Wednesday, 24 November 2021

THE DESTRUCTION OF AFRICVILLE

 THE DESTRUCTION OF AFRICVILLE

Murphy Browne © November 20-2021

Dominant groups, such as colonizers, have always defined, confined, regulated, and eradicated groups marked as racially inferior through the control of space. Dominant groups express their own identities, and reinforce what they see as their rightful rule, through acts of regulation and destruction of the racial Other – and, simultaneously, through space. There are many discourses that feed and justify these acts of racism.

 

From the 2008 published book Razing Africville: A Geography of Racism by Jennifer J. Nelson

 

Africville was a historic African Canadian community in Halifax, Nova Scotia that was destroyed by the government in the 1960s. There has been an African Presence in Nova Scotia since the 1700s according to information from the Nova Scotia Archives. Many enslaved Africans were taken to Nova Scotia between 1749 and 1782 by English or American colonizers/settlers. On September 22, 1750, a Royal Navy officer, Thomas Bloss, brought 16 enslaved Africans to Halifax, to crew vessels involved in maritime commerce. Joshua Mauger, a prominent shipowner and trader sold enslaved Africans at auctions in Halifax. In the May 30, 1752, edition of the Halifax Gazette Mauger has an auction advertisement for the sale of enslaved Africans. In 1750, included in the nearly 3000 inhabitants of Halifax there were approximately 400 enslaved and 17 free people of African descent.

 

In 1759 the governor of Nova Scotia, Charles Lawrence, offered large tracts of free land to White families from New England, USA if they would move to Nova Scotia. This resulted in approximately 6000 settlers relocating to Nova Scotia between 1759 and 1765. They settled in the Annapolis Valley and elsewhere and formed townships including Cornwallis, Falmouth and Liverpool. The White settlers from the USA brought hundreds of enslaved Africans with them. Nova Scotia's economic resources and climate could not sustain a plantation economy, so enslaved Africans in Nova Scotian worked as domestics, agricultural labourers and sailors. Some were skilled including coopers, carpenters, sail-makers and rope-makers.

 

At the end of the American War of Independence in 1783, White and African refugee United Empire Loyalists arrived in Nova Scotia. A group of approximately 600 African Jamaican Maroons were taken to Nova Scotia against their will in July 1796. Another wave of African American migration followed at the end of the War of 1812, with formerly enslaved Africans who fought loyally for the British against the Americans.

 

Africville was founded by the descendants of the various waves of Africans both enslaved and free who arrived in Nova Scotia beginning in the 16th century. In Razing Africville: A Geography of Racism, Jennifer J. Nelson writes: “In the 1840s, they purchased properties on the shore of the Bedford Basin from white merchants, several of whom had been slave traders. Here the new residents fished, began keeping livestock, and explored opportunities for waged labour in the nearby city.” Many of the men worked as stevedores in the dockyards, stonemasons, truck drivers and seamen. Many of the women were domestic workers in White households. Africville was a close knit, mostly self-sufficient African Canadian community whose members built a church and a school with no help from the government.

 

The Halifax government did not support Africville and actively harmed the community beginning as early as 1853 with the demolition of several homes to allow the Nova Scotia Railway Company to build rail lines through the community. The City of Halifax collected taxes from the people of Africville but did not provide services such as paved roads, running water, sewers, public transportation and garbage collection. In 1859 the city built a prison on a hill overlooking Africville. In the 1870s the city built an infectious disease hospital on a hill overlooking Africville. In 1947 the city dump was moved onto Africville land. The stage was set for the eradication of Africville almost from the time of its establishment.

 

 

In Razing Africville: A Geography of Racism, Jennifer J. Nelson writes: “It was early in Africville’s life that the provincial and Intercolonial Railway began to infringe on the community. A petition from William Brown of Africville dated dated 21 March 1860, requests compensation for land expropriated by the city six years earlier, and an 1855 report states that several families had been moved but had yet to be compensated.” Not satisfied with expropriating the land of Africville community members, the politicians who ruled the city of Halifax subjected the people of Africville to serious environmental racism. Africville became the place for the city to place anything that was considered too dangerous for other parts of the city. “Besides the noise, pollution, and danger of the railways, Africville had soon to contend with a nearby prison, an infectious diseases hospital, the nearby dump, and the city’s night soil. The municipality built a trachoma hospital in the Africville area after other city residents complained about its proposed proximity to their own homes.”

 

 

The Seaview African United Baptist Church was opened in 1849 and was described as “the beating heart of Africville.” It was the place in the community where weddings, funerals, and baptisms were held. The city of Halifax demolished the Seaview Baptist Church on November 20, 1967, in the middle of the night without notice to the people of Africville. At the time the city claimed that it owned the church. An article published on Wednesday, March 8, 2017, by CTV Atlantic casts doubt on that claim. "Documents obtained exclusively by CTV News have solved a 50-year-old mystery surrounding the church that was once the heart of the community of Africville, N.S. The document confirms the building was indeed demolished by Nov. 20, 1967. However, it also confirms the City of Halifax didn’t formally purchase the church until nine months after the demolition." https://atlantic.ctvnews.ca/exclusive-documents-solve-mystery-surrounding-africville-church-s-demolition-date-1.3316144 In Razing Africville: A Geography of Racism, the author writes “Africville’s establishment and eradication is all about territory. It is about white people’s self-proclaimed right to land that was not theirs.”

 

 

The last building in the historic Africville community was demolished in 1969. In 1970, 24 year old Eddie Carvery, who had lived in Africville before it was demolished, returned to the site of his home, Africville, and remained there, in protest, for 50 years. The 2010 published book The Hermit of Africville: The Life of Eddie Carvery by Jon Tattrie tells the heartbreaking story of Carvery’s one-man protest. The story of Africville is relatively unknown in Canada, unlike the well-known U.S stories of Rosewood, Florida and Black Wall Street, Tulsa, Oklahoma. Canada needs the teaching of Critical Race Theory to educate Canadians about histories like Africville beginning from elementary schools. The Last Days in Africville by Dorothy Perkyns published 2003 and The Children of Africville by Christine Welldon published 2009 can be a start.

 

 

The government of Nova Scotia after evicting the Africville community and razing their homes established “Seaview Park” which is an off-leash dog park in its place. After suffering the horrific abuse of chattel slavery and the complete destruction of their homes by the government the members of the community continue to meet every year. On February 24, 2010, Peter Kelly, the Mayor of Halifax, Nova Scotia apologized to the African Canadian community for the city government’s destruction of the African Canadian community of Africville. The historic community which had been established by African Canadians in the 1800s was bulldozed out of existence by the city of Halifax in the 1960s. The members of the community, forced to relocate were scattered and their land became Seaview Park. The Africville community and their descendants gather at Seaview Park every summer at the end of July to remember the community of Africville.

Murphy Browne © November 20-2021









Saturday, 20 November 2021

NOVEMBER IS AFRICAN BRAZILIAN MONTH

 NOVEMBER IS BRAZIL BLACK AWARENESS MONTH

 

Three hundred and twenty-six years ago, on November 20-1695 Portuguese colonizers and enslavers beheaded African Brazilian freedom fighter Zumbi. On November 20, 2021, Brazilians celebrate "Dia da Consciência Negra" to commemorate the memory of African Brazilian freedom fighter Zumbi who was beheaded by the Portuguese on November 20-1695. His head was publicly displayed both as a warning to enslaved Africans and proof that Zumbi was not immortal. Zumbi is recognized as a hero, freedom fighter and a symbol of freedom.

 

 

 

Murphy Browne © November 12, 2020

 

BRAZIL BLACK AWARENESS MONTH

 

Throughout the Americas (Central, North, South) and on the Caribbean islands, Africans were enslaved by members of various European tribes, from the 15th century to the 19th century. Wherever these unfortunate Africans were enslaved they resisted their enslavers in various ways, including armed struggle. Most of the Africans who resisted are famous in the communities where they resisted but hardly known elsewhere. Bussa in Barbados, Marie Joseph Angelique in Canada, Solitude in Guadeloupe, Cuffy/Kofi in Guyana, Cudjoe in Montserrat, Gaspar Yanga in Mexico, Nanny in Jamaica and Zumbi in Brazil are some of the countless African freedom fighters. Many of these freedom fighters are honoured in the communities where they waged struggle against their enslavers, but Zumbi is the only African freedom fighter who is celebrated for an entire month. 

 

 

In the Brazilian city Salvador da Bahia, “Black November” is celebrated similar to African Heritage Month in Canada and the USA during February. Salvador da Bahia has the largest number of African Brazilian citizens and art, dance, food, music and religion are influenced by African Brazilian culture. Capoeira is an African Brazilian martial art form that arrived in Brazil on the slave ships from the African continent. Candomblé is an African Brazilian religion derived from Yoruba belief systems developed by enslaved Africans in Brazil. 

Since 1960 Brazilians have celebrated “Black Consciousness Day” (Dia da Consciência Negra) on November 20. November 20 was chosen as Dia da Consciência Negra/Black Consciousness Day in honour of a famous Brazilian Maroon leader Zumbi dos Palmares. Zumbi dos Palmares (1655-1695,) the last leader of the famous Palmares Quilombo was beheaded on November 20, 1695 by the Portuguese and his head publicly displayed both as a warning to enslaved Africans and proof that Zumbi was not immortal. 

 

 

 

On January 6, 1694, Palmares suffered a surprise attack because of a careless sentry who failed to warn Zumbi of an approaching army of Portuguese. Although Zumbi and his followers from Palmares fought valiantly, they were surrounded and outnumbered. The Portuguese destroyed the Palmares Quilombo, captured 510 Africans and sold them in Bahia. 

 

Zumbi and a few others from Palmares escaped and continued the fight. Zumbi was eventually betrayed by one of his trusted men who bargained Zumbi’s life for his own with the Portuguese. Zumbi was killed in the ensuing fight on November 20, 1695, and his body was delivered to the officials of the city council of Porto Calvo. In her 2013 published Zumbi of Palmares: Challenging the Portuguese Colonial Order Mary Karasch, a white American historian writes: “An examination revealed fifteen gunshot wounds and innumerable blows from other weapons; after his death he had been castrated and mutilated. The last degradation by his enemies occurred in a public ceremony in Porto Calvo, in which his head was cut off and taken to Recife, where the governor had it displayed on a pole in a public place. His objective was to destroy the belief that Zumbi was immortal.”

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Zumbi is a National Hero to many Brazilians, with a Brazilian airport (Zumbi dos Palmares International Airport) named in his honour and a postage stamp (2008) commemorating his memory. He was once the bane of the Portuguese colonizers/enslavers in Brazil. Zumbi was born a free African in the community of Palmares where Africans had established a free Maroon community (quilombo) in 1594. Palmares was the most successful community of quilombos established by Africans who fled enslavement in Brazil and it survived and thrived for 100 years. 

 

 

Although the Quilombo of Palmares was one of several quilombos established by Africans in Brazil, it was the largest with a population of 30,000 and lasted longer than any other (100 years) from 1594 to 1694. Some of Zumbi’s followers who escaped the carnage visited upon them by the Portuguese attack on Palmares escaped to live in other quilombos. Enslaved Africans in Brazil continued to flee until slavery was abolished in Brazil in 1888. Some of the quilombos were so well hidden that they were never discovered by the Portuguese and the inhabitants lived in freedom and seclusion. Since 1988, the quilombos have received protective status under Brazil’s constitution in an attempt to maintain the distinctive culture, history and language developed by these communities. 

 

 

In 2011 Dilma Rousseff then President of Brazil signed into law a bill that makes November 20 a Brazilian National Holiday although many Brazilian states had previously recognized November 20 with a public holiday.

 

 

In spite of the special day to honour Zumbi and the recognition of his place in Brazil’s history, African Brazilians continue to experience oppression in Brazil’s White supremacist culture. African Brazilians continue the fight for equality in education, employment, media, the workplace and the justice system. On November 20, the enslavement of Africans and other injustices since the abolition of slavery are discussed and the contributions of African Brazilians are recognized and celebrated.

 

 

In his 1989 published book Brazil, Mixture Or Massacre?: Essays in the Genocide of a Black People African Brazilian scholar and historian Abdias do Nascimento wrote: “On the whole in this pretentious concept of ‘racial democracy,’ there lies deliberately buried the true face of Brazilian society: only one of the racial elements has any rights or power – whites. They control the means of dissemination of information, educational curriculum and institutions, conceptual definitions, aesthetic norms and all other forms of social/cultural values.” 

 

 

Nascimento who transitioned to the ancestral realm on May 23, 2011 was a Pan-Africanist who played a significant role in raising awareness among African Brazilians and also wrote Racial Democracy in Brazil, Myth or Reality?: A Dossier of Brazilian Racism (1977), Race and ethnicity in Latin America – African culture in Brazilian art (1994), Orixás: os deuses vivos da Africa (Orishas: the living gods of Africa in Brazil) (1995) and Africans in Brazil: a Pan-African perspective (1997.) Recognition of Zumbi would not be complete without recognition of Nascimento as the African Brazilian activist scholar who has been described as a “militant Pan-Africanist” and spent his life raising awareness of the struggle of African Brazilians to navigate a White supremacist culture/system.

 

In 2020, 202 years after the Portuguese abolished slavery (1888) Brazil continues to discriminate against the African Brazilian population. During this Decade for People of African Descent (2015-2024) African Brazilian freedom fighter and hero Zumbi remains a symbol of freedom and struggle for African Brazilians 325 years (November 20-1695) after he was assassinated by the Portuguese colonizers/enslavers. On Friday, November 20, 2020, amidst the Covid19 Pandemic, African Brazilians will celebrate Zumbi’s courage, leadership and heroic resistance to Portuguese colonial rule and enslavement.

 

 

Murphy Browne © November 12, 2020