• The Coup and the Aftermath: Re-evaluating Nkrumah’s Legacy and the End of Ghana’s First Republic

    In the early hours of February 24, 1966, while Kwame NkrumahKwame Nkrumah Full Description:The U.S.-educated activist and charismatic leader who founded the Convention People’s Party (CPP) and became the first President of independent Ghana. He was a leading theorist of Pan-Africanism and “scientific socialism,” advocating for the total liberation and unification of Africa. Under his leadership, Ghana became a symbol of Black self-determination and a haven for the global Black freedom struggle. Critical Perspective:Nkrumah’s legacy is a study in the tension between revolutionary vision and governance. While he successfully broke the back of British colonial rule through mass mobilization, his…

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  • How Nkrumah’s Ghana Became a Hub and Haven for African-American Activists and Intellectuals

    The achievement of Ghanaian independence in 1957 sent a powerful signal across the Atlantic, resonating deeply within African-American communities. For a people grappling with the entrenched system of Jim Crow segregation and the slow pace of civil rights progress in the United States, Ghana was not merely a new nation; it was a tangible, functioning symbol of Black self-determinationSelf-Determination Full Description:Self-Determination became the rallying cry for anti-colonial movements worldwide. While enshrined in the UN Charter, its application was initially fiercely contested. Colonial powers argued it did not apply to their imperial possessions, while independence movements used the UN’s own language to…

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