A unique memoir chronicles the fortunes of a family led by an African-American mother and a Congolese father, living both in Boston and in Tanzania, discussing the misunderstandings that divide Africans from African-Americans and extolling the traditions of both cultures. Reprint.
Some books you can’t put down. Some books leave you with assurance and your heading nodding stating....he gets it. This is one of them. All children of the Diaspora, no matter where they live, should read this book.
Part memoir and part history, Philippe Wamba finds a way to tell a personal story that will resonate with so many, while also giving the historical perspective of some of the most important events and trends for Africans and African Americans. He explores the complicated relationship between Africans and their African Americans diaspora cousins. Yet, he also leaves a legacy and a wonderful tribute to his family. For me, as an African American living in Tanzania, I found comfort in reading about his experiences and feelings that so often mirrored mine. But I also learned so much about the history of the continent I now call home.
Wamba was born in America of an American mother and a Congolese father. The family lived in the Boston area for some years, but then moved to Dar es Salaam, Tanzania where Philippe spent most of his childhood. Some of this book is a memoir of his childhood and his family, but the rest is comment and analysis of the differences between Africans and African-Americans, and how they see each other and interact. He discusses the stereotypes that each group has about the other group and reaffirms his appreciation of the ties that can hold the two groups together.