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To: vannrox
"“The colonial period resulted in Africans being denied their history, but of course knowing that history is a vital part of nation-building."

Okay, they have to throw in an anti-West slam. The truth is of course the opposite, Africans had almost no idea of their history, they didn't have history as such, but legends, myths and stories. Only with the scholarship of the West, the archaelogy as demonstrated by the effort chronicled in this article, has given Africa and other parts of the world, their history back. 200 years ago, most of the civilizations of the world were lost civilizations. No one knew a thing about them until the West and scientific scholarship arrived on the scene.

2 posted on 08/17/2002 9:57:08 AM PDT by Kermit
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To: Kermit
I wouldn't be surprised if these structures were built by the people of north africa (i.e. Arabs, etc...) as a way-station for their slave caravans that travelled through the area...
3 posted on 08/17/2002 11:10:35 AM PDT by Chad Fairbanks
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To: Kermit
Yes, that is true.

Think about the 900s! The West itself was virtually unknown - a mere dream - known better in fairy tales than in fact - Arabic archaologists and scholars worked on rediscovering it and they preserved many ancient Greek and Roman manuscripts. By the time the Western barbarian armies began marching on Jerusalem the East's passion to study the West was really underway. By the 1200s, Turkish sultans began investing heavily in the exercise.

By the 1400s so much had been recovered that Westerners themselves began to earnestly pursue their own history. Accommodations relating to the transfer of libraries of ancient knowledge were formally established in Islamic and Christian Spain so that nothing would be lost. When a Moslem city would fall, Christian scribes would move in and start copying the books.

Recovery moved ahead nicely after that.

Whether Africans in Cameroon learn about their own history from the West or from their own sources is of no consequence. It is history, and no one can change it - only illuminate it!

The man whose name I use in FreeRepublic, "Muawiyah", had risen to power over the Arab Empire and discovered how to separate church from state in the furtherance of justice while Europeans did well to cluster around open fires in wattle and daub huts while picking lice - and thought themselves lucky.

Be proud that our West is able to give the people in Cameroon a picture of themselves. This is a privilege the West did without for nearly a thousand years.

4 posted on 08/17/2002 11:12:50 AM PDT by muawiyah
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To: Kermit

the tribes of southern Africa might have been pre literate, but those with contact with Arab traders do have a history. This site is in Camaroon, which is in the sphere of influence of the various Arabian empires.

The PBS had a special on the libraries of Timbucktu...it made me wonder who is translating the stuff.


21 posted on 12/18/2010 9:10:59 PM PST by LadyDoc (liberals only love politically correct poor people)
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