Title: Africa
1Africa
2East Africa
3East Africa
East Africa is known as the cradle of
humanity Why?
Olduvai Gorge, located in Northern Tanzania,
contains the oldest remains of modern human. Now
a dry and inhospitable place, the Olduvai area
once had a lake at least 12 miles in diameter fed
by streams from nearby mountains. Early hominids
apparently preferred to live along the streams
and the lakeshore its near the dry and buried
beaches and stream channels that the most
productive fossil sites have been found. Over
hundreds of thousands of years the lake grew and
shrank, intermittently burying dry land in
aquatic sediments that preserved bones.
4East Africa
East Africa is located next to the Red Sea and
the Indian Ocean as well as include Burundi,
Djibouti, Etitrea, Ethiopia, Kenya, Rwanda,
Seychelles, Somalia, Tanzania and Uganda. Aksum,
found in modern day Ethiopia, was an important
trade center due to its location and easy access
to the Indian Ocean and Red Sea. They traded
with people from Egypt and the Eastern Roman
Empire.
5East Africa
Colonization in East Africa In the quest for
natural resources, the industrialized nations of
Europe looked to East Africa to colonize and
control those parts of Africa in order to
monopolize those natural resources (including
gold and diamonds). Berlin Conference 1884-1885
14 European nations met to divide up Africa.
They neglected to invite any African ruler to
attend, by 1914, only Ethiopia and Liberia were
free. The consequence of this conference and the
dividing of the lands with no regards to the
different ethnic or linguistic groups is evident
in many of the political violence and ethnic
conflicts today. Most of East Africa has gained
their independence, but the European colonialist
did not prepare the colonies for independence,
and internal disputes and civil wars are still a
serious problem.
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7East Africa
- Due to European colonialism, the economy relies
mostly on tourism and farming. - Farming-much of E.A. relies on cash crops such as
coffee, tea and sugar. This brings in revenue but
reduces the amount of farmland that could be used
for growing food. This is changing because more
people are leaving the farms and heading to the
cities for more opportunities. - Tourism- Wildlife parks in Kenya, Uganda and
Tanzania are famous world-wide.
8East Africa
- Culture-over 160 ethnic groups in E.A. with 2
major groups - Masai E.A. ethnic group that live in the
grasslands in Kenya and Tanzania, they live off
livestock and farm the land. - Kikuyu number close to 7 million and have
shifted from being herders to a variety of jobs.
They organized a group called the Mau Mau to
fight the British.
9East Africa
- AIDS Pandemic
- What is a Pandemic?
- HIV vs. AIDS- Those infected with HIV do not
necessarily have AIDS. Some people can carry HIV
for years without knowing and therefore AIDS
statistics can be misleading. - AIDS Education-AIDS education is increasing, yet
some govts hide the scope of the disease, most
doctors in Africa say there are more AIDS cases
than are actually reported. Studies predict that
the countries affected the most might have a
population decline by 10 to 20. That means for
every 100 people their population could decrease
by 2.
10Famine in Somalia
- Natural Causes lack of rain resulting in
drought. Drought affects the amt. Of food grown
and theres not enough to feed the population. - Human Causes Somali gunmen looted relief
shipments and then took payment for protecting
the relief workers. Delivery of food supplies
were also influenced by other factors such as
warring political factions. - Result Somalians beg for water which was
delivered by the International Red Cross in 1992.
Its estimated that between 25 and 50 people died
per day in 1992. Over 300,000 Somalians died from
famine and another 30,000 died from civil war.
The 1992 famine in Somalia was exacerbated by
warlord violence and civil strife. The worlds
attention turned to the desperate situation in
Somalia when the United Nations sent in a relief
mission, led by UN and U.S. forces. Chronic
drought and poor harvests combined with
inadequate food distribution are some of the
all-too-familiar elements of famine in
sub-Saharan Africa.
11North Africa
Sahara Panorama
12North Africa
- The Nile River and Egyptians- Egypt is a cultural
hearth, a place where ideas and innovations come
together to change a region. - .
13North Africa
Islam in N.A.- Remains the major cultural and
religious influence in N.A. Islam began to spread
in N.A. through conquest and trade.
Mosque of Sidi Sahab, Tunisia
El Ghriba Synagogue, Tunisia
14North Africa
Black Gold- N.A. began with an agriculture
based economy that has evolved into an economy
based on cash crops and mining. Today their
economy revolves around the oil found in that
region. Libya and Algeria supply the E.U. with
much of its gas and oil. However, unemployment is
still a problem and as a result, tons of N.
Africans have moved to Europe in search of work
United States Oil Imports This chart depicts the
sources of American oil imports. While the United
States gets about 45 of its oil from the Middle
East and North Africa, these regions hold over
two thirds of the oil reserves worldwide.
15North Africa
- Culture
- Souks- are marketplaces which are common in N.A.
souks not only have food, but musicians,
storytellers, and fortunetellers to entertain the
crowds. They are usually located in medinas, some
of the most well known souks are located in
Marrakesh, Morocco, where you have to bargain
fiercely for the lowest price on an item.
Souk in Marrakesh, Morocco
16North Africa
Protest Music- Algeria, home to rai, a type of
music the developed in the 20s by poor urban
children. It is fast paced and contains elements
of popular Western music. Before their
independence in the 60s from France, Algerians
used rai to communicate their resentment towards
the colonizers. The govt tried to ban rai after
they gained their independence, and is
criticized by Islamic fundamentalists for the
Western style qualities. Rai now is used
especially by women as a form of rebellion
against Islamic fundamentalists. Popular Rai
Music of Algeria
Algerian singer-songwriter (b. May 8, 1923,
Tessala, French Algeriad. May 15, 2006, Paris,
France), was called the mother of rai music,
the rebellious fusion of traditional Algerian and
Western popular music. After a childhood of
wandering as a homeless orphan, she joined a
song-and-dance troupe and adopted the
professional name Cheikha (from a descriptive
term applied to female Muslim singers) Rimitti.
Though illiterate, she began composing the first
of hundreds of slang-couched songs, many of which
contrasted the hardships suffered by women and
the working class with the escape offered by sex
and sensuality. Rimitti's song Charag Gatta, in
which she questioned society's emphasis on
virginity, was a hit in 1954, but her songs
outraged conservatives, and in 1962 she was
banned by the Algerian government. Thereafter,
she performed mostly for expatriate Algerians in
France until the 1990s, when the generation of
singers she had influenced brought international
prominence to rai. Rimitti's last concert was in
Paris only two days before her death.
17North Africa
- The changing role of women
- Going from male-centered to more freedoms and
rights for women. - In Tunisia, the practice of having more than one
wife has been abolished and the penalty for
spousal abuse has been increased. Preteen girls
are no longer allowed in arranged marriages, any
party can initiate a divorce, and they require
equal pay for equal work.
18West Africa
Acrobatic Dance of the Snake Girl
19West Africa
- A History of Rich Trading Empire- W.A. is also a
cultural hearth and its ideas and practices
spread to N.A. and Europe. - Three trading empires- Ghana, Mali and Songhai
have flourished because of their location on
trade routes across the Sahara where gold and
salt were the main items traded. -
Ghana grew rich from taxing the traders who
traveled through its territory. Mali had
conquered Ghana, promoted agriculture and
reestablished the gold and salt trade, until the
30s most of the world's gold came from
W.A. Songhai replaced Mali and was later defeated
and- destroyed by an invading Moroccan army.
20West Africa
Stateless Societies-W.A. is home to many
different cultures and peoples who lived in
stateless societies before colonialism. A
stateless society is a society where people rely
on their family lineage to govern themselves
instead of an elected govt or monarch. Members
of stateless societies work through their
problems to cooperate and share power. This type
of system was challenged when colonialists took
over and expected them to have one ruler to
govern the society
21West Africa
- Economic Struggles- trade is still as important
to W.A. today as it was in the past. Their
well-being depends on their sale of goods to
industrialized societies. - Ghana- their economy is stable and relies mainly
on the export of gold, diamonds, magnesium and
bauxite. Its per capita is 2nd highest in W.A.
but compared to the industrialized world, it is
very low.
Located near the Gulf of Guinea, Accra is the
capital and largest city of Ghana
22West Africa
- Sierra Leone- home to the worst economic
conditions in W.A. It used to produce some of the
worlds most high quality diamonds, but due to
years of political instability and civil wars,
the economy is in shreds. The population remains
largely uneducated, which limits the amount of
skilled labor and they have a few low number of
roads and highways.
Residents of Freetown, Sierra Leone, purchase
local produce and products at the King Jimmy
Market on the citys harbor. Freetown, the
capital and largest city of the country, is
situated on one of the best natural harbors in
western Africa. The location led to the citys
founding as a refuge for freed slaves, primarily
from Great Britain, in 1787.
23West Africa
- Culture
- Ashanti- live in Ghana and are known for their
weaving of asasia or what we call kente cloth.
It is brightly colored and very recognizable. The
designed on kente cloth are very important
because they all have specific meanings, at one
point, only royalty were allowed to wear kente
cloth. They also make stools, which symbolize the
unity of ancestral spirits and living members of
the family. - Benin- the kingdom of Benin arose in Nigeria,
their artists make beautiful objects of metal and
terra cotta, but they also use brass and create
statues, masks and jewelry.
Music The W.A. popular music blends traditional
African music with American forms of jazz, blues
and reggae (which has origins in W.A.). The
artists use a combination of French and English
to attract international audiences and they used
a wide variety of drums, guitars, percussion
instruments, pedal steel guitar accordion and the
kora a cross between a harp and a lute. Youssou
NDour Sings Leaving (Dem)
24Central Africa
25Central Africa
- Bantu- group pf people and cultures that speak
one of the Bantu languages. - Migrations- Starting about 4,000 years ago, in
todays southeastern Nigeria, the Bantu moved
southward throughout Africa, spreading their
languages and cultures. This may have begun due
to land shortages, whatever the reason, this
migration was one of the most important movements
in history because it produced a great diversity
of cultures and linked parts of Africa.
26Central Africa
Slave Trade- Established in the 15th century by
the Portuguese. European traders came to Africa
and waited on the coast until the African
merchants brought their potential slaves to them.
Many African rulers took part in the slave
trades, as this was not a new experience for
them, they saw no difference in selling the
slaves to Europeans as they did to Arabs or other
African rulers.
This 19th-century engraving depicts an Arab slave
trading caravan transporting black African slaves
across the Sahara. The trans-Saharan slave trade
developed in the 7th and 8th centuries, as Muslim
Arabs conquered most of North Africa. The trade
grew significantly from the 10th to the 15th
century and peaked in the mid-19th century.
27Central Africa
Colonialism
Start In the mid 1800s C.A. was made up of
hundreds of different ethnic groups which has
their own religions, languages, cultures, from
villages to vast empires. Europeans had been
there for some time but had stayed mainly on the
coast. This changed when King Leopold II from
Belgium became interested in the Congo. The
wanted to open the interior of Africa to trade by
way of the Congo River and eventually controlled
that area and paved the way for the Berlin
Conference, which established the areas as the
Congo Free State, Leopold used forced labor to
gather rubber, palm oil, ivory and other
resources.
Effects During the 1800s and 1900s C.A. was
mainly colonized by the Belgians and French.
Most C.A. colonies gained their independence back
in the 1960s. However, the borders that were
imposed on the the Africans became a problem
because they disrupted long standing govt
systems, ignored ethnic regions, and grouped
enemies together. Remember that traditional
societies were stateless societies a centralized
form of govt would have destroyed that. When
colonialism ended, new govt were forced to
govern very diverse populations. You can see how
this system is prone to corruption, especially
when there are inexperienced leaders.
28Central Africa
- Economic Legacy of Colonialism- like most of
Africa, C.A. countries rely too much on the
export of raw materials and a lack of
infrastructure. - Economic Effects- C.A. is still recovering from
the loss of resources, the change/disruption of
the political system and the cultural and ethnic
oppression of the people. Colonialism took much
and gave very little back. - Traditional Pygmy Music of the Congo
Popular Soukous Music - Congo- The Congo is a great example of the econ.
problems caused by colonialism. The Democratic
Republic of the Congo possesses huge amts. of
natural resources like gold, copper and diamonds,
but the country was left in disarray due to
colonization and the desire for power and wealth
but postcolonial leaders. - Mobutu Sese Seko leader of the Congo from 1967
to 1997, brought the countrys business under
natl control and took kickbacks to profit from
the reorganization. The economy, education and
social structure began to quickly fall apart. He
used his army to maintain power, his regime gave
way to a new leader, Laurent Kabila, a regime
that led to more violence in C.A. He was
assassinated in 2001 and his son took over. The
political system is still unstable to this day.
29Central Africa
- Art
- Central African Art- Up until the 60s C.A. art
has in some way reflected the attitudes towards
colonialism. After the 60s the countries wanted
to est. their own identities and as a result have
banned Western influences in their art. Artists
who did not grow up during the colonial era are
using art to focus on issues like political
instability, urban life, social justice and
crime. -
Fang Sculpture- Before the 1900s not many people
knew abt. African art, until Pablo Picasso in
1907 saw a display of African Fang Sculpture in
Paris. This intrigued Picasso and he began to use
African themes in his work. The Fang are famous
for their carvings, like wooden masks and
ancestral boxes.
30Central Africa
- Education
- Adversity- There is a short supply of adequate
schooling for young people in Africa. It is
estimated that in 2001 less than half of
Sub-Saharan Africas 16-20 year old attend
school. Education problems include a shortage of
trained teachers, a high dropout rate, and a
shortage of secondary schools. There are over 700
languages spoken in C.A. which also poses a
problem, the language used at school is often
different from the language used at home. For
instance, in Gabon, a former French colony,
French is used in school for instruction, but
outside the classroom, most people speak one of
the Bantu languages. - Learning- Education varies in C.A. In Cameroon,
most kids leave school at the age of 12, whereas
in the Central African republic, you are required
to go to school if you are between 6 and 14.
Many C.A. countries are improving their
educational systems though. They hope that
better education will slow the spread of AIDS,
Ebola (which first emerged in the Congo in 1976
and is named after the Ebola River), Cholera and
various other diseases.
31Southern
Africa
Zulu Sangoma
32Southern Africa
- Gold Trade Empires- The majority of people in
S.A. are Bantu- speaking - Great Zimbabwe- city established in 1000 by the
Shona. It is in what is now the country of
Zimbabwe. For 2 centuries, Great Zimbabwe was the
the capital of a thriving gold trading era.
However, around 1450, the Shona abandoned Great
Zimbabwe. - Mutapa- Extended throughout all but the eastern
part of modern day Zimbabwe. They too thrived on
the gold trade, but then the Portuguese arrived
in the 1500s and began to interfere with the
politics there and the Mutapa Empire began to
decline. The showed the increasing role that
Europeans would have in S.A.
Ethnic Clash- As you might have guessed, as
Europeans migrated to S.A., they began to have
conflicts with the Africans already living there.
They competed with Europeans and each other for
land .There were many different ethnic tribes
living there, but the largest amt. Of land was
controlled by the Zulu tribe which was defeated
by the British and they took over the land. By
1890, the British had fought the Boers (Dutch
farmers) for control of the region. This was
known as the Boer War. The British won and
formed the Union of S.A. in 1902. FYI South
Africa is currently a country in the region of
South Africa.
The ruins of Great Zimbabwe, near Masvingo in
modern Zimbabwe
33Southern Africa
- Apartheid
- In 1948, the white minority govt instituted a
policy of apartheid or complete separation of the
races. This is different than just segregation in
that it completely banned social contact between
blacks and whites, est. segregated schools,
hospitals and neighborhoods. Interestingly
enough, 75 of the population was, you guessed
it, black. They only received a small percent of
the land, as the best land was reserved for the
whites. - Nelson Mandela- in 1949 N.M had emerged as one of
the leaders of the African National Congress
(ANC, formed in 1912) and led a long struggle to
end apartheid, which resulted in him being thrown
in jail for life. By the 80s countries around
the world, including the U.S. was pressuring S.A.
to end apartheid. In 1989, F.W. de Klerk became
president of S.A. and he wanted to change things.
S.A. as a result experienced a peaceful
revolution, and the govt ended the apartheid
laws, an election that included all races in S.A
was held, N.M who had be released from jail, was
elected president and in 1996, the govt passed a
new democratic law which guaranteed the rights of
all citizens. - Anti-Apartheid Violence
- Nelson Mandela
- Mandela's Electoral Victory
34Southern Africa
- Economic Effects- The economies in S.A. are some
of the most advanced in Africa. However, many
countries are trying to raise the standard of
living for blacks, who get the worst jobs, own
the least productive land and go to the worst
schools. Apartheid has definitely hurt the
economy of S.A. Because of it, foreign countries
imposed economic sanctions preventing countries
from doing business with or investing in S.A.
Apartheid led to the poor education on blacks,
which resulted in a mass of uneducated young
people. As a result of this, two economies exist
in S.A. One potion has an upper-middle income
economy like the U.S. S.A has huge cities with
industrial complexes such as Johannesburg or Cape
Town. There are modern, mechanized farms and
large ranches, whereas in other parts of S.A.
there are poverty-stricken rural areas with
shanty towns, unequal land distribution and an
extreme housing shortage. -
Beginning in the 1950s, the government of South
Africa divided the black population into ethnic
groups and assigned each group to a separate
territory, or bantustan. A total of ten
bantustans, called homelands by the government,
were created as part of the system of apartheid,
or separation of the races. The bantustans
consisted of many fragments of land and could not
support the populations assigned to them. They
were reintegrated into the rest of South Africa
in 1994.
35Southern Africa
- AIDS in S.A.- by 1999, the most severely affected
countries were in S.A. For example, in Zimbabwe
and Botswana, over 25 of adults had HIV. In
Botswana, the average male life expectancy was 60
in 1994, but by 1999, it was 39.
36Southern Africa
- Culture- S.A. more than any other region is a
huge mix of African and European cultures. - Dancing in S.A.- Dancing is huge in S.A. for
instance, the Chewa people practice a dance
called the gule wa mkulu which reflects their
traditional religious beliefs. The Timbuka people
and N. Malawi perform vimbuza which is done by
healers to cure the sick. The benji dance done by
the Yao warriors, makes fun of the European
militarys desire to march and have parades. - Johannesburg- One of S.A.s largest cities which
began as a small mining town and grew due to the
gold reserves. Today over 6 million people of
many different ethnicities and lifestyles live
there. But due to apartheid, the greater
Johannesburg area has developed into two
different cities. In the north, there are huge
suburbs and to the south are poor black
townships. - Modern and Traditional Lifestyles- Some S.A.
life modern lifestyles such as doctors, lawyers
etc. They live in housing areas that look like
something you would find in the U.S. On the
other hand, many others, due to the effects of
apartheid, still live in former black only
housing and shantytowns. They work in menial
unskilled labor jobs. - Some ethnic groups still follow the traditional
lifestyle like farming, trading or herding. - Ladysmith Black Mambazo
37Follow-up
- Answer the Main Idea questions on page 458.
- Answer Critical Thinking Questions, 2, 3, and 5.
- You may write your answers on the packet or
attach them to the packet.