A steady trickle of African-Americans find a homeland in Africa, whether motivated by love, money, or a desire to connect with ancestral roots. Ghana has become a particularly popular destination. Jimmy Thorne says that relocating to Ghana is one of the best moves he’s ever made.
It
doesn’t matter if he, an African-American, gets called “obroni,” the
local word for white person, in the streets, or if some of his family
can’t quite figure out what he’s doing in this West African nation so
far from his roots in North Carolina.
In
his eight years in Ghana, he has found his wife, reconnected with God,
and even manages to play golf daily. Ghana is home to him now.
“Once
you accept it as your home, why wouldn’t you stay in your home?” Mr.
Thorne said. “This is where we come from originally, so maybe that’s why
we’re here. Maybe it’s divine providence.”
Whether motivated by love, money, or the desire to rekindle a long-lost connection, black repatriation to Africa remains alive and well, even if it never quite became the high-volume, emotional return to African roots that initially captured the imagination of black intellectuals and celebrities like boxer Mohammad Ali decades ago.
Some 3,000
African-Americans live in this country of 25 million, according to the
African-American Association of Ghana. Their migration is more a trickle
than a flood, attracting mostly retirees who want to start charities,
rediscover their roots, or simply relax, the association said.
Ghana
has become the destination of choice for African-Americans looking for a
spiritual home, if not an ancestral one, on the African continent.
“Wherever
it is that we find ourselves, in Africa is where we should be," says
Imahkus Okofu, who moved to Ghana from New York City 24 years ago and
now runs a health spa and has authored books on repatriation. “Whether
we come from Sierra Leone or Ghana, or wherever, we are the result of
the transatlantic and European slave trade.”
Ghana’s government has met the African-American embrace of its country cautiously.
WHO SENT THEM TO THE AMERICAN BEFOR??
ReplyDeletepls stay in america and be speaking yo yo there cos nobody understand that here in africa
ReplyDeletedo they even have families here who are they coming to meet?
ReplyDelete