained a moral upgrade. "There but for the grace of
God go I," he says.
Along with the
institution of slavery, he is ready to forgive the
loss of life in the Second World War, the pogrom
against Jews in Germany, and the explosion of the
atomic bomb on Japan because of "mankind's ability
to make something good arise often in the aftermath
of the most horrible evil."
But he has no such
charity for Africa. He will deny Africa the capacity
for self correction. He would strip Africa bare of
goodness and leave it as a place where the forces of
evil always triumph over those of good.
Richburg's conclusion is divisive.
His us (African
American) versus them (African) interpretation of
the story of the slave trade does not factor in the
sense of our shared tragedy, our loss, and what
should be our resolve because of this tragic period
in our history. And this narative is wrong.
Collectively, Africans warred, and pillaged against
each other, collected prisoners, and, senselessly,
allowed many members of the continent to be taken
out of Africa; very ignorant about the cruelties
that awaited these sons and daughters.
Slavery was not selective, and not by progeny either
as to who went and who was left behind. The fog of
war or raid did not allow this luxury.
That Richburg is in
America and Idi Amin remained in Africa is sheer
coincidence. Turn it around, and Idi Amin could have
been born in Detroit, worked in an automobile
factory as a Union leader, and perhaps, could have
sired Richburg.
The slave trade was the most horrific aspect of our
history. We must not be divided by it. Never again.
For those who are ready to rebel against mother
Africa because of Richburg's ill advised conclusion,
I offer this African proverb: Chasing after a mad
man in the streets, butt naked, can only serve as a
sufficient commentary on one's own sanity.
For myself, I will read
Earnest Gaines' "A Lesson Before Dying" again. It
will help as a reminder of the obligation we owe
each other, and also to help shelter my psyche
against this type of assault on our common
ancestry.
E. Ablorh-Odjidja, Washington, D.C.
March 03, 1998
|