Against the Empire: The Black Panthers in Congo, Insurgent Cosmopolitanism and the Fluidity of Revolutions
Against the Empire: The Black Panthers in Congo, Insurgent Cosmopolitanism and the Fluidity of Revolutions
In 1971, while the Black Panther Party was torn by internal warfare and the attacks from the FBI COINTELPRO, Eldridge Cleaver, then Minister of Information and head of its International section, led a delegation to the capital city of the People's Republic of Congo, Brazzaville, for a three-week trip. Three men and two women arrived in a country which 'name was almost synonymous to Africa'. After two years spent in Algiers, Eldridge Cleaver hoped to relocate the BPP international section in sub-Saharan Africa to tie the party and the Black Power Movement to an African 'Socialist' revolution. To document what should have been a founding moment interconnecting revolutions, the filmmaker Bill Stephens edited Congo Oye: We have come Back, and Eldridge Cleaver published an essay, Revolution in the Congo. Both conjured up a black 'insurgent cosmopolitanism' uniting Marxist-based protests from black people worldwide. This paper first explores how Congo epitomized Eldridge Cleaver and the Panthers' imageries of Africa: from the fatherland to the continent of a new anti-imperialist struggle where they could start a global revolution. Second, it confronts the Black Panthers' rhetoric of liberation to the Congolese perspective and analyzes how both developed parallel discourses on decolonization and the porosity of revolutions that hardly became one.
CITATION: Fila-Bakabadio, Sarah. Against the Empire: The Black Panthers in Congo, Insurgent Cosmopolitanism and the Fluidity of Revolutions . Oxon : Taylor & Francis Group , . African Identities, Volume 16, Number 2, May 2018, pp. 146-160 - Available at: https://library.au.int/fragainst-empire-black-panthers-congo-insurgent-cosmopolitanism-and-fluidity-revolutions