The first African statesman to achieve world
recognition was Kwame Nkrumah (1[zasłonięte]909-19), who became
president of the new Republic of Ghana in 1960. He
campaigned ceaselessly for African solidarity and for
the liberation of southern Africa from white settler
rule. His greatest achievement was to win the right of
black peoples in Africa to have a vote and to determine
their own destiny. He turned a dream of liberation into
a political reality. He was the leader of Ghana who
urged Africa to shed the colonial yoke and who inspired
black people everywhere to seek their freedom. This
revised edition of Birmingham's fine and accessible
biography chronicles the public accomplishments of this
extraordinary leader, who faced some of the century's
most challenging political struggles over colonial
transition. African nationalism, and pan-Africanism. It
also relates some of the personal trials of a complex
individual. As a student in America in the late 1930s,
Nkrumah, shy, disorganized, but ambitious and
persistent, earned four degrees in ten years. For
political training he then went to England. Nkrumah
found writing difficult throughout his lifetime, but
once back in his African homeland, with its oral
heritage, Nkrumah blossomed as a charming
conversationalist, a speechmaker, and eventually a
visionary and inspiring leader. Nkrumah's crusades were
controversial, however, and in the 1960s he gradually
lost his heroic stature both among his own people and
among his fellow leaders. He lived his last years in
exile. This remarkable life story, which touches on many
of the issues facing modern Africa, will open a window
of understanding for the general leader as well as for
graduate and undergraduate classes. In this new edition,
Birmingham also examines Nkrumah's exile and provides
insight into the image of Nkrumah that has emerged in
the light of research recently published.
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