Jump to content

Godfrey Mwakikagile

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected from Mwakikagile)

Godfrey Mwakikagile
Born4 October 1949
Kigoma, Tanganyika Territory
Occupationscholar, author and news reporter
NationalityTanzanian
Alma materWayne State University (1975)
GenreAfrican studies
Notable worksNyerere and Africa: End of an Era (2002)

Godfrey Mwakikagile (born 4 October 1949 in Kigoma[1]) is a Tanzanian scholar and author specialising in African studies. He was also a news reporter for The Standard (later renamed the Daily News) — the oldest and largest English newspaper in Tanzania and one of the three largest in East Africa.[2] Mwakikagile wrote Nyerere and Africa: End of an Era — a biographical book on the life of former Tanzanian President Julius Nyerere set in the backdrop of Africa's early post-colonial years and the liberation wars in the countries of southern Africa in which Nyerere played a major role.

Growing up in the 1950s, Mwakikagile experienced a form of apartheid and racial segregation in Tanganyika, what is now mainland Tanzania, and wrote about it in some of his works, as he did about the political climate of Tanganyika during the colonial era, in books such as Reflections on Race Relations: A Personal Odyssey, Life in Tanganyika in The Fifties and Life under British Colonial Rule.[1]

Early life and family

[edit]

Mwakikagile was born on 4 October 1949 into a middle class Tanganyikan family in the town of Kigoma at a government hospital, Western Province of Tanganyika – what is now mainland Tanzania[3] – his sister Maria at a Catholic hospital in nearby Ujiji in April 1951, his brother Lawrence at a government hospital in Morogoro, Coast Province, in September 1952.

His parents moved from Tanga to Kigoma in May 1949 five months before he was born. They lived in Muheza and Tanga in the late 1940s. His paternal grandfather Kasisika Mwakikagile, who came from Mwaya (Mwaja) in what is now Kyela District, also lived and worked in Tanga first, then in Muheza, years earlier in the 1930s. He died in Muheza in 1937 and was buried at Power Station, Muheza.

His father Elijah Mwakikagile, who once worked at the Amani Research Institute in Muheza District in the late forties, was a medical assistant during the British colonial era and was one of the few in the entire country of 10 million people. There were fewer than 300 medical assistants and fewer than 10 doctors in Tanganyika in the forties and fifties and only 12 doctors at independence from the United Kingdom on 9 December 1961. Medical assistants underwent an intensive three-year training after finishing secondary school and worked as a substitute for doctors and were even called "madaktari" - doctors - in Kiswahili (Swahili).

Godfrey's mother Syabumi Mwakikagile (née Mwambapa), a housewife, was a pupil of Tanganyika's British feminist educator, and later Member of Parliament, Mary Hancock, who taught her at Kyimbila Girls' School in Rungwe District in the Southern Highlands Province in the early 1940s. Mary Hancock was a friend of Nyerere and his family since 1953 and supported him during the struggle for independence.[4]

The eldest of his siblings, Mwakikagile was named Godfrey by his aunt Isabella, one of his father's younger sisters, and was baptised at an Anglican CMS church – Church Missionary Society – in Kigoma by Reverend Frank McGorlick from Victoria, Australia, on Christmas day, 1949. But he was brought up as a member of Kyimbila Moravian Church whose pastor was his maternal great uncle, Asegelile Mwankemwa, younger brother of his grandmother and the first African pastor of the church. He was named Willie by his mother soon after he was born, a prebaptismal name he does not officially use but by which he is known among his relatives and other people who knew him when he was growing up, as he has stated in his autobiographical writings and in other works including a book he wrote in 2023 about one of his secondary school teachers who was a national leader in Tanganyika's independence movement, Julius Mwasanyagi: A forgotten African nationalist.[1]

His father played a critical role in his early life and education. He was a strict disciplinarian and taught him at home when he was attending primary school from Standard One to Standard Four and during the first two years of middle school, Standard Five and Standard Six, before he left home to go to boarding school in 1963, three miles away, when he was 13 years old. He also taught him when he was out of school and went home during holidays in his last two years of middle school in Standard Seven and Standard Eight. His mother, who taught Sunday school and was a volunteer adult education teacher for some time teaching adults how to read and write, also taught him at home when he was in primary school.[5]

His father was active in the Tanganyika African National Union – TANU – which led the struggle for independence and was friends with some of the leading figures in the African independence movement. They included John Mwakangale, his classmate from Standard One at Tukuyu Primary School to Malangali Secondary School, where Elijah was appointed head prefect, in the Southern Highlands Province. They came from the same area, five miles apart, in Rungwe District and knew each other since childhood. Mwakangale became one of the prominent leaders of the Tanganyika African National Union and of the Pan-African Freedom Movement for East and Central Africa (PAFMECA), later renamed the Pan-African Freedom Movement for East, Central and Southern Africa (PAFMECSA), formed in Mwanza, Tanganyika, in September 1958 under the leadership of Julius Nyerere to campaign for the independence of the countries of East and Central Africa and later Southern Africa and which played a major role in the formation of the Organisation of Africa Unity almost five years later. He also became a Member of Parliament (MP) and a cabinet member in the early part of independence under Nyerere serving as Minister of Labour.

John Mwakangale was also the first leader Nelson Mandela met in newly independent Tanganyika in January 1962 – just one month after Tanganyika emerged from colonial rule – when Mandela secretly left South Africa on 11 January to seek assistance from other African countries in the struggle against apartheid and wrote about him in his autobiography Long Walk to Freedom. Tanganyika was the first independent African country Mandela visited and the first one where he sought such assistance. It was also the first country in the region to win independence and the first one he visited, as Tanzania, when he was released from prison on 11 February 1990. He travelled to other African countries using a document given to him by the government of Tanganyika which stated: “This is Nelson Mandela, a citizen of the Republic of South Africa. He has permission to leave Tanganyika and return here.”

Tanganyika was chosen by African leaders to be the headquarters of all the liberation movements when they met in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, in May 1963 to form the Organisation of African Unity (OAU).

Professor John Iliffe in his book, A Modern History of Tanganyika, described John Mwakangale as a "vehement nationalist."

Mwakangale was also described as the most "anti-white" and "anti-British" member of the government and was very defensive of the interests of African workers.

He did not even want American Peace Corps in Tanzania. In his book Reflections on Race Relations: A Personal Odyssey, Godfrey Mwakikagile wrote that John Mwakangale accused American Peace Corps of causing trouble, including attempting to overthrow the government, and bluntly stated: “These people are not here for peace, they are here for trouble. We do not want any more Peace Corps”, according to a report, "M.P. Attacks American Peace Corps," which was the main story on the front page of the Tanganyika Standard, 12 June 1964.

Other colleagues of Elijah Mwakikagile were Austin Shaba, his co-worker as a medical assistant and earlier his classmate at the Medical Training Centre (MTC) at Tanganyika's largest hospital in the capital Dar es Salaam later transformed into the country's first medical school who served as a Member of Parliament and cabinet member in the first independence cabinet— serving as Minister of Local Government and later as Minister of Health and Housing, and as Deputy Speaker of Parliament; Wilbard B.K. Mwanjisi, his classmate from Standard One at Tukuyu Primary School to Malangali Secondary School who became a doctor, prominent member of TANU and, before leaving government service, was president of the Tanganyika Government Servants Association, a national organisation for African government employees during colonial rule; Jeremiah Kasambala, Elijah Mwakikagile's classmate at Malangali Secondary School who became head of the Rungwe African Cooperative Union responsible for mobilising support from farmers to join the struggle for independence and who went on to become a cabinet member in the early years of independence—taking over the portfolio for Commerce and Cooperatives and later serving as Minister of Industries, Minerals and Energy; Robert Kaswende - he and Elijah Mwakikagile knew each other since the early 1940s - who became police chief for Rungwe District in Tukuyu soon after independence and who later became deputy head of the police for the whole country and thereafter head of the National Service which became a part of the Ministry of Defence renamed Ministry of Defence and National Service; and Brown Ngwilulupi, who became Secretary General of the Cooperative Union of Tanganyika (CUT), the largest farmers' union in the country, appointed by President Nyerere.

One of their teachers at Malangali Secondary School was Erasto Andrew Mbwana Mang'enya who later became a cabinet member under President Nyerere, Speaker of Parliament, and Tanzania's Permanent Representative to the United Nations.

Brown Ngwilulupi, a member of TANU for decades, later left the ruling party and co-founded Tanzania's largest opposition party, Chadema, and served as its first vice-chairman under former Finance Minister and IMF's executive director Edwin Mtei during the same period when he was a relative-in-law of Tanzania's Vice President John Malecela who also served as Prime Minister at the same time under President Ali Hassan Mwinyi. Ngwilulupi's daughter was married to Malecela's son. Malecela was also the first African to serve as District Commissioner (D.C.) of Rungwe District in the town of Tukuyu soon after independence in the early 1960s when Elijah Mwakikagile was a member of the Rungwe District Council where he was a councillor for many years. Brown Ngwilulupi also worked in Tukuyu during the same period with Jeremiah Kasambala at the Rungwe African Cooperative Union.

Ngwilulupi and Elijah Mwakikagile came from the same village four miles south of the town of Tukuyu, knew each other since childhood, were classmates from Standard One at Tukuyu Primary School to Malangali Secondary School and later became relatives-in-law when they married cousins. Their wives, who came from the same area they did, were first cousins to each other.

Elijah Mwakikagile was also a first cousin of one of Tanzania's first commercial airline pilots, Oscar Mwamwaja, who was shot but survived when he was a co-pilot of an Air Tanzania plane, a Boeing 737, that was hijacked on 26 February 1982 and forced to fly from Tanzania to Britain. His mother was an elder sister of Oscar's father. And his son Godfrey is a first cousin of Brigadier-General Owen Rhodfrey Mwambapa, a graduate of Sandhurst, a royal military academy in the United Kingdom, and head of the Tanzania Military Academy, an army officers' training school at Monduli in Arusha Region. Owen's father was an elder brother of Godfrey's mother, the last-born in her family.

Education and early employment

[edit]

Godfrey Mwakikagile attended Kyimbila Primary School - founded by British feminist educator Mary Hancock and transformed into a co-educational institution - near the town of Tukuyu in the late 1950s. Mary Hancock was also the founder of Loleza Girls' School in the town of Mbeya which had its origin in Kyimbila Girls' School.

Mwakikagile also attended Mpuguso Middle School in Rungwe District, Mbeya Region, in the Southern Highlands. The headmaster of Mpuguso Middle School, Moses Mwakibete, was his math teacher in 1961 who later became a judge at the High Court of Tanzania appointed by President Nyerere. And one of his American Peace Corps teachers at Mpuguso Middle School in 1964 was Leonard Levitt who became a prominent journalist and renowned author. He wrote, among other works, An African Season, the first book ever written by a member of the Peace Corps, and Conviction: Solving the Moxley Murder, about a homicide which received extensive media coverage because it involved a member of the Kennedy family.

Mwakikagile also attended Songea Secondary School from 1965 to 1968 in Ruvuma Region which was once a part of the Southern Province. His current affairs teacher at Songea Secondary School, Julius Mwasanyagi, was one of the early members and leaders of TANU (Tanganyika African National Union) who played a major role in the struggle for independence and worked closely with Nyerere. He was one of the major participants at the Tabora Conference of 1958 when the role of TANU was debated on how the party would carry on the independence struggle as a nationalist movement without compromising the interests of the black African majority.

He fell out of favour with Nyerere in the mid-1960s and spent the rest of his life in relative obscurity as a secondary school teacher, almost forgotten as one of the earliest and prominent nationalists who, together with Nyerere, Oscar Kambona, Abdullah Kassim Hanga and Bibi Titi Mohammed, was one of the first proponents and supporters of the unification of Tanganyika and Zanzibar, even before the Zanzibar Revolution, which led to the creation of Tanzania as a union of two independent countries.

A native of Iringa District in the Southern Highlands Province, Mwasanyagi was one of the most vocal nationalists of his time who also, in the 1950s, wrote and sent petitions to the United Nations opposing the government's land policy which involved land grabs and other colonial injustices during British rule which affected the well-being of the indigenous people. He stated in one of his petitions to the United Nations that one day the people, subjected to land dispossession, will find out that their fertile land was declared White Highlands for white settlers as happened in neighbouring Kenya where the Kikuyu lost their land in the Central Highlands to the British settlers, triggering the Mau Mau rebellion - war of independence.

A graduate of Makerere University, Mwasanyagi was also one of the most influential teachers in the history of Songea Secondary School - so was Erasto Andrew Mbwana Mang'enya who also once taught there - and of the country as a whole in the post-colonial era, whose reputation as a scholar and as a Pan-African nationalist left an indelible mark on his students. He had a deep booming voice and thorough command of both Kiswahili and English and was one of the most articulate and remains one of the most-forgotten early nationalists in Tanganyika's colonial and post-colonial history.

He articulated positions which thrust him into prominence as one of the national leaders and not just of the Hehe people (Wahehe) in Iringa District in the Southern Highlands Province during the struggle for independence. As a Pan-Africanist, he greatly admired Kwame Nkrumah and Julius Nyerere as leaders of continental stature despite his sharp differences with Nyerere on what route Tanzania should take in pursuit and consolidation of democracy. It is a subject one of his students, Godfrey Mwakikagile, has briefly addressed in his book Nyerere and Africa: End of an Era (2002, 2010). Mwasanyagi has drawn the interest of some scholars in and outside Tanzania because of his important role in the struggle for independence and in the quest for democracy, among them, Professor James L. Giblin of the University of Iowa, whose primary research focuses on Tanzania and East Africa. Godfrey Mwakikagile has also addressed the subject in his book Julius Mwasanyagi: A forgotten African nationalist (2023).

Mwakikagile's headmaster at Songea Secondary School, Paul Mhaiki, also played a national role when he was later appointed by President Nyerere as Director of Adult Education at the Ministry of National Education and after that worked for the United Nations (UN) as Director of UNESCO's Division of Literacy, Adult Education, and Rural Development. He later served as Tanzania's ambassador to France. After finishing his studies at Songea Secondary School in Form IV (Standard 12) in 1968, Mwakikagile went to Tambaza High School in 1969 in Dar es Salaam, formerly H.H. The Aga Khan High School mostly for Asian students (Indian and Pakistani), where he completed Form VI (Standard 14) in 1970. One of his classmates at Tambaza High School was Mohamed Chande Othman, simply known as Chande, who became Chief Justice of Tanzania appointed to the nation's highest court by President Jakaya Kikwete after serving as a high court judge and as a UN prosecutor for international criminal tribunals.[6]

While still in high school at Tambaza, Mwakikagile joined the editorial staff of The Standard (later renamed the Daily News) in 1969 as a reporter. He was hired by the news editor, David Martin, a British journalist who later became Africa correspondent of a London newspaper, The Observer, the world's oldest Sunday paper, covered the Angolan Civil War for BBC and for CBC (Canadian Broadcasting Corporation) and who was a close friend of President Nyerere. Mwakikagile credits David Martin for opening the door for him into the world of journalism and helping him launch his career as a news reporter when he was still a high school student. In addition to his position as news editor, David Martin also served as deputy managing editor of the Tanganyika Standard under Brendon Grimshaw.[2] Founded in 1930, The Standard was the oldest and largest English newspaper in the country and one of the three largest in East Africa, a region comprising Kenya, Uganda and Tanzania.

After finishing high school in November 1970, Mwakikagile joined the National Service in January 1971 which was mandatory for all those who had completed secondary school, high school and college or university studies. He underwent training, which included basic military training, at Ruvu National Service camp when it was headed by his former primary school teacher Eslie Mwakyambiki who later became a Member of Parliament (MP) representing Rungwe District and Deputy Minister of Defence and National Service under President Nyerere. Mwakikagile then went to another National Service camp in Bukoba on the shores of Lake Victoria in the North-West Region bordering Uganda.

After leaving National Service, Mwakikagile returned to the Daily News. His editor then was Sammy Mdee who later served as President Nyerere's press secretary and as Tanzania's deputy ambassador to the United Nations and as ambassador to France and Portugal, and then Benjamin Mkapa who helped him to further his studies in the United States. Years later, Mkapa became President of Tanzania after serving as President Nyerere's press secretary, Minister of Foreign Affairs and as ambassador to Nigeria, Canada and the United States among other cabinet and ambassadorial posts. He was a student of Nyerere in secondary school at St. Francis College, Pugu, on the outskirts of Dar es Salaam, and president of Tanzania for 10 years, serving two consecutive five-year terms.[7]

Mwakikagile also worked as an information officer at the Ministry of Information and Broadcasting (now known as the Ministry of Information, Youth, Culture and Sports) in Dar es Salaam. He left Tanzania in November 1972 to go for further studies in the United States when he was a reporter at the Daily News under Mkapa. He has stated in some of his writings including Nyerere and Africa: End of an Era that without Mkapa, he may never have gone to school in the United States where he became an author and an Africanist focusing on post-colonial studies. He also credits Mkapa for helping him achieve his goal as an author because of the role he played in sending him to the United States where he got the opportunity to write books. Mkapa was also a close friend of David Martin.[8]

One of Mwakikagile's main books in post-colonial studies is The Modern African State: Quest for Transformation (Nova Science Publishers, Inc., Huntington, New York, 2001). Professor Guy Martin, in his book African Political Thought (Palgrave Macmillan, 2012) in which he examines the political thought of leading African political thinkers throughout history dating back to ancient times (Kush/Nubia, sixth century BCE), has described Mwakikagile as one of Africa's leading populist scholars and political thinkers and theorists and has used his book The Modern African State to examine his ideas. Professor Edmond J. Keller, Chairman of the Political Science Department at the University of California-Los Angeles (UCLA), in his review of Professor Martin's African Political Thought in Africa Today, Volume 60, Number 2, Winter 2013, Indiana University Press, has described Mwakikagile as a public intellectual and an academic theorist. Other major African political thinkers and theorists covered by Professor Guy Martin in his book include Julius Nyerere, Kwame Nkrumah, Leopold Sédar Senghor, Amilcar Cabral, Cheikh Anta Diop, and Steve Biko.

Professor Ryan Ronnenberg in his article about Godfrey Mwakikagile in the Dictionary of African Biography, Volume 6 (Oxford University Press, 2011) covering the lives and legacies of notable African men and women since ancient times, edited by Harvard University professors, Emmanuel K. Akyeampong and Henry Louis Gates Jr., has stated that Mwakikagile has written major works of scholarship which have had a great impact in the area of African studies.

Some of Mwakikagile's most influential books in post-colonial studies include Africa and the West, reviewed by West Africa magazine and other publications including Sierra Leone's ExpoTimes, and Africa After Independence: Realities of Nationhood. Professor Ronnenberg has used both books and others including Economic Development in Africa and Africa is in a Mess: What Went Wrong and What Should Be Done by Mwakikagile in his article about him in the Dictionary of African Biography to explain his ideas and influence.

Professor George Ayittey described Godfrey Mwakikagile as one of Africa's leading “Cheetahs,” a term he used in his lectures and writings to describe Africans, especially of the younger generation and sometimes older ones, who offer from a different perspective innovative solutions for fundamental change to transform Africa into a prosperous continent contrasted with what has been proposed and pursued by African leaders since independence, as Mwakikagile has shown in Africa is in a Mess and in his other books on post-colonial Africa. Anna Mahjar Barducci, like Ayittey, has described Mwakikagile in similar terms in her work, “Aiutiamoli A Casa Loro? Lo Stiamo Già Facendo, Ma Male” (“Let's Help Them at Home? We Are Already Doing It, But Badly”).

Mwakikagile contends that bad leadership is the biggest problem African countries have faced since independence because leaders are not held accountable for their actions and rig elections to stay in power and even perpetuate themselves in office, a problem he has addressed in his books including Ethnicity and Regionalism in National Politics in Kenya and Nigeria: A Comparative Study (2024).

His books are mostly found in college and university libraries throughout the world. They are also found in public libraries. They are mostly academic books primarily for scholars.

Mwakikagile's works in post-colonial studies have been cited in other contexts besides academic fields. The premier of Western Cape Province in South Africa, Helen Zille, in her speech in the provincial parliament on 28 March 2017, cited Godfrey Mwakikagile's analysis of the impact of colonial rule on Africa in defence of her Tweets which her critics said were a defence of colonialism and even called for her resignation. She said her analysis was the same as Mwakikagile's and those of other prominent people including Nelson Mandela, Chinua Achebe, Ali Mazrui, and former Indian prime minister, Manmohan Singh, stating that she made the same point they did. And South African Vice President Phumzile Mlambo-Ngcuka in her speech on African leadership and development at a conference of African leaders, diplomats and scholars at the University of the Western Cape in South Africa in September 2006 cited Mwakikagile from his book Nyerere and Africa: End of an Era to support her position on the subject.

In the United States, Mwakikagile served as president of the African Students Union whilst attending Wayne State University in Detroit, Michigan. He graduated from that university in 1975.[9]

He was sponsored by the Pan-African Congress-USA, a Detroit-based African-American organisation founded by Arthur Smith (Kwame Atta), who was a close friend of Malcolm X, and Edward Vaughn, a political activist and national civil rights leader who served as executive assistant to Detroit's first black mayor Coleman Young and as a state representative of Detroit in the Michigan State Legislature and later as president of the NAACP for the state of Alabama, as Mwakikagile has explained in his writings including Reflections on Race Relations: A Personal Odyssey.

The organisation was formed to establish ties with African countries – some of its members went to live and work in Africa including Tanzania – and supported liberation movements in the countries of southern Africa in their struggle against white minority rule. It was inspired by and followed the teachings and writings of Kwame Nkrumah, Julius Nyerere, Ahmed Sékou Touré, Marcus Garvey, and Malcolm X. These were also the only leaders whose portraits were on the wall of the conference hall of the Pan-African Congress-USA.

Pan-African Congress members also learned and taught Swahili. The organisation also had a scholarship programme to sponsor students from Africa to study in Detroit. The director of the scholarship programme, Malikia Wada Lumumba (Rosemary Jones), was a professor of psychology. Besides Tanzania, other students came from Ghana, Sierra Leone, Nigeria and Gambia.

Godfrey Mwakikagile was the first student from Tanzania to be sponsored by the organisation. He was also one of the two students who became authors. The other one was Amadou S.O. Taal from Gambia who became an economist under President Dawda Jawara and later served concurrently as Gambia's ambassador to Nigeria, Ghana, Angola, Chad, Rwanda and seven other African countries and to the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS). He and Mwakikagile planned to write a book together on NEPAD – New Partnership for Africa's Development – as Mwakikagile stated in his writings including Nyerere and Africa: End of an Era and Africa is in a Mess: What Went Wrong and What Should Be Done. They were schoolmates and roommates when they attended Wayne State University from the early to the mid-seventies.

After completing his studies at Wayne State University, Mwakikagile went to Aquinas College in Grand Rapids, Michigan, in 1976. One of his professors of economics and head of the economics department at Aquinas College was Kenneth Marin who once worked as an economic advisor to the government of Tanzania in Dar es Salaam on capital mobilisation and utilisation from the late 1960s to the early 1970s. Before he went to Tanzania, Professor Marin was a member of the White House Consumer Advisory Council where he served on Wage and Price Control in the mid-1960s, appointed by President Lyndon B. Johnson. Coincidentally, Mwakikagile's first book was also about economics.

Mwakikagile also composed some instrumental music in 1993 but did not release it until thirty years later, as he has briefly explained in one of his books, Julius Mwasanyagi: A forgotten African nationalist, in which he also states that he pursued it only as a hobby during that time and has, instead, focused on writing books through the years.

Books

[edit]

Mwakikagile's first book, Economic Development in Africa, was published in June 1999. He has written many books – 95 books listed on Goodreads – mostly about Africa during the post-colonial era.

His books are used in various academic disciplines up to the post-graduate level including doctoral studies. He has also written some books about the African diaspora, mainly Black America and the Afro-Caribbean region including Afro-Caribbean communities in Britain and the United States. His works on race relations include Shattered Dream: Race and Justice, Patrick Lyoya killed by the police: What did I do wrong?, Across The Colour Line in an American City, On the Banks of a River, In the Crucible of Identity and Reflections on Race Relations: A Personal Odyssey which is a comparative analysis between colonial Tanganyika and the United States in terms of race relations that also focuses on problems in race relations in the American context in contemporary times.

Nyerere and Africa: End of an Era

[edit]

His book Nyerere and Africa: End of an Era,[10] was published not long after Nyerere died and established him as one of Nyerere's prominent biographers.[11]. Professor David Simon, a specialist in development studies at the University of London and Director of the Centre for Development Areas Research at Royal Holloway College, published in 2005 excerpts from the book in his compiled study, Fifty Key Thinkers on Development. Professor Simon was, during that time and thereafter, also the editor of the scholarly Journal of Southern African Studies and was on the editorial staff of another academic publication, the Review of African Political Economy.[12] Mwakikagile's book Nyerere and Africa was also reviewed by West Africa magazine in 2002.[13] It was also reviewed by a prominent Tanzanian journalist and political analyst, Fumbuka Ng'wanakilala of the Daily News, Dar es Salaam, in October 2002, and is seen as a comprehensive work, in scope and depth, on Nyerere.[14] The same book was also reviewed by Professor Roger Southall of the University of the Witwatersrand (Wits), formerly of Rhodes University, South Africa, in the bi-annual interdisciplinary publication, the Journal of Contemporary African Studies (Taylor & Francis Group), 22, No. 3, in 2004. Professor Southall was also the editor of the journal during that period.

Others who reviewed the book include Professor A.B. Assensoh, a Ghanaian teaching at Indiana University in Bloomington, Indiana, in the United States. He reviewed the first edition of Nyerere and Africa: End of an Era in the African Studies Review, an academic journal of the African Studies Association, in 2003.

Controversy

[edit]

Mwakikagile has been criticised, along with some African and European scholars including Professor Ali Mazrui, Christoph Blocher, Mahmood Mamdani, Peter Niggli, and R. W. Johnson, as someone who advocates the recolonisation of Africa through supervision of failed states by the African Union and the United Nations.[11][12]

Academic reviews

[edit]

Mwakikagile's books have been reviewed in a number of academic publications, including the academic journal African Studies Review, by scholars in their fields. They include Military Coups in West Africa Since The Sixties, which was reviewed in that journal by Professor Claude E. Welch of the Department of Political Science at the State University of New York, Buffalo; and Ethnic Politics in Kenya and Nigeria, reviewed by Nigerian Professor Khadijat K. Rashid of Gallaudet University, Washington, D.C.[13]

Other books by Mwakikagile have also been reviewed in the African Studies Review and in the Journal of Contemporary African Studies, including Nyerere and Africa: End of an Era and The Modern African State: Quest for Transformation which were reviewed in the African Studies Review. Nyerere and Africa was also reviewed in the Journal of Contemporary African Studies.

His book, Western Involvement in Nkrumah's Downfall, was reviewed by Professor E. Ofori Bekoe, in Africa Today, Vol. 64, Number 4, Summer 2016, Indiana University Press.

Mwakikagile has also written about race relations in the United States and relations between continental Africans and people of African descent in the diaspora in his titles such as Black Conservatives in The United States; Relations Between Africans and African Americans; and Relations Between Africans, African Americans and Afro-Caribbeans. Professor Kwame Essien of Gettysburg College, later Lehigh University, a Ghanaian, reviewed Relations Between Africans and African Americans: Misconceptions, Myths and Realities, in Souls: A Critical Journal of Black Politics, Culture, and Society, Volume 13, Issue 2, 2011, an academic journal of Columbia University, New York, and described it as an "insightful and voluminous" work covering a wide range of subjects from a historical and contemporary perspective, addressing some of the most controversial issues in relations between the two.

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b c Kyoso, David E., Godfrey Mwakikagile: Biography of an Africanist, Intercontinental Books (2017), pp. 7 -12, 116 ISBN 9781981731503[1]
  2. ^ a b My Life as an African, pp. 89–90; "Newsman Leaves for America," Daily News, Dar es Salaam, Tanzania, 7 November 1972, p. 3; Life in Tanganyika in The Fifties, p. 56.
  3. ^ Godfrey Mwakikagile, Life in Tanganyika in The Fifties, ISBN 9789987160129, New Africa Press, Dar es Salaam, Tanzania, 2009, p. 19. See also, G. Mwakikagile, My Life as an African: Autobiographical Writings, Dar es Salaam, Tanzania: New Africa Press, 2009, p. 21. ISBN 9789987160051.
  4. ^ Kyoso, David E, Godfrey Mwakikagile: Biography of an Africanist, Intercontinental Books (2017), pp. 8-9, ISBN 9781981731503 [2] (last retrieved 10 November 2018)
  5. ^ Kyoso, p. 123, 169, 176
  6. ^ Mwakikagile, Godfrey, Life in Tanganyika in The Fifties, pp. 44, 77, 122; My Life as an African, pp. 47-48, 78, 89, 92, 117, 119, 138, 154, 172, 175; Tanzania under Mwalimu Nyerere: Reflections on an African Statesman, pp. 15–16, New Africa Press - Pretoria, South Africa, (2006), ISBN 9780980253498
  7. ^ "Newsman Leaves for America," Daily News, 7 November 1972, p. 3; Life in Tanganyika in The Fifties, p. 123; My Life as an African, p. 90.
  8. ^ "Newsman Leaves for America," Daily News, 7 November 1972, p. 3; Life in Tanganyika in The Fifties, pp. 122–123; My Life as an African, p. 176.
  9. ^ Wayne State University Alumni, 1975; My Life as an African, pp. 76, 86, 120, 140, 164, 188, 190, 192, 246, 250, 266, 281; Godfrey Mwakikagile, Nyerere and Africa: End of an Era, 5th Edition, 2010, pp. 86, 491, 509–511, 658, 664–665.
  10. ^ Godfrey Mwakikagile, Nyerere and Africa: End of an Era, 5th Edition, ISBN 0980253411, Pretoria, South Africa: New Africa Press, 2010.
  11. ^ Dr. Kenday Samuel Kamara of Walden University in his abstract "Considering the Enormity of Africa's Problems, is Re-Colonization an Option?" cites Africa is in A Mess: What Went Wrong and What Should Be Done and related works by other African academic authors, including Professor Ali Mazrui, and Professor George Ayittey's Africa in Chaos. See also Tunde Obadina, "The Myth of Neo-Colonialism," in Africa Economic Analysis, 2000; and Timothy Murithi, The African Union: Pan-Africanism, Peacebuilding and Development.
  12. ^ Professor Sabelo J. Ndlovu-Gatsheni, a Zimbambwean teaching international studies at Monash University, South Africa campus, in his abstract "Gods of Development, Demons of Underdevelopment and Western Salvation: A Critique of Development Discourse as a Sequel to the CODESRIA and OSSREA International Conferences on Development in Africa" (June 2006), advances the same argument as Mwakikagile and cites Africa is in A Mess to support his thesis. See also Floyd Shivambu, "Floyd's Perspectives: Societal Tribalism in South Africa," 1 September 2005, who cites Mwakikagile's Ethnic Politics in Kenya and Nigeria, in his condemnation of tribalism in post-apartheid South Africa; Mary Elizabeth Flournoy of Agnes Scott College, in her paper "Nigeria: Bounded by Ropes of Oil," citing Mwakikagile's writings, including Ethnic Politics in Kenya and Nigeria; Professor Eric Edi of Temple University, in his paper, "Pan West Africanism and Political Instability: Perspectives and Reflections," citing Mwakikagile's books Military Coups in West Africa Since The Sixties and The Modern African State: Quest for Transformation.
  13. ^ Professor Claude E. Welch, Jr., in African Studies Review, Vol. 45, No. 3, December 2002, pp. 124–125; and Ethnic Politics in Kenya and Nigeria, reviewed by Nigerian Professor Khadijat K. Rashid of Gallaudet University, Washington, D.C. in African Studies Review, Vol. 46, No. 2, September 2003, pp. 92 – 98.

Selected bibliography

[edit]
[edit]

 This article incorporates text by Godfrey Mwakikagile available under the CC BY-SA 3.0 license. The text and its release have been received by the Wikimedia Volunteer Response Team; for more information, see the talk page.