
Ketura JosephDuring meals, I often heard
the phrase, “Don’t waste your food because there are children starving
in Africa.” But why is that the most common narrative about Africa? Why
is the continent so often associated with poverty and struggle? While
there is no single answer, I believe colonialism is a major reason why
many African — and some Asian — countries continue to face economic
hardship today.
Whitewashing colonialism: myths and realities
Nigel
Biggar, former director of the MacDonald Centre for Theology, Ethics,
and Public Life, led a research project called Ethics and Empire, which
aimed to assess the morality of
imperialism. Biggar attempted to justify colonial rule, citing examples
such as Britain’s abolition of the Atlantic slave trade in 1807 and the
fact that Black Africans were granted voting rights in 1892 — 17 years
before African Americans men were given the right to vote.
However,
this selective framing ignores the deeper harm of colonial rule. The
Cape Franchise and Ballot Act, for example, may have allowed a
“non-racial franchise,” but it also raised the property qualification
for voting from £25 to £75 — effectively disenfranchising many Black
South Africans. As historian Sabelo Ndlovu-Gatsheni puts it in Moral
Evil, Economic Good, “The
fact is the African struggles were not undertaken for a trinket like
getting voting rights under colonialism.” Imperialism didn’t just limit
political rights; it reshaped entire economies and societies to benefit
European powers at the expense of the colonized.
What Africa could have been: The devastation of the Berlin Conference
Had
imperialism never happened, Africa could have taken a very different
path. Before European intervention, various African kingdoms, such as
Mali, Songhai and Great Zimbabwe, thrived
with sophisticated trade networks, governance systems, and cultural
achievements. The Berlin Conference of 1885, however, marked a turning
point.
European
nations carved up Africa without regard for existing political ties or
rivalries. This disregard led to artificial borders, internal conflicts,
and the forced restructuring of African economies to serve European
interests.
Many
African and Latin American countries now have cash crop economies, where
the bulk of their GDP relies on a single commodity, such as bananas or
vanilla beans. This dependency makes them vulnerable to economic
fluctuations, further limiting their growth. Imperialist economic
structures continue to push many people to migrate to countries like the
U.S. in search of stability, ironically, in nations that profited from
their historical exploitation.
The lasting effects of imperialism: The wealth gap in Boston
The
effects of imperialism extend far beyond Africa and can be seen in
places like Boston through the racial wealth gap. According to The
Boston Globe, a study by the Federal Reserve Bank of Boston found that
the average net worth of Black households in Greater Boston is just $8,
compared to $247,000 for white households. That disparity is staggering.
One
major factor is homeownership. After World War II, the GI Bill helped
millions of veterans purchase homes, allowing them to build wealth that
could be passed down to future generations. However, discriminatory
policies like redlining denied many Black veterans access to these
benefits. The GI Bill could have been the “40 acres and a mule” that
America never provided as reparations for slavery, but instead, it
reinforced racial economic disparities. The racial wealth gap today is
not just about individual choices; it is the result of systemic
oppression that dates back to colonialism and the economic systems it
put in place.
The importance of knowing your history
In
many schools, Black history is taught primarily through the lens of
struggle. While resilience is crucial to understand, so is the richness
of African cultures, traditions, and successes. Africa is a vast
continent with diverse languages, histories, and innovations that
deserve better representation in media and education.
For
me, learning about a broader history — beyond suffering — has
strengthened my pride in my identity, my roots, and even my relationship
with my hair.
Knowledge
is power, and understanding history is essential to breaking cycles of
misinformation and reclaiming narratives about Africa and its people.
Ketura
Joseph is currently a junior at Brooke High School. Ketura has been
writing Teens in Print for three years. Her favorite types of articles
to write include op-eds and reviews. Ketura is currently a newsroom
report for Teens in Print.