1 / 8

Struggle for Independence

Africa after World War II. Struggle for Independence. Imperialism Review. During the late 19 th century , European countries scrabbled to colonize parts of Africa. In 1884-1885 European leaders met at the Berlin Conference to discuss how to divide Africa

onslow
Download Presentation

Struggle for Independence

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Africa after World War II Struggle for Independence

  2. Imperialism Review • During the late 19th century, European countries scrabbled to colonize parts of Africa. • In 1884-1885 European leaders met at the Berlin Conference to discuss how to divide Africa • By 1905, all of Africa was claimed except for Liberia & Ethiopia

  3. Education of Africans • Education of Africans • From the early 1900’s, Colonial powers had cultivated a small group of elite Africanswho were sent to be educated in Western universities (US & Europe) • Here they met others of African descent. • They later became the leaders of independence movements in various African countries.

  4. Nationalism in Africa • Sense of Nationalism grew among these educated Africans • Began to dream of independence. • Believed they could govern themselves • Pan-Africanism • The idea that people of African descent should work together for their freedom • Stressed unity and cooperation among all Africans

  5. World War I & the Pan-African Congress • First Pan-African Conference was held July 23-25, 1900 I n England. • 37 delegates attended with 10 other participants & observers from Africa, the West Indies, the UK, and the US • Wanted to stop racism & govern their own countries • W.E.B. DuBois (of the US) played a leading role by drafting a letter to European leaders appealing to them to stop racism and grant colonies self-governmentand demanding political rights to African-Americans. • Throughout both World War I and World War II, Europeans maintained control of their African colonies which provided resources and men for these conflicts • World War I • African men fought for Allies, thousands died • Ex-soldiers wanted self-rule (independence) • 1919: 1st Pan-African Congress • Meeting to address issues facing Africa as a result of European colonization • Seen as a peace maker for decolonization in Africa • There were six more meetings: 1921, 1923, 1927, 1945, 1974, 1994

  6. World War II • Atlantic Charter (1941) – Created at a meeting between FDR & Churchill in 1941 that set out the goals of the post-war world. • FDR included a provision that would give autonomy (independence) to the imperial colonies. • Churchill misrepresented the intention of this provision & led Parliament to believe it only applied to German colonies. After the war, Europeans still saw themselves as “protectors” of colonial peoples.” • Africa plays huge role to help Allies • The war increased industrialization & urbanization in Africa • Supply Allies with natural resources & men • African soldiers fought and died to free Europe • Once freedom (in Europe) was gained and the war was over, African countries had their OWNfreedom in mind

  7. After the War • European powers were weakened by World War II • After the war, Africans believed they deserved freedom (independence from Europe) • In 1945 , the 5th Pan-African Congress was held in Manchester England • Considered the most important of the 5 Congresses • A number of resolutions were passed such as the criminalization of racial discrimination and a resolution that condemned imperialism and capitalism. • 90 delegates were sent, 26 from Africa • Scholars, intellectuals & political activists • W.E.B. DuBois attended at age 77 • Several of those who attended became future political leaders in Africa: • Kwame Nkrumah (Ghana) • Jomo Kenyatta (Kenya)

  8. Challenges of Independence • Between 1951 & 1980 – most African colonies gained their freedom. • But the decolonization of Africa resulted in violent, inefficient & corrupt socialist dictatorships or right-wing family dictatorships which held little regard to international rule of law and human rights. • The Challenges of Independence • African leaders spent years fighting towards freedom, but had NO experience governing (Europeans wouldn’t let them govern) • The result of this inexperience was that the new governments were unstable • Civil Wars (fighting within a country) • Rebel forces using children in their military & selling diamonds to buy weapons • Riots (mob violence) • Genocide (systematic killing of a whole group of people) (15) • In some countries, military took control by force (Coup d’etat) • These governments not always fair, people had very few rights, and were jailed if protested • Most African countries are less then 50 years old (USA 237 yrs. old)

More Related