Mr Drammeh, I have been enjoying your exchange and the many interesting issues you have been putting us through.However there are certain points that I believed are not inline with my own view of what is going on. The Political situation in Senegal is very interesting and we as Gambians should pay great attentions to the developments there.First,let me tell you what I feel about Negritude.The reason why I believed that Africans are not interested in this political thought, is because of the fact that it has been the most reactionary political thought that has ever emerged in the continent since independent.Negritude was posing itself as an alternative to Pan-Africanism,reducing its meaning to the well known slogan of the founder "Reason Greek,emotion African".Critics like Anta Jobe have accused Senghore of not knowing his history and for that reason came to such a conclusion.Negritude does not only say that all that is black is "beautiful" but also glorifying terrible African history,conditions and culture.This you can simply find out in the writings of both Senghore and likes of Lye Camara of Guinea.The most interesting contradictions is that,must of these people live a life very different from that of the African.Take Senghore's "Night in Sine" and compare this with the life of Senghore and the condition of the African Woman in the village.Falsifying the African culture,history or beign is the least we need as a struggling continent. Secondly the Political situation in Senegal is perhaps more complicated.For more than 10 years,Senegalese oppositions Parties have been working together to bring about political change in that country and among the most active in this work were the most progressive political parties in that country,who were also banned political parties during the Period of Senghore and the bann lifted by the Joof.After bringing down the PS regime,these people are now face with another situation and the condition of the ordinary Senegalese still the same. The lesson for us Gambians is that,is it just enough that we are against the semi fascist APRC regime or do we want a better Gambia after Jammeh.This is what is the problem with people like me and my lack of interest in a unified Opposition against Jammeh.Not only in Senegal,but in Accra too this is the problem,even though bringing down the regime of Junior Judas brought hope to the ordinary people,very little has changed in the life of ordinary Ghanaians.Are the opposition parties capable of bringing about change for a better Gambia.Do we ever here them telling us how is this going to take place.Much of what we hear from them is what they are against and most of us agree with them on those issue.Learning from Senegal or Ghana,will mean that the oppositions parties tell us what they are for and how they are going to go about it and then we can put in place things that will make it impossible to have another fascist regime,light or strong. For Freedom Saiks >From: Oko Drammeh <[log in to unmask]> >Reply-To: The Gambia and related-issues mailing list ><[log in to unmask]> >To: [log in to unmask] >Subject: Re: SV: Fw: Thousands March in Protest At Growing Political > Violence >Date: Sun, 9 Nov 2003 14:55:44 +0100 > >Culture and Life. > >We want Africa to asset her self, to preserve her personality to up hold >and excercise her Lirbety >of actions .We want Africa to recover her dignity which should be expressed >and acknowledge. >Senegal is a hurdle too high to jump. > >QUOATATION >" I notice that all of thoes comminting on Senegalese politics are the ones >who never made a >single comment on the APRC regime " >Jabou Joh wrote. > >This is what this time of political emergence of the African people to >liberty and dignity >commands us to do. > >Renovations should sweep the past But sadly Senegal; is still strengthen >by colonialism. > >There is oppression in the Gambia as a nation but in Senegal there is still >Neo colonialism and >ANTI-African Unity a virus that affects the Contienent of Africa as a whole >and the diaspora.. > >Much respect and Love. > >For The records. >Oko Drammeh > >~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ >To Search in the Gambia-L archives, go to: >http://maelstrom.stjohns.edu/CGI/wa.exe?S1=gambia-l >To contact the List Management, please send an e-mail to: >[log in to unmask] > >To unsubscribe/subscribe or view archives of postings, go to the Gambia-L >Web interface >at: http://maelstrom.stjohns.edu/archives/gambia-l.html > >~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ _________________________________________________________________ On the move? 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