Senegal's Cheikh Anta Diop - the Pharaoh of Knowledge
I
start this blog on the premise that most of us accept today that Africa is the
cradle of mankind and that despite the geographical and political demarcations
that separate North and Sub-Saharan Africa, all its inhabitants were
originally one. But how many of us know of the Senegalese academician,
scientist, philosopher and politician who popularised these concepts in the
early 1950s and was widely criticised for doing so?
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My signed copy of the film from Mbaye
© MisBeee Writes
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His name was Séex (Cheikh) Anta Diop and his research, publications and discussions made him an important figure in elevating Africans, our histories, cultures and identities on the continent and across the Diaspora.
Thanks
to Birkbeck University’s free airing of the Ouseman Mbaye film ‘Kemtiyu’ in
London on 3 February 2017, I got to learn more about Dr Diop and understand why his
arguments were so fiercely criticised by the academic elite. The film (the name of which is
fittingly derived from the word Kemet – meaning land of the black people) chronicles
Diop – a child prodigy and only surviving offspring of Magatte and Massamba
Sassoum Diop. The film takes snippets from Diop’s interviews, footage from his French
wife Louise Marie Maes, their children, colleagues and friends.
Pharaoh of knowledge
Born in the
village of Thiaytou, central-west Senegal on 29 December 1923, he was thought
to be a gifted individual. At age 12, he was reported to be developing a universal
‘African’ alphabet. He was educated in a traditional Islamic school, gained his
bachelor’s degree in Senegal and continued his education in France. He went on
to study philosophy then chemistry, physics, history, linguistics and
anthropology in Paris in 1947. In adulthood, he was described as a ‘warrior of
the mind’ and ‘Pharaoh of knowledge’ who believed that language (your own – not
that of your coloniser) was the key to a country’s development. During his time
in Paris, he reinforced this by giving a lecture in maths in Wolof – a language
spoken in Senegal, the Gambia and Mauritania, primarily.
His
book 'Nations Négres
et Culture', published in 1954, revolutionised thinking on the origins of
mankind at a time when it was widely believed that the ancient Egyptian
civilisations and structures such as the pyramids could not have come from
Black Africans. He argued that humankind started in Africa along the Nile River, and
argued that the knowledge claimed to come from the Greeks was learnt when
the Greeks came to study in Africa.
Ruffling feathers
After
obtaining his doctorate in France, Diop returned to Senegal shortly after the
country gained independence in 1960. But he faced fierce opposition. He not
only clashed with Senegal’s first president Leopold Sedar Sénghor but was imprisoned for a
month in 1962 because of his political activism. He was also banned from teaching at
Dakar University because of his views. Diop famously said when fending off
opposition from fellow Senegalese and Western academics, that unfortunately,
for something to be considered objective, it had to come from the white man. Undeterred,
he committed much of his life (he died aged 63) to establishing Senegal’s first
carbon dating laboratory with IFAN (Institut Fondamental d’Afrique Noire - the
Fundamental Institute of Black Africa). According to the Radio Carbon Laboratory (IFAN), the laboratory was
the second of its kind in Africa next to one in modern-day Zimbabwe. His
written work was prolific as were his lectures, which attracted wide audiences
and included invitations to the US up until his death.
Ironically,
it was not until after his death that he was given the honour of having the
seat of learning that he was banned from teaching in (Dakar University) named
after him. The longest road in Senegal also bears his name. While these
accolades are laudable, what is surprising is 31 years after his death, his
work is not taught in the university, according to ‘Kemtiyu’ filmmaker Mbaye. There
were efforts to introduce it into the curriculum in 2015, but this has not really
progressed, Mbaye said.
Have you watched the film ‘Kemtiyu’ or do you know about Diop's work - is so why do you think his legacy is not more widely known?
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Please be aware that you may not reproduce, republish, modify or commercially exploit this content without our prior written consent.
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