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LIBERIA

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Title: LIBERIA


1
LIBERIA
2
First Independent Country in Africa
3
Facts About Liberia
  • First Independent Country in Africa (1847)
  • Country formed by free slaves from the U.S., The
    Caribbean and Britain
  • Many similarities to Southern African-American
    culture cuisine, architecture, music etc
  • Capital City is Monrovia named after American
    President James Monroe
  • First Female President in Africa, Ellen Johnson
    Sirleaf (2005)
  • Natural Resources are Rubber, Iron Ore, Diamond,
    Gold, Timber, Rain Forest

4
  • The history of Liberia is unique in Africa as it
    started neither as a native state nor as a
    European colony, but began in 1821 when private
    societies began founding colonies for free blacks
    from the United States on the coast of West
    Africa.
  • Modern Liberia was founded in 1822 by freed
    slaves from the United States. They were sent to
    Africa under the auspices of the American
    Colonization Society, a private organization
    whose purpose was "to promote and execute a plan
    for colonizing in Africa, with their own consent,
    the free people of color residing in the US.

5
  • The settlers recreated American society,
    building churches and homes that resembled
    Southern plantations. And they continued to speak
    English. They also entered into a complex
    relationship with the indigenous people --
    marrying them in some cases, discriminating
    against them in others, (and enslaving them in
    the worst of cases) but all the time attempting
    to "civilize" them and impose Western values on
    the traditional communities.
  • The new colonies adopted other American styles of
    life, including southern plantation-style houses
    with deep verandahs, and established thriving
    trade links with other West Africans. The
    Americo-Liberians distinguished themselves from
    the local people, characterized as 'natives,' by
    the universal appellation of "Mr."

6
Liberian Independence 1847
  • The Flag
  • The Seal

7
THE FLAG
  • The Liberia's national flag is called LONE
    STAR. The eleven horizontal stripes represent
    the eleven signers of the declaration of
    independence and the constitution of the Republic
    of Liberia the blue field symbolizes the
    continent of Africa the five pointed white star
    depicts Liberia as the first independent
    republic on the continent of Africa the red
    color designates valor the white, purity
    and the blue, fidelity. Although these
    representations are uniquely Liberian, the flag
    itself is a replica of Old Glory, the national
    flag of the United States.

8
THE SEAL
  • The seal shows a sailing-vessel approaching the
    coast, a palm tree, a plow and a spade on the
    shore, a dove on the wing with an open scroll in
    its claws and the sun just emerging from the
    waters. Above the emblem the national motto THE
    LOVE OF LIBERTY BROUGHT US HERE and beneath it,
    the words REPUBLIC OF LIBERIA.
  • The symbols of the seal are obvious a
    peace-bringing bird, the dove, arrives with a
    message from overseas (the United States), the
    granting of independence. The ship represents the
    arrival of the colonists, as does the national
    motto THE LOVE OF LIBERTY BROUGHT US
    HERE. Also the spade and the plough refer to the
    colonists as they brought these tools with them.
    The palm tree may symbolize one of the main
    products of the region.

9
Liberians First President
  • Joseph Jenkins Roberts
  • Joseph Jenkins Roberts (1809-1876) was born in
    Virginia, U.S.A. His parents were poor. He came
    to Liberia in 1829. Roberts soon became a
    prosperous trader and also engaged in politics.
    After the creation of the Commonwealth of
    Liberia, in 1838, he became Vice-Governor. In
    1841 Governor Thomas Buchanan, a cousin of the
    President of the USA, James Buchanan, died and
    was succeeded by J.J. Roberts. It was the first
    time that the colony was not governed by a white
    agent of the American Colonization Society - its
    legal owner - but by a colonist. Although
    Roberts was a colonist, "he was not really black
    he was an octoroon and could have easily passed
    for a white man", as Aboyomi Karnga, one of
    Liberias best-known historians reported. 

10
FIRST FEMALE PRESIDENT IN AFRICA
  • Ellen Johnson Sirleaf
  • Ellen Johnson Sirleaf (born October 29, 1938) is
    the current President of Liberia, Africa's first
    elected female head of state and Liberia's first
    elected female president. She was elected
    President in the 2005 Presidential Election and
    took office on January 16, 2006. She is often
    referred to as the Iron Lady".

11
Liberia Natural Resources
  • Natural Resources
  • Agricultural Products
  • Timber
  • Rubber
  • Gold
  • Diamond
  • Iron Ore
  • Rice
  • Cassava
  • Coffee
  • Cocoa
  • Palm Oil
  • Sheep
  • Goat
  • Sugarcane

12
THE RAINFOREST
13
..continued
  • Liberia hosts the last two significant blocks of
    the remaining closed canopy tropical
  • rainforest within the Upper Guinea Forests of
    West Africa. The Upper Guinea Forest,
  • recognized as one of the worlds twenty-five
    biodiversity hotspots, consists of a belt of
  • fragmented forests that runs parallel to the
    coast of West Africa, and covers all or part
  • of some ten countries, from Guinea at its western
    end to southwestern Cameroon at
  • its eastern terminus. It ranks first in mammalian
    diversity among the worldstwentyfive
  • hotspots. The Upper Guinea Forest hosts 551
    different species of mammals and is
  • home to half of the mammal species known to the
    African continent. Additionally, it
  • is among the highest priority regions in the
    world for primate conservation, and is
  • consequently one of the priorities for global
    biodiversity conservation.
  • The Upper Guinea Forest has shrunk to an
    estimated 12.7 of its original size,
  • estimated to be 727,900 square-kilometers, and
    almost 45 of this remaining forest is in Liberia
  • SHOW POSTER ON RAINFOREST ANIMALS!

14
Threats of the Rainforest
  • The Liberian rainforest, however, is under great
    threat, primarily from industrial logging. From
    1997 to 2001 log production increased by more
    than a staggering 1,300. Unsurprisingly, this is
    already having an enormous impact on indigenous
    rural communities and local people who depend on
    the land and the forest for their livelihood.
    Their cultural and spiritual practices are so
    dependent on the forest that, with the rapid loss
    of forest, the survival and growth of these
    communities is being severely endangered. The
    current level of poverty in these communities is
    a clear indication of what is to come if nothing
    is done to check the current trend of forest
    exploitation.

15
The Civil War
  • the President of Liberia, had taken power in a
    popular coup of 1980 but opposition from abroad
    to his undemocratic regime led to economic
    collapse. At first, Doe crushed internal
    opposition, but after his Krahn tribe began
    attacking other tribes particularly in Nimba
    County conflict seemed inevitable.
  • Charles Taylor, who had left Doe's government,
    assembled a group of rebels in Côte d'Ivoire who
    later became known as the National Patriotic
    Front of Liberia (NPFL). They invaded Nimba
    County on 24 December 1989. The Liberian Army
    retaliated against the whole population of the
    region, attacking unarmed civilians and burning
    villages. Many left as refugees for Guinea and
    Côte dIvoire, but opposition to Doe was
    inflamed. Prince Johnson had sided with Taylor in
    the invasion, but soon split to form his own
    guerrilla force, based on the Gio tribe.

16
The Beauty of Liberia
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