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Title: Africa-Asia Relations: Historical, Cultural, and Linguistic Connections


1
Africa-Asia RelationsHistorical, Cultural, and
Linguistic Connections
  • Adams B. Bodomo
  • University of Hong Kong
  • abbodomo_at_hku.hk
  • Visiting Professor
  • Ansted University, Penang, Malaysia
  • August 7, 2001

2
Outline of the Talk
  • Introduction and Themes of the Talk
  • Historical/ Archeological/ Genetic Links
  • Cultural Links/ Similarity
  • Linguistic Links
  • East-West Dualism and the African Absence in Asia
  • The Way Forward How to improve Asian-African
    Links
  • Summary and Conclusions
  • Ansted as a Universal University
  • References and Bibliographical/ Web-based sources

3
Themes of the Talk
  • African presence in Asia Hong Kong and China
  • Despite the not-so-tenuous historical, cultural,
    and linguistic connections between Africa and
    Asia, Africa is not so much present in the minds
    of Asians as compared to other parts of the world
  • Africa has not much conceptual space in the minds
    of Asians.
  • Most Asians know next to nothing about Africa as
    compared to Europe and the Americas.
  • There is a certain kind of conceptual and
    philosophical dualism in the minds of Asians.
  • this dualism is the East-West dichotomy that is
    so pervasive and rampant in Asian parlance!

4
Historical/ Archeological/ Genetic links
5
History of Mankind and Humanity
  • began in Africa
  • East Africa and the Nile Valley
  • Homo Erectus migrated out of Africa into Asia
  • Varieties of the early Africans
  • Peking man (first humankind found in China)
  • Java Man

6
Recent Genetic Studies
  • Migration - first Africans to Asia
  • Early Asians - the closest cousins of the early
    Africans!
  • Human race emerged from Africa
  • Scientists have uncovered the strongest evidence
    yet that humans share a single African
    ancestorThe idea that the entire world is
    African is supported by powerful genetic analysis
    of the Y chromosome.
  • Victoria Griffith, the London Financial Times,
    May 10, 2001
  • Chinese Roots Lie in Africa
  • Most of the population of modern China--one
    fifth of all people living today--owes its
    genetic origins to Africa.
  • Robert Lee Holz, Los Angeles Times, Sep 29, 1988

7
African Asian Communities today
  • Within South Asia, A Little Touch of Africa
  • Kenneth J. Cooper, Washington Post Foreign
    Service, April 12, 1999
  • the existence of African Asian communities such
    as the Siddis of India who speak Gujarati, the
    Sheedi community near Karachi in Pakistan most of
    whom speak Baluchi, and the Kaffirs of Sri Lanka.
  • these communities may not exhibit as much African
    consciousness as we see among many African
    Americans
  • but their music, their dance and many of their
    indigenous speech forms and other linguistic
    characteristics point to strong African
    connections.
  • these groups aredescended from slaves, servants
    and soldiers brought from East Africa over the
    centuries, first by Arab traders and later by
    Portuguese and British colonizers.
  • Indigenous communities in other parts of Asia
  • The Philippines, Malaysia (Orang Asli, Original
    Man), In donesia, Iran, Saudi Arabia

8
Vibrant Communities
  • Vibrant African communities in Asia
  • in megacities like Hong Kong, Beijing, Shanghai,
    Singapore, Tokyo, Delhi, Kuala Lumpur, Jakarta
    and Manila
  • Vibrant Asian communities in Africa
  • In African cities like Accra, Johannesburg, Cape
    Town, Durban, Nairobi, Dar es Salaam, Cairo and
    Lagos.

9
Cultural Links/ Similarity
10
Ancestor Worship
  • In BOTH African traditional religions and Chinese
    traditional beliefs
  • Ancestors are worshipped like GODS
  • Strong belief and practice
  • Families in Africa set up regular periods in the
    year for ancestor worship
  • Chinese Ching Ming Festival (grave-sweeping)
  • Chinese families show their respect by visiting
    the graves of their ancestors to clear away
    weeds, touch up gravestone inscriptions and make
    offerings of wine and fruit.

11
Ghosts
  • Africans and Asians are superstitious in their
    beliefs.
  • Belief in ghosts
  • Dead peoples souls will not depart this world
    and linger about among the living as ghosts to
    hound people if they are not given a fitting
    burial
  • Theme of the novel Beloved, by Toni Morrison
    (African-American Nobel laureate)

12
Anthropomorphism
  • Duality of existence between man and animals
  • Humans are given animal characteristics and some
    animals are given human characteristics
  • In some ethnicities in Africa, e.g. the
    Dagaare-speaking people of the central parts of
    West Africa
  • Every person born has a totem, an animal that
    lives somewhere in the wild
  • The fate and destiny of a human and their totem
    are linked
  • If the totem dies the human dies
  • My totem the PYTHON
  • Cool, calm, collected, humour, grace, compassion,
    compunction
  • Dont step on its tail!

13
Chinese Horoscope - the twelve-year cycle
(twelve animal signs)
  • TOTEM
  • Rat
  • Ox
  • Tiger
  • Rabbit
  • Dragon
  • Snake
  • Horse
  • Sheep
  • Monkey
  • Rooster
  • Dog
  • Pig

http//www.discoverhongkong.com/eng/interactive/ho
roscope/index.jhtml
14
Mentorship as Educational Model
  • Belief in authority, deference to the elders as
    custodians of knowledge, rigorous mentorship
    relationship between pupil and master
  • University of Hong Kongs mentorship program
  • African traditional education systems
  • No formal classes and lectures
  • Children of farmers and fishermen understudy
    their parents

15
Linguistic Links
16
Genetic Linguistic Relationships
  • Languages do not move until people have moved
  • The Afro-Asiatic group
  • African languages - Hausa, Oromo, Tigrinya, and
    Berber
  • Asian languages Hebrew, Assyrian, and Arabic
  • The Dravidian group
  • South Asian languages - Tamil, Malayalam, Kannada
  • Have variants in Southeast Asia, South Africa,
    and Mauritius
  • A web of communities in Africa and Asia speaking
    either the same languages or similar ones
    belonging to the same language families

17
Typological Linguistic Relationships(1) TONE
  • Tone languages in Africa and Asia
  • Akan , Dagaare, Ewe, Ga, Igbo, Yoruba
  • Chinese, Thai, Zhuang
  • Two tones in Dagaare
  • High Nyu? (to drink)
  • Low Nyu ? (to smell)

18
Tones in Cantonese
  • 6 tonemes
  • 1 High
  • 2 High rising
  • 3 mid level
  • 4 - Low Falling
  • 5 Low rising
  • 6 Low level

19
Typological Linguistic Relationships(2) Serial
verb construction (SVC)
  • More than one lexical verb may be found in the
    same clause
  • Example - I bought some water and drank it
  • Cantonese
  • Ngo5 maai5 seoi2 jam2
  • 1.SG buy.PERF water
    drink
  • Dagaare
  • N? da? la?
    ko?O? nyu?
  • 1.SG buy.PERF FOC water
    drink
  • Tones and serial verb constructions have received
    the attention of many linguists
  • contributed very useful data for this linguistic
    inquiry (Luke and Bodomo 1998)
  • Association for Languages of Far East, Southeast
    Asia and West Africa (LESEWA)
  • Typological similarities as important aspect
    Comparative African and Asian Studies

20
East-West Dualism and the African Absence in Asia
21
My experiences as an African living and working
in Hong Kong
  • Africa is not much present in the minds of
    Chinese and other Asians as other parts of the
    world are in their minds
  • Asians I have interacted with know next to
    nothing about Africa
  • In Asian academic setups, compared to the
    institutions of Europe and America, Asian
    universities and colleges have very little
    content about Africa.

22
Why is Africa so much absent in the minds of
Asians?
  • The way Asians, especially people of Hong Kong
    (the group of Asians I know best), categorize the
    world
  • Conceptual and philosophical dualism in the minds
    of Asians
  • This dualism deprives Africa of any conceptual
    space in the Asian mind
  • This dualism is called
  • EAST means Chinese or Asian in general
  • WEST refers to European, American or any white
    person

EAST - WEST DICHOTOMY
23
Examples of East-West Dichotomy in Hong Kong
  • In search for restaurants
  • often involves choice between a Chinese or a
    Western restaurant
  • Politicians and many people in Hong Kong
  • Like to see their city as a meeting point between
    East and West
  • The REALITY Hong Kong is indeed a global
    business hub
  • A positive move
  • Government of Hong Kong has moved away from the
    maxim, Hong Kong where East Meets West to HONG
    KONG ASIAS WORLD CITY

24
Consequences of the East-West Mindset
  • Non-Western and non-Asian countries are relegated
    to the background in their minds and daily
    practices
  • When Africa is glanced at with a wink, it is
    often with borrowed lenses
  • In Hong Kong,
  • Africa is hardly mentioned on the main
    English-speaking TV channels
  • No African city is mentioned in weather reports
    of the worlds major cities
  • When African news is reported
  • It is negative news
  • It is to be curled from Western sources such as
    Agence Press, Associated Press and other news
    media which portray Africa as some backward,
    uncivilized part of the world

25
Consequences of the East-West Mindset
  • The potentials of Africa as an economic force and
    as a business and cultural partner of Asia are
    lost
  • Africa has no economic significance to Asians
  • The reality
  • growing presence of Chinese communities and
    businesses in Africa
  • rich resources of gold, diamond, manganese and
    oil
  • Asians must revise their world-view, moving away
    from a conceptualization of world affairs in
    terms of East and West

26
The Way ForwardHow to Improve Asian-African
Links
27
Improving the linksSTEP (1) A Global Approach
  • Asians must accord Africa new conceptual spaces
    in their mindsets
  • They must dispel and desist from constructing a
    bi-polar view of the world
  • They must not see relations between them and the
    rest of the world as one of East and West

28
Improving the linksSTEP (2) Establishing
Economic and Cultural Links
  • Tourism
  • Africa is a potential tourist destination of the
    highest magnitude, with its wild life and
    uninhabited and unspoilt nature
  • Trade, cultural, and educational exchanges
  • Benefit a lot from a rediscovery of Africa in a
    new Asian mindset

29
Improving the linksSTEP (3) Africans in Asia
and elsewhere serve as catalysts
  • There is an emerging trend of African communities
    in parts of Asia, especially in megacities like
    Tokyo, Hong Kong, Singapore, and Kuala Lumpur
  • These must play a pioneering role in drawing the
    attention of Asia to the potentials of Africa,
    i.e. to sell Africa to Asia and other parts of
    the world

30
Summary and Conclusions
  • SUMMARY of the talk
  • Africa-Asia relations
  • Historical links (Archeological and Genetic
    studies)
  • Cultural links (ancestor worship, totems)
  • Linguistic links (Genetic and Typological
    relationships)
  • Africans and Asians have not taken advantage of
    these links because of the way many Asians see
    the world
  • To move forward, people in all parts of the world
    ought to discard a bi-polar view of the world and
    embrace a more universalist view in which Africa
    can gain new conceptual spaces
  • Trade, tourism, and other economic, educational
    and cultural links can only flourish if Africans
    and Asians work towards greater cooperation

31
Ansted as a Universal University
  • Africans and Asians can take advantage of new
    paradigms of education in our age of information
    technology
  • Consolidating open and distance education
  • Training their populations for manpower needs
  • Ansted a Universal / Global university
  • It transcends the West, the East, the North and
    the South
  • Campuses in many parts of the world
  • It represents the new paradigm of higher
    education that must be emulated by many other
    educational institutions in the world for a
    better understanding of our vast universe
  • A better understanding of the world is a
    precondition for fostering peaceful relations
    among the different regions and peoples of the
    world

32
Further issues
  • to know how Africans on the continent think of
    Asia and the nature of Asian communities in
    Africa
  • to investigate the consequences of the inability
    of Africans and Asians to relate more to each
    other on the nature of comparative studies in
    either continent
  • to investigate the impact of an increased
    African-Asian corporation on world bodies and
    global politics

33
References and Bibliographical/ Web-based sources
  • The African-Asian Society. 2000. An NGO website
    managed from South Africa http//www.africanasians
    ociety.com/
  • Bodomo, A. B. 1998. Publish or Perish Notes from
    Africa. In CERCular Newsletter of the
    Comparative Education Research Centre, University
    of Hong Kong, no 2, pp 6-7.
  • Bodomo, A. B. 2000. AfricansInHongKong website
  • http//communities.msn.com/AfricansInHongKong/hom
    e.htm
  • Bodomo, A. B. 2001. Historical, Cultural, and
    Linguistic Links between Africa and Asia, ms,
    University of Hong Kong
  • Brunson, James E. 1985. Black Jade The African
    Presence in the Ancient East and Other Essays.
    Introduction by Runoko Rashidi. DeKalb Kara.
  • Brunson, James E. 1989. The Image of the Black in
    Eastern Art. Pt. 1, Black Roots in Most Ancient
    China (1766 B.C. - 950 B.C.) DeKalb Kara.
  • Brunson, James E. 1989. Kamite Brotherhood
    African Origins in Early Asia. DeKalb Kara.
  • Chai, Chen Kang. 1967. Taiwan Aborigines A
    Genetic Study of Tribal Variations. Cambridge
    Harvard University Press.
  • Chang, Kwang-chih. 1968. The Archaeology of
    Ancient China. Rev. ed. New Haven Yale
    University Press.
  • Chi, Li. 1967. The Formation of the Chinese
    People An Anthropological Inquiry. 1928 rpt.
    New York Russell Russell.
  • Cooper, Kenneth J. 1999. "Within South Asia, A
    Little Touch of Africa." Washington Post Foreign
    Service, April 12,1999.
  • Duyvendak, J.J.L. 1949. China's Discovery of
    Africa. London Probsthain.
  • Filesi, Teobaldo. 1972. China and Africa in the
    Middle Ages. Translated by David L. Morison.
    London Frank Cass.

34
References and Bibliographical/ Web-based sources
  • Griffith, Victoria. 2001. "Human Race Emerged
    from Africa." The London Financial Times, May
    10, 2001.
  • Horton, Mark. 1987. "The Swahili Corridor."
    Scientific American (Sep 1987) 86-93.
  • Hotz, Robert Lee. 1998. "Chinese Roots Lie in
    Africa, Research Says." Los Angeles Times, Sep
    29, 1998.
  • Kochiyama, Yuri. 1998. A History of Linkage
    African and Asian, African American and Asian
    American. In Shades of Power Newsletter of the
    Institute for Multi-Racial Justice, Spring
    1998.http//www.hardboiled.org/2-3/linkage.html
  • Luke, K. K. and Adams Bodomo. 1998. A semantic
    typology of serial verb constructions in Dagaare
    and Cantonese. ms, University of Hong Kong.
  • Rashidi, Runoko and Ivan Van Sertima. (eds).
    1995. The African Presence in Early Asia. Rev.
    ed. New Brunswick Transaction Press.
  • Rashidi, Ronoko. 1998. The Global African
    Community website http//www.cwo.com/lucumi/runo
    ko.html
  • Rashidi, Runoko, 2001. The African Presence in
    Early China a Bibliography. Website
    http//www.cwo.com/lucumi/east.html
  • The 1990 Trust. 2001. A website for the promotion
    of the interests of people of Asian, Caribbean
    and African origin living in Britain
    http//www.blink.org.uk/organ/1990t.htm
  • Winters, Clyde-Ahmad. 1978. "Trade Between East
    Africa and Ancient China." Afrikan Mwalimu 4, No.
    3 (1978).
  • Winters, Clyde-Ahmad. 1979. "The Relationship of
    Afrikans and Chinese in the Past." Afrikan
    Mwalimu (Jan 1979) 25-31.
  • Winters, Clyde-Ahmad. 1984. "Blacks in Ancient
    China, Pt. 1 The Founders of Xia and Shang."
    Journal of Black Studies (1984) 8-13.
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