Abstract
According to Nana (chief) Ani Marimba, “your culture is your immune system” (n.d.). This is to say that culture is a universal reality that provides its members specialness and a shared sense of collective identity. Therefore, for me Wairimu—daughter of Wangũi and Njoroge (my late-mother and still living father, and that of my fore parents and ancestors)—culture is not only about my/our people’s values, traditions, and heritage from our common origins in the Nile Valley (The Earth Center, The history of the Dogon. Retrieved May 10, 2023, from https://www.theearthcenter.org/history, 2023). Most importantly, African culture “holds remarkable solutions to our problems and potential for our greatness” (Marimba, What is culture? Retrieved June 10, 2020, from https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ItHbLahuPBw, 1999, n.p). In this chapter, I as a “continental African” who acknowledges my insider-outsider identity as a resident and student being “mis-educated” in the western colonial institutions, I will explore from an African-centered lens: (1) What is Culture? (2) What is Cultural Genocide? and (3) What is its Impact on my/our holistic being as a Pan-Africanist(s), by looking at What Was, What Became/is Becoming of African culture? (Njoroge, “Mtu Akikuita Mmbwa Usibweke”/When Someone Calls You a Dog, Don’t Bark Back! In Eizadirad, A. & Wane, N. N. (eds.), The power of oral culture in education. Palgrave Macmillan. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-18537-3_2, 2023). In conclusion, since the afflicted is the expert of their reality and with utmost humility, I offer that “the best way to fight an alien culture is to live your own”, as Okuninibaa Safisha Nzingha Hill Adélékè reminds us (The best way to fight an alien culture is to live your own, n.d.). In accordance with the African tradition of honoring thy ancestors, I will capitalize on the already existing and passed-down ancestral and elders’ knowledges and wisdom (The Earth Centre, The history of the Dogon. Retrieved September 10, 2020, from https://www.theearthcenter.org/history, n.d.).
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Njoroge, W. (2024). Cultural Genocide: The Miseducation of the African Child. In: Wane, N.N. (eds) Education, Colonial Sickness. Palgrave Macmillan, Cham. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-40262-3_11
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