Dubois and PanAfricanism
Dubois and PanAfricanism
Dubois and PanAfricanism
by
A Thesis
McMaster University
Ju~, 1967
(ii)
MASTER OF ~1TS (1967) McMaster University
(Political Science) H~milton, Ontario.
(iii)
At the background of every Negro, however
wise, or well educated, or brave, or good,
is contemporar,r Africa which has no collective
achievement like other nationalities.
Wo E. B. Du Bois.
(lv)
A C K NOW L E D\ GEM E N T S
\
(v)
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Page
Introduction 0
.. o 0
o
. . . 1
I The Han o. o. 0 o o o 5
II The Ideology o. .. .
o. 31
III The Congresses 00
O. O. o. o. . . . . 55
IV Conclusion o. .0 00
00 o. 0" 81
Bibliography o 0 o O
0 87
(vi)
INTRODUCTION
The scope of this study is to examine the role played by H.E.B. Du Bois
in the development of the Pan-African idea. Du Bois' direct influence v-las
felt most prior to 1945 and to a great extent it was his leadership that
provided the loose organizational structure that pe~sisted through a series
of Congresses. More important~, however, it was Du Bois who provided
the ideas that gave to Pan-A.fricanism a distinct ideology- that to a large
degree has persisted to the present.
The lifetime ofH.E.B. Du Bois, the most prolific of all Negro v-lriters
and intellectuals, spans the decades from Negro emancipation down to 1963.
Born in 1868, he had his first book published in 1896, and until his death
there issued from his pen a flow of words that Isaacs sums up as "passionate
and biting and strong and angr,y words, poetic and mrstical, great, florid
and sweeping words, state~ and ornate words, vague, c;Loudy and of~en mut,ualJ.y
cqntradictor,y words, and remarkab~ often, some deeply penetrating and piercing
prophetic words."l His books included sociological studies, essays and sketches,
biography and autobiography, histor,y, novels and poetry:. It was through such
works that Du Bois t claim to influence upon Negroes was based. His works
reflected his own life lon~ fight for dignity and respect and the securing for
all Negroes civil rights and equality of opportunity. Much of his writing
emphasized the relationship of the Negro to Africa and this was central to his
Pan-African ideas.
: The study is divided into three chapters. The first deals with
those aspects of Du Bois' life that provided the impetus for him in seelting
solutions to America's racial problems on a world-wide basis with particular
emphasis on Africa. This chapter also discusses the attachment that Du Bois
felt for things African and his strong sense of racial kinship with the
African people. The second chapter discusses those ideas of Du Bois that
became the nucleus of the. Pan-African ideology. The third chapter examines
the series of Pan-African Congresses that Du Bois was instrumental in
summoning.
In examining the role of Du Bois in the development of the Pan-
African idea a number of propositions are advanced which, it is hoped, will
be supported by the evidence contained in th~ three substantive chapters.
These propositions are merelY advanced at this stage and will be given
detailed examination in the concluding chapter. First, the study will
attempt to Shovl that the Pan-African idea for Du Bois vIaS an attempt to
resolve American racial problems in world~iLde and particularlY African terms.
It served also as a means of escape for Du Bois from the realities of the
American situation. Second, Pan-Africanism prior to 19h5 was not so much
political in its impact as it was cultural. Here I hope to show that move-
ments, sueh as earlY Pan~ricanism, consisting of a few intellectuals
meeting periodically, have little hope of solving intense political and
social problems. Their impact, if any, is that an idiom is created in which
politic41ly more active organizations and leaders operate -- Du Bois' idiom
being a particular view of the relationship between the coloured peoples
of the world and their collective relationship to colonial powers. He
attempted to destroy the old assumptions on vlhich racial superiority was
based and substitute instead new assumptions proving the equality of races.
Third, prior to 19h5, Pan-Africanism, organizationally, was not a move-
ment, nor was it African; it was Du Bois. Fourth, the type and style of
Du Bois' leadership severely curtailed any effectiveness Pan-Africanism
might have had during this period.
In concluding this brief introduction it is pointed out that the
major sources of information are Du Bois' own writings, chiefly his auto-
biographies. Secondary sources are used whenever they prove useful. The
method of study is an analysis of Du Bois' own material.
CHAPI'ER I THE MAN
his mother as Itdark, shining bronze, with a tiny ripple in her black hair,
black--eyed-, with a heavy, kind face who " gave one the impression of
infinite patience, but a curious determination was concealed in her softness. 1I2
Later iilvestigations of his ancestors by Du Bois showed that his paternal family
were descendants of French Huguenots and Dutch settlers. Du Bois, in a
chara'cteristic fashion, stated that he was born with Ita flood of Negr0 3blood,
a strain of French, a bit of Dutch,' but, thank God! no II Anglo-Saxon III L.
As a child in Great Barrington Du Bois was not overtJ.y aware of the
that there were ineradicable differences between him and his white friends.
Not surprisingly, the realization vlas caused by a girl:
Once the 'veil' was in place, there was no desire to tear it dovm or "to
creep through; I held all beyond it in common contemp.t, and lived above it in
episode, and may have embellished it and his reaction considerably, it is not
unlikely that some such event had deep implications for his subsequent life
Erik Erikson,lO in a still experimental theory, has suggested that the life
of men such as Du Bois ~ be interpreted as the striving to find an identity
that has been denied by environmental factors. The beginning point of such a
struggle is the feeling that a personal problem of identity can only be solved
on a large scale and in a grand context. In Du Bois' childhood the realization
of his apartness through the action of his playmates provided the impetus for
him to seek the public arena in settling these slights. While such slights may
not appear monuraental, their impact upon a fatherless child is significant. There
was his realization that he was no longer a member of a childhood group and that
his exclusion meant a loss of security. It became apparent that being white carried
with it prerogatives of wealth and an accepted place in society. His life became
9.
, -- - -~----.--------
Harold R. Isaacs, the New W:0rl<!...<?! NeEE~ Americans (Nev-T York:
b
an attempt to win these prizes for Negroes everywhere; to see that opportunities
were open to them and that they were allowed to participate equally in the life
of their commpnity. "l1Y proble~ then was how, into the inevitable and logical
democracy which was spreading over the world, could black folk in America and
particular~ in the South, be openly and effectively admitted; and the coloured
p~ople of the world be al~O't'18d their own s~lf-government.1I11 His own search
for identity was bound up with the search for an identity and acceptance for
Negroes ever,ywhere.
He surpassed his classmates in examinations, graduated from High School,
but because of his mother's death postponed attending university for a year. At
first he wanted to attend Harvard University but was told that the pJ~ce for him
was in the South. A SCholarship was arranged for him by relatives at Fisk
University. "After a twinge rhe1 telt a strange delight" at entering the "land
of the slaves:"
12 L -
At Fisk Du Bois was thrown IIboldly into the Negro problem. II ' It vlaS
a region where lithe world I,ras split into t-1hite and black halves, and where
the darker half was held back by race prejudice and legal bonds, as Hell as
teacher in a'Tennessee country school and met at close range the poverty,
poor land, i@lorance, and prejudice with which southern Negroes had to contend.
Violence that he had never realized possible in NevI England vIaS common. These
experiences made Du B,ois embrace his race with greater enthusiasm than ever.
A new loyalty and allegiance replaced his Americaness: Ithenceforward I was a
Negro. lIl ) He viaS proud to be a Negro, and this pri.de began in demanding for
all Negroes the rights and privileees to which they vlere entitled. His under-
standing of'the race problem became clearer and sharper at Fisk; and he
resolved to fight the 'colour bar' in a forthright but peaceful w~. The
soluti.on he thought would be fo~d by-Negro intellectuals and other leaders who
saw it their duty to lead the race beyond its veil.
Had it not been that the race problem was thrust upon him a'[j an early
age, Du Bois commented that he probably would have been an unquestioning
worshipper at the shrine of the social order and economic development into which
-he was born. But the prejudice directed at him by a white world that decreed
for him an inferio~ status was completely unacceptable. At fjxst he saw only
14. _If.E.B. Du Bois, III-V Evolving Programme for N.egro Freedomll, in 1'lhat
the Jlteg::~ vlapts, ed. Rayfo~d W. Logan (Chapel Hill, .University of North Carorrna,
1944), p. 30. -
15. Du Bois, !Ltl@ k...f"'pawn, p. ?8.
10
the Negro in relation to a white lvorld but soon he was questionine the goals
\vhat the Hhite world was doing, its goals and ideals, ! had
not doubted were quite right. What v-m,s wrone was that I
and people like me and thousands of others 1-1ho might have
rrw ability and aspiration, were refused permission to be a
part of this world. It.was as though movine on a rushing
express, l1'lf main thought was as to the relation I had to
other passengers on the express, and not to its rate of
speed and its destination. 16
The problem for him was determinine how all coloured people could participate
This problem Du Bois thought could best be attacked and solved by a 'scientific
speaker, took as his subject 'Bismarck'. He spoke of the' need for trained
leadership tll1der whose guidance Negroes would march forward. He later wrote
After Fisk he entered Harvard, his original choice, as a junior and began
at Harvard 't-Jas more relaxed for him than at Fisk. He made no a.ttem.pts to cra.sh
the colour line and kept very much to himself. He asked nothing of Harvard
but the IItutelage of its teachers, ~nd the freedom of the library.II18 He
related that he
was happy at Harvard, but for unusual.reasons. One
of these 't-JaB ll\Y acceptance of racial segregation.
Had I gone from Great Barrington HiGh School d.irectly to
Harvard I loJould have sought companionship vrl th ll\Y white
fell01-1s and been disappointed and embittered by a discovery
of social limitations to which I had not been used. But I
came by Hay of Fisk and the South and there I had accepted
and embraced eagerly the companionship of those 'of ll\Y own
colour.
19
Contact with Harvard professors of the stature of James in
psychology-, Santayana in philosophy, and Hart in history contributed to his
'intellectual stimulation '. James with his pragmatism and Hart with his
research methods turned Du Bois away from his first academic choice of
philosophy to a course of study as close to sociology as was then possible.
In his academic Hork, race was often discussed and "he heard lectures on
problems and for the first time emerged from the extremes of racial
white American, was white Em'opean and not American at all." 21 After his
return to fnigger"'hating America I in 1894 he published his doctoral disserta-
tion 21a and the effect of study in German;y became apparent. Before goinf, to
Germany a preliminal'1J summary of his work dealt vlith the legal aspects of the
African slave trade. Now he acknowledged the economic aspects of the slave
trade and wrote that its final abolition was "largely the result of the
economic co~lapse of the large-farming slave system. n21b
United states taught him that society was not made up of fixed or static
in the post of Director of Publications and Research for the ne1rlly fonned
National Association for the Advancement of Coloured People (N.A.A.C.P.).
This post included also the editorship of the Association's journal, 1he
9risis, a post he retained for twenty-two years. ThroJlgh the jourr;tal he
addressed the Negroes of the United states and Africa and continuously urged
Negro was an average and ordinary hUman being faced with the pressures created
1j-1hile Du Bois objected to the way historians had distorted the image
of Negroes, he himself, when writing history, was not above distorting facts
in order to present the Negro or the African in as favourable a light as possible.
~1hile he often proclaimed that the solution of racial problems was only possible
in the "light of the best scientific research1l27 his mm historiography was best
_."'-- .~~-..
,",-" ---------------
Du Bois, II~ Evolving Programme for NegI'o Freedom", p. 57.
25.
WoE ,B. Du Bois, liThe Conservation of Races ll , AmericanJ'l~~
26.
AcademY, Occasiona~PaEe~ No.2.
.
27. Du Bois, quoted Francis L. Broderick, ~B '. Du Bois 1i!'T~.EEo
I-eader in a Time o!..cr.2..si~. (Stanford University Press, 1959), p. ~O.
15
Du Bois stated:
I do not for a moment doubt that nw Negro descent and
nar1'0111 group culture have in many cases pred;Lsposecl me
to interpret my facts too favourabJy for my race; but
there is little dangor of lone misleading here, for the
champions of Hhite folk arE3 legion. The NeSTo has long
been the cl01,m of history; the football of anthropolo:n
and the slave of industry. I am trying to shOv1 here 1-111y
these attitudes can no longer be maintained. I realize
that the truth of history lies not in the mouths 'of
partisans but rather in the calm Science that sits betvleen.
Her cause I seek to serve, and wherever I fail, I am at
least paying Truth the,respect of earnest efforto28
For the rest of his life Du Bois was a 'minister of propaganda I for
the Negroes of the United States and Africa, and, indeed, for coloured people
minority group, Du Bois I most important experiences -V18re concerned Hith race.
The reported snub whi9h he received from a whit.e girl pointed up dramati.cally
his apartness, and perhaps caused him to have some feelings of inferiority.
Her refusal of his card was perhaps the starting point of his life-long
---------------.-.----..---------------..--~----------------------------------------
30. Du BO,is, Dusk ~f Dawn, p. 14.
31. Du Bois, ~~~, p. 12.
17
compensation for the insults and conflicts that he Has led to expect. He
wrote that quite early in his life he assumed that most Americans did not
manner; and th..1.t any personal approach on his part would meet with deliberate
admitted that he was often vJrong in these assumptions, he Vlas right often
enough to
whites but to an excessive degree he also removed himself from close contact
rnth the mass of the Negro people. His only close contact came during his
e9X'ly teaching career when he spent two summers in a Tennessee country school.
------------------._--"------_._..-------------------------------------------------
32. ~e, pp. 11 - 12.
33. Du Bois, Dusk of Dar~, p. 259.
HI
told his QE~ sis readers that his personal coluum 'vas "'II'itt-en for sophis~
Du Bois did not see the need for personal contact with the mass of
Negro people. He thoug~1t that. the salvation of the Ne'gro race would only
occur through the creation of a 'talented tenth'; an intelligent minority
which, through its superior achievements, would tend to elevate the race as
a 1vhole.
------------------------------------------------~--~~---~-----------------
34. Quoted by T .G. Standing, IINationalism in Negro Leadershipll,
~erican JO\JIla..!. of pociol?QC, .xL (September, 1934), p. 186.
,
Du Bois saw the talented tenth as the trained servants of the remainine
ninety per cent of Negro Americans. Any special privileges accruing to
such a group were justified on the grounds of the benefits that they
could confer on their fellow men. To his critics such an idea from a
man t.;rho Has undoubtedly a member of the talented tenth had a "selfish,
self-serving ring,,36 and Du Bois was constantly accused of being interested
on1y in a handful of Negroes and of being little use to the mass of Negroes
clamourinG for freeuom, Tho ~in_.Q)_ty Ifc~alc1 conunontod in 1929 that
the upper class that has developed in the Il.ace
in the last t~venty-five years has been a class ~vhose
aims are to exploit and drain the masses for all they
are Horth; they draw apart from them plJYsically and
socially and in many cases build up a light skinned
world of its own and ape the Hhi to man this
class is of no importance they are of no value
to our masses, and the best interests of the Race
demands that they refashion or be cast off'37
Such criticism had a degree of truth but not much. The talented tenth to
Du Bois vTaS simply a means to an end; that end being the political and
Negro society. His identification Has not so much vlith the ma.ss of IleprocG
claiming that he Has not interested in being a popular leader, his only
concern a...'1d interest being the advocating of new ideas and approaches to the
high, would declaim the direction the struggle for freedom would take. He 'Has
not so much interested in the day to day realities as to i'lhat he considered the
grand over view. He had no followers and little organization, and his relation ...
ship Hith Negroes 't'las as someone lecturing them either in person or in print.
was not a perso~ who was generally liked. IJ'Jany commentaries pictured him as a
l-laS, many commentators suggest, a little too proud of, himself and {HU'() t:lat
l-iis ideas 111ere the only ones of consequence. Nor,ro(~s and l>Ihites ~ompl::dnr.:rJ.
that they had t9 be introduced to him time after time, because it 111Q::; only
Hhile holding himself aloof behind the 'veil', he put his talents to
Hark in order to Got things rir;ht, not for himself ... he HaG above it, he ahmys
1+0
claimed - but for all. This was the essence of his life, the setting of
things right for Negroes, the settling of the score imposed by his ot-m colour.
In setting things right Du Bois chose to,operate in the largest arena possible.
there was little hope of breaking down the racial prejudice found in the
United states if prejudice continued elsewhere.
In seeking the largest arena possible for the solution of racial
the idea that racial harmony and co-operation was oi1~ possible if attacked on
a world wide basis and, especially as far as the American Negro was concerned,
wrote that lithe problem of the Americari Negro must be thought of and settled
only with continual reference to the probler~ of the West Indian Negroes, the
problems of the French Negroes and the English Negroes, and above all of the
41
African NegrOes n From 1919 until his death in 1963 Du Bois' concern with
the emancipation of Negroes everywhere occupied much of his time and energy.
________._.___*_._________21_.._ ' _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _.____._ _ _
40. See Isaacs, OPe c~~., p. 201.
41. Du Bois, quoted B.F. Rogers, "W.E.B. Du Bois J Harcus Garvey. and
Pan-Africa li , :!.urnal 0l lLego Risto!"., XXXX (April, 1955), p. 156.
22
. )12
He Has instrumental in callinG a series of P~m-lI.frican ConV'cG~;,,"!s' ~'7})f~r')
delerates from Africa, the Ifcst Indtcs, the United Statns and. Ti:urorn
discussed the problems of their race and ad.voc;l'Gcc1. a proGramme vlll:i <::11 1J<")uld
for the benefit of Africans. The Congresses, Du Bois thought, 'Hould bring
the Negroes of the vlorld together into a gre~t international pressure group.
away the mvths which European conquerors constructed around the African past
Du Bois hoped that racial pride would be established and with such pride the
greatest obstacle to Negro emancipation, psychological inferiority, could be
overcome.' On the subject of Africa he hammered a'tvB'3' year after year, re-
edncating some, stirring a fevl but meeting, as Isaacs puts it, "that deep
critical a role Africa played in human history. A role that needed retelling
since most historians had assumed that 'history could be "truly written VIithout
reference to Negroid peoples". 45 , In many of his books, especially The Ne.E..~2~ and
---------------------------------------------------.-.--.--~--------------.-------
42. See Chapter III for a full discussion of the Congresses.
43.' Isaacs, ~I?... ci'!?., p. 200.
1. I. -n....! .J
Lj.Lj.. ~.
45. \v.E.B. Du Bois, The lvorld ~n_<!. Af~J.<?~ (New York: Viking Press,
19L~7), p. vii.
23
~.Ji2rld and A!ri~ and in many of his articles Du Bois developed the theme
Du Bois continually emphasized the fact that "black Africans [vlereJ men in the
i~6
same sense as white Europeans and yellow Asiatics".
In his concern with Africa, Du Bois was largely unique among American
Negroes. There- was on the part of most American Negroes a longing to forget
their African past and to concentrate solely on the winning of freedom in the
American context. 110st saw little importance in stressing the African back-
grotUld; to do so 'tV'as believed to be a reinforcement of prevailing white opinions
about Negroes. Their homeland vms the 'dark continent '- and most Negroes agreed
or at least accepted this verdict. To do anything but forget Africa was
patterns that were not so much African as Dut.ch and Ne'tV' England. 47 The family
customs were those of New England and African ties were, as he points out in
and the resentment at being classed as an African. He was an American and it viaS
not until late in the nineteenth century that he embraced the idea of 'Pan-Negroism l
and began to write of Africa as the 'great fatherland! of the race. Early in
this centur,y he believed that some Negro Amel~can customs were survivals from
Africa. In particular he thought that the power of Negro ministers over their
past. At the same time he was thinking in terms of organizing a small band of
educated Negroes, to go and help Africans achieve political, economic and social
emancipation. He made representations to the Belgian Consulate-General in the
United States for the help of the Belgian government in organizing a 'development
"work directly in Africa" and informed the German Consulate-General that there
48.
Ibid.
h9. Organized by Du Bois in 1905 in order to inaugurate a coherent
programme of public agitation for Negro constitutional rights in the United
States. It lacked the bacldng of Brooker T. Washington, the then leading
spokesman for Negroes, and was not successful. Most of its members joined
the N.A.A.C.P. wnen it was founded in 1909.
2-;JrJ
50
maintained a Pan-African Department and corresponded with African intel1ectuals.
This vlaS his early pre-occupation with Africa and it amounted to very little. It
l-Jas not until the second decade of the century that he became familiar vTl th the
work of Franz Boas and systematicalJy beGan to develop his idea of the r,reat
alone among social scientists, maintained that innate racial differences were
. \
I
African kingdoms that had flourished south of the Sallara before the arrival
of the whites.
Although Du Bois lmderstood the repugnance vlhich Africa held for most
attachment was founded on a deep racial Idnship that bound him to the 'dark
lithe development of the village unit in religion, industry, and government, the
1
realization of beauty in folklore, SCUlpture, and music".5 Boas was cited to
show that the African, while the "European 'VIas satisfied with crude stone
tools n , had Itinvented or adopted the art of smelting iron ll 52 Despite its
overall development contemporaI'"lJ and not prehistoric. It could teach the vJestern
nations the truth that lIefficiency and happiness did not necessarily go together
1. t S 1<.noll,C<:tge
] 'I of ~l1e }
'v '
l'uman SOU ] _ h .:tol b een d eepene d b . '1 0:t'1. on 115LI'
y 'lt' S J,SO
Apart from the abovo, his at.tachment to ~md sentiment for Arrie::l.
needed little in the 'Hay of empirical eviclence. 1rlri tin~ in his autobiograpby,
!?ll:~k_~L..P.~lV!!_' Du Bois questioned ,vhat l,t was betvlcen Africa and himself
He anslVered:
It is ironic that in such an answer Du Bois could say that his 'physical bond'
to Africa vIaS 'least I and that the badge of colour was relatively unimportant while
for most of his life he was obsessed wit~ colour, being hardly able to describe
anyone or any event without stress upon it. He himself was "firmly chiseled in
lli2.., pp.
55. ~., pp. 116 ~ 117, Emphasis added.
27
bronze n56 and 'VIas critical of the caste system that developed in the United
States. One of his most persistent criticisms of Harcus Garvey and the
system. At Harvard he was indignant over the exclusion of two black friends
Em'ope he turned down the love of a white girl, telling her that "it 'V]Ould not
be fair to-marry her and bring her to A~erica".57 At home he ended his
courtship of a Negro girl who "looked quite white" because it might hinder him
in his work. Hi~ writings stressed fblaclmess as a positive virtue ,58 and
'whiteness' an object of hatred for Negroes. He once admitted that he, in
opposing racial prejudice, was "one of the greatest sinners,,59 in the intensity
concluded a section of verse which condemned "The White World's Vermin and
In his first visit to Africa at the end of.1923' Du Bois reported that it
was the g'I'eatest experience of his life. Europe lvas IIpainfully white" but in his
voyage south to "the Eternal Horld of Black Folk ll61 he made the characteristic
...
56. E.R. Embree, ;U.!gaJ-ns.t_!-b.e Odd~ (New York: Viking Press, 194L~), p. 153.
57 . Du Bois, Dusk of Dmm, p. 46.
58. See Isaacs, P. cit. , p., 208.
59. Du Bois, quoted ,Ralph McGill, "W.E.B. Du Bois", 'Fhe Atlantic, CCXVI
(November, 1965), p. 81.
60. Du Bois, arlcv7ater, p. 51+.
61. Du Bois, quoted Rud'Vnck, fl.E. cit. , p. 231.
28
observation that "as the world darkens it gets happier 11 .62 The trip vias
undertaken at the request of the President of the United states: Du Bois vIaS
The African lvaS courteous and diQ1ified; ho did not sec "ono
cities 1>Jere as cr0Nded litho police would ha.ve a busy time". 66 ReturninG to
the form of the slim limbs, the muscled torso, the deep
full breasts. 67
He had read evel'1Jwhere that Africa meant sexual licence but in his tl'10 months
these comments on his sojou.rn in West Africa. liThe elitest gratified by the
rituals of _power; .the man drawn by deep 'full breasts; the day dreamer won by
languor; the poet swooning on Africa's black bosom; the rhapsodist celebrating.
colour, curve., and form, the aristocrat pleased by dignity, deference, order and
.------"'-----.----------~-------.---------------------~----------------------
65. Du Bois, ~Els2f D~, pp. 126 - 127.
66. lli:., p. 128.
67. Du Bois, quoted Isaacs, Ope, cit., p. 210.
68. Du Bois, Dusk_of Da..!!, pp. 127 - 128.
30
gentility; the puritan alert to any nonpoetic licence ll But in all of this
Du Bois was Hell aHare of his goal and it Has alHays present. He Has still
the race propaGandist, II alHays trying to carry his reader s v.Ji th him tOHClrd
a better opinion of their past and present links to Africa and thereby tOv7ard
a better opinion of themselves ll 69
For all of his praise of things African Du Bois did not feel the
need of retreating there himself. Africa for him Has best appreciated from
afar in spite of any inner peace its tropical languor might provide. Even
visits lV'ere extremely rare; his second not occurring until 1960 v7hen he
attended Ghana's Republican Day celebrations. Du Bois did not see any sense
in returning; Negroes l-Jere Americans and not Africans and the idea of ureing
the masses of American Negroes to return and start life over in the Hhiteless
influenced Du Bois' view of himself and Africa. The rest of the thesis will
dealing with the ideology of the Novement and Chapter III dealing ~vi th its
or ganization.
----_..------._------------------------------------------
69. Isaacs, OPe cit., pp. 210 = 211.
CIHPEER II TIlE IDEOLOGY
had over the years been viewed in tHo distinct H.JYG; 'both of theG8 the
rCI3111t of the discrimination and race prejudico t.hat forced upon thrr;l '1:.110
This vimV' Has constantly reinforced by the view of Africa displayed by the
Africa, in the thinking of many Negroes, became the epitomy of evil and as
2
one respondent in Isaacs' survey commented:
Africa was rejected because it 't-Ias the land of blac}mess; to attach any importance
At the other end of the spectrum was the view that Africa was the only
place where Negroes were going to find the conditions necessary to live
decently as free men in a free land. Mass exodus of Negroes from tho
United States to Africa was thought by many to bo the solution. It Has the
ultimate option of men who dispaired of ever changing the condition;::; of
if all people of African descent throughout the world realized that they had
comnon interests and spiritual affinity with each other and that, having
suffered together in the past, they must now work together in order to realize
a new and brighter future. Du Bois believed that the comnon sufferings of
a common identity among Negroes that cut across the political borders of
Africa, the West Indies and the United states. The oppression and sufferings
of Negroes within these areas could on~ be ameliorated when all joined forces
to ensure that their wealmess did not invite even greater oppression and
writing in The NegrQ j thought that he saw
33
a major purt of his life advocating. It was not simp]y a movement to effect
the decolonization of Africa as many cOlmnentators have contended. Du Bois,
the earlie-st possible time the industrial and spiritual emancipation of the
Negro peoples .114 It was thus a ttvo ...pronged movement that Hanted not only
the decolonization of Africa to allow the industrial emancipation of the
Negro peoples but also, and this 'Has the most significant, Du Bois was after
transvaluation of the values and ideas that had established the African and
the Negro as persons of no consequence who had not progressed beyond the
primitive stages of mankind. He was out to show that the Africans and the
Negro were heir to a history and a culture, still in the process of rediscovery,
ivhich was as profound and significant as any, and that this history and culture
tho idea that blaclmess ,vas not the mark of a snrvilc inferior people - the
Bois contended that to be black Has oornething :i.n Hhiell to hn,vc pride ;mel
admiration.
psychological. The key was Africa since the loss of freedom and disnity by
of their homeland. Destroy the myth of African savagery and primitiveness and
the chains of oppression would be shorn and the bonds between all' Negro people
strengthened. Du Bois saw the origins of this rrrrt.h in -the "trade in human
beings betV1een Africa an~ America, which flourished between the Renaissance and
the American Civil vIar".5 The trade imposed disasters upon Africans and Negroes
which led to their characterization as savage and primitive. The disasters Here
cultural patterns. 1I
concerning Africans. The late nineteenth and early twontieth centuries smT
the beginning of major revtsions in the concept of Africa and. its peoples.
to the idea that African culture and soctety had been seriousJy underestimated
\
and that the African Has something mbre than the savage he had been depicted.
The flow of ideas was by no means one Hay and Du Bois in many areas
led the woy in pJ;'oviding information and ne~l ideas needed for a neH understanding
owed much to the African way of life. This thesis, was later examined by
Herskovits 'Nhen he published his l':[tl:. f..-J.pe.,.~I:ref7o PaJ3~. in 19h1. His extensive
research to some degree supported Du Bois' thesis. However, it is still VlideJy
debated.
just hOH savage \'laS the savage then the elementary hierarchy was indeed on
and heard at first hand many of tho new ideas on race that l'lOre chanGing
the ~V'hite world's vimV' of the colonred. The conclave vJaS 'scientific' and
'humanitarian' and. focused upon the lateot findings concerning the vlho1c
race qnestion. Sergi of Italy, von Ranke of Germany, liYers, Lyd.e and Hadden
reported the findings of the Conference at length and its importance to him
Has the prestige of scientific authority it l-Jas to give to many of his ovm
ideas. Speakers held that it l..;ras not possible to chart fD~ed or enclosed
many races there are than to ImoH how many angels dance on the point of a
declared that racial cj.ifferences vJere .the product of social and geOGraphical
----------_.----_._-----_.._------------
9.
-Ibid.
37
prejudice Gnd 'lll'Ged upon the rlelcc.:>tcs "the Ilvitnl irnport;mc0 at tlli::: ,jl,;1c;tlJre
N.1\.A. c. P. Hho h::tcl sent him abroad in 1911 lito make forei[TI prop3.candallll
and tho Universal Races Congress fitted that aim. Du Bois spoke on liThe
Negro Race in the United States" and Has critical of Brooker T. Hashineton's
Tuskegee Institute ~vcre IIpurely impersonal - and very dignified" .12 He left
the Conference with "a broad tole~ance of race n13 and a stronger internationalist
outlook.
Du. Bois' 0IVl1 ideas on race at this juncture l'lere similar to those of
lj' I
18 e 0 nferees. II. e saw race as a 'I 1 SOmelj1rneS an hJ_S t or1ca
cuIt u1'a, I - 14
. ] _, f ac t"
It 1vas a dynamic concept since for him race Has based upon the changing
factors that determined relations betvleeri. smaller and larger, vleaker and
stronger, subordinate and dominant social groups. lr-Jhile he accepted the broad
that the importance of race to the modern Horld i'Tas not visible through such
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ....... _ _ _ _ _ #00.-_ _ _ _ _ ..... . . -_ _ _ _ _ _ _ . -_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
there Here
110 de 1'11 racial problems to Du Bois Here not problems of primary races, but of
for the fll~st edition of ..El:;z:1-_(). Here he poirrts out that the concept 'race 1
refers to
By defining culture in this way and shovJing that racial unity "\'las found in
culture, Du Bois via,S trying to undermine the assumption that II congenital
differences among the lnain masses of human beings absolute~ condition the
- 18
individual destiny of every member of the group". Biological and psycho-
logical differences, while quite apparent, were not the determining factors
in whether groups of men were members of a 'lower race' or members of a
'higher race'. The determining factors were cultural and were constantly
open to chru1ge. ~~len culture, through education, economic development or
osmosis changed its ideas, values or habits then its members changed,
irrespecti ve of ' congenital differences'. There were no groups too t were
:inherently inferior or :inherently superior. All 'races t were in 'constant
ferment, some advancing, others regressing, but none because of biological
or psychological factors, standing sti~l. Thus to Du Bois, racial and
cultural relations vlere designations that were interchangeable; race was
Itcultural and historical in essence, rather than pri~rily biological and
19
psychological".
It was the task of science not to obliterate all races and group
distinctions, ilbut to lmow and study them, to see and appreciate them at
their true values, to emphasize the use- and place of human differences as
20
tool -and method of progress lt Science had to show the world "racial
problems" were problems of logic and ethics; that neither colour, nor
condition, made a closed racial group.
-
20. Ibid.
La
the "race problem in America, the problem of the peoples of Africa and Asia
22
and the political development of Europe as one ll In '1905 he suggested that
the problems of the African and the Negro could best be solved by a union of
all the black, brown, and yellow peoples; by 1917 the idea vTaS a common one
in his writings and he saw the Africans and Negroes, aided by their 'natural'
c
21. Du Bois, Dusk of Da'lm, pp. 5 - u.
22. ~., p. 47.
allies, the Japanese) Chinese and Indi,ans, in a militant crusade .that 't-1ould
23
wage war upon the 'white world'. 1rJhile he hoped that war would not be
necessary,_ since Hwar is hell", he reminded his audience that "there are
, 24
things worse than hell, as every Negro lmows".
The threat o:f race war between the 'darker peoples' and the tHhite
world' was the bluff' of' a frustrated man. Du Bois had seen his Pan-African
been freed of her oppressors and there .-Jere f'e1-1 changes there that ame liorated
the hopelessness of her people. The Congresses had sh~1n that there was little
for the unity of all 1coloured peoples 1 on even more tenuous grounds than his
Pan-Africanism. His threat of race war was toned dovm on careful reconsideration
but his dream of China, Japan, India and Africa as developing a 'common
conSC10usness
, I was
' not 25 Wh'l
1 e 'he recognlze
. d tha t there was a vas t gulf I
between the peoples of these lands, like his 'brotherhood of Negro blood I , Du
Bois thought that the oppression and exploitation common to all would overcome
the gulf. In his most racist work ~f.ck Princess, Du Bois in Hollywoodian
Negro. The Unity of Africa and Asia is decreed: liPan-Africa belongs logically
26
with Pan-Asia". That the gulf was more complex than Du Bois would admit
the call to arms was more important than a realistic assessment of the
problems involved.
liThe Japanese and the Chinese despise each other, and both feel superior to
1I27
the brown and the black, and the Hindu has more caste tabus than either.
Du Bois, hmvever, smv on~ colour and colonialism, and both had in common the
important, were at 'VlOrk were dismissed. He was captive of his ovm racial
philosophy which saw 'white' as the criterion of evil and I coloured I as the
criterion' of good. The coloured peoples of the 'VlOrld, since they 'V18re oppressed,
Japan I S defeat of Russia in 1905 as the leading edge of a movement that vlOuld
see the end of white domination of the world. The Washington Conference of
Japan and China and he predicted Ilthat the day is in sight when they will
Japan lvas one of China's oppressors, Du Bois remained defensive and hoped that
Japan l'JQuld al~ herself with the coloured races Iwhere she belonged'; her
29
attacks on China were seen as part of her resistance to the white powers.
The strengthening of the Chinese government and tho broadening of democracy in
Japan would provide for a reapproachment betHcen the tvlO countries and both
Hould sce that their mutual antagonism had been caused by the Hhite world,
especial~ Great Britain. The Japanese invasion of Manchuria in 1931 Has
the forerunner of a Japanese-Chinese bloc against the white vlorld. Her
attack on Manchuria was the seizure of Itdismembered parts of China' nearest
to her tl before European nations could seize them. Japan ImeH that China
could not have been saved from Europe and America unless Japan umade YJanchuria
Asiatic by force ll 30 As the occupation of Manchuria continued and became more
oppressive, Du Bois became defensive and suggested that what Has right for
England in the nineteenth century was right for Japan in the tvrentieth. The
concession in 1933 by Ethiopia of sixteen million acres of land to Japan was
a IIreapproachment bet'Vleen Asia. and Africa l.vhich foreshadows closer. union
31
between yellow and black people lt No matter what the event, his notion of the
unity of coloured peoples provided an! explanation. Japan1s silence at the
coronation of Haile Selassie as Emperor was seen as a sign of her pleasure at
the prospects of ~ strong, armed Ethiopia run by Africans. His summary of
World I-lar II in 1947 stretched his nwopia tow'ards Japan to its limits. II Japan
aroused Asia, and by attacking America thus furnished the one reason, based on
race prejudice, w~ich brought America immediately into the war ll 32
.
29. Du Bois, quoted, lli.. , p. 133.
30. Du Bois, quoted, lli. , p . 133.
p. .,J...J4.
..,., _....] ..,\.
.J.L. Du. Bois, quuveu,
~_._~.L "1""'1.-~
~.,
....J
,
32. Du Bois, The World and Africa, p. 14.
44
If 'Liberian labour I vIaS sold in France and Spain, what of it? Did not the
European nations pressure the small state into such practices, and besides
did not the British ,only just release two hundred thousand slaves in Sierra
Leone?
George S. Sch~ler, in laves To~~~ provided a devastating reply
to Du Bois ~ lvarped vision of Liberia. The Liberian governmen'b was condemned
for permitting slavery, and exploiting and terrorizing its people. Schuyler
pointed out that Liberia's problems were of her own making and that there
was little evidence of'a European conspiracy. He lectured Du Bois for
"condoning abuse wh~n the culprits were Negroes ll ;36 his "belligerent. ..
Negrophilismn while commendable warped his vision.
37 Du Bois made no reply
to the attack.
Sqhuyler's assertion that Du Bois' Negrophilism warped his ability
to see the problems of the Negro in more than one dimension contained a great
deal of truth. Du Bois was the prisoner of what mrgaret Halsey called the
'lirth of the Wonderful Oppressed' - "the notion that because a group suffers
from persecution, it automaticalJ.y incompasses all virtue and is purged of all
, 38
faultsll. Japanese imperialism and Liberian shortcomings had to be explained
and in Du Bois 1 vim'T, they could only be the result of vlhitc cxploit;J.tion
qince these states Here 'coloured' and thus unable to act in Hays t.h:J.t vT8re
imitative O.r the 't'lhite Vlorld'. rlhile his belief in the nwth Gave Du Bois a
"coherent point of vie'iv it led him some distance from the real vlorld
... The colour line was not monomania among all coloured peoples. 1I He viaS
unwilling to admit that 'coloured ' states such as Japan and Liberia cou.ld act
from nationalistic, economic or even racist motives. 39
While his analysis of world problems in terms of colour and colonialism
in the 1920ls ru1d 130 t s was perhaps some distance from being totally realistic,
its applicability to the world ushered in by World War II was not so far off the
mark. Japan viewed the ~var in Asia as a campaign to win IAsia for the Asians I
and the post lvar inq.ependent movements in the area had a large degree of racial
nationalism at their core. While wrong about the time, he was certainly right
about their int,ensity, place and programme. Du Bois I call for unity between the
Africans and Asians has certainly had manifestations since the war, although the
duration and intensity of such unity was and still is fickle. But despite this,
Du Bois' assertions that the welfare of American Negroes was tied to the welfare
of coloured people everywhere was a sound one and has been a factor in impressing
upon white Americans today the necessity of racial justice at home.
There were never any organizational links betHeen Du Bois' Pan-African
movement and Asians. It was left to later Pan-Africanists to refine the theme
and today it is a constant one. Padmore in 'his book Pan ..Africimism or Communism,
speaks of the "oneness of the struggles of the Coloured world for freedom from
39.
-Ibid., pp. 133 - 135.
alien domination ll , and that Pan-Africanism lIendorses the conception of an
Asian-African front II Also, Pan-Africanism Ildravm considerable in8piration
from the struggles of the national freedom movements of the Asian countries,
and subscribes to the Gandhian doctrine of non-violence as a means of
attaining self-determination and racial
.
equal~ty".
40
his emphasis on colour gave Du Bois a much clearer picture of the world than
most. Africa was the 'land of the twentieth century I and i f lasting peace
was ever to succeed it was essential that the democratic ideal was extended to
lIyellow, brown and black people". The monopolizing of African land by Europeans
which had forced "poverty on the masses and [reduce~ them to the 'dumb
driven-cattle' stage of labour activityll had to cease. Education had to be
applied honestly and effectively before Europe succeeded in making over "yellow,
brown and black men into docile beasts of burdenll. Most importantly, the
"principle of home rule must extend to groups, nations, and races. The ruling
of one people for another people's whim or gain must stop. This kind of
despotism has been in late days more and more skillfully disguised. But the
brute fact remains: the white man is ruling Africa for the white mants gain,
and just as far as possible he is doing the same to coloured races elsewhere ll
If Europe did not heed the call then 'Vlar was always possible, arising out of
44
After the First World War in 1920, who but Du Bois and his
preoccupation with colour could placo the conflict junt past into'its proper
their emigration was not part of that role. Africa was for the Africans and
the idea of transporting Negroes back to Africa was never acceptable to him as
to Africa r' movements seemed to be solutions not only to the "inexperienced and
to demagogues, but to the prouder and more independent type of Negro tired
of begging for justice and recognition,from folk who ,seem to him to have no
result of ~uroI?ean colonialism, Africa was Itabout the last place rlhere coloured
realistic advice.
be known, Black Zionism. It had as its central idea the realization of a free
and independent Africa as home for Negroes throughout the world. At the opening
his movemetlt.
\ve are des cendents of a suffering people; we are
the descendents of a people determined to suffer no
longer "He shall now organize the 400,000,000
Negroes of the lvorld into a vast orga.nization to plant
the banner of freedom on the great continent of Africa
We do not desire what has belonged to others,
though others have always sought to deprive us of that
which belonged to us If Europe is for the
Euxopeans, then Africa shall be for the black peoples
of the 'VlOrld. \V'e say it; 'VJe mean it The other
races have countries of their oun and it is time for the
4~0,000,000 Negroes to claim ltfrica for thems~lves.50
Garvey was of West Indian ancestry; a spectacular showman, he built the U.N.I.A.
into an organization that at its apogee in the ear~ 1920lS had a membership of
nearly two million Negroes. It had what Du Bois I Pan ...Africa.n Movement lacked,
support from the mass of American Negroes iv-ho saw in Garvey their only hope of
delivery from exploitation and oppression. In addition to its aim of
establishing Africa as the homeland of all black peoples, the Association also
campaigned for Negro owned and operated commercial and industrial bUsiness
throughout the world. Several SU9h enterprises were commenced - the most notable
being the Black Star Steamship Line. It, due to mismanagement, brought a charge
of fraud from the United States Government; convicted, .Garvey was jailed in 1923.
His jailing and the reluctance of the Liberian government to support his plans
for a Negro state or allow members of the U.N.I.A. jnto Liberia (Garvey main-
tained that was at the insistence of Du Bois), caused splits in the movement
Conference although as early as 1897 he was think:il1g in world wide race terms:
"If the Negro was to be a factor in the world's history it would be through a
51. Du Bois, quoted Isaacs, E" c~t., pp. 222 - 223. Emphasis added.
52. Du Bois, quoted, Colin Legum, Pan-Africanism (New York: Praeger,
1962), p. 24.
53
relations bet'V18en the races of the world i f one race continued to dominate the
others; racial harmonY meant that self-government for European colonies in
Africa and elsel'lhere was essential. Du Bois t address at the 1900 Conference
government to the Black Colonies of Africa and the West Indies ll 53 While it
is not certain that by responsible government Du Bois meant a cabinet
responsible to a popular~ elected legislature, his subsequent statements at
later Pan-African Congresses indicated that 'responsible government' certain~
The following year, the idea, growing ever larger and ever more impractical, it
was suggested that the great free central African state be enlarged to include
53. Du_ Bois, quoted, Alexander Halters, MY Life and Work (New York:
,....~ ___ ." "r\""'\ nrn
n~y~~~, ~7~(J, V= ~~7.
Uganda, French Equatorial Africa,. German Southvlest Africa, and the Portugese
territories of Angola and Mozambique. How' such a state viaS to becorr:e a reality,
Du Bois gave no clues except to saJ" that once the state. was constituted
"organized civilization'" would act as guardians. 56 - Organized civilization in
Du Boisian terms lias the opinions of those educated Africans and Negrces who
presumed to speak for all of Africa. Such guardians vlould gather at regular
Pan-African Congresses and attempt to merge modern cultural advantages - science,
education, connnunications, philanthropy - ~vith the IIcuriously efficient African
institutions of local self-g~vernment through the family and the tribe ll
57 Apart
from this suggestion Du Bois had little to say on how self-governing African
states would govern themselves. He made reference to the idea that they would
be 'democratic' and Isocialistic' but did not embellish on what he meant.
This chapter has examined the ideology of Du Bois' Pan-Africanism. It
was not an ideology in the sense that it represented an elaborate, compre-
hensive or closed system of knowledge. Instead, his Pan-Africanism was a
disjointed boqy of assertions and beliefs held together by his concept of
colour that showed African society, its history, and its goals was not much
different in kind from that of other societies. While Du Bois recognized that
there were fundamental. and far reaching divisions on the African continent, he
thought that the cultural and political heterogeneity could be overcome by the
realization by Africans of their connnon sufferings under colonialism. That this
did not happen is more apparent today than thirty years ago.
4. lli4.
5. Not much is kno~n of Williams except tbat he was legal advisor to
several African chiefs and other native representatives who visited London on
political missions to the Colonial Office. He returned to Trinidad shortly
after the Conference and died.
6. 'VTalters vTas Bishop of the African Hethodist Episcopal Zion Church;
he a.lso worked lfith the Afro-American Cotmcil and wrote often about the need
for a 'Negro Cec~l Rhodes l
. 7. Alexander Walt~rs, ~ Life and 1[or1 (New York: Revell, 1917), p. 253.
57
WbyWilliams called the Conference ivhen he did is not lmovm, but the Boer
\'Tar was raging at the time j and it no doubt influenced his thinking.
Du Bois as Secretary prepared the Conferencels "Address to the
Nationn of the World". In the "Address ll Hilliams' aims for the Conference
l-wre transformed by Du Bois to mclude limited self ...governmont for the
British Colonies m Africa and the West Indies. While the language was
concilatory it 1vaS explicit m ivhat it demanded.
Let the British Nation, the first modern champion of
Negro freedom, hasten to crown the work of 1f.Llberforce,
and Clarkson, and Bro..."ton, and Sharpe, Bishop Co lens 0 ,
and Livingstone, and give, as soon as practicable, the
rights of responsible government to the Black Colonies
of Africa and the West Indies.
8
This demand was preceded ~ the warnmg that lithe problem of the twentieth
century is the problem of the colour lme - the relation of the darker to
the lighter races of men m Asia and Africa, in America and the islands of
the seall 9 His IlAddress" went on to suggest that the Congo Free State become
Ila great central Negro state of the worldll , and that other colonial powers
grant 'justice' to Negroes. 'He then advocated respect for the "mtegrity and
mdependence of the free Negro states of Abyssinia, Liberia, Haiti, etc. lI ,
\
hopmg that the people of these states, "the independent tribes of Africa, the
Negroes of the West Indies and America, and the black ~ubjects of all nations
[WOUld] take courage, strive ceaseless~, and fight brave~, ,that they m~
prove to the ivorld that their incontestable right to be counted among the great
n _. '1""'10_. _ _ _ _ _ .-L_--"' "'T""L..!....:t _ I')rn
O. ilU ~o~s, quoveu, ~., p. ~77o
9. W.E.B. Du Bois, The Soul 'of Black Folk (New York: A Crest
Reprint, 1961), p. 23. - ..
58
10
brotherhood of mankind".
The Conference addressed a memorial to Queen Victoria protesting
the treatment of Africans in South Africa and Rhodesia, especial~, lithe
compulsory labour, segregation, the curfew, the passes, and the restric-
- 11
tions on their right to vote". The rep~ through the Queen IS secretary
lvas polite, but vague. She had commanded the Colonial Secretary, Joseph
Chamberlain, that lIin settling the lines on which the administration of
the conquered [south African] territories is to be conducted, Her
Hajesty's Government will not overlook the interest and l'1elfare of the
12
native races tt
The Pan-African Conference had its social side and lV-alters reported
that it IIbrightened immeasurably the social season of the London Negro
colony and served as a brilliant intellectual and social diversion for
Icoloured American tourists I abroad that sunuller ll The Lord Bishop of
London entertained the delegates at Ihis-state~ palace l Walters, self-
conscious~ reports: "After a magnificent repast had been served we were
conducted through the extensive grounds which surround -the palace. Professor
Du Bois (and several others) moved about the palace and grounds with an ease
and elegance that was surprising; one would have thought they were I-GO the
manor born l 1I Following a tea for the delegates at the St. Ermin Hotel (llone
of the most elegant in the city splEmdid- repast was served") the
10. Du Bois, quoted Walters, 0E- cit., pp. 258 - 260.
lL
12. Walters, OPe
-
Du Bois, quoted, Ibids; ps
cit., p. 257.
256~
59
t distinguished I delegates returned home IIvowing they would recruit the better
. 13
classes of our people in their proJectll.
The Conference, before concluding its mee'l:,ing, voted a constitution
and named officers (Du Bois was vice-president for the United States) to
continue to press its programme on the colonial powers concerned. But lithe
meeting had no deep roots in Africa itself, and the movement and the idea
died for a generation ll 14 Its significance was that Du Bois, after attending
its meetings, began to see the American racial problem in a world vlide and
especial~ African perspective.
Apart from his presence at the Universal Races Conference in 1911 and
his call for a Congress to meet during the fiftieth anniversary of the
Emancipation Proclamation, Du Bois, between 1900 and 1919, did little to
build a Pan-African organization, although, as already mentioned, it was
during this period that most of his proposals for Africa were developed.
While he continued to reiterate to his readers in Crisis
"tIlL .....
that lithe cause
of Liberia, the cause of Haiti, the cause of South Africa is our cause, and
the sooner we realize this the better ll ,15 it was not until 1919 that his
idea for a series of Pan-African Congresses was realized. In that year the
landed in Paris in December, 1918, and vlent about txying "-GO impress upon the
of the world ll 16 He tried to see President 1voodrow Wilson, but got only as
far as Colonel House, "who was sympa'thetic but non-comilli tta.l" .17 A memorandum
vTaS prepa.red for presentation to vlilson outlining Du Bois' plans for a Pan-
Du Bois' suggestions were IIquite Utopian', and has less than a China ...
conjure with in Paris nowadays, the Negro leaders are seeking to have it
18
applied, ii: possible, in a measure to their race in Africa".
constituted 1I,t.he thinldng classes of the future Negro world" and should be
19
given "the decisive voice ll in the disposition of the German colonies. Trese
people were the African chiefs and educated Negroes in the West Indies and the
-
17. Tbid.
18. Quo'ted Du Bois, ~.
19. Du Bois, quoted Rudwick, OPe cit., pp. 210 - 211.
61
land, and in the Union of South Africa. The governments of Haiti, AbY88jnia,
and Liberia were also to be represented. In order that the opinions of
received by either of the three major powers at the Peace Conference. The
United States and Great B,ritain, feeling that official French policy would
allow no meeting, refused to issue passports to prospective delegates. 11hen
21
the announcement was made that the First Pan-African Congress was to be
held Februar,y 19 - 21, in the Grand Hotel, Paris, Acting Secretar,y of State
Polk was 'puzzled' and reiterated that he IIhad been officially advised by the
- . 22
French Government that no such conference would be held".
France's change of policy occurred when Du Bois was able to convince
Ba1ise Diagne on the value of the Pah-African Congress. Diagne was a Senegalese
24 .
Deputies ". Diagne was elected President and gave the opening address;
Du Bois lvas elected executive secretary. Diagne IS speech 't-TaS restrained and
laudatolJr of French colonialism. Other speakers acquainted the delegates
with Belgiumls latest reforms in the Congo while another spoke about the
lIopportunities and liberties given the natives in the Portugese colonies".25
When the time came to pass resolutions for presentation to the Peace Conference
the delegates lost some of their accommodating pose and were critical of
colonial policies.
The resolutions asked that the lI allied and associated powers establish
a code of law for the international prote~tion of the natives of Africa, similar
to the proposed international code for labour". Also that a permanent bureau
be established under the League of Nations to oversee the application of the
code of laws so that lithe political, social and economic welfare of the
natives lt2Q would be assured. The resolutions went on: liThe Negroes of the world
demand that hereafter the natives of Africa and the peoples of African descent
be governed ll so that they are allowed to own as much land as they can profitably
develop; capital investment by outsiders should be "regulated as to prevent
exploitation of the natives and the exhaustion of the natural wealth of the
countryll; the general conditions of labour were to be prescribed and regulated
education each child had the right "to learn to read and write his own language,
and the language of the trustee nation, at public expense, and to be given
technical education in some branch of industryll; the application of the
principle of self-determination was limited by the factor of African
development but lithe natives of Africa must have the right to participate
in Government in conformity ivith the principle that the government
exists for the natives and not the natives for the Government". In cases
where the Africans were not receiving just treatment at the hands of
colonial' powers nit shall be the duty of the League of Nations to bring the
matterto the notice of the civilized worldll 27 No mention was made of any
right of the Africans to independence.
T~e Congress also formulated a petition to the Peace Conference
demanding that the former German African colonies of Togoland, Cameroons,
South West Africa, and Tanganyika be placed under international supervision,
and be held in trust for the inhabitants. This proposal in a diluted form
became embodied in the Mandates System ot the League of Nations. Du Bois
contended that in this proposal by the Congress were the origins of
the System. But Logan comments that this was not the case. "George Louis
Beer, chief of the Colonial Division of the American Delegation to Negotiate
Peace in 1919, had prepared as early as 1917 a memorandum on the subject which
great~ influenced the thinking of Woodr~w Wilson, the real architect of the
. 28
Mandates Systemll.
Congress as important since "it emphasized the solidarity of Ameri'can Negroes with
the oppressed colonial peoples, and especia~ that it expressed the national
s~ntiments of th~ America~ Negro people u 33 Rudwick on the other hand saw it as
accomplishing very little. No one considered "Du Bois or his followers I
representatives of the Negro race. Educated Negroes in the United States were
not much interested in the Pan-African Congress and the masses did not
respond different~.
Du Bois returned to the United S'liates after the Congress and, fired by
what he thought were the possibilities of additional congresses, began to plan
for a Second Pan-African Congress. Late in 1920 he was successful in convincing
the executive Board of N.A.A.C.P. to lend their support and to allocate three
thousand dollars for a Pan-African fund. Responding to criticism from Harcus
Garvey over the lack of Africans at the previous Congress, Du Bois stated that
all organizations interested in the Pan-African idea would be invited to send
delegates to the Second ~an-African Congress scheduled for August and September,
36
co-operation ll Another meeting was held with the International Department
of the British Labour Party "where the question of the relation of white and
coloured labotu~ was discussed ll 37 Sidney Webb declared that the Labour Party
was opposed to lithe colour bar in labour and elsewhere II , and asked for
The first session of the Congress met in London at the Central Hall
on August 28 and 29. Twice as many delegates w'ere in attendance - 113 - as
at the 1919 Congress, and African representation more than tripled with forty-
one delegates. Twenty=five were from the United States, twenty-four from
Europe and seven were from the West Indies. vfuile attempts were made to have
representatives from organizations and groups, most of the delegates, as in
which he reviewed the problems confronting Africans and gave solutions that
colonial experts, notab~ Sir Sydney Oliver, a former Governor of, Jamaica and
had been apparent in London had evaporated. Negroes in the audience were out-
numbered by whites and the audience had, according to DuBois, a much deeper
interest than "that of white people we had found elsewhere. Many of BelgiJllTl 3S
economic and material interests centred in Africa in the Belgian Congo. Any
interference with the natives might result in an interference with the SOill~ces
from i-lhich so many Belgian capitalists draw their prosperity.,,39 These fear::' had
been voiced earlier by a Brussels t ncmspaper, The N~I~':) ':?bnn trYJ annan): cs
ment of the Brussels t meeting 'VJa.S made. The CongrefJS 'ltJ;:"S rlr:mou.nced as "<Xr.
agency of Moscow l-1921?\ and the cause of native unrest :'n the Congo". The
J
government was called upon to forbid the meetings of t'h.e Congress in Brns[;cb.
Despite the criticism in the press the Congress met and for the _~::,:r';;t
twa days,:lIcalmness and cliches reigned". 41 Belgian spokesmen fI'om the (;OlO;lL,~.
office poirrted out to the delegates how far the Africans had advanced under
Belgian administration. The 'calmness' was broken by Du Bois 'I-1hen, on the 1.&0i::;'(:
day of the meeting, he read the resolutions adopted at the London sessions a.nd
asked that they be accepted by the delegates. One of the resolutions was c:!:'i.t.kal
of Belgian1s colonial administration, although it also gave her credit for pla7.1S
of reform for the future. Du Bois' action IIproduced 'a serious clash' between the
the French-Belgian delegates, who desired an accommodation with the status gU~II.42
---------------------------------------------------------------------------j~~
40. Quoted b.r Padmore, OPe cit., p. 133.
41. Rudwick, op. cit., po 223.
42. ~.
Diagne, as Chairman, refused to allow the London resolutions to be voted on,
.
and charged that the IIblack American radicals" Vlere courting du:aster.
h3 A
it 'Has agreed that the Africans could profit from -education and asked that the
overall majority of the American and British delegates the alternate res;)""
Bois, even 'Hhite spectators were allowed to cast ballots. Du Bois though.t
that Diagne had acted in. "bad faithll but felt that it was better to allo14
fragile organization.
the delegates moved on to Paris for the third session of the Congress which
Brussels. but argued that he was only trying to save the race from destruction. II
But his action as Chairman in the Paris session did not differ overmuch f~cm
that at Brussels and he often refused to recognize delegates who disagreed with
him.44 The schism between the British-American and Belgian-French delegat.es wc:to
not helped when Diagne along with Gratien candace 45 told the Congress about tbe
43. lli.,
44. ~., p. 22Lh
45. Guadalupian member of the French Chamber of Deputies.
73
46. lli.
47. Du Bo1~ quoted Broderick, 0E- cit., p_ 131.
48. Quoted Rudwick, OPe cit." p. 225.
49.
50.
.
Labour Party to officially support the holding of the first session of the 1923
51. The Commission had ten members, all Europeans, half of which
belonged to non-mandator,r countries.'
52. Du Bois, The World and Africa, p. 240.
75
Congress in London.
Delegates from thirteen countries assembled in London towards the
end of 1923. The resignations of Candace and Breton were accepted, widening the
\I
split between the French and American members of the movement. Despite
addresses by such British socialists as H.G. Wells, Lord Oliver and Harold Laski,
the meeting was poor~ attended with 'representatives' from on~ thirteen
countries. Ramsay MacDonald, electioneering, sent his regrets about not
attending and declared: "Anything I can do to advance the caUse of your people
on your recommendation, I shall always do glad~II.53 Resolutions from the
earlier Congresses were reiterated, the most significant being the demand that
A second session of the Third Congress was held in Lisbon and arrange-
ments were undertaken by the Liga Africana. Padmore described the Li~~ as ltal1
actual federation of all the indigenous associations scattered throughout the
five provinces of Portugese Africa.,,55 The meetings were attended by two former
Portugese Colonial Hinisters. Representations were made in an attempt to get
76
this Congress that Du Bois made his first trip to Africa, d:Lse\)3sed earlier
in the thesis.
A Fourth Congress was scheduled for 1925 but by this time the lack
of support for the Movement had taken its toll. Du Bois' idea was to charter
a ship and "sail down the Caribbean stopping for meetings in Jamaica, Haiti,
Cuba and the French Islands ll56 but upon hearing the price of the charter from
the French Line - fifty thousand dollars - the scheme was quickly dropped.
Dn Bois I only comment was that he suspected lithe colonial powers spiked this
p 1an
,,57
Unable to find support in holding the Congress elsewhere, the 1925
Congress was indefinitely postponed. It was not until August 1927, that he
\vas able to collect enough support to call the Fourth Pan-African Congress to
meet in New York City.
The Circle for Peace and Foreign Relations of the National Association
of Coloured Women under Addie W. Hunter and Addie Dickenson agreed to sponsor
the Congress for the second time. Two hundred and eight delegates from twenty-
two American states and ten foreign countries attended. Most of the American
delegates were the repre~entatives of various women's organizations. Africa was
sparsely represented by delegates from the Gold Coast (Chief Amoah II), Sierra
Leone, Liberia, and Nigeria. Anthropologists - Melville Herskovits from the
United States and Mensching from GermaQY - were to address the sessions.
Du Bois, ever hopeful, thought that this Congress would Itsettle for all
I.
77
time the question as to whether Negroes are to lead :in the rise of Africa
or whether they must alw~s and everywhere follow the guidance of white
58' ,
folk". Afraid that this Congress would become confused with Garvey's
IIBack-to-A.i'rica" Movement - which had happened to previous Congresses -
D~ Bois was extreme~ careful in his pre-Congress statements. The New
York !hmes was informed that the Pan-Af!ican Movement had no desire to
reset'(jle Negroes in Africa nor was it interested in removing whites from
their recognized 'portion' of Africa. The Congress was on~ interested in
promoting harmonious race relations and the Times lauded the "absence of
inflammatory racialismll 59
The resolutions from previous Congresses were reworked and brought
up to date by including sections deploring American intervention in Haiti
and the increasing power and influence of the Firestone Rubber Compa~ in
the affairs of Liberia. One new note was added, however: "We thank the
Soviet Government of Russia for its liberal attitude toward the coloured races
60
and for the help which it has extended to them from time to time ll A generous
statement since the American Communist Party was denouncing the Pan-African
Movement as "petit ...bourgeois, black nationalism 8 blocking the dissemi=
61
nation of Communist influence among the Negroes".
Once again Du Bois' hopes of arousing the Negro race were unrealized.
The Fourth Congress had little impact on conditions in the United States, the
West Indies, or in Africa. The New York 'times reported that the Congress
centred "in the personality of Dr. W.E.B. Du Bois"; 62 apart from that it
had little to sustain it as a viable movement.
Du Bois made one more attempt to keep the Movement alive. AnSl.rering
critics that his Congresses were always convened away from Africa, he
scheduled a Fifth Congress in Tusis for 1929. The French Government, however,
upon being informed of the plans "very politely, but firmly, informed [DU BOiS]
that the Congress could take place at Marseilles or any French city, but
not in Africa ll 63 The Congress was rescheduled for somewhere in Europe,
but was never held since, as Du Bois put it, "there came the Great Depression ll 64
No further Congresses were attempted during the 1930 l s and it was not
until 1945 that a new Congress was called. The Congress was organized by the
Pan-African Federation;65 Du Bois had little to do with its planning, although
at the age of seventy-three, he flew across the Atlantic and was given an
lIenthusiastic welcome by the delegates ll 66 He was elected Chairman but for the
first time in the Pan-African Movement the initiative and leadership passed to
Africans. Jomo Kenyatta, Kwame Nkrumah, Peter Abrahams, S.L. Akintola and
Nmandi Azildwe played prominent roles. Over two hundred delegates were present
62. Quoted B.F. Rogers, "W.E.B. Du Bois, Marcus Garvey and Pan-Africa",
Journal of Negro Histor~, 40 (April, 1955), p. 157.
63. Du Bois, The World and Africa, p. 243.
64. ~.
65. Formed in 1944 by the merger of the International African Service
Bureau with several other coloured and colonial organizations in Great Britain.
Its aim was to present a united front in ending colonialism in Africa. See
PaQ~orej 0E~ cit~j pp~ 146 - 151~
66. Padmore, OPe cit., p. 162.
79
w1d what was significant was that a large number of them represented political,
trade union, and farmer's organizations in Africa. Many of the delegates had
just attended the organizational meeting 'for the World Federation of Trade
Unions held' in London. These delegates had organizational support in the
colonial territories and unlike the small intellectual elite that had guided
the previous Congresses were geared for social action. The Satyagraha methods
of Gandhi were thoroughly discussed and endorsed by the Congress "as the only
effective means of making alien rulers respect the wishes of unarmed subject
67
people" A study of the resolutions adopted by the 1945 Congress indicates
the transformation of the Pan-African Movement from a protest movement primarily
against racial inequality and involving mainly western hemisphere Negroes to an
African movement primarily concerned with the liberation of African colonies from
colonial rule. Gone were resolutions reaffirming vague principles and demanding
limited self-government. The resolutions were direct and in firm language
pointed up the fact that these delegates saw only "complete and absolute
independence for the people of West Africa [as
68
J the only solution to ..
existing problems".
While Padmore comments that "Du Bois was by no means a silent
spectator at the Fifth Pan-African congress,,6 9 his influence was minimal and
his acclaim at the Congress was largely sentimental. After 1945 he was not
overtly active in events concerning Africa. In the late 1950's, thoroughly
- -
80
within the Western world between Negroes and whites, and betloJeen the African
nations in embryo and w~stern nations. This equality was not to be a reward
for succ.essful13" aping the ways of western civilization through 'education,
'but a right derived both from the natural dignity of man and what Du Bois con-
I
sidered the glorious achievements of African civilization. The result was a
blending in his work of the rights of Negroes in the United States '!-lith the
rights of Africans. The blending took place in a revival of interest in
African history and society, and an abhorrence' of European domination of
Africa. The result of this came to be called Pan-Africanism.
Du Bois correctly diagnosed racial problems as being as much psycho-
logical in characte~ as political, and as a result he saw the need for a trans-
valuation of the ideas that denied the existence of aQy African cultural
achievements. In restoring Africa to a respected place in the world, Du Bois
hoped that some semblance of dignity might be restored to the Negro, a dignity
that had been lost through years of enslavement, persecution, inferiority,
discrimination and dependency. Without dignity or a pride in their history,
psychological emancipation for Negroes' was impossible. To this end, Du Bois
sought to bolster the dignity and self-esteem of Negroes by searching the past
for factors that could give the Negroe~ the basis of pride in their race. Out of
this search came Du Bois' conviction that all people of African descent had
common in~erests and must work together if freedom w'~re to be attained.
Du Bois saw the common interests of Africans and Negroes as resulting
from tloJO factors. First, their ~acial kinship, and, second, their common
history of exploitation and subjection. His Pan-African idea was an attempt
to exploit both of these factors in the hope that joint action could force a
change in the European domination of Africans. His Pan-African Congresses
were to be the vehicle for applying such force but, by and large, the
Congresses were empty gestures, since the common interests that Du Bois spoke
of were not sufficient to overcome other factors. International Negro-African
unity did not exist, and, even i f it did, the race possessed no power at that
time that could force a change in American ~acial patterns or European
colonialism.
The Pan-African idea fulfilled for Du Bois a deep personal need in
that it allowed him to get beyond the American scene and find the acceptance
and recognition which he felt were denied him in the United States. In his
mm country Du Bois isolated himself, personally, from the mainstream of
American life, fearing the sting of 'deliberate insult I i f he attempted to
participate. The Pan-African Congresses provided him with an atmosphere of
Africanism was not a movement in the sense of enjoying wide support from those
it was designed to help. African involvement was minimal. Most of the
delegates' were from the United States or the West Indies, and those Africans
who did attend were residents of colonial countries and had little contact v1ith
events in Africa. Du Bois, in. 1923, attempted to interest the National Congress
of British West Africa but found little rapport for, or interest in, his idea.
The ~ack of African support was matched also by the lack of lasting support in
the United States. The N.A.A.C.P. approved of the 1919 Congress and voted
funds for the 1921 Congress, but thereafter did little to support the idea.
Du Bois did little except for writing editorials to win widespread support or
influence key Board members. His relations with Board members were often
strained and he refused to modif.r his programme in order to keep them interested.
Instead, he attacked th~m, accusing them of being ~hamed of their African
heritage.
The on~ consistent factor in the growth of Pan-Africanism was Du Bois
himself, and his own shortcomings became the shortcomings of the movement.
Once he lost interest in the idea, there was little else to keep it alive. After
his failure to summon a 1929 Congress, Du Bois realized till futility of his idea
and concluded that there was little hope of changing racial conditions through
worldwide action. Thereafter, his ideas were dormant and it was not until 1945,
when more political~ active organizers arrived on the scene that some of his
goals were achieved. Even then, the success of Africans in ending colonialism
became possible on~ with a rejection of Du Bois' central thesis of international
racial co-operation. Colonialism was displaced when African leaders realized
85
that the fight had to take place on an' intra-territorial rather than an
inter-territorial basis.
It is possible that Du Bois' Pan-Africanism would not have achieved
its aims, no matter what its support, but under the type and style of his
leadership the whole effort became hollow and ineffectual. Du Bois was chief~
that - an idea.
Du Bois started out in life to be a social scientist, a seeker of truth
in the belief that the truth would make the Negro and the African free men. But
he felt driven to be a propagandist and as such his truth-seeking became more
selective and his truths more supple . Nowhere was this more evident than in his
use of race and colour, central to his Pan-Africanism. Negroness and blackness
not onlY had.to be made acc~ptable, the,r had to be romanticized and in his more
rhapsodic moments made the criterion for good, beauty, and truth. Race doctrine
that was anathema when it was white became eloquent when it was black: "I
believe in the Negro race, in the beauty of its genius, the sweetness of its
soul". 2 In such a scheme white became the criterion of all evil. Du Bois
thought that since coloured people eve~vhere were exploited by whites it was
Du Bois might have headed an epic movement. Du Bois was a captive of his own
racial philosophy which saw the call to arms more urgent than many-sided
analysis. The call to arms was hardly a success, since colour was not
monomania among coloured peoples.
and his Pan-Africanism part of the glacial pressures that move hUman society,
and in doing so he provided impetus for others.
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Du Bois, W.E.B. ~lack Folkz_Then and Now, New York: Holt, 1939.
Colour and Democracy:: Colonies and Peac. Ne'l'l
York: Harcourt, Brace, i945.
BOOKS - GENERAL
Bardolph, Richard The Negro Vanguard. New York: Rinehart 8.!ld Co. Inc., 1959.
Bontemps, Arna 100 Years of Nef:o Freedom. New York: Dodd, Mead, 1961.
Broderick, Francis 'L. W.E.B. Du Bois: Negro Leader in a Time of Crisis.
S1(anford: Stanford University :Pr8Ss719~9" -
Cronon, Edward David Black Noses: The Stog of Marcus Garvey and the
Universal Negro Dn;erovement Association. NadIson:
TTni"p'r~i t.'U' nf'
- - - - .. - - - - - . , --
w; ",,,nne,.;,., p,...",,,,o
.... -.._--,. .. _ .............. """""" ..... ,
1022
""'/.".,,;1*
-
Drake, Mary M. W.E.B. Du Bois as a Man of Letters. Masters'
Essay, Fisk University, 1934.
Embree, E.R. J.) A8,ainst the Odd~. New York: Viking Press, 1944.
Ferlciss, Victor C. Africa's Search for Identit;z.. New York: George
Braziller, 1966.
Franklin, JOM Hope Erom SlaveEY to Freedo~. New York: Knopf, 1956.
. Isaacs, Harold R. The New World of Ne~ro Americans. New York: Viking
Press, 196).
Logan, Rayford W. 'Fhe N~o in Am~rican Life and Thought.. Nei-l York:
Dial Press, 19~h.
Rogers, J .A. World's Great Men of Colour. New York: The Author,
1946, pp. 593 - 59n.
Rudwick, Elliott M. W.E.B. Du Bois: A Stugz ir Min~rity Group Leadership.
University City: .University of Pennsylvania rress,1960.
Shepherd, George W. The Politics of African Nationalism. New York:
Praeger', 1962.
Sigmund, Paul E., ed. The Ideolo~ies of Developing Nations. New York:
Praeger, 1963.
Spencer, Samuel R. ~rooker T. ~Tashing!ion and the Ne~ols Place in
American Life. Boston: Little, Brown, 19~5'.
Wallerstein, Immanuel "Pan-Africanism as Protest n in The Revolution in
World Politics. ed. Morton A. Kaplan. New York:
John Wiley and Sons, 1962, pp. 137 - 151.
91
Isaacs, Harold R. "Du Bois and Africa", ~, II (November, 1960), pp. 3 - 23.
Wells, Linton liThe Case Against the White Race", Saturday Review,
XXX (March 29, 1947), p. 10.