Republic of New Afrika

US black nationalist organization and movement From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Republic of New Afrika (RNA) is a black nationalist organization in the United States founded in 1968 after the civil rights movement. The organization has three goals: creation of an independent socialist country[3] in the heart of the Black Belt in the American South, payment by the U.S. federal government of several billion dollars in reparations to African Americans for the damages inflicted on them through slavery and Jim Crow laws, and a plebiscite of all African Americans to determine their desires for citizenship. Its provisional government claims sovereignty over the states of Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama, Georgia and South Carolina (with adjoining areas in East Texas and North Florida) as subjugated national territory.

Largest cityAtlanta, Georgia
OfficiallanguagesAfrican-American English
DemonymNew Afrikan
Quick facts Capital, Largest city ...
Republic of New Afrika
Flag of RNA
Flag of the Republic of New Afrika
US States identified as subjugated national territory at the 1968 foundational conference
US States identified as subjugated national territory at the 1968 foundational conference[1]
CapitalJackson, Mississippi
Largest cityAtlanta, Georgia
Official languagesAfrican-American English
DemonymNew Afrikan
Government
 President
Sah Ankh Sa Ma’at[2]
 Vice President
Ayodele Kofie
Area
 Total
750,503 km2 (289,771 sq mi)
Today part ofSouthern United States
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The organization experienced significant decline in the early 1970s primarily due to sustained government repression, including violent raids and mass arrests that imprisoned key leaders and disrupted operations. Efforts to build institutions involved land purchases, but the project encountered severe repression from federal and state authorities.

History

The idea of the RNA arose following the events of the 1967 Detroit riot.[4]:276 It was the first separate nation declared by African Americans in the United States.[4]:276

The vision for this country was first promulgated by the Malcolm X Society[5] on March 31, 1968, at a Black Government Conference held in Detroit, Michigan. The conference participants drafted a constitution and declaration of independence,[5] and they identified five Southern states Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama, Georgia and South Carolina (with adjoining areas in East Texas and North Florida) as subjugated national territory.[1]

The Black Government Conference was convened by the Malcolm X Society and the Group on Advanced Leadership (GOAL), two influential Detroit-based black revolutionary organizations with broad followings. The attendees drafted a Declaration of Independence, a constitution, and the framework for a provisional government.[4]:276

Chinese leader Mao Zedong signing a copy of his Little Red Book for Robert F. Williams, first president of the Republic of New Afrika organization

This provisional government gave birth to the Republic of New Afrika.[4]:276 Robert F. Williams, then living in exile in Cuba, was chosen as the first president of the provisional government; attorney Milton Henry (a student of Malcolm X's teachings) was named first vice president;[6] and Betty Shabazz, widow of Malcolm X, served as second vice president. Imari Obadele was its first Minister of Information.[4]:267 An RNA delegation traveled to China to meet Williams in June 1968.[4]:276 Williams accepted the position and proposed diplomatic initiatives for the RNA to undertake.[4]:276

The Provisional Government of the Republic of New Afrika (PG-RNA) advocated/advocates a form of cooperative economics[7] through the building of New Communities—named after the Ujamaa concept promoted by Tanzanian President Julius Nyerere.

It proposed and created militant self-defense through the building of local people's militias; a standing army to be called the Black Legion.

The organization was involved in numerous controversial issues. For example, it attempted to assist Oceanhill-Brownsville area in Brooklyn to secede from the United States during the 1968 conflict over control of public schools. Additionally, it was involved with shootouts at New Bethel Baptist Church in 1969 (during the one-year anniversary of the founding) and another in Jackson, Mississippi, in 1971. (It had announced that the capital of the Republic would be in Hinds County, Mississippi, located on a member's farm.) In the confrontations, law-enforcement officials were killed and injured. Organization members were prosecuted for the crimes. The members claimed they acted in self defense.[8]

The Republic of New Afrika's influence persisted through publications, such as Imari Obadele's War in America: The Malcom X Doctrine (1977) and Free the land! (1984), and Nkechi Taifa's Reparations Yes (1993). Key figures like Chokwe Lumumba, elected vice president in 1971, became a prominent attorney defending Republic of New Afrika members and later mayor of Jackson, Mississippi (2013-2014), where he advanced cooperative economics before his death. [9][10]

Notable members

Leaders

Publications

  • The Article Three Brief. 1973. (New Afrikans fought U.S. Marshals in an effort to retain control of the independent New Afrikan communities shortly after the U.S. Civil War.)
  • Obadele, Imari Abubakari. Foundations of the Black Nation, Detroit: House of Songay, 1975.
  • Brother Imari [Obadele, Imari]. War In America: The Malcolm X Doctrine, Chicago: Ujamaa Distributors, 1977.
  • Kehinde, Muata. RNA President Imari Obadele is Free After Years of Illegal U.S. Imprisonment. In Burning Spear Louisville: African Peoples Socialist Party, 1980. pp. 4–28
  • Obadele, Imari Abubakari. The Malcolm Generation & Other Stories, Philadelphia: House of Songhay, 1982.
  • Taifa, Nkechi; Lumumba, Chokwe (1993) [1983, 1987]. Reparations Yes (3rd ed.). Baton Rouge: House of Songhay.
  • Obadele, Imari Abubakari. Free The Land!: The True Story of the Trials of the RNA-11 Washington, D.C. House of Songhay, 1984.
  • New Afrikan State-Building in North America. Ann Arbor. Univ. of Michigan Microfilm, 1985, pp. 345–357.
  • "The First New Afrikan States". In The Black Collegian, Jan./Feb. 1986.
  • A Beginner's Outline of the History of Afrikan People, 1st ed. Washington, D.C. House of Songhay, Commission for Positive Education, 1987.
  • America The Nation-State. Washington, D.C. and Baton Rouge. House of Songhay, Commission for Positive Education, 1989, 1988.
  • Walker, Kwaku, and Walker, Abena. Black Genius. Baton Rouge. House of Songhay, Commission for Positive Education, 1991.
  • Afoh, Kwame, Lumumba, Chokwe, and Obafemi, Ahmed. A Brief History of the Black Struggle in America, With Obadele's Macro-Level Theory of Human Organization. Baton Rouge. House of Songhay, Commission for Positive Education, 1991.
  • RNA. A People's Struggle. RNA, Box 90604, Washington, D.C. 20090–0604.
  • The Republic of New Africa New Afrikan Ujamaa: The Economics of the Republic of New Africa. 21p. San Francisco. 1970.
  • Obadele, Imari Abubakari. The Struggle for Independence and Reparations from the United States 142p. Baton Rouge. House of Songhay, 2004.
  • Obadele, Imari A., editor De-Colonization U.S.A.: The Independence Struggle of the Black Nation in the United States Centering on the 1996 United Nations Petition 228p. Baton Rouge. The Malcolm Generation, 1997.

See also

References

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