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102 pages, Paperback
First published January 1, 1950
They talk to me about progress, about 'achievements,' diseases cured, improved standards of living. I am talking about societies drained of their essence, cultures trampled underfoot, institutions undermined, lands confiscated, religions smashed, magnificent artistic creations destroyed, extraordinary possibilities wiped out.Estimations show that 150 million Black people were taken from Africa as slaves within four centuries – one of the most egregious crimes in human history, for which the so-called 'Christian West' is mainly responsible. A reckoning is inevitable, and it came in the form of Césaire.
They throw facts at my head, statistics, mileages of roads, canals, and railroad tracks. I am talking about thousands of men sacrificed to the Congo-Ocean. I am talking about those who, as I write this, are digging the harbor of Abidjan by hand. I am talking about millions of men torn from their gods, their land, their habits, their life-from life, from the dance, from wisdom. I am talking about millions of men in whom fear has been cunningly instilled, who have been taught to have an inferiority complex, to tremble, kneel, despair, and behave like flunkeys.With relentless logic, Césaire holds up the mirror of barbarism to white civilization, especially in its bourgeois-capitalist guise, and shows that fascism has always been present in it: "Yes," he writes, "it would be worth the trouble to examine clinically precisely and in all details the methods of Hitler and Hitlerism and to make the oh-so-distinguished, oh-so-humanistic, oh-so-Christian bourgeois of the 20th century understand that he himself carries a Hitler within him without knowing it, that Hitler is his inner demon, […] and that basically what he does not forgive Hitler for is not the crime itself, the crime against man, not the degradation of man in itself, but the crime against the white man, the degradation of the white man, and that he, Hitler, has applied colonialist methods to Europe to which only the Arabs of Algeria, the coolies of India, and the Negroes of Africa have hitherto been subjected."
They dazzle me with the tonnage of cotton or cocoa that has been exported, the acreage that has been planted with olive trees or grapevines. I am talking about natural economies that have been disrupted — harmonious and viable economies adapted to the indigenous population — about food crops destroyed, malnutrition permanently introduced, agricultural development oriented solely toward the benefit of the metropolitan countries, about the looting of products, the looting of raw materials.As a Black person, it was a (surprisingly?) empowering read. It's something I will put into the hands of many of my friends, and will keep recommending. This essay is needed!