Pan-African Movements Pre & Post WWI and WWII Wall Print
$82.00
Our Pan-African Movements wall print highlights pre & post WWI and WWII Pan-African movements and key figures such as Henry S. Williams, Alice Kinloch, Bishop Alexander Walters, Marcus Garvey, W.E.B. Dubois, Kwame Nkrumah, Jomo Kenyatta, Amy Ashwood Garvey, C.L.R. James, George Padmore, Chris Jones, Ras Makonnen, I.T.A. Wallace-Johnson, Dr. Peter Milliard and Hastings Banda.
FEATURED PAN-AFRICAN MOVEMENTS:
The African Association | 1897 | London
Founders:
Henry S. Williams, Trinidadian Barrister & Pan-Africanist organizer
Alice V. Kinloch, South African human rights activist, public speaker & writer
We aim to: “ENCOURAGE A FEELING OF UNITY AND TO FACILITATE FRIENDLY INTERCOURSE AMONG AFRICANS IN GENERAL; TO PROMOTE AND PROTECT THE INTERESTS OF ALL SUBJECTS CLAIMING AFRICAN DESCENT, WHOLLY OR IN PART, IN BRITISH COLONIES AND OTHER PLACES, ESPECIALLY IN AFRICA, BY CIRCULATING ACCURATE INFORMATION ON ALL SUBJECTS AFFECTING THEIR RIGHTS AND PRIVILEGES AS SUBJECTS OF THE BRITISH EMPIRE, BY DIRECT APPEALS TO THE IMPERIAL AND LOCAL GOVERNMENTS.”
The Pan-African Conference | 1900 | London
The Universal Negro Improvement Assoc. | 1914 | Jamaica
The 1st Pan-African Congress | 1919 | Paris
The 2nd Pan-African Congress | 1921 | London, Brussels, Paris
The 3rd Pan-African Congress | 1923 | London & Lisbon
The 4th Pan-African Congress | 1927 | New York
The International African Friends of Abyssinia | 1935 | London
The International African Service Bureau | 1937 | London
The Pan-African Federation | 1944 | Manchester
The 5th Pan-African Congress | 1945 | Manchester
IN ESSENCE, PAN-AFRICANISM IS ABOUT THE RESTORATION OF AFRICAN PEOPLE TO THEIR PROPER PLACE IN WORLD HISTORY. HOWEVER, THE OBJECTIVE OF PAN-AFRICANISM IS NOT ONLY THE RESTORATION OF LAND AND NATIONHOOD; IT ALSO AIMS AT RESTORING RESPECT. ANY THOUGHT OR ACTION ON THE PART OF AN AFRICAN PERSON TO PROTECT AND DEFEND their CONCEPT OF CULTURE, HISTORY AND POLITICS, AND TO DEFEND Their RIGHT TO SELF-DETERMINATION, IS AN ASPECT OF PAN-AFRICANISM. THE ACTION AND THOUGHT PATTERNS ASSOCIATED WITH PAN-AFRICANISM DATE BACK TO THE 18TH CENTURY.
DR. JOHN HENRIK CLARKE
- Giclée printing quality
- Made on thick and durable matte paper
- Frame not included
Quantity

























