How Deep the Well: History and the Journey from Selma to Timbuktu

Similar documents
Journal What trade goods did West Africa supply to North Africa

Journal Journal A. Which is a reason for Timbuktu s importance to the Mali empire?

Lesson 1: Traveling Asia s Silk Road

9/21/14. Bell Work Fill in the blanks. Agenda. Complete vocabulary quiz. Finish Mansa Musa Instagram. Take notes on Songhai

Kingdoms & Trading States of Medieval Africa

African Kingdoms and Salt

Chapter 5 and 6 Study Questions

What was Africa like before global integration?

Many trade routes crossed the savanna through the region farmed by the Soninke people. The Soninke called their leader Ghana, or war chief.

I. Development of Early African Civilization A. The geography of Africa is diverse (varied). This makes the cultures of Africa very diverse.

Contents. List of Acknowledgements. Introduction 1 Historiography 1 Geography, climate and Vegetation 3

Eastern Hemisphere African Empires

Unit Two: Early African Kingdoms and Arabic Trade Routes, 7-16 th centuries

World History and Geography to 1500 A.D. Unit VII Eastern Hemisphere Trade

List of Illustrations

TOM NEWBY SCHOOL EXAMINATION

Geography of WEST AFRICA 7.4.1

African History. Return

AFRICA. Human Geography

TOM NEWBY SCHOOL. Up to a maximum of 7.5 marks can be deducted for spelling and grammar errors.

Divine Learning: The Traditional Islamic Scholarship of Timbuktu, Mali

Medieval Trade Systems

History Department EXAMINATION-JULY 2013

The Americans (Reconstruction to the 21st Century)

THE NEXT. BIG THING Cal Poly s Center for Wine and Viticulture

SSWH6 Describe the diverse characteristics of early African societies before 1500 CE/AD.

CIVILIZATION IN AFRICA NUBIAN Necklace B.C.

GRADE 7 History Notes Term

Did you know? Africa is one of the earth s seven continents. It is the second largest continent. Africa is a land of great beauty and resources.

Golden kingdoms of Africa *

Sudanic Kingdoms Ghana, Mali, Songhai

WEST AFRICAN TRADING EMPIRES

Bellringer T1D6. How has the world changed in the last 200 years? What has changed?

Areas of Heavy Rainfall around 7000 B.C. present

History Grade 7 Term 1

Post Classical Civs. F Block - Humanities

Early and. Medieval African Kingdoms. Timeline Cards

Ghana: A West African Trading Empire

Back to the English. HISTORY'S INFLUENTIAL PLANTS

Medieval Africa Section One: The Rise of African Civilizations

Libraries of Mali. Caption: A map of Mali showing the famed city of Timbuktu

Unit 3: European Explorers

Chapter 12: Establishing World Trade Routes

Madera Vintners Association Grant Program In Honor Of Dr. Vincent Petrucci and Professor Ken Fugelsang

Muhammad the prophet and founder of Islam. Mansa Musa a Muslim ruler of the Mali empire during its height

CAUSES OF EXPLORATION. READING and ASSIGNMENT. Read the excerpt below. Use the reading to complete the section of the graphic organizer.

Competition for a Continent Why did early French and English efforts at colonization falter?

What Will You Learn In This Chapter?

Bourbon County 4-H Newsletter

ACOS ETHIOPIA CASE STUDY

Farm to School. Independence Area Chapter

2018 partnership opportunities

The School Trip of the Year starts December 1 st!

Kevin Shillington History Of Africa

Lesson 2: China s Past. Ancient China

REMARKS BY PAUL BULCKE, GROUP CHIEF EXECUTIVE OFFICER, NESTLÉ S.A. MEDIA CONFERENCE, NAIROBI, FRIDAY, JULY 2, 2010

The Age of Exploration. Europe Encounters the World

Native Americans Culture

In addition to salt list two other products a North African trader might bring to trade in West Africa.

Review Questions 1. How did the Bantu migrations affect existing cultures?

Medieval Adventures. Travel Brochure. 9/27/2017 Medieval Africa Time Travel Guide - Diego Soto - Google Docs

a Wine To Water Publication

Wealth and resources. ! New beginning. ! Get out of debt. ! Escape political & religious persecution

Name: Global 10 Section. Global Regents Packet 7. Movement of People and Goods

of Mondavi Center MEMBER HANDBOOK

Understanding Anaphylaxis in Schools

PRISM AWARDS BEST USE OF AN EVENT TO BUILD OR CHANGE REPUTATION THE BOTANIST: THE FORAGER 2.0 THE FRIDAY STREET CLUB OPENING STATEMENT

Tea With Jane Austen Recipes Inspired By Her Novels And Letters

Haverhill Union Mission records,

STANDARD WHII.2a The student will demonstrate an understanding of the political, cultural, geographic, and economic conditions in the world about 1500

Hong Kong In Chinese History By Jung-Fang Tsai

Fairtrade University Report, Year 2 November 2005

Chapter Summary. Section 2: Kingdoms of West Africa. Section 1: Early Civilizations of Africa

PACKET D. Technology & Commercial Practices Intensify Trade. 9 Topic Workshop #26. Module

Chapter 1: Beginnings in Africa Notes

FACULTY OF BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION DEPARTMENT OF ECONOMICS THE ECONOMY OF MALI EMPIRE BABA OSMAN BUKARI 12/7/2016. Lecturer: PROF.

Q u a l i t y W e l c o m e E x c l u s i v e n e s s

COLLEGE EMPLOYEE SATISFACTION SURVEY RESULTS Gallaudet University - Fall Comparison to 4-year, Private not-for-profit Institutions

Emergence of Transregional Networks of Communication and Exchange. Key Concept 2.3

Holt African American History Chapter 1


SOL Review - Geography

Literature Review. Introduction. The purpose of this study is to explore the demands placed on ice-cream vendors to produce state

brands! great restaurants Great start with

The World Economy. Chapter 17

Natives & Europeans Collide Study Guide

Beans in Bean Mushroom Sauce Serves 6 to 8

UNIT 3 ANCIENT AFRICAN CIVILIZATIONS

John Keble Church of England Primary School. Healthy Eating and Packed Lunch Policy. Chair of Governors Fr Andrew Teather

DAY191 French fries will be 3cm shorter SYNONYM MATCH. GIVE YOUR BEST ANSWER Tim Berners-Lee conceived of the Internet 50 years ago.

African Civilizations 1500 BC-AD 700

Student Handout #4: Era 3 Societies around the World. The Olmec:

Fair Trade Campus Application Form

Latin America: 1800s to the Present. Colonial Legacies. History 134. Jason Suárez History Department El Camino College

The Ming Dynasty. Eric Otiende March 7, 2019

14. Think Outside the Bun.

Teacher's Guide for APPLESEEDS Exploring the Sahara April 2002

THE BROMPTON GAZETTE

Mali Sugar Conglomerate

The Earliest Americans. Chapter 1 Section 1

Transcription:

University of Massachusetts Amherst ScholarWorks@UMass Amherst Afro-American Studies Faculty Publication Series Afro-American Studies October 2001 How Deep the Well: History and the Journey from Selma to Timbuktu Amilcar Shabazz University of Massachusetts - Amherst, shabazz@afroam.umass.edu Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarworks.umass.edu/afroam_faculty_pubs Recommended Citation Shabazz, Amilcar, "How Deep the Well: History and the Journey from Selma to Timbuktu" (2001). The Bus Stop. 1. Retrieved from https://scholarworks.umass.edu/afroam_faculty_pubs/1 This is brought to you for free and open access by the Afro-American Studies at ScholarWorks@UMass Amherst. It has been accepted for inclusion in Afro-American Studies Faculty Publication Series by an authorized administrator of ScholarWorks@UMass Amherst. For more information, please contact scholarworks@library.umass.edu.

How Deep the Well: History and the Journey from Selma to Timbuktu by Amilcar Shabazz* The Inter-Diaspora Conference on Education of the African Child for the New Millennium, held in Mali, West Africa, involved a most significant sharing of strategies, insights, and inspiration. With a broad recognition that our hopes of a bright future is based upon how well we cultivate the minds and hearts of our young people today, the Coalition of Alabamians Rebuilding Education (CARE) looked at how best to reclaim excellence through the rebuilding of education in concert with our people throughout the African World Community. In going to Africa we committed ourselves to improving our work to rebuild education and to see that work as integral to the international struggle for human rights. Our right to vote is meaningless if we are not exercising our human right to selfdevelopment and self-determination as a people. Each day in Mali brought new ideas and information. The trip was truly an amazing and unforgettable location for a conference with so ambitious an agenda. The greatness of Mali has not been lost on U.S.-born African scholars. Monroe N. Work, in his The Passing Tradition and the African Civilization, [Journal of Negro History, Vol. 1, No. 1. (Jan., 1916), pp. 34-41] wrote about the high state of civilization that our ancestors had achieved in the Mali empire in the Western Sudan. Popular education and advanced study in this region had reached a pinnacle unsurpassed anywhere else on the planet. The most active

center of learning in Mali was located in Timbuktu at the University of Sankore. The rise and passing of the greatest of the Sudanese kingdoms, that of the Songhay, extends over a millennium, but Work dates its golden age from 750 to 1591. The closing of this age is marked by the Moroccan pasha Mahmud Zarqun s exiling of the celebrated scholar Ahmed Baba (see John Hunwick s essay in History of West Africa by Ajayi and Crowder). While the 1600s brought a decline in the economic fortunes of Timbuktu in particular and sub-saharan Africa in general (from the escalation of the trans-atlantic slave trade to the Boer invasion at the continent s southernmost point), the legacy of educational excellence remains ours to claim. Timbuktu, a name given the place by the Tuareg people that literally means Buktu s well, has a deep, spiritual meaning for African people. There and in other great Malian cities such as Segou and Djenne our people amazed the world with the power of African genius. What our people did a millennium ago we can and will do again in this new millennium. We touched one of thousands of ancient manuscripts at the Ahmed Baba Center that was written by African scholars centuries ago. One of these was entitled An Essay on Power and it was a refutation of the ideas that Niccolo Machiavelli had written in The Prince around 1515. This critical essay was written within two years of the publication of The Prince. In our internet age e-mail, cell phones, jet planes, and faxes, it s still a tall order to find scholarly discourse so quickly let alone five centuries ago when camel-based caravans across the Sahara desert was the only way a

political tract from Italy could have gotten to Timbuktu. The well of African intellect, talent, creativity, and discipline is very deep indeed. We gained up close knowledge about the process of rebuilding education in Mali from visiting classrooms and speaking with the chief and elders in a small village such as Ngaran; talking to children and teachers at the Institute for Popular Education in Kati, a city of 46,000; and discussing the rebuilding process with national leaders such as the Mme. Adame Ba Konare, the First Lady of Mali, Malian Education Minister, Moustapha Dicko, Bishop Mori Julien- Marie Sidibe of Segou, and the Hon. Adama Samassekou, President of the People s Decade for Human Rights Education (PDHRE). It has been my pleasure to speak to students here in Tuscaloosa at the University of Alabama, Stillman College, and public schools such as Matthews Elementary about the struggle to rebuild and reclaim educational excellence under way in Mali and Alabama. The African American Studies at the University of Alabama has been fortunate to host a reception during Black History Month, this past February 2001, for the Malian delegation to the U.S. led by PDHRE President Samassekou. The reception was attended by students, faculty, the Provost of the University, and UA System Board of Trustees member Judge John England. The Mayor of Tuscaloosa extended the keys to the city to delegation members. From the Alabama delegation s journey to Timbuktu at the beginning of the new millennium many great things have begun to develop in our state and in

Mali. We look forward to convening again in November in another historic educational summit. * Dr. Amilcar Shabazz, chair of the board of the Coalition of Alabamians Rebuilding Education (CARE), is an assistant professor of American Studies and the first director of The University of Alabama's African American Studies Program. His publications include The Forty Acres Documents on the history of the quest for black reparations and a forthcoming book entitled Saving the Race and Advancing the Cause of Democracy: African Americans and the Struggle for Access and Equity in Higher Education. He can be contacted at amilcar@bama.ua.edu