By Omiko Awa
INSPIRED by the spirit of convergence for which Lagos
remains pre-eminent, the Lagos Black Heritage (LBH) Festival celebrates African
creativity within a carnivalesque of traditional and contemporary dance, music,
painting and photo exposition, drama, international symposium, film shows and
other artistic offerings.
The 3rd edition, which maps out the black African presence in the
Mediterranean with a cultural exploration of the Afro-Italian connection
opened with a keynote, The Black
Mediterranean: Migrants’ Routes In The Global Millennium, followed by Africa Meets Italy: History, Industry, Trade;
Western Imperialism In Africa: The
Italian Connection; and The Roots Of
Italian Interest In Nigeria Oil: Economic And Political Stakes Of A Challenging
Initiative. The various speakers that handled the subjects talked about
Italy’s role in the exploitation and under development of Africa as well as how
blacks have come to doing demeaning jobs in Europe, especially Nigerian ladies
taking to prostitution in Italy and the consequent effect of stereotyping.
Calling on European countries to alleviate
the plight of Africans countries whose homelands were plundered centuries ago
by European slave traders and colonialist, Dr. Oti Agbajola Laoye, Professor of
English and Diaspora Studies, Monmouth University, West Long Branch, New
Jersey, US in a chat with The Guardian
says, “Africans have been contributing positively to global economy. There are
a lot of African professionals who are contributing in all kinds of ways to the
economy of foreign countries; even the so-called uneducated or unskilled
workers are also contributing to the growth and development of their host
country. In most cases, people focus only on the negative facts and ignore all
the positive contributions of Africans everywhere; so, if you are asking for
people who are not necessary successful in the sense we define success to come
back home, we should then ask everybody to come back to Africa and build the
continent.”
Responding to those who often conclude that African engaged in prostitution
and the sales of elephant tusks as the same and that Africans engaged in such
business are doing ‘nothing’ in Europe, the don states, “we can’t say these
class of people are doing nothing, at least the prostitute are taking care of
the excess sexual energy of the Italian people. They need customers to survive
in the business and the striving trade shows that they are being patronised not
by Nigerian men, but by Italians and this has been going on everywhere, even
during the colonial periods. Many of the white people came here and got ride of
their excess sexual energy by interacting sexually with our women, I do not
want to use an extreme word such as rape, though the whites did a lot of it.
So, this is not a recent problem, it is a problem that has suddenly become
noticeable because of the kind of attention given to it in the past few years.”
What then must the nation do to correct its
damaged image as a result of this? Dr. Laoye who has presented many scholarly
papers on African-European relations in seminars and symposiums says, “it’s
time the various countries that make up the African continent, including
Nigeria, begin to call back and ultilise their professionals that have left the
continent. A lot of them left their home countries not because they hate them,
but because there is nothing to do. I love Nigeria and many others outside do,
but we left because we want to be busy, we want to be ultilised, we want our
knowledge to be tapped for the betterment of the nation; and it is not until
Nigeria and others that make up the African continent actively begin to think
of nation building would they then create more jobs and the enabling
environment for people to come back and contribute to the development of their
countries.” She continues, “right now Nigeria is only spending money; in fact,
wasting money because if you have a problem with prostitutes in Italy, then we
should have problems with our leaders who take our money abroad or to Swiss
banks; they buy expensive houses in different countries, thereby contributing
to the economy of such countries while depleting our local economy. So, when we
talk of prostitution, we need to redefine and expand the meaning to not only be
limited to the women standing in the cold in a foreign countries waiting for customers,
but to include our leaders and people that willingly hand over what truly
belongs to Africa to Europeans.
“We should look at it in its proper perspective
and not victimise the victim. The woman who leaves Edo State or wherever she
may be coming from in Nigeria or Africa to Italy is being victimised and it is tragic
because they are endangering their lives, they are exploited and easily killed.”
“Prostitution is not a good or fair business,
rather those involved are victims of the society; they are, in fact, the
victims of our time. And because of the activities of these victims of our
local societies, the Italians have resulted to stereotyping all African women.
To them, the few African women involved in the illicit trade, mean every woman
that has legally made her way to Italy and doing legitimate job is a prostitute,
and if there is any man carrying a bag or wearing Senegalese clothes, as long
as he is an African, he is selling elephant tusks,” Laoye sighs.
Frowning at the way Africans are stereotyped
the English language teacher says, “stereotyping is bad, in Africa we don’t say
because one white person is a serial killer, he has killed a hundred people,
therefore all white people are killers; it is not extended to all the white
people in the world, why then should Africa identity be based on stereotype. I
think it’s a dangerous way of looking at the world, because it will make us to continue
to look at the world in terms of race, which is obsolete. We should look at the
world in terms of ethnicity, culture and national identities rather than
identifying a person based on the skin colour and then engaging in stereotyping,
which are mostly negative. You will never find positive stereotypes.
“Nigeria has some of the most brilliant
people in the world, but you will never hear them say Nigerians are brilliant
people, you will never hear them extend that brilliance to every Nigerian.
Stereotyping is, in fact, bad and dangerous,” she states.
Comparing the situation to the US where she
lives, Dr. Laoye informs, “in the US you can take a person to court for
stereotyping you, so they are more careful about asking you if you are a waiter,
but that does not mean it does not exist. I am telling you if Obama steps out
of the White House some one will surely stereotype him; even as he is in the
White House, he is experiencing discrimination too.
“ Someone said there are Italians involved in
crime in the US, yet an Italian rose to be a US president; that does not mean
they are no longer criminals; the fact is, the illegal acts of those few
Italians was not used against all of the Italians, but when it in the case of
Africans, it is generalised inform of stereotype. Europeans forcefully
transported Africans to their plantations to work for them and are still bold
enough to punish us that should be punishing them for the crime committed
against us.”
Can’t Nigeria and other African countries
call Italy to pay reparations? “Some group of people want Italy to be held
accountable for exploiting the African continent since they were among those
that forcefully took away our resources, art and even man power to develop
their country, but rather than refuse our people visas or citizenship, they want
them to make it possible for any Nigerian or African to work in Italy because
they are owing us.
“Reparations can take different forms; some people
have said it is not possible to pay African in monetary terms because the harm
done cannot be quantified monetarily; for example how do you quantify the
Africa-American whose parents were forcefully taken to America 400 years ago
and have worked for centuries without payment. It is not just the money, but
also the suffering, psychological torture and the trauma, which can’t be paid
for. European countries that have robbed Africa in the past can make things
better by funding research, giving free services in needed areas and, with time
the people will get back what that have been taken away from them, even if such
giving lasts for 400 years. All the European countries are owing Africa and the
least they can do is to respect us and not punish Africans for being black.”
Commending the efforts of Lagos State
government on LBH, Laoye says, “the name Freedom Park, venue of the festival
should be extended to other facets of life in the country, so that we can sit
and think about freedom in more engaging ways and know what to be freed from.”
Making reference to the state of the nation,
Laoye asks, “is it freedom from economic hardship, freedom of speech, freedom
to move from one part of the country to another without fear of being bombed or
is it freedom to work in the northerner part of the country without being
offered temporary appointment because one is not a northerner? “We
need to make border crossing a more positive thing rather ignore them or focus
attention on the mobility that exists outside the country. While we are theorizing
on freedom; we should begin to look at its practicality and extend it to our
immediate local.”
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