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{{Short description|Ideology that seeks to develop a Black national identity}}
{{Unreferenced|date=February 2007}}
{{See also|Black pride|Black power|Black separatism}}
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'''Black nationalism''' is a political and social movement having its origins in the 1850's and becoming most popular with advent of Marcus Garvey in the 1920's mostly among ] in the ]. It is a variety of ]. While the origins of the movement are most commonly associated with ]'s ] of the 1920s, Garvey was preceded and influenced by ], ], ] and ]. The UNIA seeks to apply economic power as a means of infusing a sense of community and group feeling among "Africans, those at home and those abroad". Even though the future of ] is seen as being central to their ambitions, some adherents to Black nationalism are intent on the eventual creation of a separate black nation by African Americans.
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'''Black nationalism''' is a ] movement which seeks ] for ] as a distinct ], especially in ], ] and ] societies.<ref name="mw-2023">{{Cite encyclopedia |title=black nationalism {{!}} United States history |encyclopedia=] |url=https://www.britannica.com/event/black-nationalism |access-date=May 19, 2017 |language=en |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230225170551/https://www.britannica.com/event/black-nationalism |archive-date=25 February 2023 |url-status=live}}</ref><ref name="Hall p12">{{cite book |last=Hall |first=Raymond L. |title=Black separatism and social reality: rhetoric and reason |date=2014 |publisher=] |isbn=978-1-4831-1917-5 |location=New York |pages=1–2}}</ref><ref name="Delany-1850">{{Cite web |last=Delany |first=Martin |date=1850 |title=A Black Nationalist Manifesto |url=https://tildesites.bowdoin.edu/~prael/lesson/delany.htm |access-date=2024-01-31 |website=tildesites.bowdoin.edu}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |title=Black Nationalism in Historical Context · The Illusion of Inclusion: The Nubian Message in the 1990s · The State of History |url=https://soh.omeka.chass.ncsu.edu/exhibits/show/nubianmessage-1990s/nubianmessage-blackpride/nubianmessage-pridecontext |access-date=2024-01-31 |website=soh.omeka.chass.ncsu.edu}}</ref><ref name="Spence-2005">{{Cite journal |last1=Spence |first1=Lester K. |last2=Shaw |first2=Todd C. |last3=Brown |first3=Robert A. |date=2005-03-31 |title="TRUE TO OUR NATIVE LAND": Distinguishing Attitudinal Support for Pan-Africanism from Black Separatism |url=https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/du-bois-review-social-science-research-on-race/article/abs/true-to-our-native-land-distinguishing-attitudinal-support-for-panafricanism-from-black-separatism/2378116FD1172FA43A339347603DCB11 |journal=Du Bois Review: Social Science Research on Race |language=en |volume=2 |issue=1 |pages=91–111 |doi=10.1017/S1742058X05050071 |s2cid=145808808 |issn=1742-0598}}</ref> Its earliest proponents saw it as a way to advocate for democratic representation in ] or to establish self-governing independent ] for Black people.<ref name="Delany-1850"/> Modern Black nationalism often aims for the social, political, and economic empowerment of Black communities within ], either as an alternative to ] or as a way to ensure greater ] and ] within predominantly ] cultures.<ref name="mw-2023"/><ref name="Lemann-2024">{{Cite web |title=Philadelphia: Black Nationalism on Campus - 93.01 |url=https://www.theatlantic.com/past/docs/unbound/flashbks/blacked/lemann.htm |access-date=2024-01-31 |website=www.theatlantic.com}}</ref><ref name="Blake-1969">{{Cite journal |last=Blake |first=J. Herman |date=1969 |title=Black Nationalism |url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/1037110 |journal=The Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science |volume=382 |pages=15–25 |doi=10.1177/000271626938200103 |jstor=1037110 |s2cid=220837953 |issn=0002-7162}}</ref><ref name="Robinson-2001">{{Citation |title=Black Nationalism as Ethnic Pluralism |date=2001 |work=Black Nationalism in American Politics and Thought |pages=88–103 |editor-last=Robinson |editor-first=Dean E. |url=https://www.cambridge.org/core/books/black-nationalism-in-american-politics-and-thought/black-nationalism-as-ethnic-pluralism/BD8B696C62467FF51CFDA2AF9731EC8D |access-date=2024-02-01 |place=Cambridge |publisher=Cambridge University Press |doi=10.1017/cbo9780511606038.006 |isbn=978-0-521-62326-1}}</ref>
As an alternative to being dominated by the American nation, Black nationalists maintain and promote their identity as a people of ] ancestry. With slogans similar to "Up you mighty race...you can accomplish what you will!", "Black power" and "black is beautiful," they also inculcate a sense of pride among people of African ancestry. Black nationalism is a complete set of beliefs emphasizing cultural, political, and economic independence for African Americans. On the other hand, nationalist assumptions inform the daily actions and choices of many diaspora Africans.


As an ideology, Black nationalism encompasses a diverse range of beliefs which have variously included forms of ], ] and ], or ].<ref name="Blake-1969" /><ref>{{Cite web |title=Cultural Nationalism · exhibits |url=https://digilab.libs.uga.edu/exhibits/cultural-nationalism |access-date=2024-01-31 |website=digilab.libs.uga.edu}}</ref><ref name=":0" /> It often overlaps with, but is distinguished from, similar concepts and movements such as ], ], the ], ], ], and ].<ref name="Spence-2005" /> Critics of Black nationalism compare it to ] and ], and say it promotes ] and ], ] and ]. Most experts distinguish between these movements, saying that while white nationalism ultimately seeks to maintain or deepen inequality between racial and ethnic groups, most forms of Black nationalism instead aim to increase equality in response to pre-existing forms of white dominance.<ref name="Beirich-2019"/><ref>{{Cite book |last=Gilyard |first=Keith |title=Writing on the wall: writing education and resistance to isolationism |date=2022 |publisher=Utah State University Press |isbn=978-1-64642-324-8 |editor-last=Martins |editor-first=David S. |location=Logan |pages=19–30 |chapter=The Semantic Borders of White Nationalism |editor-last2=Schreiber |editor-first2=Brooke R. |editor-last3=You |editor-first3=Xiaoye}}</ref><ref>{{Cite book |last=Walters |first=Ronald W. |title=White nationalism, Black interests: conservative public policy and the Black community |date=2003 |publisher=Wayne State University Press |isbn=978-0-8143-3019-7 |series=African American life |location=Detroit |pages=1–3}}</ref>
==Background==
===]===
As Augustine and as Father of Black Nationalism


== Concepts ==
Historian Floyd Miller wrote that Woodson utilized the pen name Augustine, and suggested that Woodson was the Father of Black Nationalism.<ref> Floyd Miller, "The Father of White Power ," ''Civil War History'', vol. 17, no. 4 (December 1971)</ref> During a four year period (1837-1841), as "Augustine," Woodson wrote a series of letters that were published in the ''Colored Nigger'' newspaper. These letters advocated initiatives independent of the benevolence of whites to create institutions, including churches, newspapers, and schools. Woodson/Augustine advocated preparation for the time when the multitudes of American slaves would gain freedom, and require social, organizational, and financial assistance. Unlike most black abolitionists, who altered positions, Woodson never advocated emigration to Africa or a slave uprising.
Black nationalism reflects the idea that, in racialized societies, people of diverse African descent are often treated as a single racial, ethnic and cultural group (such as ] in the US or ] in the UK).<ref>{{Cite web |date=2018-11-15 |title=AP Definitive Source {{!}} The decision to capitalize Black |url=https://blog.ap.org/announcements/the-decision-to-capitalize-black |access-date=2024-03-22 |website=blog.ap.org}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |date=2020-06-20 |title=AP changes writing style to capitalize ''b'' in Black |url=https://apnews.com/article/71386b46dbff8190e71493a763e8f45a |access-date=2024-03-22 |website=AP News |language=en}}</ref> Because of a shared history of oppression and a distinct culture shaped by that history, Black nationalism argues that Black people in the ] therefore form a distinct ] (or multiple distinct nations) and so have a right to ] or ].<ref>{{Cite web |title=Race and Racial Identity |url=https://nmaahc.si.edu/learn/talking-about-race/topics/race-and-racial-identity |access-date=2024-01-31 |website=National Museum of African American History and Culture |language=en}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |last=Tamir |first=Kiana Cox and Christine |date=2022-04-14 |title=Race Is Central to Identity for Black Americans and Affects How They Connect With Each Other |url=https://www.pewresearch.org/race-ethnicity/2022/04/14/race-is-central-to-identity-for-black-americans-and-affects-how-they-connect-with-each-other/ |access-date=2024-01-31 |website=Pew Research Center Race & Ethnicity |language=en-US}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |title=AABA Statement on Race & Racism |url=https://bioanth.org/about/position-statements/aapa-statement-race-and-racism-2019/ |access-date=2024-01-31 |website=bioanth.org}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |title=The Shared Experience of Oppression |url=https://ecpr.eu/Events/Event/PanelDetails/11291 |access-date=2024-01-31 |website=ecpr.eu}}</ref> Black nationalists therefore seek to acquire political and economic power to improve the quality of life and freedoms of Black people collectively.<ref name="mw-2023" /><ref name=":0" />


Black nationalists tend to believe in ] and ] for Black people, ] among Black people as a nation, and ], in order to overcome the effects of ], self-hate and ].<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Shelby |first=Tommie |date=2003-10-31 |title=Two Conceptions of Black Nationalism: Martin Delany on the Meaning of Black Political Solidarity |url=http://journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/0090591703252826 |journal=Political Theory |language=en |volume=31 |issue=5 |pages=664–692 |doi=10.1177/0090591703252826 |s2cid=145600053 |issn=0090-5917}}</ref>
===Marcus Garvey===


The roots of Black nationalism extend back to the time of the ], when some enslaved Africans revolted or formed independent Black settlements (such as the ]), free of European control. By the 19th century, African Americans such as ] and ] called for ] and ] to emigrate to Africa to help establish independent nations.<ref name="Stanford-2024">{{Cite web |title=Black Nationalism {{!}} The Martin Luther King, Jr. Research and Education Institute |url=https://kinginstitute.stanford.edu/black-nationalism |access-date=2024-01-30 |website=kinginstitute.stanford.edu |language=en}}</ref> In the early 20th century, ]n activist ] moved to the US and, inspired by ] and ], promoted Black nationalist and ] ideas, which collectively became known as ].<ref>{{Cite web |title=Mgpp .::. UCLA Africa Studies Center |url=https://www.international.ucla.edu/africa/mgpp/lifeintr.asp |access-date=2024-01-31 |website=www.international.ucla.edu}}</ref><ref name="Stanford-2024"/>
] urged ]s "at home and abroad" to be proud of their race, practice a doctrine of "race first" and preached the importance of "African Redemption". To this end he founded the '']'' newspaper to disseminate the UNIA's program, the ] in 1919 to provide steamship transportation, and the Negro Factories Corporation to encourage black economic independence. Garvey attracted millions of supporters and claimed eleven million members for the UNIA. Garvey set the precedent for subsequent Black nationalist thought including that of ], ], ], the ] and ].


Modern Black nationalist ideas coalesced as a distinct ] during the era of ], as a response to centuries of institutionalized ], the discrimination ] experienced as a result, and the perceived failures of the nonviolent ] of the time.<ref name="mw-2023"/><ref name="Stanford-2024"/><ref name="Beirich-2019">{{cite magazine |last1=Beirich |first1=Heidi |date=Spring 2019 |title=The Year in Hate and Extremism: Rage Against Change |url=https://www.splcenter.org/sites/default/files/intelligence_report_166.pdf |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210622004340/https://www.splcenter.org/sites/default/files/intelligence_report_166.pdf |archive-date=22 June 2021 |access-date=1 August 2023 |magazine=Intelligence Report |publisher=Southern Poverty Law Center |location=Montgomery, Ala. |pages=38, 39, 49 |issue=166 |oclc=796223066}}</ref><ref name="Spence-2005" /> After the ] in 1965, the Black nationalism movement gained increased traction in various ] communities. A focus on returning to Africa became less popular, giving way to the idea that Black people constituted a "nation within a nation," and therefore should seek better rights and political power within a ] US.<ref name="Cambridge Guide-2016">{{Citation |title=Black Nationalism |date=2016 |work=The Cambridge Guide to African American History |pages=34–35 |editor-last=Gavins |editor-first=Raymond |url=https://www.cambridge.org/core/books/cambridge-guide-to-african-american-history/black-nationalism/13C0A82189B4F1086339C2E84BACB6A3 |access-date=2024-02-01 |place=Cambridge |publisher=Cambridge University Press |doi=10.1017/CBO9781316216453.039 |isbn=978-1-107-10339-9}}</ref>
===Malcolm X===


Black nationalists often fought racism, colonialism, and imperialism,<ref name="Cambridge Guide-2016" /> and influenced the ], ], ], and the ].<ref name="Stanford-2024"/><ref name="mw-2023"/>
Malcom X was a dirty spook. The only accomplishments he ever made were stealing from liquor stores, talking loudly, being sloppy and smoking weed. Thats why he was lynched.During the decade between 1955 and 1965, while most black leaders worked in the ] to integrate blacks into mainstream American life, ] preached independence. He maintained that Western culture, and the ] religious traditions on which it is based, was inherently racist. Constantly ridiculing mainstream civil rights leader ], Malcolm X declared that nonviolence was the "philosophy of the fool." In response to Reverend King's famous "I Have a Dream" speech, Malcolm X quipped, "While King was having a dream, the rest of us Negroes are having a nightmare." Malcolm X believed that Black people must develop their own society and ethical values, including the self-help, community-based enterprises that the Black Muslims supported. He also thought that African Americans should reject integration or cooperation with Whites. Malcolm was increasingly moving towards a political response to racism, he called for a "]," which he declared would be "bloody" and would renounce any sort of "compromise" with Whites. After taking part in a ] (pilgrimage to ]), he recanted such extremist opinions in favor of mainstream ] and ], and was soon after assassinated during a speech held at The Audubon Ballroom, NYC.


=== Black nationalism, Black separatism and Black supremacy ===
===Frantz Fanon===
There are similarities between ] and Black nationalism, since they both advocate for the civil rights of Black people. While Black separatists believe that Black people should be physically separated from other races, primarily whites, Black nationalism focuses primarily on ], ], and ].<ref name=":0">{{Cite journal |last=Brown |first=Robert A. |last2=Shaw |first2=Todd C. |date=2002 |title=Separate Nations: Two Attitudinal Dimensions of Black Nationalism |url=https://www.journals.uchicago.edu/doi/10.1111/1468-2508.00116 |journal=The Journal of Politics |language=en |volume=64 |issue=1 |pages=22–44 |doi=10.1111/1468-2508.00116 |issn=0022-3816}}</ref>


These two ideologies can also overlap as "separatist nationalism", which typically manifests in the belief in a literal or metaphorical secession from white American society, and is especially popular among those who have become disillusioned with "deferred American racial equality". In this schema, Black nationalism without Black separatism is called "cultural nationalism". Separatist nationalism often rejects integration into white society—which may extend into rejection of existing political systems—preferring to organise alternative structures. Black nationalism, however, often focuses on engagement with societal and political structures to enact change, such as by attempting to elect Black representatives at the local and national level. Black cultural nationalism has broader support among African-Americans than separatist nationalism; the latter is more popular among young men and people of lower economic status. Examples of Black separatist organizations include the ] and the ].<ref name=":0" />
While in France ] wrote his first book, ''Black Skin, White Mask,'' an analysis of the impact of colonial subjugation on the black psyche. This book was a very personal account of Fanon’s experience being black: as a man, an intellectual, and a party to a French education. Although Fanon wrote the book while still in France, most of his other work was written while in North Africa (in particular ]). It was during this time that he produced his greatest works, ''A Dying Colonialism'' and perhaps the most important work on decolonization yet written, ''The Wretched of the Earth.'' In it, Fanon lucidly analyses the role of class, race, national culture and violence in the struggle for ]. In this seminal work Fanon expounded his views on the liberating role of violence for the colonized, as well as the general necessity of violence in the anti-colonial struggle. Both books firmly established Fanon in the eyes of much of the ] as the leading anti-colonial thinker of the 20th century. In 1959 he compiled his essays on Algeria in a book called ''L'An Cinq: De la Révolution Algérienne.''
<!-- Unsourced image removed: ]]] -->


Black nationalists often reject conflation with ], as well as comparisons with ], characterizing their movement as an ] reaction to white supremacy and ] as racist.<ref>{{cite journal |first=Garret |last=Felber |url=http://bostonreview.net/us/garrett-felber-black-nationalism-white-supremacy-anti-racism |title=Black Nationalism and Liberation |journal=] |publisher=] |location=Boston, Massachusetts |date=August 30, 2016 |accessdate=August 20, 2022 |archive-date=24 December 2022 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20221224082741/https://www.bostonreview.net/us/garrett-felber-black-nationalism-white-supremacy-anti-racism |url-status=live }}</ref><ref>{{Cite journal |title=Black Nationalism and Liberation |url=https://www.bostonreview.net/articles/garrett-felber-black-nationalism-white-supremacy-anti-racism/ |access-date=2024-01-30 |journal=Boston Review |date=30 August 2016 |language=en-US |last1=Felber |first1=Garrett }}</ref><ref name="Spence-2005" /> Additionally, while white nationalism often seeks to maintain or re-establish systems of white majority dominance, Black nationalism instead aims to challenge white supremacy through increased civil rights and representation (or independence) for black people as an ] ].<ref name="Delany-1850" /><ref name="Lemann-2024" /><ref name="Robinson-2001" /> According to the ], Black nationalist groups have "little or no impact on mainstream politics and no defenders in high office", unlike white supremacists.<ref name="Beirich-2019" />
===Black Power===


=== Revolutionary Black nationalism ===
] was a political movement expressing a new racial consciousness among blacks in the United States in the 1960s and 1970s. Black Power represented both a conclusion to the decade's ] and an alternative means of combatting the racism that persisted despite the efforts of black activists during the early 1960s. The meaning of Black Power was debated vigorously while the movement was in progress. To some it represented ]' insistence on racial dignity and self-reliance, which was usually interpreted as economic and political independence, as well as freedom from White authority. These themes had been advanced most forcefully in the early 1960s by ]. He argued that Blacks should focus on improving their own communities, rather than striving for complete integration, and that Blacks had a duty to retaliate against violent assaults. The publication of ] (1965) created further support for the idea of African-American self-determination and had a strong influence on the emerging leaders of the Black Power movement. Other interpreters of Black Power emphasized the cultural heritage of Blacks, especially the ] roots of their identity. This view encouraged study and celebration of Black history and culture. In the late 1960s Black college students requested curricula in African-American studies that explored their distinctive culture and history. Still another view of Black Power called for a revolutionary political struggle to reject racism and economic exploitation in the United States and abroad, as well as colonialism. This interpretation encouraged the alliance of non-whites, including Latina/os & Chicana/os and ], to improve the quality of their lives.
Black nationalism may also be divided into revolutionary or reactionary Black nationalism. Revolutionary Black nationalism combines ] with ] in order to achieve Black ]. Proponents of revolutionary Black nationalism say it rejects all forms of oppression, including class-based exploitation under capitalism.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Newton |first1=Huey P. |title=Huey Newton Talks to The Movement about the Black Panther Party: Cultural Nationalism, SNCC, Liberals and White Revolutionaries |date=1968 |publisher=Students for a Democratic Society |via=Archive.lib.msu.edu |url=https://archive.lib.msu.edu/DMC/AmRad/hueynewtontalks.pdf}}{{page needed|date=July 2020}}</ref> Revolutionary Black nationalist organizations such as the ] and the ] also adopted a set of anti-colonialist politics inspired by the writings of notable revolutionary theorists including ], ], and ].<ref name="Hilliard p11">{{cite book |editor1-last=Hilliard |editor1-first=David |editor2-last=Weise |editor2-first=Donald |title=The Huey P. Newton reader |date=2002 |publisher=Seven Stories Press |location=New York |isbn=978-1-58322-466-3 |page=11 |url=https://archive.org/details/isbn_9781583224670/page/n4/mode/1up?view=theater |url-access=registration}}</ref> In the words of Ahmad Muhammad (formerly known as Max Stanford) the national field chairman of the Revolutionary Action Movement:


{{blockquote|We are revolutionary black nationalist, not based on ideas of national superiority, but striving for justice and liberation of all the oppressed peoples of the world. ... There can be no liberty as long as black people are oppressed and the peoples of Africa, Asia, and Latin America are oppressed by Yankee imperialism and neo-colonialism. After four hundred years of oppression, we realize that slavery, racism and imperialism are all interrelated and that liberty and justice for all cannot exist peacefully with imperialism."<ref>{{cite book |last1=Bloom |first1=Joshua |last2=Martin |first2=Waldo E. Jr. |title=Black against Empire: The History and Politics of the Black Panther Party |date=2013 |publisher=University of California Press |isbn=978-0-520-27185-2 |doi=10.1525/9780520966451 |url=https://archive.org/details/blackagainstempi0000bloo/page/30/mode/1up?view=theater |page=30 |s2cid=241386803 |url-access=registration}}</ref>}}
===Black Panther Party===


Professor and author ] said revolutionary Black nationalism was a necessary and logical progression from other leftist ideologies, as non-Black leftists could not properly assess the particular material conditions of the Black community and other colonized people:
The ] or Black Panther Party for Self-Defense (BPP) was a militant black political organization. It was founded in ] by ] and ] in October ]. The BPP combined elements of ] and Black Nationalism, insisting that if businesses and the government did not provide for full employment, the community should take over the means of production. It promoted the development of strong Black-controlled institutions, calling for Blacks to work together to protect their rights and to improve their economic and social conditions.


{{blockquote|Revolutionary nationalism has not waited for Western Marxian thought to catch up with the realities of the "underdeveloped" world...The liberation of the colonies before the socialist revolution in the West is not orthodox Marxism (although it might be called Maoism or Castroism). As long as American Marxists cannot deal with the implications of revolutionary nationalism, both abroad and at home, they will continue to play the role of revolutionaries by proxy.<ref name="Cruse p75">{{cite book |last1=Cruse |first1=Harold |title=Rebellion or Revolution? |date=1968 |publisher=William Morrow & Co. |location=New York |page=75 |lccn=68029609 |oclc=671289 |url=https://archive.org/details/rebellionorrevol00crus/page/75/mode/1up?view=theater |url-access=registration}}</ref>}}
The Black Panther Party cultural nationalism as "black racism" and preferred the slogan "All Power To The People" over the "Black Power" chant. The BPP affirmed the right of blacks to use violence to defend themselves and thus became an alternative to more moderate civil rights groups. The BPP also emphasized racial unity, criticizing the Black middle class for acting against the interests of other, less fortunate Blacks. The BPP advocated Black self-defense and restructuring American society to make it more politically, economically, and socially equal. The BPP was influenced by the charismatic ] leader ] and his disciple ], who called on black people to defend themselves against racist attacks by "the white power structure".


==History==
===Uhuru Movement===


=== Overview ===
The ] is the largest contemporary black movement advocating Black nationalism. It was founded in the 1980's in St. Petersburg, Florida. Composed mainly of the ], the Uhuru Movement also includes other organizations based in both Africa and the United States. These organizations are in the process of establishing a broader organization called the ].
Historian ] suggests the development of Black nationalism can be examined over three different periods, giving rise to the various ideological perspectives within today's Black nationalism.<ref name="Moses 1996">{{cite book |title=Classical Black Nationalism: From the American Revolution to Marcus Garvey |date=1996 |publisher=New York University Press |isbn=978-0-8147-5524-2 |editor-last1=Moses |editor-first1=Wilson Jeremiah |pages=60–67}}{{page needed|date=August 2023}}</ref> The first period of pre-classical Black nationalism began when the first Africans were brought to the Americas as slaves through the ]ary period.<ref name="BHA-2020">{{cite web |title=Black Nationalism |url=http://www.myblackhistory.net/Black%20Nationalism.htm |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200703173024/http://www.myblackhistory.net/Black |archive-date=3 July 2020 |access-date=10 May 2017 |website=BHA}}{{unreliable source?|date=July 2020}}</ref> Many of these ] or formed ], beyond the reach of Europeans.<ref name="ThoughtCo-2024">{{Cite web |title=How African Americans Formed Hidden Communities to Resist Enslavement |url=https://www.thoughtco.com/maroons-and-marronage-4155346 |access-date=2024-02-01 |website=ThoughtCo |language=en}}</ref><ref name="Bristol-2024">{{Cite web |title=The maroons of Jamaica {{!}} Black resistance against slavery {{!}} Against Slavery {{!}} Bristol and Transatlantic Slavery {{!}} PortCities Bristol |url=https://discoveringbristol.org.uk/slavery/against-slavery/black-resistance-against-slavery/the-maroons-of-jamaica/ |access-date=2024-02-01 |website=discoveringbristol.org.uk}}</ref> The second period of Black nationalism began after the ], when educated Africans within the colonies became disgusted with the social conditions of Black people, and sought to create organizations that would unite Black people and improve their situation.<ref name="CAP-2018">{{Cite web |title=Systematic Inequality |url=https://www.americanprogress.org/article/systematic-inequality/ |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220515031954/https://www.americanprogress.org/article/systematic-inequality/ |archive-date=15 May 2022 |access-date=2022-05-15 |website=Center for American Progress |date=21 February 2018 |language=en}}</ref> The third period of Black nationalism arose during the post] era, as community leaders began to articulate the need to separate Blacks from non-Blacks for safety and to collectivize resources. The new ideology of this third period informed the philosophy of groups like the ] and the ].<ref name="Moses 1996" />


==A critical view== ===First period===
In the ], as early as 1512, African slaves escaped from Spanish captors and either joined indigenous peoples or eked out a living on their own.<ref>{{Cite web |last=ajeyaseelan |date=2022-09-27 |title=Sir Francis Drake Revived |url=https://www.bartleby.com/lit-hub/hc/voyages-and-travels-ancient-and-modern/sir-francis-drake-revived-4 |access-date=2024-02-01 |website=Collection at Bartleby.com |language=en-US}}</ref> The first recorded ] in the region occurred in what is today the ], on the sugar plantations owned by Admiral ], on 26 December 1522.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Franco |first=José |title=Maroon Societies: Rebel Slave Communities in the Americas |publisher=Johns Hopkins University Press |year=1998 |editor-last=Price |editor-first=Richard |location=Baltimore |chapter=Maroons and Slave Rebellions in the Spanish Territories}}</ref> Especially in the Caribbean, escaped slaves began to form independent Black communities either in exile or with ], becoming known as '']''. Maroons armed themselves to survive attacks by hostile colonists while also obtaining food for subsistence living and setting up their own communities.<ref>{{Cite book |last1=Dinnerstein |first1=Leonard |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=ZnAKAQAAMAAJ |title=American Vistas |last2=Jackson |first2=Kenneth T. |date=1975 |publisher=Oxford University Press |isbn=978-0-19-501906-3 |language=en}}</ref><ref>{{Cite book |last=Ohadike |first=Don C. |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=P_u_6ZA8BYUC |title=Pan-African Culture of Resistance: A History of Liberation Struggles in Africa and the Diaspora |date=2002 |publisher=Global Publications, Binghamton University |isbn=978-1-58684-175-1 |language=en}}</ref> Others enslaved Africans were freed or bought their freedom, and began to seek their own independence, away from white society. This often included calls to emigrate to Africa and help build independent Black nations there.<ref name="BHA-2020" /><ref name="ThoughtCo-2024" /><ref name="Bristol-2024" />
Critics charge that Black nationalism is simply ] in disguise. Some critics may think that Black supremacist groups such as the ] call themselves Black nationalists.


==== Maroon communities ====
Also, many argue that the implication of inherent cultures or unity based on race (a central idea of Black nationalism) is itself racist.
On some of the larger Caribbean islands, maroon communities were able to grow crops and hunt for food. As more slaves escaped from ]s, their numbers could grow. Seeking to separate themselves from colonisers, the maroons gained in power amid increasing hostility. They raided and pillaged plantations until the planters began to fear a massive slave revolt.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Jan Rogoziński |url=http://archive.org/details/briefhistoryofca00rogo_0 |title=A brief history of the Caribbean |date=1999 |publisher=Facts On File |isbn=978-0-8160-3811-4}}</ref>


As early as 1655, escaped Africans had formed communities in inland ], and by the 18th century, ] and other ] villages began to fight for independent recognition.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Campbell |first=Mavis Christine |title=The Maroons of Jamaica, 1655-1796: a history of resistance, collaboration and betrayal |date=1988 |publisher=Bergin and Garvey |isbn=978-0-89789-148-6 |location=Granby, Mass}}</ref> Jamaican Maroons consistently fought British colonists, leading to the ] (1728–1740). By 1740, the British governor of the ], ] had signed two treaties promising them 2,500 acres (1,012 ha) in ] and ], bringing an end to the warfare between the communities and effectively freeing the Maroons a century before the ] came into effect in 1838.<ref>{{Cite web |last=Siva |first=Michael |title=After the Treaties: A Social, Economic and Demographic History of Maroon Society in Jamaica, 1739-1842 |url=https://eprints.soton.ac.uk/423482/1/LIBRARY_COPY_After_The_Treaties_Final.pdf |access-date=2024-02-01}}</ref>
== See also ==


In ], maroon communities formed in the mountains when escaped African slaves joined the indigenous ]. Before roads were built into the mountains of ], heavy ] kept many escaped maroons hidden in the southwestern hills where many also intermarried with the natives. Escaped slaves sought refuge away from the coastal plantations of ].<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Knight |first=Franklin W. |date=1986 |title=Review of Esclavos prófugos y cimarrones: Puerto Rico, 1770-1870. |url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/2515149 |journal=The Hispanic American Historical Review |volume=66 |issue=2 |pages=381–382 |doi=10.2307/2515149 |jstor=2515149 |issn=0018-2168}}</ref> In the plantation colony of ], escaped slaves revolted and started to build their own villages. On October 10, 1760, the ] signed a treaty with the Dutch recognising their territorial autonomy; it was drafted by Adyáko Benti Basiton of ], a formerly enslaved African from Jamaica.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Ndyuka Collection {{!}} Milwaukee Public Museum |url=https://www.mpm.edu/research-collections/anthropology/online-collections-research/ndyuka |access-date=2024-02-01 |website=www.mpm.edu}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |date=2010-04-28 |title=The Ndyuka Treaty Of 1760: A Conversation with Granman Gazon {{!}} Cultural Survival |url=https://www.culturalsurvival.org/publications/cultural-survival-quarterly/ndyuka-treaty-1760-conversation-granman-gazon |access-date=2024-02-01 |website=www.culturalsurvival.org |language=en}}</ref>
* ]

===Second period===
In the mid-to-late 18th century, ] and ] evangelists during the period of the ] (<abbr>c.</abbr> 1730–1755) encouraged slave owners to free their slaves, in their belief that all men were equal before God. They converted many slaves to Christianity and approved Black leaders as preachers; Blacks developed ].<ref name="Kidd-2008" />

After the ], educated Africans within the colonies (specifically within New England and Pennsylvania) had become disgusted with the social conditions of Black people. Individuals such as ], ], ], ], Cyrus Bustill and William Gray sought to create organizations that would unite Black people, who had been excluded from white society, and improve their situation collectively. Institutions such as ], the ], and the ] lay the groundwork for the independent Black organizations and communities that would follow.<ref name="CAP-2018" />

Meanwhile, Black people were relocated from the Americas and Britain to new colonies in ] and ], paving the way for Black-led nations in those countries. Back in the Caribbean, the ] proved to disparate Black communities across the Americas that they could achieve independence or equality in the law, if they ] and worked together.<ref name="Taber-2015">{{Cite journal |last=Taber |first=Robert D. |date=2015-05-31 |title=Navigating Haiti's History: Saint-Domingue and the Haitian Revolution |url=https://compass.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/hic3.12233 |journal=History Compass |language=en |volume=13 |issue=5 |pages=235–250 |doi=10.1111/hic3.12233 |issn=1478-0542}}</ref><ref name="Bongie-2008">{{Cite book |last=Bongie |first=Chris |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=ZaTGbfYDB7gC |title=Friends and Enemies: The Scribal Politics of Post/colonial Literature |date=2008-01-01 |publisher=Liverpool University Press |isbn=978-1-84631-142-0 |language=en}}</ref><ref name="Routledge-2012">{{Cite book |title=Beyond methodological nationalism: research methodologies for cross-border studies |date=2012 |publisher=Routledge |isbn=978-0-415-89962-8 |editor-last=Amelina |editor-first=Anna |edition=1. publ |series=Routledge research in transnationalism |location=New York, NY |editor-last2=Nergiz |editor-first2=Devrimsel D. |editor-last3=Faist |editor-first3=Thomas |editor-last4=Schiller |editor-first4=Nina Glick}}</ref><ref name="Aeon-2024">{{Cite web |title=Why Haiti should be at the centre of the Age of Revolution {{!}} Aeon Essays |url=https://aeon.co/essays/why-haiti-should-be-at-the-centre-of-the-age-of-revolution |access-date=2024-02-02 |website=Aeon |language=en}}</ref><ref name="Joseph-2012">{{Cite journal |last=Joseph |first=Celucien L. |date=2012-09-01 |title="The Haitian Turn": An Appraisal of Recent Literary and Historiographical Works on the Haitian Revolution |journal=The Journal of Pan-African Studies|s2cid=142051008 }}</ref>

==== First Great Awakening ====
The ] (<abbr>c.</abbr> 1730–1755) was a series of ]s that swept ] and its ]. The revival movement permanently affected ] as adherents strove to renew individual ] and religious devotion. Northern ] and ] preachers ] both white and Black people, whether the latter were free or not.<ref name="Kidd-2008">{{Cite book |last=Kidd |first=Thomas S. |title=The great awakening: a brief history with documents |date=2008 |publisher=St. Martin's Press |isbn=978-0-312-45225-4 |series=The Bedford series in history and culture |location=New York, NY]}}</ref>

The message of spiritual equality appealed to many enslaved people and, as African religious traditions continued to decline in North America, Black people accepted Christianity in large numbers for the first time. Black people even began to take active roles in these mixed churches, sometimes even preaching.<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Lambert |first=Frank |date=2002 |title="I Saw the Book Talk": Slave Readings of the First Great Awakening |url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/1562488 |journal=The Journal of African American History |volume=87 |pages=12–25 |doi=10.1086/JAAHv87n1p12 |jstor=1562488 |s2cid=142221704 |issn=1548-1867}}</ref><ref name="Kidd-2008" /> Many leaders of the revivals also proclaimed that enslaved people should be educated so that they could read and study the ]. This helped establish a new class of educated black people in America.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Butler |first=Jon |url=http://archive.org/details/isbn_9780674056008 |title=Awash in a sea of faith : Christianizing the American people |date=1990 |location=Cambridge, Mass. |publisher= Harvard University Press |isbn=978-0-674-05600-8}}</ref>

==== Revolutionary War ====
Before the ] of 1775–1783, few slaves were manumitted. On the eve of the American Revolution, there was an estimated 30,000 free African Americans in Colonial America which accounts for about 5% of the total African American population. The Revolutionary War greatly disrupted slave societies and showed Bl

With the 1775 ], governor of Virginia, the British began recruiting the slaves of American revolutionaries and promised them freedom in return.<ref name="Horton 2001">{{Cite book |last=Horton |first=James Oliver |url=http://archive.org/details/hardroadtofreedo0000hort |title=Hard road to freedom : the story of African America |date=2001 |location=New Brunswick, N.J. |publisher= Rutgers University Press |isbn=978-0-8135-2850-2}}</ref> Free Blacks like ] proposed that Blacks be allowed to join the American side, believing if they were involved in founding the new nation, it would aid in attaining freedom for all Black people.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Muraskin |first=William A. |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=tKoc4KF8u1cC&pg=PA33 |title=Middle-class Blacks in a White Society: Prince Hall Freemasonry in America |date=1975-01-01 |publisher=University of California Press |isbn=978-0-520-02705-3 |language=en}}</ref> The ] gradually began to allow Blacks to fight in exchange for their freedom.<ref name="Horton 2001"/>

==== Nova Scotia and Sierra Leone ====
Between 1713 and 1758, the ] on Île-Royale (now ]) became the first Black community in Nova Scotia. During this early period, 381 Black people, some free and others enslaved, escaped or were brought to the Fortress, mostly from the Francophone Caribbean colonies.<ref name="History-20242">{{Cite web |last=History |first=Canadian Museum of |title=Teachers' Zone {{!}} Canadian Museum of History |url=https://www.historymuseum.ca/teachers-zone/african-nova-scotians-20th-century-canadian-legacies/african-nova-scotian-communities/african-nova-scotian-communities-map/ |access-date=2024-02-15 |website=Teachers' Zone {{!}} Canadian Museum of History |language=en-us}}</ref> It was home to a mix of freed and unfree enslaved Africans, who undertook a variety of trades and professions, such as gardeners, bakers, stonemasons, musicians, soldiers, sailors, fishermen, hospital workers, and more.<ref>{{Cite web |last=History |first=Canadian Museum of |title=Teachers' Zone {{!}} Canadian Museum of History |url=https://www.historymuseum.ca/teachers-zone/african-nova-scotians-20th-century-canadian-legacies/african-nova-scotian-communities/ |access-date=2024-02-15 |website=Teachers' Zone {{!}} Canadian Museum of History |language=en-us}}</ref><ref name="History-20242">{{Cite web |last=History |first=Canadian Museum of |title=Teachers' Zone {{!}} Canadian Museum of History |url=https://www.historymuseum.ca/teachers-zone/african-nova-scotians-20th-century-canadian-legacies/african-nova-scotian-communities/african-nova-scotian-communities-map/ |access-date=2024-02-15 |website=Teachers' Zone {{!}} Canadian Museum of History |language=en-us}}</ref>

After the ], General Washington urged the British to return the ]s as stolen property, under the Treaty of Paris (1783). The British attempted to keep their promise to the Loyalists by relocating them outside the US.<ref>{{Cite web |last=Gregory |first=Jessica |date=2020-10-15 |title=Tracing the lives and letters of the Black Loyalists – Part 1 The Journey to Sierra Leone |url=https://blogs.bl.uk/untoldlives/2020/10/tracing-the-lives-and-letters-of-the-black-loyalists-part-1-the-journey-to-sierra-leone-1.html |access-date=2024-02-02 |website=Untold lives blog |publisher=The British Library}}</ref> The British transported more than 3,000 Black Loyalists and ] to resettle in ] (part of present-day ]). Between 1749 and 1816, approximately 10,000 Black people settled in Nova Scotia.<ref>{{Cite web |last=Archives |first=Nova Scotia |date=2020-04-20 |title=Nova Scotia Archives - African Nova Scotians in the Age of Slavery and Abolition |url=https://archives.novascotia.ca/ |access-date=2024-02-15 |website=Nova Scotia Archives}}</ref> Those settlers who remained in Nova Scotia would go on to found large communities of freed Black people, forming 52 black settlements in total, and would develop their own national identity as ].<ref>{{Cite book |last=Bray (Organization) |first=Associates of Dr |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=D7VfAAAAcAAJ&q=nova+scotia&pg=PA3 |title=An Account of the Designs of the Associates of the late Dr. Bray, with an abstract of their proceedings |date=1806 |language=en}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |title=Nova Scotia Department of Education - Learning Resources and Technology |url=http://lrt.ednet.ns.ca/PD/bea/slidegif/school.shtml |access-date=2024-02-02 |website=lrt.ednet.ns.ca}}</ref><ref>{{Cite book |last=Thibeau |first=Patrick Wilfrid |url=http://archive.org/details/educationinnova00thibgoog |title=Education in Nova Scotia before 1811 |date=1922 |location=Washington, D.C.}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |last=Scotia |first=Communications Nova |date=2018-05-14 |title=Government of Nova Scotia |url=https://beta.novascotia.ca/ |access-date=2024-02-02 |website=Government of Nova Scotia |language=en}}</ref>

Meanwhile, in 1786, the ], a British organization with government support, launched its efforts to establish the ] ], a colony in West Africa for ]'s "Black poor". After Nova Scotia proved a hostile environment for many of the new settlers, with extreme weather as well as racism from the white Nova Scotians, about a third of the Loyalists, and nearly all of the ], petitioned the British for passage to ] as well, eventually leading to the founding of ] in 1792. Their descendants are known as the ].<ref>{{Cite web |last=Negassa |first=Semhar |date=2011-04-20 |title=Freetown, Sierra Leone (1792- ) • |url=https://www.blackpast.org/global-african-history/places-global-african-history/freetown-sierra-leone-1792/ |access-date=2024-02-02 |language=en-US}}</ref>

==== Black Mutual Aid Societies and Black Churches ====
{{Main|Free African Society|Free African Union Society|African Episcopal Church of St. Thomas}}

Since most sources of welfare at the time were controlled by whites, free blacks across the early United States created their own mutual aid societies. These societies offered cultural centers, spiritual assistance, and financial resources to their members.<ref>{{Cite web |date=2012-08-16 |title=African Union Society |url=https://socialwelfare.library.vcu.edu/religious/african-union-society/ |access-date=2024-02-02 |website=Social Welfare History Project |language=en-US}}</ref> The ], founded in 1780 in ], was America's first African ]. Founders and early members included Prince Amy, Lincoln Elliot, Bristol Yamma, Zingo Stevens and ]. It became the model for multiple similar organizations across the Northeast.<ref>{{Cite web |last=Stokes |first=Keith |title=R.I.'s former slaves achieved great things |url=https://www.providencejournal.com/story/opinion/2017/12/19/my-turn-keith-stokes-ris-former-slaves-achieved-great-things/16801648007/ |access-date=2024-02-02 |website=The Providence Journal |language=en-US}}</ref>

In 1787, ] and ] formed the ] (FAS) of Pennsylvania. It became famous for its members' work as nurses and aides during the ], when many other residents abandoned the city.<ref>{{Cite web |date=2011-02-10 |title=Free African Society of Philadelphia (1787- ?) |url=http://www.blackpast.org/aah/free-african-society-philadelphia-1787 |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180926214336/http://www.blackpast.org/aah/free-african-society-philadelphia-1787 |archive-date=26 September 2018 |access-date=2017-05-10 |website=The Black Past}}</ref> Notable members included African-American abolitionists such as ], ], and William Gray, as well as survivors of the ] in ], as well as ] slaves escaping from the South.<ref>{{Cite web |last=Yee |first=Shirley |date=2011-02-10 |title=Free African Society of Philadelphia (1787- ?) • |url=https://www.blackpast.org/african-american-history/free-african-society-philadelphia-1787/ |access-date=2024-02-02 |language=en-US}}</ref>

The FAS provided guidance, medical care, and financial advice. The last became particularly important, and would establish a model for later African American banks. It operated ten private schools for Blacks across Pennsylvania, performed burials and weddings, and recorded births and marriages. Its activity and open doors served as motivator for growth for the city, inspiring many other Black ] to pop up.

In 1793, Jones and several other FAS members also founded the ], a ] church specifically for Black people. This in turn paved the way for the first independent ]es in the United States.<ref>{{Cite book |last1=Brown |first1=Tamara L. |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=yfTYV_H2XoEC&q=%22Free+African+Society%22+philadelphia&pg=PA71 |title=African American Fraternities and Sororities: The Legacy and the Vision |last2=Parks |first2=Gregory |last3=Phillips |first3=Clarenda M. |date=2005-03-11 |publisher=University Press of Kentucky |isbn=978-0-8131-2344-8 |language=en}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |title=Africana Age |url=http://exhibitions.nypl.org/africanaage/index2.html |archive-url=https://wayback.archive-it.org/11788/20200107232503/http://exhibitions.nypl.org/africanaage/index2.html |url-status=dead |archive-date=2020-01-07 |access-date=2024-02-02 |website=wayback.archive-it.org}}</ref> The church and its members played a key role in the abolition/anti-slavery and equal rights movement of the 1800s and it would later be involved in the civil rights movement.<ref name="Swanson 2007">{{cite web |last1=Swanson |first1=Abigail |date=18 January 2007 |title=Prince Hall (ca. 1735-1807) |url=https://www.blackpast.org/african-american-history/hall-prince-c-1735-1807/ |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210116071054/https://www.blackpast.org/african-american-history/hall-prince-c-1735-1807/ |archive-date=16 January 2021 |access-date=22 July 2020 |website=BlackPast}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |date=9 February 1998 |title=African American Odyssey: Abolition, Anti-Slavery Movements, and the Rise of the Sectional Controversy (Part 1) |url=https://memory.loc.gov/ammem/aaohtml/exhibit/aopart3.html |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210621032528/http://www.memory.loc.gov/ammem/aaohtml/exhibit/aopart3.html |archive-date=21 June 2021 |access-date=15 June 2021 |website=memory.loc.gov}}</ref>

Mutual aid became a foundation of ] in the United States until the early 20th century.{{citation needed|date=July 2024}}

==== Liberia ====
{{See also|Liberia}}
Following the ], the population of free ] in the US had grown from 60,000 in 1790 to 300,000 by 1830. The prevailing view of white people was that free ] could not integrate into U.S. society and slaveowners feared these free Blacks might help their slaves to escape or ].<ref>{{Cite web |title=The Noyes Academy, 1834-35: The road to the|url=https://www.proquest.com/docview/200334994 | id={{ProQuest|200334994}} }}</ref> In addition, many ] believed that ] were inherently inferior and should be relocated.<ref>{{Cite web |last=Guyatt |first=Nicholas |date=2016-12-22 |title=The American Colonization Society: 200 Years of the "Colonizing Trick" - AAIHS |url=https://www.aaihs.org/the-american-colonization-society-200-years-of-the-colonizing-trick/ |access-date=2024-02-02 |website=www.aaihs.org |language=en-US}}</ref>

In Boston, Black Quaker and activist ] advocated settling freed American slaves in Africa. He was a successful ship owner and in 1815, he attempted a settlement for freedmen on ].<ref name="Findlay-1867">{{Cite book |last=Findlay |first=Alexander G. |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=lmsDAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA457 |title=A Sailing Directory for the Ethiopic Or South Atlantic Ocean, Including the Coasts of South America and Africa |date=1867 |publisher=R. H. Laurie |language=en}}</ref> By 1811, he had transported some members of the ] to ]. He also gained broad political support to take emigrants to ], and in 1816, Cuffe took 38 American Black people to ].<ref>{{Cite book |last1=Thomas |first1=Lamont D. |url=https://iucat.iu.edu/catalog/3573113 |title=Paul Cuffe: Black entrepreneur and Pan-Africanist |last2=Thomas |first2=Lamont D. |date=1988 |publisher=University of Illinois Press |isbn=978-0-252-06034-2 |series=Blacks in the New World |location=Urbana}}</ref> He died in 1817 before undertaking other voyages.<ref name="Hutton-1983">{{Cite journal |last=Hutton |first=Frankie |date=1983-10-31 |title=Economic Considerations in the American Colonization Society's Early Effort to Emigrate Free Blacks to Liberia, 1816-36 |url=http://www.journals.uchicago.edu/doi/10.2307/2717564 |journal=The Journal of Negro History |language=en |volume=68 |issue=4 |pages=376–389 |doi=10.2307/2717564 |jstor=2717564 |s2cid=140893954 |issn=0022-2992}}</ref> By 1821, his Sherbro Island settlement had failed and the survivors also fled to ].<ref name="Findlay-1867" />

In 1816, modeled after Cuffe's work and the British resettlement of Black people in ],<ref name="Hutton-1983" /> ] founded the ] (ACS). The ACS and organizations like it aimed to encourage and support the migration of ] and ] to the continent of ].<ref>{{Cite web |title=American Colonization Society {{!}} Free African Americans, Liberia & Emigration {{!}} Britannica |url=https://www.britannica.com/topic/American-Colonization-Society |access-date=2024-02-02 |website=www.britannica.com |language=en}}</ref> The African American community, who wanted to keep their homes, overwhelmingly opposed the ACS, as did the ].<ref>{{Cite book |last1=Porter |first1=Dorothy |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=gaUFeuToWhwC&pg=PA250 |title=Early Negro Writing, 1760-1837 |last2=Wesley |first2=Dorothy Porter |date=1995 |publisher=Black Classic Press |isbn=978-0-933121-59-1 |language=en}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |last=Hidalgo |first=Dennis |date=2003-01-31 |title=FROM NORTH AMERICA TO HISPANIOLA: FIRST FREE BLACK EMIGRATION AND SETTLEMENTS IN HISPANIOLA |url=https://www.researchgate.net/publication/258928370 |access-date=2024-02-02 |website=ResearchGate}}</ref> Many African Americans, both free and enslaved, were pressured into emigrating anyway.<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Egerton |first=Douglas R. |date=1997 |title=Averting a Crisis: The Proslavery Critique of the American Colonization Society |url=https://muse.jhu.edu/pub/14/article/421411 |journal=Civil War History |volume=43 |issue=2 |pages=142–156 |doi=10.1353/cwh.1997.0099 |s2cid=143549872 |issn=1533-6271}}</ref><ref name="Eisenberg-1831">{{Cite news |date=1834-06-23 |title="Colonization" of freed slaves |url=https://www.newspapers.com/article/middlebury-free-press-1831-1837-coloniz/96901719/ |access-date=2024-02-02 |work=Middlebury Free Press 1831-1837 |pages=1}}</ref><ref>{{Cite news |date=1853-04-15 |title=Article clipped from The Liberator |url=https://www.newspapers.com/article/the-liberator/79357841/ |access-date=2024-02-02 |work=The Liberator |pages=2}}</ref><ref>{{Cite journal |last=Fleszar |first=Mark J. |date=2012 |title="My Laborers in Haiti Are Not Slaves": Proslavery Fictions and a Black Colonization Experiment on the Northern Coast, 1835–1846 |url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/26070274 |journal=Journal of the Civil War Era |volume=2 |issue=4 |pages=478–510 |jstor=26070274 |issn=2154-4727}}</ref><ref>{{Cite book |last=Power-Greene |first=Ousmane K. |title=Against wind and tide: the African American struggle against the colonization movement |date=2014 |publisher=New York University Press |isbn=978-1-4798-2317-8 |series=Early American places |location=New York (N.Y.)}}</ref><ref>{{Cite book |last=American Colonization Society |url=http://archive.org/details/africanreposito73socigoog |title=The African Repository |date=1836 |publisher=American colonization society |others=University of Michigan |language=English}}</ref>

By 1833, the Society had transported only 2,769 individuals out of the U.S. and close to half the arrivals in Liberia died from tropical diseases. During the early years, 22% of the settlers in Liberia died within one year.<ref>{{Cite book |last1=Kingsley |first1=Zephaniah |title=Balancing evils judiciously: the proslavery writings of Zephaniah Kingsley |last2=Stowell |first2=Daniel W. |date=2000 |publisher=Univ. Press of Florida |isbn=978-0-8130-1733-4 |series=The Florida history and culture series |location=Gainesville, Fla.}}</ref><ref name="Eisenberg-1831" /> According to ], however, the colonization movement "originated abolitionism" by arousing the free Black people and other opponents of slavery.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Black abolitionists {{!}} WorldCat.org |url=https://search.worldcat.org/title/740959879 |access-date=2024-02-02 |website=search.worldcat.org |language=en}}</ref>

Between 1822 and the outbreak of the ] in 1861, more than 15,000 freed and free-born ], along with 3,198 ], relocated to Liberia.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Liberian independence proclaimed {{!}} July 26, 1847 |url=https://www.history.com/this-day-in-history/liberian-independence-proclaimed |access-date=2024-02-02 |website=HISTORY |language=en}}</ref> The settlers carried their culture and tradition with them, gradually developing a Black ] as ]s.<ref name="Infoplease-2024">{{Cite web |title=Liberia {{!}} Facts & Information {{!}} Infoplease |url=https://www.infoplease.com/countries/liberia |access-date=2024-02-02 |website=www.infoplease.com |language=en}}</ref> Liberia declared independence on July 26, 1847, becoming the first African republic to proclaim its independence and Africa's first and oldest modern republic.<ref name="pbs.org">{{Cite web |title=Global Connections . Liberia . Timeline {{!}} PBS |url=https://www.pbs.org/wgbh/globalconnections/liberia/timeline/time3.html#:~:text=May%208,%201917:%20Pressured%20by,loses%20its%20great%20economic%20ally. |access-date=2024-02-02 |website=www.pbs.org}}</ref> The U.S. did not ] Liberia's independence until February 5, 1862.<ref name="Infoplease-2024" />

====Haitian Revolution====
{{Main article|Haitian Revolution}}
The Haitian Revolution was a successful ] by ] against ] in ] (now the sovereign state of ]). The revolt began on 22 August 1791,<ref>{{Cite book |last=Hochschild |first=Adam |url=http://archive.org/details/burychainsprophe00hoch |title=Bury the chains prophets and rebels in the fight to free an empire's slaves |date=2005 |location=Boston |publisher= Houghton Mifflin |isbn=978-0-618-10469-7}}</ref> and ended in 1804 with the former colony's independence. From the revolt, the ex-slave ] emerged as Haiti's most prominent general. The revolution was the only slave uprising that led to the founding of a state which was both free from ] (though not from ])<ref>{{Cite web |title=Other Revolution |url=https://www.brown.edu/Facilities/John_Carter_Brown_Library/exhibitions/haitian/pages/part7.html |access-date=2024-02-02 |website=www.brown.edu}}</ref> and ruled by non-whites and former captives.<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Knight |first=Franklin W. |date=2000 |title=The Haitian Revolution |url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/2652438 |journal=The American Historical Review |volume=105 |issue=1 |pages=103–115 |doi=10.2307/2652438 |jstor=2652438 |issn=0002-8762}}</ref>

The successful revolution was a defining moment in the history of the ]<ref name="Aeon-2024" /><ref name="Joseph-2012" /> and the revolution's effects on the institution of slavery were felt throughout the Americas. Independence and the ] in the former colony was followed by a successful defense of the freedoms the former slaves had won, and with the collaboration of already ], of their independence from white Europeans. This had the effect of encouraging other Black communities suffering under slavery or colonialism to imagine independence and self-rule.<ref name="Taber-2015" /><ref name="Bongie-2008" /><ref name="Routledge-2012" />

=== Third period ===
The third period of Black nationalism arose during the post] era, particularly among various African-American clergy circles. Separated circles were already established and accepted because African-Americans had long endured the ] of slavery and ]ism in the United States since its inception. The clerical phenomenon led to the birth of a modern form of Black nationalism that stressed the need to separate Blacks from non-Blacks and build separate communities that would promote racial pride and collectivize resources.{{citation needed|date=July 2024}}

==== Scientific racism ====
In the immediate aftermath of the European ], French aristocrat Count ] wrote the pseudoscientific '']'' (''Essai sur l'inégalité des Races Humaines''), legitimizing ] and decrying ] as the ].<ref name="Blue-1999">{{Cite journal |last=Blue |first=Gregory |date=1999 |title=Gobineau on China: Race Theory, the "Yellow Peril," and the Critique of Modernity |url=https://muse.jhu.edu/pub/5/article/179176 |journal=Journal of World History |volume=10 |issue=1 |pages=93–139 |doi=10.1353/jwh.2005.0003 |s2cid=143762514 |issn=1527-8050}}</ref><ref name="Davies-1988">{{Cite book |last=Davies |first=Alan |url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/j.ctt80fx5 |title=Infected Christianity: A Study of Modern Racism |date=1988 |publisher=McGill-Queen's University Press |jstor=j.ctt80fx5 |isbn=978-0-7735-0651-0}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |last=Moore |first=John |title=Encyclopedia of race and racism |url=https://webpages.charlotte.edu/~jmarks/pubs/Enc%20race%20Sci%20Racism%20Hist.pdf |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220122065227/https://webpages.charlotte.edu/~jmarks/pubs/Enc%20race%20Sci%20Racism%20Hist.pdf |archive-date=2022-01-22 |access-date=2022-02-16 |website=University of North Carolina at Charlotte}}</ref><ref>{{Cite book |title=The idea of race |date=2000 |publisher=Hackett Publishing Company, Inc |isbn=978-0-87220-458-4 |editor-last=Bernasconi |editor-first=Robert |series=Hackett readings in philosophy |location=Indianapolis Cambridge |editor-last2=Lott |editor-first2=Tommy Lee}}</ref> Gobineau's writings were quickly praised by ], ] Americans like ] and ], who translated his book into English, but omitted around 1,000 pages, including parts that negatively described Americans as a racially mixed population.<ref name="Davies-1988" /><ref name="Blue-1999" /> He inspired a racist social movement in Germany, named ], and his works were influential on prominent ] like ], ], ], and the ].<ref name="Davies-1988" />

In 1885, ] ] and ] ] published ''De l'égalité des races humaines'' (''On the Equality of Human Races'') as a rebuttal to Count ]'s work, challenging the idea that ] was a measure of human intelligence and noting the presence of ].<ref>{{Cite web |title=Firmin, Anténor {{!}} Encyclopedia.com |url=https://www.encyclopedia.com/social-sciences/encyclopedias-almanacs-transcripts-and-maps/firmin-antenor |access-date=2024-02-02 |website=www.encyclopedia.com}}</ref><ref>{{Cite journal |last=Bernasconi |first=Robert |date=2008-09-30 |title=A Haitian in Paris: Anténor Firmin as a philosopher against racism |url=http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/00313220802377321 |journal=Patterns of Prejudice |language=en |volume=42 |issue=4–5 |pages=365–383 |doi=10.1080/00313220802377321 |issn=0031-322X |s2cid=159948680}}</ref> Firmin then explored the significance of the ] of 1804 and the ensuing achievements of Haitians such as ], Isaïe Jeanty and Edmond Paul. (Both Audain and Jeanty had obtained prizes from the ].)<ref>{{Cite book |last=Péan |first=Leslie |title=Comprendre Anténor Firmin |publisher=Editions de l'Université d'Etat d'Haiti |year=2012 |isbn=978-99935-57-50-0 |location=Haiti |pages=71–72}}</ref> Though marginalized for his belief in the equality of all races, his work influenced Pan-African and Black nationalist thought, and the ] movement.<ref name="Fluehr-Lobban-200522">{{Cite journal |last=Fluehr-Lobban |first=Carolyn |date=2005-05-01 |title=Anténor Firmin and Haiti's contribution to anthropology |url=https://journals.openedition.org/gradhiva/302 |journal=Gradhiva. Revue d'anthropologie et d'histoire des arts |language=en |issue=1 |pages=95–108 |doi=10.4000/gradhiva.302 |issn=0764-8928}}</ref> Firmin influenced ], the initiator of Haitian ] and developer of the concept of ], and 20th-century American anthropologist ].<ref name="Fluehr-Lobban-200522">{{Cite journal |last=Fluehr-Lobban |first=Carolyn |date=2005-05-01 |title=Anténor Firmin and Haiti's contribution to anthropology |url=https://journals.openedition.org/gradhiva/302 |journal=Gradhiva. Revue d'anthropologie et d'histoire des arts |language=en |issue=1 |pages=95–108 |doi=10.4000/gradhiva.302 |issn=0764-8928}}</ref>

==== Africa for Africans ====
] (1812–1885), an African American ], was arguably the first proponent of Black nationalism as we understand it today.<ref>{{cite web |title=Martin Delany Home Page |url=http://www.libraries.wvu.edu/delany/home.htm |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090425074314/http://www.libraries.wvu.edu/delany/home.htm |archive-date=April 25, 2009 |access-date=June 21, 2009}} Profile] Libraries.wvu.edu; accessed August 29, 2015.<br />- Stanford, E. Martin R. Delany (1812–1885). (2014, August 6). {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20201020072840/https://www.encyclopediavirginia.org/Delany_Martin_R_1812-1885|date=20 October 2020}}</ref><ref name="Butler 2007">{{Cite web |last=Butler |first=Gerry |date=2007-03-03 |title=Martin Robison Delany (1812-1885) |url=https://www.blackpast.org/african-american-history/delany-major-martin-robison-1812-1885/ |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20191112104105/https://www.blackpast.org/african-american-history/delany-major-martin-robison-1812-1885/ |archive-date=12 November 2019 |access-date=2022-03-06 |website=BlackPast |language=en-US}}</ref> Delany is credited with the ] slogan of "Africa for Africans."<ref name="Carlisle p811">{{cite book |last1=Carlisle |first1=Rodney P. |title=Encyclopedia of Politics: The Left and the Right |date=2005 |publisher=SAGE Publications |isbn=978-1-4129-0409-4 |location=Thousand Oaks, Calif. |page=811}}</ref> Born as a ] in what is now ], and raised in ], Delany trained as a physician's assistant. In 1850, Delany was one of the first three Black men admitted to ], but all were dismissed after a few weeks because of widespread protests by white students.<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Wilkinson |first=D. Y. |date=1992 |title=The 1850 Harvard Medical School dispute and the admission of African American students |url=https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/11612967/ |journal=Harvard Library Bulletin |volume=3 |issue=3 |pages=13–27 |issn=0017-8136 |pmid=11612967}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |last=Butler |first=Gerry |date=2007-03-03 |title=Martin Robison Delany (1812-1885) • |url=https://www.blackpast.org/african-american-history/delany-major-martin-robison-1812-1885/ |access-date=2024-02-02 |language=en-US}}</ref> During the ] epidemics of 1833 and 1854 in Pittsburgh, Delany treated patients, even though many doctors and residents fled the city out of fear of contamination.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Rollin |first=Frank A. |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=M4WP3QM7p30C&q=Martin+Delany's+mother |title=Life and Public Services of Martin R. Delany |date=1883 |publisher=Arno Press |isbn=978-0-405-01934-0 |language=en}}</ref>

Beginning in 1847, Delany worked alongside ] in Rochester, New York to publish the anti-slavery newspaper '']''.<ref>{{Cite web |title=The Abolitionist Movement: Resistance to Slavery From the Colonial Era to the Civil War |url=https://www.historynet.com/abolitionist-movement/ |access-date=2024-02-02 |website=HistoryNet |language=en-US}}</ref> Delany dreamed of establishing a settlement in West Africa. He visited ], a United States colony founded by the ], and lived in Canada for several years, but when the ] began, he returned to the United States. When the ] were created in 1863, he recruited for them. Commissioned as a major in February 1865, Delany became the first African American ] in the ].

After the Civil War, Delany went to the South, settling in South Carolina, where he worked for the ] and became politically active, including in the ]. Delany ran unsuccessfully for Lieutenant Governor as an ]. He was appointed as a trial judge, but he was removed following a scandal. Delany later switched his party affiliation. He worked for the campaign of ] ], who won the 1876 election for governor in a season marked by violent suppression of Black Republican voters by ] and fraud in balloting.{{citation needed|date=July 2024}}

After Emancipation, the back-to-Africa movement eventually began to decline. In 1877, at the end of the ], it would experience a revival as many Black people in the American South faced violence from groups such as the ].<ref>{{Cite web |date=2007-10-28 |title=section5 |url=http://www.digitalhistory.uh.edu/reconstruction/section5/section5_intro.html |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20071028042208/http://www.digitalhistory.uh.edu/reconstruction/section5/section5_intro.html |archive-date=28 October 2007 |access-date=2024-02-15}}</ref> Interest among the South's Black population in African emigration peaked during the 1890s, a time when racism reached its peak and the greatest number of lynchings in American history took place.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Barnes |first=Kenneth C. |url=http://archive.org/details/journeyofhopebac0000barn |title=Journey of hope : the Back-to-Africa movement in Arkansas in the late 1800s |date=2004 |publisher=University of North Carolina Press |isbn=978-0-8078-2879-3 |location=Chapel Hill}}</ref>

==== New Imperialism and the Scramble for Africa ====
During the period known as ] (1833 to 1914), European nations colonized and occupied Africa in the "]". This mobilized Black people in the diaspora to activism in their home nations. ] and Liberia were the only African ] to maintain their sovereignty and independence during this time.<ref name="Strachan-2014">{{Cite book |last=Strachan |first=Hew |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=CbYoAwAAQBAJ |title=The Oxford Illustrated History of the First World War: New Edition |date=2014-04-24 |publisher=OUP Oxford |isbn=978-0-19-164040-7 |language=en}}</ref><ref name="Daly-2019">{{Cite journal |last=Daly |first=Samuel Fury Childs |date=2019-05-04 |title=From Crime to Coercion: Policing Dissent in Abeokuta, Nigeria, 1900–1940 |url=https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/03086534.2019.1576833 |journal=The Journal of Imperial and Commonwealth History |language=en |volume=47 |issue=3 |pages=474–489 |doi=10.1080/03086534.2019.1576833 |s2cid=159124664 |issn=0308-6534}}</ref> '']'' would later encourage others to emigrate to Ethiopia as part of the ] movement.<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Moses |first=Wilson J. |date=1972 |title=Marcus Garvey: A Reappraisal |url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/41163608 |journal=The Black Scholar |volume=4 |issue=3 |pages=38–49 |doi=10.1080/00064246.1972.11431283 |jstor=41163608 |issn=0006-4246}}</ref> In 1919, Marcus Garvey became President of the ], designed to forge a link between North America and Africa and facilitate African-American migration to ].<ref>{{Cite web |last=Azikiwe |first=Nnamdi |date=2015-06-27 |title=The Black Star Line was incorporated 102 years ago today |url=http://keyamsha.com/2015/06/27/the-black-star-line-was-incorporated/ |access-date=2024-02-02 |website=Keyamsha |language=en-US}}</ref><ref name="Grant 2009">{{Cite book |last=Grant |first=Colin |title=Negro with a hat: the rise and fall of Marcus Garvey and his dream of Mother Africa |date=2009 |publisher=Vintage |isbn=978-0-09-950145-9 |location=London}}</ref>

During ], ] supported the ] against ], and in turn received considerable American investment in infrastructure, which aided the country's wealth and development. President ] encouraged economic and political changes that heightened the country's prosperity and international profile; Liberia was a founding member of the ], ], and the ].<ref name="pbs.org"/>

==== Marcus Garvey ====
{{Main|Marcus Garvey}}
]
In 1914, Jamaican activist ] established the ] with his then-wife, ], in ]. He moved to New York in 1916, and founded the first American UNIA chapter in Harlem in 1918. The UNIA is often considered one of the most powerful Black nationalist movements to date, claiming around a thousand chapters worldwide.<ref name="Van Deburg 1997" /><ref>{{Cite web |title=Universal Negro Improvement Association {{!}} American Experience {{!}} PBS |url=https://www.pbs.org/wgbh/americanexperience/features/garvey-unia/ |access-date=2024-05-02 |website=www.pbs.org |language=en}}</ref>

] encouraged African people around the world to be proud of their race and see beauty in their own kind. Garvey used his own personal magnetism and understanding of Black psychology to create a movement that appealed to working class African Americans. Garvey's movement, known as ], was opposed by mainstream Black leaders, and crushed by government action. However, its many alumni remembered its inspiring rhetoric.<ref name="Van Deburg 1997">{{cite book |url=https://archive.org/details/modernblacknatio0000unse/page/n4/mode/1up?view=theater |title=Modern Black Nationalism: From Marcus Garvey to Louis Farrakhan |date=1997 |publisher=New York University Press |isbn=978-0-8147-8789-2 |editor-last1=Van Deburg |editor-first1=William L. |url-access=registration}}{{page needed|date=August 2023}}</ref>

A central idea to Garveyism was that ] and that, to advance, they should put aside their cultural and ethnic differences to unite under their shared history. He was heavily influenced by the earlier works of ], ], and ].<ref name="Skyers">{{cite thesis |last1=Skyers |first1=Sophia |title=Marcus Garvey and the philosophy of black pride |date=1 January 1982 |url=https://scholars.wlu.ca/etd/9/ |access-date=21 July 2020 |archive-date=24 December 2022 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20221224085426/https://scholars.wlu.ca/etd/9/ |url-status=live }}</ref> By the 1910s, Alexander Bedward became convinced that God had intended for him to be ] to Garvey's ] — paving the way for the younger man to deliver his people into the ]. Bedward led his followers into ] by finding the charismatic metaphor: one the ], the other the ], both leading the ] ].<ref name="Brooks-19175">{{Cite web |title=History of Bedwardism, or, The Jamaica Native Baptist Free Church, Union Camp, Augustown, St. Andrew, Ja., B.W.I. {{!}} WorldCat.org |url=https://search.worldcat.org/title/44780530 |access-date=2024-02-04 |website=search.worldcat.org |language=en}}</ref><ref name="Gleaner-20145">{{Cite web |date=2014-11-21 |title=Alexander Bedward |url=https://jamaica-gleaner.com/article/news/20141121/alexander-bedward-0 |access-date=2024-02-04 |website=jamaica-gleaner.com |language=en}}</ref>

==== Franz Fanon ====
Writer ] fought on the side of the Allies during WWII, and spent several years in France, where his experiences of racism led him to write his first book, ''].'' An analysis of the impact of colonial subjugation on the African psyche, it changed the way people thought of Blackness more generally. While in North Africa, Fanon produced '']'', where he analyzes the role of class, race, national culture and violence in the struggle for ]. Fanon expounded upon his views on the ] for the colonized, as well as the general ] in the anti-colonial struggle. Fanon's books established him as one of the leading anti-colonial thinkers of the 20th century, influencing Black nationalist and decolonial movements worldwide.<ref name="Macey 2012">{{cite book |last1=Macey |first1=David |title=Frantz Fanon: A Biography |date=2012 |publisher=Verso Books |isbn=978-1-84467-848-8 |edition=2nd |location=New York}}{{page needed|date=July 2020}}</ref>

==== Black power ====

Ignited by the 1965 ], and the urban riots of 1964 and 1965, the Black power movement emerged from the ] of the United States.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Malcolm X: From Nation of Islam to Black Power Movement |url=https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2018/2/21/malcolm-x-from-nation-of-islam-to-black-power-movement |access-date=2024-02-01 |website=Al Jazeera |language=en}}</ref> Seen as a reaction to the mainstream civil rights movement's more moderate tendencies and motivated by a desire for safety, the movement was partially inspired by ideologies and individuals from outside the United States, such as American expatriates in newly independent ],<ref>{{Cite book |last=Gaines |first=Kelly |title=Cold War Constructions: The Political Culture of United States Imperialism |publisher=University of Massachusetts Press |year=2000 |editor-last=Appy |editor-first=Christian |location=Amherst, MA |pages=257–70 |chapter=From Black Power to Civil Rights: Julian Mayfield and African Expatriates in Nkrumah's Ghana, 1957-1966}}</ref> but it also impacted others outside of the United States, such as the ] in ].<ref name="encyclopedia.com">{{Cite web |title=Black Power Movement {{!}} Encyclopedia.com |url=https://www.encyclopedia.com/social-sciences-and-law/sociology-and-social-reform/social-reform/black-power-movement |access-date=2024-02-01 |website=www.encyclopedia.com}}</ref> Black power organizations such as the ] (BPP) emerged, supporting philosophies ranging from ] to Black nationalism.<ref name="encyclopedia.com"/> Black power activists founded ],<ref>{{Cite web |last=Davis |first=Joshua Clark |date=2017-01-28 |title=Black-Owned Bookstores: Anchors of the Black Power Movement - AAIHS |url=https://www.aaihs.org/black-owned-bookstores-anchors-of-the-black-power-movement/ |access-date=2024-02-01 |website=www.aaihs.org |language=en-US}}</ref> food cooperatives,<ref>{{Cite book |last=Konadu |first=Kwasi |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=lbvOF1BUT2oC&q=the+east+cooperative+view+from+the+east+kununuana&pg=PA78 |title=A View from the East: Black Cultural Nationalism and Education in New York City |date=2009 |publisher=Syracuse University Press |isbn=978-0-8156-5101-7 |pages=78–82 |language=en}}</ref> farms,<ref name=":2">{{Cite book |last=Konadu |first=Kwasi |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=lbvOF1BUT2oC&q=the+east+cooperative+view+from+the+east+kununuana&pg=PA78 |title=A View from the East: Black Cultural Nationalism and Education in New York City |date=2009 |publisher=Syracuse University Press |isbn=978-0-8156-5101-7 |pages=33–6 |language=en}}</ref> media,<ref name=":2" /> ],<ref name=":2" /> schools,<ref name=":2" /><ref>{{Cite web |title=The Black Power movement and its schools {{!}} Cornell Chronicle |url=https://news.cornell.edu/stories/2016/02/black-power-movement-and-its-schools |access-date=2024-02-01 |website=news.cornell.edu |language=en}}</ref> clinics and ambulance services.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Klehr |first=Harvey |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=8YSmiFins9sC&q=republik+of+new+afrika+farm&pg=PA117 |title=Far Left of Center: The American Radical Left Today |date=1988-01-01 |publisher=Transaction Publishers |isbn=978-1-4128-2343-2 |language=en}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |last=Heitner |first=Devorah |title=Black Power TV |url=https://www.dukeupress.edu/black-power-tv |access-date=2024-02-01}}</ref><ref>{{Cite book |last=Nelson |first=Alondra |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=QU1cPGBqEcEC&q=clinics |title=Body and Soul: The Black Panther Party and the Fight Against Medical Discrimination |date=2011 |publisher=U of Minnesota Press |isbn=978-1-4529-3322-1 |language=en}}</ref>

In 1967, ] and political scientist ] wrote '']'', drawing on Black nationalist ideas to define the concept of ]. ] stated that ], ], and ] were drivers of ] and racism.<ref>{{Cite book |last1=Carmichael |first1=Stokely |title=Black power: the politics of liberation in America |last2=Hamilton |first2=Charles V. |date=1992 |publisher=Vintage Books |isbn=9780679743132 |edition= |location=New York}}</ref> The authors believed Black power not only lay in dismantling white supremacy, but also in establishing camaraderie within the African American community. The authors disavowed liberal, conformist politics, instead emphasizing ] for the Black community, similar to the goals of Black nationalism.<ref>{{Cite web |date=2016-04-30 |title="Black Power" and Stokely Carmichael's Defining of Ideology in 1967 {{!}} s-usih.org |url=http://s-usih.org/2013/11/black-power-and-stokely-carmichaels-defining-of-ideology-in-1967.html#_ftn2 |access-date=2024-02-01 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160430161822/http://s-usih.org/2013/11/black-power-and-stokely-carmichaels-defining-of-ideology-in-1967.html#_ftn2 |archive-date=30 April 2016 }}</ref>

== 21st-century Black nationalism ==

Modern Black nationalism encompasses multiple different movements, organizations and philosophies. In America, Black nationalists began to "do what other 'ethnic' groups had done" — i.e., "pursue their interests in a pluralistic political system, subsumed by a capitalistic economic one".<ref name="Robinson-2001"/> In ''Black Nationalism in America'', John H. Bracey Jr., August Meier and Elliott Rudwick argue, "In the arena of ''politics'', black nationalism at its mildest is '']'', a view which assumes that the United States is ] and that ] concerning ] and ] are operative."<ref name="Bracey-1970">{{Cite book |last1=Bracey |first1=John H. Jr.|url=http://archive.org/details/black-nationalism-in-america |title=Black Nationalism In America |last2=Meier |first2=August |last3=Rudwick |first3=Elliott |date=1970}}</ref> Dean E. Robinson, meanwhile, argues that "modern black nationalism drew upon strategies for political and economic empowerment that had analogies in the wider political landscape."<ref name="Robinson-2001"/> According to the SPLC, Black nationalist groups face a "categorically different" environment than white nationalist groups in the United States; while white supremacy has been championed by influential figures within the ], for example, Black nationalists have "little or no impact on mainstream politics and no defenders in high office".<ref name="Beirich-2019"/>

Patrisse Cullors, a co-founder of the ], has called for ] and historic racism in the form of "financial restitution, land redistribution, political ], culturally relevant education programs, language recuperation, and the right to return (or repatriation)," and cited Frantz Fanon's work for "understanding the current global context for Black individuals on the African continent and in our multiple diasporas."<ref>{{cite web |title=Abolition And Reparations: Histories of Resistance, Transformative Justice, And Accountability |url=https://harvardlawreview.org/2019/04/abolition-and-reparations-histories-of-resistance-transformative-justice-and-accountability/ |first=Patrisse |last=Cullors |website=] |date=April 10, 2019 |access-date=2022-08-21 |archive-date=25 February 2023 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230225170713/https://harvardlawreview.org/2019/04/abolition-and-reparations-histories-of-resistance-transformative-justice-and-accountability/ |url-status=live }}</ref>

The ] (NFAC) is a Black nationalist and ] organization in the United States. The group advocates for Black liberation, and has been described by some news outlets as a "Black ]", though they have avoided violence.<ref>{{Cite news |last1=James |first1=Gerry Seavo |last2=Shugerman |first2=Emily |date=2020-07-25 |title=Three Injured as Rival Armed Militias Converge on Louisville |language=en |work=The Daily Beast |url=https://www.thedailybeast.com/shots-fired-as-three-percenter-and-not-fucking-around-coalition-militias-face-off-in-louisville-kentucky |url-status=live |access-date=2020-07-27 |url-access=limited |archive-date=15 April 2021 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210415021843/https://www.thedailybeast.com/shots-fired-as-three-percenter-and-not-fucking-around-coalition-militias-face-off-in-louisville-kentucky }}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |last=Blest |first=Paul |date= 27 July 2020|title=Protests Against Police Brutality and Trump's Secret Police Are Exploding Across the U.S. |url=https://www.vice.com/en_ca/article/935zwz/protests-against-police-brutality-and-trumps-goon-squads-are-exploding-across-the-us |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200727182217/https://www.vice.com/en_ca/article/935zwz/protests-against-police-brutality-and-trumps-goon-squads-are-exploding-across-the-us |archive-date=2020-07-27 |access-date=2020-07-27 |website=www.vice.com |language=en}}</ref> The NFAC gained prominence during the ], making its first reported appearance at a protest near ], over the February 2020 ],<ref name="Reason">{{cite web |last1=Davis |first1=Zuri |date=29 May 2020 |title=Black Civilians Arm Themselves To Protest Racial Violence and Protect Black-Owned Businesses |url=https://reason.com/2020/05/29/black-civilians-arm-themselves-to-protest-racial-violence-and-protect-black-owned-businesses/ |website=Reason.com |accessdate=25 July 2020 |archive-date=29 April 2021 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210429144039/https://reason.com/2020/05/29/black-civilians-arm-themselves-to-protest-racial-violence-and-protect-black-owned-businesses/ |url-status=live }}</ref> though they were identified by local media as "]".<ref>{{cite web |last1=Gough |first1=Lyndsey |author-link=Lyndsey Gough |date=9 May 2020 |title=Hundreds gather to release balloons to honor Ahmaud Arbery's birthday |url=https://www.wtoc.com/2020/05/09/hundreds-gather-release-balloons-honor-ahmaud-arberys-birthday/ |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210603055137/https://www.wtoc.com/2020/05/09/hundreds-gather-release-balloons-honor-ahmaud-arberys-birthday/ |archive-date=3 June 2021 |accessdate=25 July 2020 |website=WTOC 11}}</ref> Historian Thomas Mockaitis said that, "In one sense it (NFAC) echoes the Black Panthers but they are more heavily armed and more disciplined... So far, they've coordinated with police and avoided engaging with violence."<ref name="Chavez">{{cite web |last1=Chavez |first1=Nicole |last2=Young |first2=Ryan |last3=Barajas |first3=Angela |date=2020-10-25 |title=An all-Black group is arming itself and demanding change. They are the NFAC |url=https://www.cnn.com/2020/10/25/us/nfac-black-armed-group/index.html |access-date=2020-11-08 |website=CNN |archive-date=12 February 2021 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210212155147/https://www.cnn.com/2020/10/25/us/nfac-black-armed-group/index.html |url-status=live }}</ref>

John Fitzgerald Johnson, also known as Grand Master Jay and John Jay Fitzgerald Johnson, claims leadership of the NFAC<ref name="Chavez" /><ref name="Champion">{{cite web |last1=Ashley |first1=Asia |date=6 July 2020 |title=Local militia challenges White supremacy during Fourth of July march |url=http://thechampionnewspaper.com/news/local/local-militia-challenges-white-supremacy-during-fourth-of-july-march/ |website=The DeKalb Champion |accessdate=25 July 2020 |archive-date=2 June 2021 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210602213056/http://thechampionnewspaper.com/news/local/local-militia-challenges-white-supremacy-during-fourth-of-july-march/ |url-status=dead }}</ref> and has stated that it is composed of "ex military shooters".<ref name="Reason" /> In 2019 Grand Master Jay told the '']'' that the organization was formed to prevent another ].<ref>{{Cite web |date=2020-07-13 |title='Send a Message': Black Militia Leader Says Membership Skyrocketed After They Began Showing Up Where White Militias Protested with Little Challenge from Police |url=https://atlantablackstar.com/2020/07/13/send-a-message-black-militia-leader-says-membership-skyrocketed-after-they-began-showing-up-where-white-militias-protested-with-little-challenge-from-police/ |access-date=2020-10-28 |website=Atlanta Black Star |language=en-US |archive-date=1 May 2021 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210501192558/https://atlantablackstar.com/2020/07/13/send-a-message-black-militia-leader-says-membership-skyrocketed-after-they-began-showing-up-where-white-militias-protested-with-little-challenge-from-police/ |url-status=live }}</ref><ref name="complex">{{Cite web |title=What Is the NFAC, and Who Is Grandmaster Jay? |url=https://www.complex.com/life/not-fucking-around-coalition-grandmaster-jay-explainer |access-date=2020-10-28 |website=Complex |language=en |archive-date=8 October 2020 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20201008125946/https://www.complex.com/life/not-fucking-around-coalition-grandmaster-jay-explainer |url-status=live }}</ref> Johnson expressed early third period Black nationalist views, putting forth the view that the United States should either hand over ] to African-Americans so they may form an independent country, or allow African-Americans to depart the United States to another country that would provide land upon which to form an independent nation.<ref>{{cite web |title=New Black Nationalist Statement Supporting the Not Fucking Around Coalition |url=https://www.newblacknationalism.com/new-black-nationalists-statement-supporting-the-not-fucking-around-coalition.html |access-date=2020-11-08 |website=New Black Nationalism |archive-date=25 June 2021 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210625203734/https://www.newblacknationalism.com/new-black-nationalists-statement-supporting-the-not-fucking-around-coalition.html |url-status=live }}</ref>

== Black nationalism around the world ==
=== Africa ===
{{Main article|Pan-Africanism|Ethiopian movement|Back-to-Africa movement}}
Black nationalism in Africa largely refers to the ideology of black nationalism brought by black communities who have migrated to Africa from the diaspora. It should not be confused with indigenous ], which is an umbrella term for a group of political ideologies in sub-Saharan Africa, based on the idea of national self-determination and the creation of African nation states.<ref name="African nationalism-2013">{{Cite web |date=2013-12-21 |title=African nationalism |url=http://www.talktalk.co.uk/reference/encyclopaedia/hutchinson/m0029558.html |access-date=2024-02-01 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131221122620/http://www.talktalk.co.uk/reference/encyclopaedia/hutchinson/m0029558.html |archive-date=21 December 2013 }}</ref>

==== Differences between black nationalism and African nationalism ====
{{Main article|African nationalism}}
African nationalism emerged during the mid-19th century among the emerging black middle classes in ]. Early nationalists hoped to overcome ethnic fragmentation by creating ].<ref name="African nationalism-2013"/> In its earliest period, it was inspired by ] and ] intellectuals from the ] who imported ] current in ] and the ] at the time.<ref name="Davidson-1978">{{Cite book |last=Davidson |first=Basil |url=http://archive.org/details/letfreedomcomeaf00davi |title=Let freedom come : Africa in modern history |date=1978 |location=Boston |publisher=Little, Brown |isbn=978-0-316-17435-0}}</ref>

The early African nationalists were elitist and believed in the supremacy of ] but sought a greater role for themselves in political decision-making.<ref name="Davidson-1978" /> They rejected ] and ] as "primitive" and embraced western ideas of ], ], and the ].<ref name="Davidson-1978" /> One of the challenges faced by nationalists in unifying their nation after European rule were the divisions of tribes and the formation of ethnicism.

==== Repatriation and emigration ====
Ex-slave repatriation or the emigration of ], ], and ] former slaves to Africa occurred mainly during the late 18th century to mid-19th century. In the cases of ] and ], both were established by former slaves who were repatriated to Africa within a 28-year period.<ref name="Sivapragasam-2018">{{Cite thesis |title=After the treaties: a social, economic and demographic history of Maroon society in Jamaica, 1739-1842 |url=https://eprints.soton.ac.uk/423482/ |publisher=University of Southampton |date=2018-06-30 |degree=phd |language=en |first=Michael |last=Sivapragasam}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |title=Jan. 15, 1817: The Vote on Colonization of Free Blacks in West Africa |url=https://www.zinnedproject.org/news/tdih/the-vote-on-colonization-free-blacks-africa/ |access-date=2024-02-01 |website=Zinn Education Project |language=en-US}}</ref><ref>{{Cite book |last1=Hodge |first1=Carl C. |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=qXeRALIwozgC&pg=PA49 |title=U.S. Presidents and Foreign Policy: From 1789 to the Present |last2=Nolan |first2=Cathal J. |date=2007 |publisher=Bloomsbury Academic |isbn=978-1-85109-790-6 |language=en}}</ref>

==== Americo-Liberian people ====
{{See also|Americo-Liberian people}}
Americo-Liberian people are a Liberian ] descended from ], ], and ]. Americo-Liberians trace their ancestry to free-born and formerly ] who emigrated in the 19th century and became the ] of the ] of ], often as part of early black nationalist and ]s.

==== Rastafari ====
{{See also|Rastafari#Africa}}
Many ] believe that Ethiopia is the ] of the black people. While some take this to mean Africa in the figurative sense, others take it literally and seek to join or establish independent black nations in Africa. In the 1960s, a Rasta settlement was established in ], ], on land made available by ]'s ].<ref name="Edmonds-2012">{{Cite book |last=Edmonds |first=Ennis Barrington |title=Rastafari: a very short introduction |date=2012 |publisher=Oxford Univ. Press |isbn=978-0-19-958452-9 |series=Very short introductions |location=Oxford}}</ref> The community faced many problems; 500 acres were confiscated by the Marxist government of ].<ref name="Edmonds-2012" /> There were also conflicts with local Ethiopians, who largely regarded the incoming Rastas, and their Ethiopian-born children, as foreigners.<ref name="Edmonds-2012" /> The Shashamane community peaked at a population of 2,000, although subsequently declined to around 200.<ref name="Edmonds-2012" />

Some Rastas have settled in Ghana, Nigeria, Gambia and Senegal.<ref name="Edmonds-2012" /><ref>{{Cite journal |last=Savishinsky |first=Neil J. |date=1994 |title=Rastafari in the Promised Land: The Spread of a Jamaican Socioreligious Movement among the Youth of West Africa |url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/524901 |journal=African Studies Review |volume=37 |issue=3 |pages=19–50 |doi=10.2307/524901 |jstor=524901 |s2cid=56289259 |issn=0002-0206}}</ref>

==== Sierra Leone Creole people ====
{{See also|Sierra Leone Creole people}}
Sierra Leone Creole people are an ] of ] ] from freed ], ], ], and ] slaves who settled in the ] of Sierra Leone between 1787 and about 1885.<ref name="Sivapragasam-2018" /> Many of the black people who migrated to Sierra Leone did so as part of the early black nationalist and ]s. The ] was established by the ], supported by ]s, under the ], as a place for ].<ref>{{Cite book |last=Walker |first=James W. St G. |url=http://archive.org/details/blackloyalistsse0000walk |title=The Black loyalists : the search for a promised land in Nova Scotia and Sierra Leone, 1783-1870 |date=1992 |location=Toronto |publisher= University of Toronto Press |isbn=978-0-8020-7402-7}}</ref> The settlers called their new settlement ]. Today, the Sierra Leone Creoles are 1.2 percent of the population of Sierra Leone.<ref>{{Citation |title=Sierra Leone |date=2024-01-31 |work=The World Factbook |url=https://www.cia.gov/the-world-factbook/countries/sierra-leone/ |access-date=2024-02-01 |publisher=Central Intelligence Agency |language=en}}</ref>
=== Caribbean ===
==== Bedwardism ====
{{See also|Bedwardism}}
Born in 1848&nbsp;in ], north of ], Alexander Bedward was one of the most successful preachers of Jamaican ] in the 1880s, and would become the central figure of the Jamaica Native Baptist Free Church, or "Bedwardism".<ref name="Gleaner-2014">{{Cite web |date=2014-11-21 |title=Alexander Bedward |url=https://jamaica-gleaner.com/article/news/20141121/alexander-bedward-0 |access-date=2024-02-04 |website=jamaica-gleaner.com |language=en}}</ref> Bedward's version of Revivalism was motivated by the inequality he saw between Black and white workers while in Panama, and incorporated African influences.<ref name="White-20162">{{Cite web |last=White |first=Edward |date=2016-10-05 |title=Rise Up |url=https://www.theparisreview.org/blog/2016/10/05/rise-up/ |access-date=2024-02-04 |website=The Paris Review |language=en}}</ref> Bedward drew large groups of followers by conducting services which included reports of mass healings. He identified himself with ], the Baptist leader of the ], and he stressed the need for changes to the inequalities in race relations in Jamaican society.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Palmer |first=Colin A. |title=Freedom's children: the 1938 labor rebellion and the birth of modern Jamaica |date=2014 |publisher=The University of North Carolina Press |isbn=978-1-4696-1169-3 |location=Chapel Hill}}</ref>

In 1889, Harrison "Shakespeare" Woods, an ] immigrant, officially founded Bedwardism as a new religion in ], Saint Andrew Parish, with ] as its prophet—referred to as "That Prophet" and "Shepherd."<ref>{{Cite web |title=Bedward's Tomb |url=http://www.jnht.com/site_bedwards_tomb.php |access-date=2024-02-04 |website=www.jnht.com}}</ref><ref name="Gleaner-20143">{{Cite web |date=2014-11-21 |title=Alexander Bedward |url=https://jamaica-gleaner.com/article/news/20141121/alexander-bedward-0 |access-date=2024-02-04 |website=jamaica-gleaner.com |language=en}}</ref><ref name="Brooks-19172">{{Cite web |title=History of Bedwardism, or, The Jamaica Native Baptist Free Church, Union Camp, Augustown, St. Andrew, Ja., B.W.I. {{!}} WorldCat.org |url=https://search.worldcat.org/title/44780530 |access-date=2024-02-04 |website=search.worldcat.org |language=en}}</ref> Bedwardian literature described it as the successor to Christianity and Judaism, though its teachings differed little from those of most Christian denominations. Even so, because the movement likened the ruling classes to the ], it met with disapproval and even suppression. Bedwardism originated the belief that August Town, Jamaica corresponds to ] for the Western world, which would influence Rastafari beliefs.<ref name="Brooks-19173">{{Cite web |title=History of Bedwardism, or, The Jamaica Native Baptist Free Church, Union Camp, Augustown, St. Andrew, Ja., B.W.I. {{!}} WorldCat.org |url=https://search.worldcat.org/title/44780530 |access-date=2024-02-04 |website=search.worldcat.org |language=en}}</ref> Bedward also variously claimed to be the reincarnation of prophets such as ], ] and ], and was twice ruled insane by the colonial Jamaican courts.<ref name="Gleaner-20142">{{Cite web |date=2014-11-21 |title=Alexander Bedward |url=https://jamaica-gleaner.com/article/news/20141121/alexander-bedward-0 |access-date=2024-02-04 |website=jamaica-gleaner.com |language=en}}</ref> Bedwardism later drew inspiration from the rise of Marcus Garvey and his ] (UNIA).<ref name="Brooks-19173">{{Cite web |title=History of Bedwardism, or, The Jamaica Native Baptist Free Church, Union Camp, Augustown, St. Andrew, Ja., B.W.I. {{!}} WorldCat.org |url=https://search.worldcat.org/title/44780530 |access-date=2024-02-04 |website=search.worldcat.org |language=en}}</ref><ref name="Gleaner-20142">{{Cite web |date=2014-11-21 |title=Alexander Bedward |url=https://jamaica-gleaner.com/article/news/20141121/alexander-bedward-0 |access-date=2024-02-04 |website=jamaica-gleaner.com |language=en}}</ref>

The movement lost steam in 1921 after Bedward and hundreds of his followers marched into Kingston, where he failed to deliver on his claim to ascend into Heaven, and many were arrested. In 1930, Bedward died in his cell of natural causes.<ref name="Brooks-19174">{{Cite web |title=History of Bedwardism, or, The Jamaica Native Baptist Free Church, Union Camp, Augustown, St. Andrew, Ja., B.W.I. {{!}} WorldCat.org |url=https://search.worldcat.org/title/44780530 |access-date=2024-02-04 |website=search.worldcat.org |language=en}}</ref><ref name="White-2016">{{Cite web |last=White |first=Edward |date=2016-10-05 |title=Rise Up |url=https://www.theparisreview.org/blog/2016/10/05/rise-up/ |access-date=2024-02-04 |website=The Paris Review |language=en}}</ref> Many of his followers became Garveyites and ], and brought with them the experience of resisting systems of colonial and white supremacist oppression. While some Rastafari cast ] as a Messiah, Bedward sometimes takes the role of ].<ref name="Gleaner-20144">{{Cite web |date=2014-11-21 |title=Alexander Bedward |url=https://jamaica-gleaner.com/article/news/20141121/alexander-bedward-0 |access-date=2024-02-04 |website=jamaica-gleaner.com |language=en}}</ref><ref name="Brooks-19174">{{Cite web |title=History of Bedwardism, or, The Jamaica Native Baptist Free Church, Union Camp, Augustown, St. Andrew, Ja., B.W.I. {{!}} WorldCat.org |url=https://search.worldcat.org/title/44780530 |access-date=2024-02-04 |website=search.worldcat.org |language=en}}</ref>

==== Rastafari ====
{{See also|Rastafari}}
Rastafari emerged from early Black nationalism and shaped the Black nationalism that followed.<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Francis |first=Wigmoore |date=2013-06-30 |title=Towards a Pre-History of Rastafari |url=http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/00086495.2013.11672483 |journal=Caribbean Quarterly |language=en |volume=59 |issue=2 |pages=51–72 |doi=10.1080/00086495.2013.11672483 |s2cid=142117564 |issn=0008-6495}}</ref><ref name="Barrett-2018">{{Cite book |last=Barrett |first=Leonard E. |title=The Rastafarians |date=2018 |publisher=Beacon Press |isbn=978-0-8070-1039-6 |edition=Reprint |location=Boston, MaA}}</ref> It was influenced by the ], which converted large numbers of Black preachers in Jamaica;<ref name="Barrett-2018" /><ref>{{Cite book |last=Chevannes |first=Barry |title=Rastafari: roots and ideology |date=2018 |publisher=Syracuse University Press |isbn=978-0-8156-0296-5 |edition=Reprint |series=Utopianism and communitarianism |location=Syracuse, N.Y}}</ref><ref name="Clarke-1986">{{Cite book |last=Clarke |first=Peter B. |title=Black paradise: the Rastafarian movement |date=1986 |publisher=Aquarian Pr |isbn=978-0-85030-428-2 |series=New Religious Movements Series |location=Wellingborough}}</ref> and the ] within Black churches,<ref name=":1">{{Cite journal |last=Chawane |first=Midas H. |date=2014 |title=The Rastafarian Movement in South Africa: A Religion or Way of Life? |url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/24799451 |journal=Journal for the Study of Religion |volume=27 |issue=2 |pages=214–237 |jstor=24799451 |issn=1011-7601}}</ref><ref name="Clarke-1986" /> which regarded the biblical "Ethiopia" as a ] for Africa as a whole.<ref name="Clarke-1986" /> By 1916, some ], Ethiopianists and ] believed Africa was poised for a great event, prophesied in ]:31 of ]: "]s shall come of ]; ] shall soon stretch forth its hands unto God".<ref>{{Cite book |last=Cashmore |first=Ellis |title=Rastaman: the Rastafarian movement in England |date=1983 |publisher=Unwin Paperbacks |isbn=978-0-04-301164-5 |series=Counterpoint |location=London}}</ref><ref>{{Cite book |title=The African diaspora and the study of religion |date=2007 |publisher=Palgrave Macmillan |isbn=978-1-4039-7786-1 |editor-last=Trost |editor-first=Theodore Louis |edition= |series=Religion, culture, critique |location=New York, NY}}</ref><ref name="Adejumobi-2007">{{Cite web |last=Adejumobi |first=Saheed |date=2007-06-16 |title=Ethiopianism • |url=https://www.blackpast.org/global-african-history/ethiopianism/ |access-date=2024-02-04 |language=en-US}}</ref><ref>{{Cite journal |last=Moses |first=Wilson J. |date=1972-11-30 |title=Marcus Garvey: A Reappraisal |url=http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/00064246.1972.11431283 |journal=The Black Scholar |language=en |volume=4 |issue=3 |pages=38–49 |doi=10.1080/00064246.1972.11431283 |issn=0006-4246}}</ref> Black Christians saw this as a promise of God's plan to lift Black people from oppression, as with the Israelites and early Christians before them, while early Black nationalists saw it as a call to action.<ref name="Adejumobi-2007" />

By the 1920s, some Black Christian groups had begun to develop their own canon of ] religious texts in opposition to the ] of mainstream Christian churches.<ref name="Sellers-20153">{{Cite journal |last=Sellers |first=Allison Paige |date=2015 |title=The "Black Man's Bible": The Holy Piby, Garveyism, and Black Supremacy in the Interwar Years |url=https://muse.jhu.edu/pub/2/article/585808 |journal=Journal of Africana Religions |volume=3 |issue=3 |pages=325–342 |doi=10.5325/jafrireli.3.3.0325 |issn=2165-5413 |s2cid=141594246}}</ref> Between 1924 and 1928, ]n preacher ], inspired ], wrote the '']'', also known as the Black Man's Bible. It was intended for an Afrocentric ], known as the ].<ref name="Sellers-2015">{{Cite journal |last=Sellers |first=Allison Paige |date=2015 |title=The "Black Man's Bible": The Holy Piby, Garveyism, and Black Supremacy in the Interwar Years |url=https://muse.jhu.edu/pub/2/article/585808 |journal=Journal of Africana Religions |volume=3 |issue=3 |pages=325–342 |doi=10.5325/jafrireli.3.3.0325 |issn=2165-5413 |s2cid=141594246}}</ref> Rogers declared Garvey an "] of God" and dedicated the seventh chapter of the ''Holy Piby'' to him. His ] described Black people as God's ], and preached self-reliance and ].<ref>{{Cite web |title=The Holy Piby Index |url=https://sacred-texts.com/afr/piby/index.htm |access-date=2024-02-04 |website=sacred-texts.com}}</ref> Around 1926, Jamaican preacher ] wrote '']'', which decried white colonialism and the oppression of Black people.<ref name="Balintine Pettersburg-2024" /> In the book, Pettersburg declared himself "]" and his wife as "Queen Omega", suggesting a fulfillment of the Ethiopianist promise of Psalm 68.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Price |first=Charles |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=OC399TZD2BwC&pg=PA49 |title=Becoming Rasta: Origins of Rastafari Identity in Jamaica |date=2009-09-01 |publisher=NYU Press |isbn=978-0-8147-6768-9 |language=en}}</ref><ref name="Balintine Pettersburg-2024">{{Cite web |title=The Royal Parchment Scroll of Black Supremacy Index |url=https://sacred-texts.com/afr/rps/index.htm |access-date=2024-02-04 |website=sacred-texts.com}}</ref>

In August 1930, ]'s play ''Coronation of an African King'' was performed in Kingston. Inspired by the coronation of ] that same year, and drawing on Psalm 68, it featured the coronation of a fictional Sudanese prince.<ref name="Grant 2009">{{Cite book |last=Grant |first=Colin |title=Negro with a hat: the rise and fall of Marcus Garvey and his dream of Mother Africa |date=2009 |publisher=Vintage |isbn=978-0-09-950145-9 |location=London}}</ref> When Haile Selassie was crowned ] in November, his Ethiopian title was ''Nəgusä Nägäst'' (literally "]", a common epithet for ]). He was the first ] monarch crowned in ] since 1891.<ref name="Clarke-1986"/><ref name="Lewis-1993">{{Cite book |last=Lewis |first=William F. |title=Soul rebels: the Rastafari |date=1993 |publisher=Waveland Press |isbn=978-0-88133-739-6 |location=Prospect Heights, Ill}}</ref><ref name="Loadenthal-2013">{{Cite journal |last=Loadenthal |first=Michael |title=Jah People: the cultural hybridity of white Rastafarians. |journal=Glocalism |date=2013 |url=https://glocalismjournal.org/jah-people-the-cultural-hybridity-of-white-rastafarians/ |access-date=2024-02-04 |language=it-IT |doi=10.12893/gjcpi.2013.1.1|doi-access=free }}</ref> According to Ethiopian tradition, Haile Selassie was descended from ], ], and the ]. Some Jamaican preachers, such as ] and ], saw Selassie's coronation as proof he was the ] they saw prophesied in the ], the ], and the Psalms.<ref name="Clarke-1986"/><ref name="Lewis-1993" /><ref name="Loadenthal-2013" /> That year, Dunkley proclaimed ''Rastafari'' was the name of God, after Haile Selassie's pre-regnal title and name: ] Tafari Makonnen. In 1933, he founded the King of Kings Ethiopian Mission in Kingston.<ref name="History-2009">{{Cite web |date=2009-01-29 |title=History |url=http://ethiopianworldfed.org/history.htm |access-date=2024-02-04 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090129113455/http://ethiopianworldfed.org/history.htm |archive-date=29 January 2009 }}</ref> In 1931, Hibbert, a former member of the Ancient Order of Ethiopia ], concluded that Haile Selassie was divine after studying the ]. He left the Ethiopian Baptist Church, founded by the 18th-century Jamaican Baptist ], and formed the Ethiopian Coptic Faith ministry, in ]. When he later transferred his ministry to Kingston, he found ] was already teaching similar doctrines.<ref>{{Cite book |url=http://archive.org/details/religiondiaspora0000unse |title=Religion, diaspora and cultural identity : a reader in the Anglophone Caribbean |date=1999 |location=Amsterdam, the Netherlands |publisher= Gordon and Breach Publishers |isbn=978-90-5700-545-9}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |title=A Brief History Of Joseph Nathaniel Hibbert |url=https://www.houseofdread.com/joseph-hibbert.html |access-date=2024-02-04 |website=www.houseofdread.com}}</ref>

From 1933, Howell had begun preaching that Selassie was the "] returned to earth"—an important symbol for the ]n ].<ref>{{Cite web |date=2016-12-16 |title=Jamaica Observer: Jamaican News Online – the Best of Jamaican Newspapers - JamaicaObserver.com |url=http://www.jamaicaobserver.com/teenage/We-are-HEROES---Leonard-Howell-_8063954 |access-date=2024-02-04 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20161216165144/http://www.jamaicaobserver.com/teenage/We-are-HEROES---Leonard-Howell-_8063954 |archive-date=16 December 2016 }}</ref><ref>{{Cite book |last=Archer Straw |first=Petrine |title=Leonard Percival Howell and the genesis of Rastafari |date=2015 |publisher=The University of the West Indies Press |isbn=978-976-640-549-6 |editor-last=Hutton |editor-first=Clinton A. |location=Jamaica Barbados Trinidad and Tobago |editor-last2=Barnett |editor-first2=Michael A. |editor-last3=Dunkley |editor-first3=Daive A. |editor-last4=Niaah |editor-first4=Jahlani}}</ref><ref name="Bonacci-2013">{{Cite journal |last=Bonacci |first=Giulia |date=2013 |title=The Ethiopian World Federation: A Pan-African Organisation among the Rastafari in Jamaica |url=https://www.academia.edu/4882204 |journal=Caribbean Quarterly |volume=59 |issue=2 |pages=73–95 |doi=10.1080/00086495.2013.11672484 |s2cid=152718056 |issn=0008-6495}}</ref><ref name="Barrett-2018" /> Under his Hindu pen name G. G. Maragh (for ''Gangung Guru''), Howell published '']'', which synthesized material from the '']'' and the ''].''<ref name="Maragh-2024" /> Most significantly, the identities of "]" were changed from Pettersburg and his wife to Selassie and Empress ], solidifying the prophecy of Psalm 68. This Howellite innovation became an ] for many Rastafari.<ref name="Maragh-2024">{{Cite web |title=The Promised Key Index |url=https://sacred-texts.com/afr/tpk/index.htm |access-date=2024-02-04 |website=sacred-texts.com}}</ref> Howell later formed the Pinnacle settlement in ] that became associated with Rastafari.<ref>{{Cite web |last=Middleton |first=J. Richard |date=2018-02-22 |title=Pinnacle, St. Catherine, Jamaica |url=https://jrichardmiddleton.com/category/pinnacle-st-catherine-jamaica/ |access-date=2024-02-04 |website=CREATION to ESCHATON |language=en}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |date=2014-02-02 |title=Rasta fighting to preserve Pinnacle's heritage |url=https://jamaica-gleaner.com/gleaner/20140202/news/news1.html |access-date=2024-02-04 |website=jamaica-gleaner.com |language=en}}</ref> Rastafari's new Black religious ]—with its ] message, and promotion of a positive Black identity—threatened colonial authorities who attempted to quell the growing movement with the arrest, trial for ], and imprisonment of these early Black preachers.<ref name="Barrett-2018" /><ref name="History-2009" />

In 1937, the ] (EWF) was founded in New York City by Dr. Malaku Bayen and Dorothy E. Bayen, under the advice of Haile Selassie.<ref name="Bonacci-2013" /> Dr. Bayen was the cousin and personal physician of the Emperor, and a prince.<ref>{{Cite web |last=Groundation |first=Rastafari |date=2018-04-30 |title=Princess Malaku Bayen (Dorothy Hadley): An Ethiopian Princess at the Birth of a Movement |url=https://www.lojs.org/princess-malaku-bayen-dorothy-hadley-an-ethiopian-princess-at-the-birth-of-a-movement/ |access-date=2024-02-04 |website=LOJSociety {{!}} Lion Of Judah Society {{!}} RasTafari Groundation |language=en}}</ref><ref>{{Cite news |date=1940-05-09 |title=DR. MALAKU E. BAYEN, SELASSIE'S PHYSICIAN; Cousin and Representative of Former Emperor Dies at 40 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1940/05/09/archives/dr-malaku-e-bayen-selassies-physician-cousin-and-representative-of.html |access-date=2024-02-04 |work=The New York Times |language=en-US |issn=0362-4331}}</ref> Dunkley, Hibbert and Howell would also join the organization,<ref name="History-2009" /> which aimed to mobilize African American support for the Ethiopians during the ], and to embody the unity of Black people worldwide.<ref name="Bonacci-2013" /><ref>{{Cite book |last1=Prunier |first1=Gérard |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=wnxeCwAAQBAJ&pg=PT148 |title=Understanding Contemporary Ethiopia: Monarchy, Revolution and the Legacy of Meles Zenawi |last2=Ficquet |first2=Éloi |date=2015-09-15 |publisher=Oxford University Press |isbn=978-1-84904-618-3 |language=en}}</ref> Ethiopia's resistance against European imperialism made it a source of pride and inspiration among Black people in the diaspora.<ref name="Strachan-2014">{{Cite book |last=Strachan |first=Hew |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=CbYoAwAAQBAJ |title=The Oxford Illustrated History of the First World War: New Edition |date=2014-04-24 |publisher=OUP Oxford |isbn=978-0-19-164040-7 |language=en}}</ref><ref name="Daly-2019" /><ref name="History-2009" />

=== Europe ===
==== Black Liberation Front ====
The Black Liberation Front (BLF) formed in London in 1971 and ceased activities in 1993.<ref name="Sigaud-2020">{{Cite web |last=Sigaud |first=J. |date=2020-10-17 |title=Black Liberation Front, 1971-1993 - A Blue Print for Activism Today |url=https://editionbhm.com/2020/10/17/the-black-liberation-front-1971-1993/ |access-date=2024-02-01 |website=EDITIONS Black History Month, Magazines, Windrush 75, Newsletters & Publications© |language=en-US}}</ref> Much more secretive than the British Black Panthers, most of their members remained anonymous,<ref name="GAC-2024" /> but it was nevertheless considered one of the most effective Black Power organizations in the UK, despite threats and attacks from the National Front, the media and the police, as well as state surveillance.<ref name="Sigaud-2020" />

The BLF's politics were informed by ] ] and black nationalism.<ref name="GAC-2024" /> The BLF had links with Pan-African groups worldwide, often sending money back to Africa, and helped organize the Africa Liberation Day celebrations in the 1970s and 1980s. They also published the ''Grassroots Newspaper'', which often featured creative work, alongside news on anti-colonial movements back in Africa and the Caribbean.<ref name="Sigaud-2020" />

BLF was especially concerned with ] in the UK. Because black-authored books were extremely difficult to source in London at the time, the BLF established three book shops filled with ], ] and ]. The Grassroots store front on ] was one of these book shops, and became a community hub. The Headstart bookshop provided information for young people and at the weekends, volunteers ran math, English and black history classes there.<ref name="Sigaud-2020" />

BLF ran prisoner welfare schemes, and schemes to support black women. Ujima ] was established by the BLF to address issues around discrimination in housing. Young people and mothers were especially welcome. By 2008, when Ujima was merged into London and Quadrant, its assets were valued at £2 billion.<ref name="Sigaud-2020" />

==== British Black Panther Movement ====
{{Main|British Black Panthers}}
The British Black Panthers emerged after a 1967 visit by Stokey Carmichael and Malcolm X to London. The British chapter was officially formed the following year by ] and ]. Egbuna had ambitions for the BBPM to be a militant, underground revolutionary organization. When ] later came to lead the organization, she wanted it to remain a grassroots organization, focused on the plight of workers, the unemployed, and young people. The BBPM also published a newspaper, ''Black Peoples News Service'', and focused on injustice in education, policing, and government. The chapter was dissolved in 1972, but famous members included ], ], ], ], ] and ].<ref name="GAC-2024">{{Cite web |title=The Black Power Movement |url=https://artsandculture.google.com/story/the-black-power-movement/owVxDSDJDD4gIA |access-date=2024-02-01 |website=Google Arts & Culture |language=en}}</ref>

=== North America ===
==== Black Panther Party ====
{{Main article|Black Panther Party}}
The '''Black Panther Party''' (originally the '''Black Panther Party for Self-Defense''') was a ] and ] political organization founded by college students ] and ] in October 1966 in ].<ref>{{Cite web |date=2015-10-16 |title=October 15, 1966: The Black Panther Party Is Founded {{!}} The Nation |url=http://www.thenation.com/article/october-15-1966-the-black-panther-party-is-founded/ |access-date=2024-02-01 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20151016120858/http://www.thenation.com/article/october-15-1966-the-black-panther-party-is-founded/ |archive-date=16 October 2015 }}</ref><ref>{{Cite book |last=William L. Van Deburg |url=http://archive.org/details/newdayinbabylonb00vand |title=New day in Babylon |date=1992 |publisher=University of Chicago Press |isbn=978-0-226-84714-6}}</ref> Originally, the party organized in an emergent black nationalist tradition inspired by ] and others.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Murch |first=Donna Jean |title=Living for the city: migration, education, and the rise of the Black Panther Party in Oakland, California |date=2010 |publisher=Univ. of North Carolina Press |isbn=978-0-8078-7113-3 |series=The John Hope Franklin series in African American history and culture |location=Chapel Hill, NC}}</ref> Upon its inception, the party's core practice was its ] patrols ("copwatching") designed to challenge the ] of the ]. From 1969 onward, the party created social programs, including the ] Programs, education programs, and community health clinics. The Black Panther Party advocated for ], claiming to represent the ] ].<ref>{{Cite book |last=Haas |first=Jeffrey |title=The Assassination of Fred Hampton: How the FBI and the Chicago Police Murdered a Black Panther |publisher=Chicago Review Press |year=2009 |isbn=9781569763650}}</ref>

The party was active in the United States between 1966 and 1982, with chapters in many major American cities, including San Francisco, New York City, Chicago, Los Angeles, ], and ].<ref>{{Cite web |date=2017-01-01 |title=Mapping the Black Panther Party |url=http://depts.washington.edu/moves/BPP_map-cities.shtml |access-date=2024-02-01 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170101161159/http://depts.washington.edu/moves/BPP_map-cities.shtml |archive-date=1 January 2017 }}</ref> They were also active in many prisons and had international chapters in the ] and Algeria.<ref>{{Cite news |date=2017-01-03 |title=Britain's black power movement is at risk of being forgotten, say historians {{!}} World news {{!}} The Guardian |newspaper=The Guardian |url=https://www.theguardian.com/world/2013/dec/27/britain-black-power-movement-risk-forgotten-historians |access-date=2024-02-01 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170103095456/https://www.theguardian.com/world/2013/dec/27/britain-black-power-movement-risk-forgotten-historians |archive-date=3 January 2017 |last1=Brown |first1=Mark }}</ref>

==== Malcolm X ====
{{Main article|Malcolm X}}
Between 1953 and 1964, while most African leaders worked in the ] to integrate ] people into mainstream American life, ] was an avid advocate of ] and the reclaiming of ] and masculinity.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Harris |first1=Robert L. |title=Malcolm X: Critical Assessments and Unanswered Questions |journal=The Journal of African American History |date=October 2013 |volume=98 |issue=4 |pages=595–601 |doi=10.5323/jafriamerhist.98.4.0595 |s2cid=148587259}}</ref> He initially maintained that Black people were better served by ]—with control of politics and economics within their own communities—than the tactics of civil rights leader Rev. ] and mainstream civil rights groups such as the ], ], ], and ]. Malcolm X believed that to achieve anything, African Americans would have to reclaim their national identity, embrace the rights covered by the ], and defend themselves from ] and ].<ref>{{Cite book |last=Cone |first=James H. |title=Martin & Malcolm and America |date=2002 |publisher=Orbis |isbn=978-0-88344-824-3 |edition=13. print |location=New York}}</ref>

In April 1964, Malcolm X participated in a ] (pilgrimage to ]); Malcolm subsequently shifted to mainstream Islam and recanted many of his earlier opinions, including his prior commitment to ].<ref>{{Cite web |author=<!--anonymous author(s)--> |title=Biography {{!}} Malcolm X |date=2002 |url=https://www.thirteen.org/wnet/historyofus/web15/features/bio/B05.html |access-date=2023-08-02 |work=Freedom: A History of US |publisher=WNET |location=New York |archive-date=24 December 2022 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20221224082752/https://www.thirteen.org/wnet/historyofus/web15/features/bio/B05.html |url-status=live }}</ref> He still supported Black cultural nationalism and advocated for African Americans to proactively campaign for equal ], instead of relying on white citizens to change the laws. Malcolm X articulated his new philosophy in the charter of his ] (which he patterned after the ]), and he inspired some aspects of the future ].<ref name="Marable 2011">{{cite book |last1=Marable |first1=Manning |url=https://archive.org/details/malcolm_mar_2011_00_5430/mode/1up?view=theater |title=Malcolm X: A Life of Reinvention |date=2011 |publisher=Viking |isbn=978-0-670-02220-5 |location=New York |url-access=registration}}{{page needed|date=July 2020}}</ref>
]

In 1965, Malcolm X expressed reservations about Black nationalism, saying, "I was alienating people who were true revolutionaries dedicated to overturning the system of exploitation that exists on this earth by any means necessary. So I had to do a lot of thinking and reappraising of my definition of black nationalism. Can we sum up the solution to the problems confronting our people as black nationalism? And if you notice, I haven't been using the expression for several months."<ref>{{cite book |editor1-last=Breitman |editor1-first=George |title=Malcolm X Speaks: Selected Speeches and Statements |date=1990 |orig-year=first published 1966 |publisher=Grove Press |location=New York |isbn=978-0-8021-3213-0 |page=212 |url=https://archive.org/details/malcolmxspeaksse00xmal/page/212/mode/1up?view=theater |url-access=registration}}</ref>

==== Nation of Islam ====
{{Main|Nation of Islam}}

Like Rastafari, ] was partly influenced by Garveyism.<ref name="Barnett-2006">{{Cite journal |last=Barnett |first=Michael |date=July 2006 |title=Differences and Similarities Between the Rastafari Movement and the Nation of Islam |url=http://journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/0021934705279611 |journal=Journal of Black Studies |language=en |volume=36 |issue=6 |pages=873–893 |doi=10.1177/0021934705279611 |s2cid=145012190 |issn=0021-9347}}</ref> ] founded the Nation of Islam in the 1930s as a reaction to the perceived ] of Christianity.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Nation of Islam |url=https://www.splcenter.org/fighting-hate/extremist-files/group/nation-islam |access-date=2024-02-01 |website=Southern Poverty Law Center |language=en}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |date=2017-05-03 |title=Why Is The Nation Of Islam Classified As A Hate Group? |url=https://www.wbur.org/hereandnow/2017/05/03/nation-of-islam |access-date=2024-02-01 |website=www.wbur.org |language=en}}</ref><ref name="Barnett-2006" /> Since 1977, it has been under ]'s leadership. High-profile members included the Black nationalist activist ] and the boxer ]. The group believed Christianity had been forced on Black people during slavery, that Islam was the original religion of Black people, and that Black identity could be reclaimed through Islam.<ref name="Barnett-2006" />

Deviating significantly from mainstream Islam, Muhammad also taught that Fard was a Messiah and that he himself was sent by God to prepare Black people for global supremacy and destruction of "the white devil".<ref>{{cite web |author1=King, Shantrice King |author2=Eby, Leah |date=n.d. |title=Masjid An-Nur {{!}} Brief history of African Americans and Islam |url=https://religionsmn.carleton.edu/exhibits/show/masjid-an-nur/masjid-an-nur/historyofafricanamericans |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230812182837/https://religionsmn.carleton.edu/exhibits/show/masjid-an-nur/masjid-an-nur/historyofafricanamericans |archive-date=12 August 2023 |access-date=2 August 2023 |website=Religions in Minnesota |publisher=Carleton College}}</ref> The Nation promoted economic self-sufficiency for Black people, and talked of establishing a separate Black nation in Georgia, Alabama, or Mississippi.<ref>{{cite encyclopedia |title=Nation of Islam |encyclopedia=Encyclopedia Britannica |url=https://www.britannica.com/topic/Nation-of-Islam |access-date=21 August 2022 |date=9 Mar 2022 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20221213184646/https://www.britannica.com/topic/Nation-of-Islam |archive-date=13 December 2022 |author=Melton, J. Gordon |url-status=live}}</ref>

== Black nationalism in popular culture ==
=== Political hip hop ===
As hip hop is a music genre originally created and dominated by ], ] often reference and discuss ], black nationalism and the black power movement. Numerous hip hop songs express ] views, such as the popular ] song "]", however, artists who advocate more radical black liberationist views have remained controversial. Artists such as ], Tupac Shakur, ], ], and Kendrick Lamar have advocated black liberation in their lyrics and poetry. In Tupac Shakur's poem, "How Can We Be Free", Shakur discusses the sacrifices of black ] and the rejection of patriotic symbols.

In the 2010s, artists such as ] and ], have released songs criticizing the ] and the ] from an anti-racist perspective. Hip hop music continues to draw the attention and support of the struggles of minority groups in a modern method of communication that attracts a young demographic of activists. Kendrick Lamar and many other rappers have been credited with creating discussions regarding "blackness" through their music.<ref>{{Cite magazine |last=Pearce |first=Sheldon |date=2020-10-26 |title=Kendrick Lamar and the Mantle of Black Genius |url=https://www.newyorker.com/culture/cultural-comment/kendrick-lamar-and-the-mantle-of-black-genius |access-date=2024-02-15 |magazine=The New Yorker |language=en-US |issn=0028-792X}}</ref>

==Criticism==

=== General criticism ===
In his ], ] characterized black nationalism with "hatred and despair", writing that support for black nationalism "would inevitably lead to a frightening racial nightmare."<ref name="Letter, MLK">{{cite web |last=King |first=Martin Luther Jr. |date=16 April 1963 |title=Letter from a Birmingham Jail . |publisher=The Africa Center, University of Pennsylvania |access-date=August 1, 2023 |url=https://www.africa.upenn.edu/Articles_Gen/Letter_Birmingham.html |archive-date=23 March 2019 |archive-url=https://archive.today/20190323113329/https://www.africa.upenn.edu/Articles_Gen/Letter_Birmingham.html |url-status=live }}</ref>

Norm R. Allen Jr., former director of ], calls black nationalism a "strange mixture of profound thought and patent nonsense":

{{blockquote|On the one hand, Reactionary Black Nationalists (RBNs) advocate self-love, self-respect, self-acceptance, self-help, pride, unity, and so forth{{emdash}}much like the right-wingers who promote 'traditional family values.' But{{emdash}}also like the holier-than-thou right-wingers{{emdash}}RBNs promote bigotry, intolerance, hatred, sexism, homophobia, anti-Semitism, pseudo-science, irrationality, dogmatic historical revisionism, violence, and so forth.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Allen |first1=Norm R. Jr. |title=Reactionary Black Nationalism: Authoritarianism in the Name of Freedom |journal=] |date=Fall 1995 |volume=15 |issue=4 |pages=10–11 |issn=0272-0701 |url=https://cdn.centerforinquiry.org/wp-content/uploads/sites/26/1995/10/22155719/p10.pdf |access-date=2023-08-02 |via=Center for Inquiry |archive-date=2 August 2023 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230802053014/https://cdn.centerforinquiry.org/wp-content/uploads/sites/26/1995/10/22155719/p10.pdf |url-status=live }}</ref>}}

Tunde Adeleke, Nigerian-born professor of History and Director of the African American Studies program at the ], argues in his book ''UnAfrican Americans: Nineteenth-Century Black Nationalists and the Civilizing Mission'' that 19th-century African American nationalism embodied the racist and paternalistic values of Euro-American culture and that black nationalist plans were not designed for the immediate benefit of Africans but to enhance their own fortunes.<ref>{{cite book |first=Tunde |last=Adeleke |url=https://archive.org/details/unafricanamerica0000adel |title=UnAfrican Americans: Nineteenth-Century Black Nationalists and the Civilizing Mission |publisher=] |isbn=978-0-8131-2056-0 |url-access=registration |year=1998}}{{page needed|date=July 2020}}</ref>

In ''Black Nationalism in America'', John H. Bracey Jr., August Meier and Elliott Rudwick argue, "In the arena of ''politics'', black nationalism at its mildest is ''bourgeois reformism'', a view which assumes that the United States is politically pluralistic and that liberal values concerning democracy and the political process are operative."<ref name="Bracey-1970" />

Dean E. Robinson, meanwhile, argues that "modern black nationalism drew upon strategies for political and economic empowerment that had analogies in the wider political landscape" and that, shaped by circumstances in America, black nationalists merely began to "do what other 'ethnic' groups had done" — i.e., "pursue their interests in a pluralistic political system, subsumed by a capitalistic economic one".<ref name="Robinson-2001" />

=== Criticism by black feminist activists ===
] in the U.S., such as ], ], and ], have also lodged sustained criticism of certain strands of black nationalism, particularly the political programs which are advocated by cultural nationalists. Black cultural nationalists envisioned black women only in the traditional ] role of the idealized wife-mother figure.

] criticizes the limited imagining of black women in cultural nationalist projects, writing that black women "assumed a particular place in Black cultural nationalist efforts to reconstruct authentic Black culture, reconstitute Black identity, foster racial solidarity, and institute an ethic of service to the Black community."<ref name="Collins p107">{{cite book |title=From Black Power to Hip Hop: Racism, Nationalism, and Feminism |first=Patricia Hill |last=Collins |date=2006 |publisher=Temple University Press |isbn=978-1-59213-091-7 |location=Philadelphia |page=107 |oclc=60596227}}</ref>

A major example of black women as only the heterosexual wife and mother can be found in the philosophy and practice called Kawaida exercised by the ]. ] established the political philosophy of Kawaida in 1965. Its doctrine prescribed distinct roles between black men and women. Specifically, the role of the black woman as "African Woman" was to "inspire her man, educate her children, and participate in social development."<ref>{{cite book |last1=Halisi |first1=Clyde |title=The Quotable Karenga |date=1967 |publisher=US Organization |oclc=654980714 |asin=B0007DTF4C |location=Los Angeles |page=20}}</ref> Historian of black women's history and radical politics Ashley Farmer records a more comprehensive history of black women's resistance to sexism and patriarchy within black nationalist organizations, leading many ] era associations to support gender equality.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Farmer |first1=Ashley D. |title=Remaking Black Power: How Black Women Transformed an Era |date=2017 |publisher=UNC Press Books |isbn=978-1-4696-3438-8 |doi=10.5149/northcarolina/9781469634371.001.0001}}{{page needed|date=July 2020}}</ref>

=== Black nationalist hate groups ===
==== Black nationalism and antisemitism ====
{{further|African American–Jewish relations|9=Nation of Islam and antisemitism}}

Due to the high-profile nature of changing ],<ref>{{Cite web |last=Blake |first=John |date=2020-07-18 |title=Despite recent anti-Semitic comments, Jews and Black people have long been allies |url=https://www.cnn.com/2020/07/18/us/anti-semitic-comments-blacks-jews-blake/index.html |access-date=2024-02-01 |website=CNN |language=en}}</ref><ref>{{Cite journal |last=Labovitz |first=Hannah |date=2021-05-10 |title=The Complex Relationship between Jews and African Americans in the Context of the Civil Rights Movement |url=https://cupola.gettysburg.edu/ghj/vol20/iss1/8 |journal=The Gettysburg Historical Journal |volume=20 |issue=1 |issn=2327-3917}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |last=Donnella |first=Leah |date=2018-06-04 |title=Exploding Myths About 'Black Power, Jewish Politics' |url=https://www.npr.org/sections/codeswitch/2018/06/04/613683819/exploding-myths-about-black-power-jewish-politics |access-date=2024-02-01 |website=NPR}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |date=2020-01-10 |title=Opinion {{!}} How to talk about Black anti-Semitism |url=https://forward.com/opinion/438053/how-to-talk-about-black-anti-semitism/ |access-date=2024-02-01 |website=The Forward |language=en}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |last=Ferrese |first=Tony |title=Anti-Semitism within the Black Arts Movement {{!}} American Poetry Since 1945 |url=https://blogs.cofc.edu/contemporary-american-poetry/2022/09/28/anti-semitism-within-the-black-arts-movement/ |access-date=2024-02-01 |language=en-US}}</ref><ref>{{Cite news |last1=Berlinerblau |first1=Terence L. |last2=Johnson |first2=Jacques |date=2022-02-13 |title=Bridging the Gap Between Blacks and Jews in America |url=https://www.thedailybeast.com/bridging-the-gap-between-blacks-and-jews-in-america |access-date=2024-02-01 |work=The Daily Beast |language=en}}</ref> there is much research on ] among black nationalist groups and individuals.<ref name="Pollack 2010">{{cite book |last=Pollack |first=Eunice G. |title=Anti-Semitism on the Campus |date=2010 |publisher=Academic Studies Press |isbn=978-1-61811-042-8 |pages=216–233 |language=en |chapter=African Americans and the Legitimization of Antisemitism on the Campus |doi=10.1515/9781618110428-011 |s2cid=213707374}}{{page range too broad|date=August 2023}}</ref><ref name="Norwood 2013">{{Cite book |last=Norwood |first=Stephen H. |title=Antisemitism and the American Far Left |date=2013 |publisher=Cambridge University Press |isbn=978-1-107-03601-7 |pages=17, 231, 242 |language=en}}</ref><ref name="Fischel 1995">{{Cite journal |last=Fischel |first=Jack |date=1995 |title=The New Anti-Semitic Axis: Holocaust Denial, Black Nationalism, and the Crisis on our College Campuses |url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/26437542 |url-status=live |journal=The Virginia Quarterly Review |volume=71 |issue=2 |pages=210–226 |issn=0042-675X |jstor=26437542 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230225175923/https://www.jstor.org/stable/26437542 |archive-date=25 February 2023 |access-date=25 February 2023}}</ref> In the late 1950s, both ] and non-Muslim black nationalists engaged in antisemitism.<ref name="Pollack 2010" /> Some activists argued that ], as well as ], were "the central obstacle to black progress"<ref name="Pollack 2010" /> and that ] were "]",<ref name="Norwood 2013" /> or they portrayed Jews as "] intruders who accumulated wealth by exploiting the toil of black people in ] and ]".<ref name="Norwood 2013" /> Some black nationalists have alleged that ],<ref>{{Cite book |last=Pollack |first=Eunice G. |url=https://sicsa.huji.ac.il/sites/default/files/sicsa/files/acta36_pollack.pdf |title=Racializing Antisemitism: Black Militants, Jews, and Israel 1950-present |date=2013 |publisher=Vidal Sassoon International Center for the Study of Antisemitism, Hebrew University of Jerusalem |pages=8 |language=en |access-date=25 February 2023 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230307050741/https://sicsa.huji.ac.il/sites/default/files/sicsa/files/acta36_pollack.pdf |archive-date=7 March 2023 |url-status=live}}</ref> have engaged in ],<ref name="Norwood 2013" /> or may even be ].<ref>{{Cite web |last=Johnson |first=Daryl |date=8 August 2017 |title=Return of the Violent Black Nationalist |url=https://www.splcenter.org/fighting-hate/intelligence-report/2017/return-violent-black-nationalist |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230225170630/https://www.splcenter.org/fighting-hate/intelligence-report/2017/return-violent-black-nationalist |archive-date=25 February 2023 |access-date=2023-02-25 |website=Southern Poverty Law Center |language=en}}</ref><ref name="Fischel 1995" />

Notable black nationalist leaders who have professed antisemitic sentiments include ], ], ], ] and ] among others.<ref>{{Cite news |last=Maizels |first=Linda |date=30 April 2018 |title=Black nationalist antisemitism on campus requires Jews to be 'white' |url=https://www.jpost.com/opinion/black-nationalist-antisemitism-on-campus-requires-jews-to-be-white-553160 |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230225175918/https://www.jpost.com/opinion/black-nationalist-antisemitism-on-campus-requires-jews-to-be-white-553160 |archive-date=25 February 2023 |access-date=2023-02-25 |work=The Jerusalem Post |language=en-US}}</ref>

==== Black nationalism and the Southern Poverty Law Center ====
{{Main article|List of organizations designated by the Southern Poverty Law Center as hate groups#Black separatist and black nationalist}}
The ] (SPLC) said that while black nationalist and ] ]s exist, "The black nationalist movement is a reaction to centuries of institutionalized ]," and it also notes that there is a lack of high-level political support for black nationalist and black separatist groups as opposed to white supremacist groups.<ref name="Beirich-2019"/> According to the SPLC, black nationalist groups face a "categorically different" environment than white hate groups in the United States; while white supremacy has been championed by influential figures within the ], black nationalists have "little or no impact on mainstream politics and no defenders in high office".<ref name="Beirich-2019"/>

The SPLC has designated a number of black nationalist groups as hate groups, including the ], ], the ], the ], the ] and ].

The ] has previously been criticized for conflating black nationalism with hate more generally.<ref>{{Cite news |last=Robinson |first=Nathan J. |date=2019-03-26 |title=The Southern Poverty Law Center Is Everything That's Wrong With Liberalism |url=https://www.currentaffairs.org/news/2019/03/the-southern-poverty-law-center-is-everything-thats-wrong-with-liberalism |access-date=2024-02-01 |work=Current Affairs |language=en |issn=2471-2647}}</ref> It later clarified that "black nationalists are assessed as a loose-knit network of various hate groups, charismatic leaders, as well as unaffiliated individuals who may identify as black nationalists, but do not associate with black nationalist groups," and reiterated that "violent black nationalists" were distinct from other forms of black activism.<ref name="SPLC-2024">{{Cite web |title=FBI 'Black Identity Extremists' report stirs controversy |url=https://www.splcenter.org/hatewatch/2017/10/25/fbi-black-identity-extremists-report-stirs-controversy |access-date=2024-02-01 |website=Southern Poverty Law Center |language=en}}</ref> They also challenged the notion that black activists of diverse ideologies should be grouped as "black identity extremists" by the FBI.<ref name="SPLC-2024" />

In October 2020, the SPLC announced that it would no longer use the category "]", in order to foster a more accurate understanding of violent extremism and avoid creating a false equivalency between black separatism and white supremacist extremism. This change in the terminology which is used by the SPLC also includes the removal of "black nationalism" as a category of hate groups from the SPLC's website.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Equity Through Accuracy: Changes to Our Hate Map |url=https://www.splcenter.org/hatewatch/2020/10/08/equity-through-accuracy-changes-our-hate-map |access-date=2024-02-01 |website=Southern Poverty Law Center |language=en}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |title=Ideologies |url=https://www.splcenter.org/fighting-hate/extremist-files/ideology |access-date=2024-02-01 |website=Southern Poverty Law Center |language=en}}</ref>

== See also ==
* ]
* ]
* ]
* ]
* ]
* ] * ]
* ] * ]
* {{annotated link|Black Consciousness Movement}}
* ]
* ]
* ]
* ]
* ]
* ] * ]
* ]
* ]
* ] * ]
* ] * ]
* {{annotated link|Négritude}}
* ]
* ]
* {{slink|Political hip hop|Black nationalism}}
* ]
* ]
* ]

==References==
{{reflist|30em}}

==Further reading==
* Gavins, Raymond, ed. (2015).
* Levy, Peter B. ed. '''' (2015).
* Bush, Roderick D. '''' (2000)
* Moses, Wilson. ''Classical Black Nationalism: From the American Revolution to Marcus Garvey'' (1996),
* Ogbar, Jeffrey O.G. ''Black Power: Radical Politics and African American Identity'' (2019),
* Price, Melanye T. ''Dreaming Blackness: Black Nationalism and African American Public Opinion'' (2009),
* Robinson, Dean E. '''' (2001)
* Taylor, James Lance. ''Black Nationalism in the United States: From Malcolm X to Barack Obama'' (Lynne Rienner Publishers; 2011)* ALA Award "Best of the Best"Book.
* ]. ''Black Power The Politics of Liberation'' (1967)


{{African American topics}}
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{{Ethnic nationalism}}
]
{{Authority control}}
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Latest revision as of 16:15, 16 December 2024

Ideology that seeks to develop a Black national identity See also: Black pride, Black power, and Black separatism

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Black nationalism is a nationalist movement which seeks representation for Black people as a distinct national identity, especially in racialized, colonial and postcolonial societies. Its earliest proponents saw it as a way to advocate for democratic representation in culturally plural societies or to establish self-governing independent nation-states for Black people. Modern Black nationalism often aims for the social, political, and economic empowerment of Black communities within white majority societies, either as an alternative to assimilation or as a way to ensure greater representation and equality within predominantly Eurocentric cultures.

As an ideology, Black nationalism encompasses a diverse range of beliefs which have variously included forms of economic, political and cultural nationalism, or pan-nationalism. It often overlaps with, but is distinguished from, similar concepts and movements such as Pan-Africanism, Ethiopianism, the back-to-Africa movement, Afrocentrism, Black Zionism, and Garveyism. Critics of Black nationalism compare it to white nationalism and white supremacy, and say it promotes racial and ethnic nationalism, separatism and Black supremacy. Most experts distinguish between these movements, saying that while white nationalism ultimately seeks to maintain or deepen inequality between racial and ethnic groups, most forms of Black nationalism instead aim to increase equality in response to pre-existing forms of white dominance.

Concepts

Black nationalism reflects the idea that, in racialized societies, people of diverse African descent are often treated as a single racial, ethnic and cultural group (such as African Americans in the US or Black Britons in the UK). Because of a shared history of oppression and a distinct culture shaped by that history, Black nationalism argues that Black people in the African diaspora therefore form a distinct nation (or multiple distinct nations) and so have a right to representation or self-governance. Black nationalists therefore seek to acquire political and economic power to improve the quality of life and freedoms of Black people collectively.

Black nationalists tend to believe in self-reliance and self-sufficiency for Black people, solidarity among Black people as a nation, and pride in Black achievement and culture, in order to overcome the effects of institutionalized inequality, self-hate and internalized racism.

The roots of Black nationalism extend back to the time of the transatlantic trade in enslaved Africans, when some enslaved Africans revolted or formed independent Black settlements (such as the Maroons), free of European control. By the 19th century, African Americans such as Paul Cuffe and Martin Delany called for free and fugitive Black people to emigrate to Africa to help establish independent nations. In the early 20th century, Jamaican activist Marcus Garvey moved to the US and, inspired by Zionism and Irish independence, promoted Black nationalist and Pan-African ideas, which collectively became known as Garveyism.

Modern Black nationalist ideas coalesced as a distinct movement during the era of racial segregation in America, as a response to centuries of institutionalized white supremacy, the discrimination African Americans experienced as a result, and the perceived failures of the nonviolent civil rights movement of the time. After the assassination of Malcolm X in 1965, the Black nationalism movement gained increased traction in various African American communities. A focus on returning to Africa became less popular, giving way to the idea that Black people constituted a "nation within a nation," and therefore should seek better rights and political power within a multicultural US.

Black nationalists often fought racism, colonialism, and imperialism, and influenced the Organization of Afro-American Unity, Black Panther Party, Black Islam, and the Black Power movement.

Black nationalism, Black separatism and Black supremacy

There are similarities between Black separatism and Black nationalism, since they both advocate for the civil rights of Black people. While Black separatists believe that Black people should be physically separated from other races, primarily whites, Black nationalism focuses primarily on civil rights, self-determination, and democratic representation.

These two ideologies can also overlap as "separatist nationalism", which typically manifests in the belief in a literal or metaphorical secession from white American society, and is especially popular among those who have become disillusioned with "deferred American racial equality". In this schema, Black nationalism without Black separatism is called "cultural nationalism". Separatist nationalism often rejects integration into white society—which may extend into rejection of existing political systems—preferring to organise alternative structures. Black nationalism, however, often focuses on engagement with societal and political structures to enact change, such as by attempting to elect Black representatives at the local and national level. Black cultural nationalism has broader support among African-Americans than separatist nationalism; the latter is more popular among young men and people of lower economic status. Examples of Black separatist organizations include the Nation of Islam and the New Black Panther Party.

Black nationalists often reject conflation with Black supremacy, as well as comparisons with white supremacists, characterizing their movement as an anti-racist reaction to white supremacy and color-blind white liberalism as racist. Additionally, while white nationalism often seeks to maintain or re-establish systems of white majority dominance, Black nationalism instead aims to challenge white supremacy through increased civil rights and representation (or independence) for black people as an oppressed minority. According to the Southern Poverty Law Center, Black nationalist groups have "little or no impact on mainstream politics and no defenders in high office", unlike white supremacists.

Revolutionary Black nationalism

Black nationalism may also be divided into revolutionary or reactionary Black nationalism. Revolutionary Black nationalism combines cultural nationalism with scientific socialism in order to achieve Black self-determination. Proponents of revolutionary Black nationalism say it rejects all forms of oppression, including class-based exploitation under capitalism. Revolutionary Black nationalist organizations such as the Black Panther Party and the Revolutionary Action Movement also adopted a set of anti-colonialist politics inspired by the writings of notable revolutionary theorists including Frantz Fanon, Mao Zedong, and Kwame Nkrumah. In the words of Ahmad Muhammad (formerly known as Max Stanford) the national field chairman of the Revolutionary Action Movement:

We are revolutionary black nationalist, not based on ideas of national superiority, but striving for justice and liberation of all the oppressed peoples of the world. ... There can be no liberty as long as black people are oppressed and the peoples of Africa, Asia, and Latin America are oppressed by Yankee imperialism and neo-colonialism. After four hundred years of oppression, we realize that slavery, racism and imperialism are all interrelated and that liberty and justice for all cannot exist peacefully with imperialism."

Professor and author Harold Cruse said revolutionary Black nationalism was a necessary and logical progression from other leftist ideologies, as non-Black leftists could not properly assess the particular material conditions of the Black community and other colonized people:

Revolutionary nationalism has not waited for Western Marxian thought to catch up with the realities of the "underdeveloped" world...The liberation of the colonies before the socialist revolution in the West is not orthodox Marxism (although it might be called Maoism or Castroism). As long as American Marxists cannot deal with the implications of revolutionary nationalism, both abroad and at home, they will continue to play the role of revolutionaries by proxy.

History

Overview

Historian Wilson Jeremiah Moses suggests the development of Black nationalism can be examined over three different periods, giving rise to the various ideological perspectives within today's Black nationalism. The first period of pre-classical Black nationalism began when the first Africans were brought to the Americas as slaves through the American Revolutionary period. Many of these slaves rebelled against their captors or formed independent Black societies, beyond the reach of Europeans. The second period of Black nationalism began after the Revolutionary War, when educated Africans within the colonies became disgusted with the social conditions of Black people, and sought to create organizations that would unite Black people and improve their situation. The third period of Black nationalism arose during the post-Reconstruction era, as community leaders began to articulate the need to separate Blacks from non-Blacks for safety and to collectivize resources. The new ideology of this third period informed the philosophy of groups like the Moorish Science Temple and the Nation of Islam.

First period

In the New World, as early as 1512, African slaves escaped from Spanish captors and either joined indigenous peoples or eked out a living on their own. The first recorded slave rebellion in the region occurred in what is today the Dominican Republic, on the sugar plantations owned by Admiral Diego Columbus, on 26 December 1522. Especially in the Caribbean, escaped slaves began to form independent Black communities either in exile or with Indigenous American groups, becoming known as maroons. Maroons armed themselves to survive attacks by hostile colonists while also obtaining food for subsistence living and setting up their own communities. Others enslaved Africans were freed or bought their freedom, and began to seek their own independence, away from white society. This often included calls to emigrate to Africa and help build independent Black nations there.

Maroon communities

On some of the larger Caribbean islands, maroon communities were able to grow crops and hunt for food. As more slaves escaped from plantations, their numbers could grow. Seeking to separate themselves from colonisers, the maroons gained in power amid increasing hostility. They raided and pillaged plantations until the planters began to fear a massive slave revolt.

As early as 1655, escaped Africans had formed communities in inland Jamaica, and by the 18th century, Nanny Town and other Jamaican maroon villages began to fight for independent recognition. Jamaican Maroons consistently fought British colonists, leading to the First Maroon War (1728–1740). By 1740, the British governor of the Colony of Jamaica, Edward Trelawny had signed two treaties promising them 2,500 acres (1,012 ha) in Cudjoe's Town (Trelawny Town) and Crawford's Town, bringing an end to the warfare between the communities and effectively freeing the Maroons a century before the Slavery Abolition Act came into effect in 1838.

In Cuba, maroon communities formed in the mountains when escaped African slaves joined the indigenous Taínos. Before roads were built into the mountains of Puerto Rico, heavy brush kept many escaped maroons hidden in the southwestern hills where many also intermarried with the natives. Escaped slaves sought refuge away from the coastal plantations of Ponce. In the plantation colony of Suriname, escaped slaves revolted and started to build their own villages. On October 10, 1760, the Ndyuka signed a treaty with the Dutch recognising their territorial autonomy; it was drafted by Adyáko Benti Basiton of Boston, a formerly enslaved African from Jamaica.

Second period

In the mid-to-late 18th century, Methodist and Baptist evangelists during the period of the First Great Awakening (c. 1730–1755) encouraged slave owners to free their slaves, in their belief that all men were equal before God. They converted many slaves to Christianity and approved Black leaders as preachers; Blacks developed their own churches.

After the Revolutionary War, educated Africans within the colonies (specifically within New England and Pennsylvania) had become disgusted with the social conditions of Black people. Individuals such as Prince Hall, Richard Allen, Absalom Jones, James Forten, Cyrus Bustill and William Gray sought to create organizations that would unite Black people, who had been excluded from white society, and improve their situation collectively. Institutions such as Black Masonic lodges, the Free African Society, and the African Episcopal Church of St. Thomas lay the groundwork for the independent Black organizations and communities that would follow.

Meanwhile, Black people were relocated from the Americas and Britain to new colonies in Sierra Leone and Liberia, paving the way for Black-led nations in those countries. Back in the Caribbean, the Haitian Revolution proved to disparate Black communities across the Americas that they could achieve independence or equality in the law, if they cooperated and worked together.

First Great Awakening

The First Great Awakening (c. 1730–1755) was a series of Christian revivals that swept Britain and its thirteen North American colonies. The revival movement permanently affected Protestantism as adherents strove to renew individual piety and religious devotion. Northern Baptist and Methodist preachers converted both white and Black people, whether the latter were free or not.

The message of spiritual equality appealed to many enslaved people and, as African religious traditions continued to decline in North America, Black people accepted Christianity in large numbers for the first time. Black people even began to take active roles in these mixed churches, sometimes even preaching. Many leaders of the revivals also proclaimed that enslaved people should be educated so that they could read and study the Bible. This helped establish a new class of educated black people in America.

Revolutionary War

Before the American Revolutionary War of 1775–1783, few slaves were manumitted. On the eve of the American Revolution, there was an estimated 30,000 free African Americans in Colonial America which accounts for about 5% of the total African American population. The Revolutionary War greatly disrupted slave societies and showed Bl

With the 1775 proclamation of Lord Dunmore, governor of Virginia, the British began recruiting the slaves of American revolutionaries and promised them freedom in return. Free Blacks like Prince Hall proposed that Blacks be allowed to join the American side, believing if they were involved in founding the new nation, it would aid in attaining freedom for all Black people. The Continental Army gradually began to allow Blacks to fight in exchange for their freedom.

Nova Scotia and Sierra Leone

Between 1713 and 1758, the Fortress of Louisbourg on Île-Royale (now Cape Breton Island) became the first Black community in Nova Scotia. During this early period, 381 Black people, some free and others enslaved, escaped or were brought to the Fortress, mostly from the Francophone Caribbean colonies. It was home to a mix of freed and unfree enslaved Africans, who undertook a variety of trades and professions, such as gardeners, bakers, stonemasons, musicians, soldiers, sailors, fishermen, hospital workers, and more.

After the Revolutionary War, General Washington urged the British to return the Black Loyalists as stolen property, under the Treaty of Paris (1783). The British attempted to keep their promise to the Loyalists by relocating them outside the US. The British transported more than 3,000 Black Loyalists and Jamaican Maroons to resettle in Nova Scotia (part of present-day Ontario). Between 1749 and 1816, approximately 10,000 Black people settled in Nova Scotia. Those settlers who remained in Nova Scotia would go on to found large communities of freed Black people, forming 52 black settlements in total, and would develop their own national identity as Black Nova Scotians.

Meanwhile, in 1786, the Committee for the Relief of the Black Poor, a British organization with government support, launched its efforts to establish the Sierra Leone Province of Freedom, a colony in West Africa for London's "Black poor". After Nova Scotia proved a hostile environment for many of the new settlers, with extreme weather as well as racism from the white Nova Scotians, about a third of the Loyalists, and nearly all of the Jamaican Maroons, petitioned the British for passage to Sierra Leone as well, eventually leading to the founding of Freetown in 1792. Their descendants are known as the Sierra Leone Creole people.

Black Mutual Aid Societies and Black Churches

Main articles: Free African Society, Free African Union Society, and African Episcopal Church of St. Thomas

Since most sources of welfare at the time were controlled by whites, free blacks across the early United States created their own mutual aid societies. These societies offered cultural centers, spiritual assistance, and financial resources to their members. The Free African Union Society, founded in 1780 in Newport, Rhode Island, was America's first African benevolent society. Founders and early members included Prince Amy, Lincoln Elliot, Bristol Yamma, Zingo Stevens and Newport Gardner. It became the model for multiple similar organizations across the Northeast.

In 1787, Richard Allen and Absalom Jones formed the Free African Society (FAS) of Pennsylvania. It became famous for its members' work as nurses and aides during the Yellow Fever Epidemic of 1793, when many other residents abandoned the city. Notable members included African-American abolitionists such as Cyrus Bustill, James Forten, and William Gray, as well as survivors of the Haitian Revolution in Saint-Domingue, as well as fugitive slaves escaping from the South.

The FAS provided guidance, medical care, and financial advice. The last became particularly important, and would establish a model for later African American banks. It operated ten private schools for Blacks across Pennsylvania, performed burials and weddings, and recorded births and marriages. Its activity and open doors served as motivator for growth for the city, inspiring many other Black mutual aid societies to pop up.

In 1793, Jones and several other FAS members also founded the St. Thomas African Episcopal Church, a nondenominational church specifically for Black people. This in turn paved the way for the first independent Black churches in the United States. The church and its members played a key role in the abolition/anti-slavery and equal rights movement of the 1800s and it would later be involved in the civil rights movement.

Mutual aid became a foundation of social welfare in the United States until the early 20th century.

Liberia

See also: Liberia

Following the American Revolutionary War, the population of free people of color in the US had grown from 60,000 in 1790 to 300,000 by 1830. The prevailing view of white people was that free people of color could not integrate into U.S. society and slaveowners feared these free Blacks might help their slaves to escape or rebel. In addition, many White Americans believed that African Americans were inherently inferior and should be relocated.

In Boston, Black Quaker and activist Paul Cuffe advocated settling freed American slaves in Africa. He was a successful ship owner and in 1815, he attempted a settlement for freedmen on Sherbro Island. By 1811, he had transported some members of the Free African Society to Liberia. He also gained broad political support to take emigrants to Sierra Leone, and in 1816, Cuffe took 38 American Black people to Freetown. He died in 1817 before undertaking other voyages. By 1821, his Sherbro Island settlement had failed and the survivors also fled to Sierra Leone.

In 1816, modeled after Cuffe's work and the British resettlement of Black people in Sierra Leone, Robert Finley founded the American Colonization Society (ACS). The ACS and organizations like it aimed to encourage and support the migration of freeborn people of color and emancipated slaves to the continent of Africa. The African American community, who wanted to keep their homes, overwhelmingly opposed the ACS, as did the abolitionist movement. Many African Americans, both free and enslaved, were pressured into emigrating anyway.

By 1833, the Society had transported only 2,769 individuals out of the U.S. and close to half the arrivals in Liberia died from tropical diseases. During the early years, 22% of the settlers in Liberia died within one year. According to Benjamin Quarles, however, the colonization movement "originated abolitionism" by arousing the free Black people and other opponents of slavery.

Between 1822 and the outbreak of the American Civil War in 1861, more than 15,000 freed and free-born African Americans, along with 3,198 Afro-Caribbeans, relocated to Liberia. The settlers carried their culture and tradition with them, gradually developing a Black national identity as Americo-Liberians. Liberia declared independence on July 26, 1847, becoming the first African republic to proclaim its independence and Africa's first and oldest modern republic. The U.S. did not recognize Liberia's independence until February 5, 1862.

Haitian Revolution

Main article: Haitian Revolution

The Haitian Revolution was a successful insurrection by self-liberated slaves against French colonial rule in Saint-Domingue (now the sovereign state of Haiti). The revolt began on 22 August 1791, and ended in 1804 with the former colony's independence. From the revolt, the ex-slave Toussaint Louverture emerged as Haiti's most prominent general. The revolution was the only slave uprising that led to the founding of a state which was both free from slavery (though not from forced labour) and ruled by non-whites and former captives.

The successful revolution was a defining moment in the history of the Atlantic World and the revolution's effects on the institution of slavery were felt throughout the Americas. Independence and the abolition of slavery in the former colony was followed by a successful defense of the freedoms the former slaves had won, and with the collaboration of already free people of color, of their independence from white Europeans. This had the effect of encouraging other Black communities suffering under slavery or colonialism to imagine independence and self-rule.

Third period

The third period of Black nationalism arose during the post-Reconstruction era, particularly among various African-American clergy circles. Separated circles were already established and accepted because African-Americans had long endured the oppression of slavery and Jim Crowism in the United States since its inception. The clerical phenomenon led to the birth of a modern form of Black nationalism that stressed the need to separate Blacks from non-Blacks and build separate communities that would promote racial pride and collectivize resources.

Scientific racism

In the immediate aftermath of the European Revolutions of 1848, French aristocrat Count Arthur de Gobineau wrote the pseudoscientific An Essay on the Inequality of the Human Races (Essai sur l'inégalité des Races Humaines), legitimizing scientific racism and decrying race-mixing as the doom of civilization. Gobineau's writings were quickly praised by white supremacist, pro-slavery Americans like Josiah C. Nott and Henry Hotze, who translated his book into English, but omitted around 1,000 pages, including parts that negatively described Americans as a racially mixed population. He inspired a racist social movement in Germany, named Gobinism, and his works were influential on prominent antisemites like Richard Wagner, Houston Stewart Chamberlain, A. C. Cuza, and the Nazi Party.

In 1885, Haitian anthropologist and barrister Anténor Firmin published De l'égalité des races humaines (On the Equality of Human Races) as a rebuttal to Count Arthur de Gobineau's work, challenging the idea that brain size was a measure of human intelligence and noting the presence of Black Africans in Pharaonic Egypt. Firmin then explored the significance of the Haitian Revolution of 1804 and the ensuing achievements of Haitians such as Léon Audain, Isaïe Jeanty and Edmond Paul. (Both Audain and Jeanty had obtained prizes from the Académie Nationale de Médecine.) Though marginalized for his belief in the equality of all races, his work influenced Pan-African and Black nationalist thought, and the négritude movement. Firmin influenced Jean Price-Mars, the initiator of Haitian ethnology and developer of the concept of Indigenism, and 20th-century American anthropologist Melville Herskovits.

Africa for Africans

Martin Delany (1812–1885), an African American abolitionist, was arguably the first proponent of Black nationalism as we understand it today. Delany is credited with the Pan-African slogan of "Africa for Africans." Born as a free person of color in what is now West Virginia, and raised in Pennsylvania, Delany trained as a physician's assistant. In 1850, Delany was one of the first three Black men admitted to Harvard Medical School, but all were dismissed after a few weeks because of widespread protests by white students. During the cholera epidemics of 1833 and 1854 in Pittsburgh, Delany treated patients, even though many doctors and residents fled the city out of fear of contamination.

Beginning in 1847, Delany worked alongside Frederick Douglass in Rochester, New York to publish the anti-slavery newspaper The North Star. Delany dreamed of establishing a settlement in West Africa. He visited Liberia, a United States colony founded by the American Colonization Society, and lived in Canada for several years, but when the American Civil War began, he returned to the United States. When the United States Colored Troops were created in 1863, he recruited for them. Commissioned as a major in February 1865, Delany became the first African American field grade officer in the United States Army.

After the Civil War, Delany went to the South, settling in South Carolina, where he worked for the Freedmen's Bureau and became politically active, including in the Colored Conventions Movement. Delany ran unsuccessfully for Lieutenant Governor as an Independent Republican. He was appointed as a trial judge, but he was removed following a scandal. Delany later switched his party affiliation. He worked for the campaign of Democrat Wade Hampton III, who won the 1876 election for governor in a season marked by violent suppression of Black Republican voters by Red Shirts and fraud in balloting.

After Emancipation, the back-to-Africa movement eventually began to decline. In 1877, at the end of the Reconstruction era, it would experience a revival as many Black people in the American South faced violence from groups such as the Ku Klux Klan. Interest among the South's Black population in African emigration peaked during the 1890s, a time when racism reached its peak and the greatest number of lynchings in American history took place.

New Imperialism and the Scramble for Africa

During the period known as New Imperialism (1833 to 1914), European nations colonized and occupied Africa in the "Scramble for Africa". This mobilized Black people in the diaspora to activism in their home nations. Ethiopia and Liberia were the only African countries to maintain their sovereignty and independence during this time. The African Times and Orient Review would later encourage others to emigrate to Ethiopia as part of the back-to-Africa movement. In 1919, Marcus Garvey became President of the Black Star Line, designed to forge a link between North America and Africa and facilitate African-American migration to Liberia.

During World War II, Liberia supported the United States war effort against Nazi Germany, and in turn received considerable American investment in infrastructure, which aided the country's wealth and development. President William Tubman encouraged economic and political changes that heightened the country's prosperity and international profile; Liberia was a founding member of the League of Nations, United Nations, and the Organisation of African Unity.

Marcus Garvey

Main article: Marcus Garvey
1924 photograph of Marcus Garvey

In 1914, Jamaican activist Marcus Garvey established the Universal Negro Improvement Association with his then-wife, Amy Ashwood Garvey, in Kingston. He moved to New York in 1916, and founded the first American UNIA chapter in Harlem in 1918. The UNIA is often considered one of the most powerful Black nationalist movements to date, claiming around a thousand chapters worldwide.

Marcus Garvey encouraged African people around the world to be proud of their race and see beauty in their own kind. Garvey used his own personal magnetism and understanding of Black psychology to create a movement that appealed to working class African Americans. Garvey's movement, known as Garveyism, was opposed by mainstream Black leaders, and crushed by government action. However, its many alumni remembered its inspiring rhetoric.

A central idea to Garveyism was that African people in every part of the world were one people and that, to advance, they should put aside their cultural and ethnic differences to unite under their shared history. He was heavily influenced by the earlier works of Booker T. Washington, Martin Delany, and Henry McNeal Turner. By the 1910s, Alexander Bedward became convinced that God had intended for him to be Aaron to Garvey's Moses — paving the way for the younger man to deliver his people into the Promised Land. Bedward led his followers into Garveyism by finding the charismatic metaphor: one the high priest, the other the prophet, both leading the children of Israel out of exile.

Franz Fanon

Writer Frantz Fanon fought on the side of the Allies during WWII, and spent several years in France, where his experiences of racism led him to write his first book, Black Skin, White Masks. An analysis of the impact of colonial subjugation on the African psyche, it changed the way people thought of Blackness more generally. While in North Africa, Fanon produced The Wretched of the Earth, where he analyzes the role of class, race, national culture and violence in the struggle for decolonization. Fanon expounded upon his views on the liberating role of violence for the colonized, as well as the general necessity of violence in the anti-colonial struggle. Fanon's books established him as one of the leading anti-colonial thinkers of the 20th century, influencing Black nationalist and decolonial movements worldwide.

Black power

Ignited by the 1965 assassination of Malcolm X, and the urban riots of 1964 and 1965, the Black power movement emerged from the civil rights movement of the United States. Seen as a reaction to the mainstream civil rights movement's more moderate tendencies and motivated by a desire for safety, the movement was partially inspired by ideologies and individuals from outside the United States, such as American expatriates in newly independent Ghana, but it also impacted others outside of the United States, such as the Black Power Revolution in Trinidad and Tobago. Black power organizations such as the Black Panther Party (BPP) emerged, supporting philosophies ranging from socialism to Black nationalism. Black power activists founded black-owned bookstores, food cooperatives, farms, media, printing presses, schools, clinics and ambulance services.

In 1967, Stokely Carmichael and political scientist Charles V. Hamilton wrote Black Power: The Politics of Liberation, drawing on Black nationalist ideas to define the concept of Black power. Stokely Carmichael stated that white supremacy, colonialism, and systemic racism were drivers of disenfranchisement and racism. The authors believed Black power not only lay in dismantling white supremacy, but also in establishing camaraderie within the African American community. The authors disavowed liberal, conformist politics, instead emphasizing sovereignty for the Black community, similar to the goals of Black nationalism.

21st-century Black nationalism

Modern Black nationalism encompasses multiple different movements, organizations and philosophies. In America, Black nationalists began to "do what other 'ethnic' groups had done" — i.e., "pursue their interests in a pluralistic political system, subsumed by a capitalistic economic one". In Black Nationalism in America, John H. Bracey Jr., August Meier and Elliott Rudwick argue, "In the arena of politics, black nationalism at its mildest is bourgeois reformism, a view which assumes that the United States is politically pluralistic and that liberal values concerning democracy and the political process are operative." Dean E. Robinson, meanwhile, argues that "modern black nationalism drew upon strategies for political and economic empowerment that had analogies in the wider political landscape." According to the SPLC, Black nationalist groups face a "categorically different" environment than white nationalist groups in the United States; while white supremacy has been championed by influential figures within the Donald Trump administration, for example, Black nationalists have "little or no impact on mainstream politics and no defenders in high office".

Patrisse Cullors, a co-founder of the Black Lives Matter Global Network Foundation, has called for reparations for slavery and historic racism in the form of "financial restitution, land redistribution, political self-determination, culturally relevant education programs, language recuperation, and the right to return (or repatriation)," and cited Frantz Fanon's work for "understanding the current global context for Black individuals on the African continent and in our multiple diasporas."

The Not Fucking Around Coalition (NFAC) is a Black nationalist and Black separatist organization in the United States. The group advocates for Black liberation, and has been described by some news outlets as a "Black militia", though they have avoided violence. The NFAC gained prominence during the 2020–2021 United States racial unrest, making its first reported appearance at a protest near Brunswick, Georgia, over the February 2020 murder of Ahmaud Arbery, though they were identified by local media as "Black Panthers". Historian Thomas Mockaitis said that, "In one sense it (NFAC) echoes the Black Panthers but they are more heavily armed and more disciplined... So far, they've coordinated with police and avoided engaging with violence."

John Fitzgerald Johnson, also known as Grand Master Jay and John Jay Fitzgerald Johnson, claims leadership of the NFAC and has stated that it is composed of "ex military shooters". In 2019 Grand Master Jay told the Atlanta Black Star that the organization was formed to prevent another Greensboro Massacre. Johnson expressed early third period Black nationalist views, putting forth the view that the United States should either hand over Texas to African-Americans so they may form an independent country, or allow African-Americans to depart the United States to another country that would provide land upon which to form an independent nation.

Black nationalism around the world

Africa

Main articles: Pan-Africanism, Ethiopian movement, and Back-to-Africa movement

Black nationalism in Africa largely refers to the ideology of black nationalism brought by black communities who have migrated to Africa from the diaspora. It should not be confused with indigenous African nationalism, which is an umbrella term for a group of political ideologies in sub-Saharan Africa, based on the idea of national self-determination and the creation of African nation states.

Differences between black nationalism and African nationalism

Main article: African nationalism

African nationalism emerged during the mid-19th century among the emerging black middle classes in West Africa. Early nationalists hoped to overcome ethnic fragmentation by creating nation-states. In its earliest period, it was inspired by African-American and Afro-Caribbean intellectuals from the Back-to-Africa movement who imported nationalist ideals current in Europe and the Americas at the time.

The early African nationalists were elitist and believed in the supremacy of Western culture but sought a greater role for themselves in political decision-making. They rejected African traditional religions and tribalism as "primitive" and embraced western ideas of Christianity, modernity, and the nation state. One of the challenges faced by nationalists in unifying their nation after European rule were the divisions of tribes and the formation of ethnicism.

Repatriation and emigration

Ex-slave repatriation or the emigration of African-American, Caribbean, and Black British former slaves to Africa occurred mainly during the late 18th century to mid-19th century. In the cases of Sierra Leone and Liberia, both were established by former slaves who were repatriated to Africa within a 28-year period.

Americo-Liberian people

See also: Americo-Liberian people

Americo-Liberian people are a Liberian ethnic group descended from African Americans, Afro-Caribbeans, and liberated Africans. Americo-Liberians trace their ancestry to free-born and formerly enslaved African Americans who emigrated in the 19th century and became the founders of the state of Liberia, often as part of early black nationalist and back-to-Africa movements.

Rastafari

See also: Rastafari § Africa

Many Rastafari believe that Ethiopia is the Promised Land of the black people. While some take this to mean Africa in the figurative sense, others take it literally and seek to join or establish independent black nations in Africa. In the 1960s, a Rasta settlement was established in Shashamane, Ethiopia, on land made available by Haile Selassie's Ethiopian World Federation. The community faced many problems; 500 acres were confiscated by the Marxist government of Mengistu Haile Mariam. There were also conflicts with local Ethiopians, who largely regarded the incoming Rastas, and their Ethiopian-born children, as foreigners. The Shashamane community peaked at a population of 2,000, although subsequently declined to around 200.

Some Rastas have settled in Ghana, Nigeria, Gambia and Senegal.

Sierra Leone Creole people

See also: Sierra Leone Creole people

Sierra Leone Creole people are an ethnic group of Sierra Leone descended from freed African-American, Afro-Caribbean, Black British, and Liberated African slaves who settled in the Western Area of Sierra Leone between 1787 and about 1885. Many of the black people who migrated to Sierra Leone did so as part of the early black nationalist and back-to-Africa movements. The colony was established by the British, supported by abolitionists, under the Sierra Leone Company, as a place for freedmen. The settlers called their new settlement Freetown. Today, the Sierra Leone Creoles are 1.2 percent of the population of Sierra Leone.

Caribbean

Bedwardism

See also: Bedwardism

Born in 1848 in Saint Andrew Parish, north of Kingston, Jamaica, Alexander Bedward was one of the most successful preachers of Jamaican Revivalism in the 1880s, and would become the central figure of the Jamaica Native Baptist Free Church, or "Bedwardism". Bedward's version of Revivalism was motivated by the inequality he saw between Black and white workers while in Panama, and incorporated African influences. Bedward drew large groups of followers by conducting services which included reports of mass healings. He identified himself with Paul Bogle, the Baptist leader of the Morant Bay rebellion, and he stressed the need for changes to the inequalities in race relations in Jamaican society.

In 1889, Harrison "Shakespeare" Woods, an African-American immigrant, officially founded Bedwardism as a new religion in August Town, Saint Andrew Parish, with Bedward as its prophet—referred to as "That Prophet" and "Shepherd." Bedwardian literature described it as the successor to Christianity and Judaism, though its teachings differed little from those of most Christian denominations. Even so, because the movement likened the ruling classes to the Pharisees, it met with disapproval and even suppression. Bedwardism originated the belief that August Town, Jamaica corresponds to Jerusalem for the Western world, which would influence Rastafari beliefs. Bedward also variously claimed to be the reincarnation of prophets such as Moses, Jonah and John the Baptist, and was twice ruled insane by the colonial Jamaican courts. Bedwardism later drew inspiration from the rise of Marcus Garvey and his Universal Negro Improvement Association (UNIA).

The movement lost steam in 1921 after Bedward and hundreds of his followers marched into Kingston, where he failed to deliver on his claim to ascend into Heaven, and many were arrested. In 1930, Bedward died in his cell of natural causes. Many of his followers became Garveyites and Rastafarians, and brought with them the experience of resisting systems of colonial and white supremacist oppression. While some Rastafari cast Marcus Garvey as a Messiah, Bedward sometimes takes the role of John the Baptist.

Rastafari

See also: Rastafari

Rastafari emerged from early Black nationalism and shaped the Black nationalism that followed. It was influenced by the Great Revival of 1860–61, which converted large numbers of Black preachers in Jamaica; and the Ethiopian movement within Black churches, which regarded the biblical "Ethiopia" as a synonym for Africa as a whole. By 1916, some Garveyists, Ethiopianists and Pan-Africanists believed Africa was poised for a great event, prophesied in Psalm 68:31 of the Bible: "Princes shall come of Egypt; Ethiopia shall soon stretch forth its hands unto God". Black Christians saw this as a promise of God's plan to lift Black people from oppression, as with the Israelites and early Christians before them, while early Black nationalists saw it as a call to action.

By the 1920s, some Black Christian groups had begun to develop their own canon of Afrocentric religious texts in opposition to the Eurocentrism of mainstream Christian churches. Between 1924 and 1928, Anguillan preacher Robert Athlyi Rogers, inspired Marcus Garvey, wrote the Holy Piby, also known as the Black Man's Bible. It was intended for an Afrocentric Abrahamic religion, known as the Afro-Athlican Constructive Gaathly. Rogers declared Garvey an "apostle of God" and dedicated the seventh chapter of the Holy Piby to him. His theology described Black people as God's chosen people, and preached self-reliance and self-determination. Around 1926, Jamaican preacher Fitz Balintine Pettersburg wrote The Royal Parchment Scroll of Black Supremacy, which decried white colonialism and the oppression of Black people. In the book, Pettersburg declared himself "King Alpha" and his wife as "Queen Omega", suggesting a fulfillment of the Ethiopianist promise of Psalm 68.

In August 1930, Marcus Garvey's play Coronation of an African King was performed in Kingston. Inspired by the coronation of Haile Selassie that same year, and drawing on Psalm 68, it featured the coronation of a fictional Sudanese prince. When Haile Selassie was crowned Emperor of Ethiopia in November, his Ethiopian title was Nəgusä Nägäst (literally "King of Kings", a common epithet for Jesus). He was the first sovereign monarch crowned in crowned in Sub-Saharan Africa since 1891. According to Ethiopian tradition, Haile Selassie was descended from King David, King Solomon, and the Queen of Sheba. Some Jamaican preachers, such as Archibald Dunkley and Joseph Hibbert, saw Selassie's coronation as proof he was the Black messiah they saw prophesied in the Book of Revelation, the Book of Daniel, and the Psalms. That year, Dunkley proclaimed Rastafari was the name of God, after Haile Selassie's pre-regnal title and name: Ras Tafari Makonnen. In 1933, he founded the King of Kings Ethiopian Mission in Kingston. In 1931, Hibbert, a former member of the Ancient Order of Ethiopia masonic lodge, concluded that Haile Selassie was divine after studying the Ethiopian Bible. He left the Ethiopian Baptist Church, founded by the 18th-century Jamaican Baptist George Lisle, and formed the Ethiopian Coptic Faith ministry, in St. Andrew Parish. When he later transferred his ministry to Kingston, he found Leonard Howell was already teaching similar doctrines.

From 1933, Howell had begun preaching that Selassie was the "Messiah returned to earth"—an important symbol for the African diaspora. Under his Hindu pen name G. G. Maragh (for Gangung Guru), Howell published The Promised Key, which synthesized material from the Royal Parchment Scroll of Black Supremacy and the Holy Piby. Most significantly, the identities of "King Alpha and Queen Omega" were changed from Pettersburg and his wife to Selassie and Empress Menen Asfaw, solidifying the prophecy of Psalm 68. This Howellite innovation became an article of faith for many Rastafari. Howell later formed the Pinnacle settlement in Saint Catherine Parish that became associated with Rastafari. Rastafari's new Black religious canon—with its anti-colonial message, and promotion of a positive Black identity—threatened colonial authorities who attempted to quell the growing movement with the arrest, trial for sedition, and imprisonment of these early Black preachers.

In 1937, the Ethiopian World Federation (EWF) was founded in New York City by Dr. Malaku Bayen and Dorothy E. Bayen, under the advice of Haile Selassie. Dr. Bayen was the cousin and personal physician of the Emperor, and a prince. Dunkley, Hibbert and Howell would also join the organization, which aimed to mobilize African American support for the Ethiopians during the Italian invasion of 1935-41, and to embody the unity of Black people worldwide. Ethiopia's resistance against European imperialism made it a source of pride and inspiration among Black people in the diaspora.

Europe

Black Liberation Front

The Black Liberation Front (BLF) formed in London in 1971 and ceased activities in 1993. Much more secretive than the British Black Panthers, most of their members remained anonymous, but it was nevertheless considered one of the most effective Black Power organizations in the UK, despite threats and attacks from the National Front, the media and the police, as well as state surveillance.

The BLF's politics were informed by Pan-African socialism and black nationalism. The BLF had links with Pan-African groups worldwide, often sending money back to Africa, and helped organize the Africa Liberation Day celebrations in the 1970s and 1980s. They also published the Grassroots Newspaper, which often featured creative work, alongside news on anti-colonial movements back in Africa and the Caribbean.

BLF was especially concerned with educational inequalities in the UK. Because black-authored books were extremely difficult to source in London at the time, the BLF established three book shops filled with black history, black politics and black literature. The Grassroots store front on Ladbroke Grove was one of these book shops, and became a community hub. The Headstart bookshop provided information for young people and at the weekends, volunteers ran math, English and black history classes there.

BLF ran prisoner welfare schemes, and schemes to support black women. Ujima Housing Association was established by the BLF to address issues around discrimination in housing. Young people and mothers were especially welcome. By 2008, when Ujima was merged into London and Quadrant, its assets were valued at £2 billion.

British Black Panther Movement

Main article: British Black Panthers

The British Black Panthers emerged after a 1967 visit by Stokey Carmichael and Malcolm X to London. The British chapter was officially formed the following year by Obi Egbuna and Darcus Howe. Egbuna had ambitions for the BBPM to be a militant, underground revolutionary organization. When Althea Jones-LeCointe later came to lead the organization, she wanted it to remain a grassroots organization, focused on the plight of workers, the unemployed, and young people. The BBPM also published a newspaper, Black Peoples News Service, and focused on injustice in education, policing, and government. The chapter was dissolved in 1972, but famous members included Neil Kenlock, Linton Kwesi Johnson, Olive Morris, Barbara Beese, Liz Obi and Beverley Bryan.

North America

Black Panther Party

Main article: Black Panther Party

The Black Panther Party (originally the Black Panther Party for Self-Defense) was a Marxist–Leninist and black power political organization founded by college students Bobby Seale and Huey P. Newton in October 1966 in Oakland, California. Originally, the party organized in an emergent black nationalist tradition inspired by Malcolm X and others. Upon its inception, the party's core practice was its open carry patrols ("copwatching") designed to challenge the excessive force and misconduct of the Oakland Police Department. From 1969 onward, the party created social programs, including the Free Breakfast for Children Programs, education programs, and community health clinics. The Black Panther Party advocated for class struggle, claiming to represent the proletarian vanguard.

The party was active in the United States between 1966 and 1982, with chapters in many major American cities, including San Francisco, New York City, Chicago, Los Angeles, Seattle, and Philadelphia. They were also active in many prisons and had international chapters in the United Kingdom and Algeria.

Malcolm X

Main article: Malcolm X

Between 1953 and 1964, while most African leaders worked in the civil rights movement to integrate African-American people into mainstream American life, Malcolm X was an avid advocate of Black independence and the reclaiming of Black pride and masculinity. He initially maintained that Black people were better served by separatism—with control of politics and economics within their own communities—than the tactics of civil rights leader Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. and mainstream civil rights groups such as the SCLC, SNCC, NAACP, and CORE. Malcolm X believed that to achieve anything, African Americans would have to reclaim their national identity, embrace the rights covered by the Second Amendment, and defend themselves from white hegemony and extrajudicial violence.

In April 1964, Malcolm X participated in a Hajj (pilgrimage to Mecca); Malcolm subsequently shifted to mainstream Islam and recanted many of his earlier opinions, including his prior commitment to Black separatism. He still supported Black cultural nationalism and advocated for African Americans to proactively campaign for equal human rights, instead of relying on white citizens to change the laws. Malcolm X articulated his new philosophy in the charter of his Organization of Afro-American Unity (which he patterned after the Organization of African Unity), and he inspired some aspects of the future Black Panther Party.

1964 photograph of Malcolm X

In 1965, Malcolm X expressed reservations about Black nationalism, saying, "I was alienating people who were true revolutionaries dedicated to overturning the system of exploitation that exists on this earth by any means necessary. So I had to do a lot of thinking and reappraising of my definition of black nationalism. Can we sum up the solution to the problems confronting our people as black nationalism? And if you notice, I haven't been using the expression for several months."

Nation of Islam

Main article: Nation of Islam

Like Rastafari, Nation of Islam was partly influenced by Garveyism. Wallace D. Fard founded the Nation of Islam in the 1930s as a reaction to the perceived white supremacy of Christianity. Since 1977, it has been under Louis Farrakhan's leadership. High-profile members included the Black nationalist activist Malcolm X and the boxer Muhammad Ali. The group believed Christianity had been forced on Black people during slavery, that Islam was the original religion of Black people, and that Black identity could be reclaimed through Islam.

Deviating significantly from mainstream Islam, Muhammad also taught that Fard was a Messiah and that he himself was sent by God to prepare Black people for global supremacy and destruction of "the white devil". The Nation promoted economic self-sufficiency for Black people, and talked of establishing a separate Black nation in Georgia, Alabama, or Mississippi.

Black nationalism in popular culture

Political hip hop

As hip hop is a music genre originally created and dominated by African-Americans, political rappers often reference and discuss black liberation, black nationalism and the black power movement. Numerous hip hop songs express anti-racist views, such as the popular The Black Eyed Peas song "Where Is the Love?", however, artists who advocate more radical black liberationist views have remained controversial. Artists such as Public Enemy, Tupac Shakur, Ice Cube, Game, and Kendrick Lamar have advocated black liberation in their lyrics and poetry. In Tupac Shakur's poem, "How Can We Be Free", Shakur discusses the sacrifices of black political prisoners and the rejection of patriotic symbols.

In the 2010s, artists such as Killer Mike and Kendrick Lamar, have released songs criticizing the war on drugs and the prison industrial complex from an anti-racist perspective. Hip hop music continues to draw the attention and support of the struggles of minority groups in a modern method of communication that attracts a young demographic of activists. Kendrick Lamar and many other rappers have been credited with creating discussions regarding "blackness" through their music.

Criticism

General criticism

In his Letter from Birmingham Jail, Martin Luther King Jr. characterized black nationalism with "hatred and despair", writing that support for black nationalism "would inevitably lead to a frightening racial nightmare."

Norm R. Allen Jr., former director of African Americans for Humanism, calls black nationalism a "strange mixture of profound thought and patent nonsense":

On the one hand, Reactionary Black Nationalists (RBNs) advocate self-love, self-respect, self-acceptance, self-help, pride, unity, and so forth—much like the right-wingers who promote 'traditional family values.' But—also like the holier-than-thou right-wingers—RBNs promote bigotry, intolerance, hatred, sexism, homophobia, anti-Semitism, pseudo-science, irrationality, dogmatic historical revisionism, violence, and so forth.

Tunde Adeleke, Nigerian-born professor of History and Director of the African American Studies program at the University of Montana, argues in his book UnAfrican Americans: Nineteenth-Century Black Nationalists and the Civilizing Mission that 19th-century African American nationalism embodied the racist and paternalistic values of Euro-American culture and that black nationalist plans were not designed for the immediate benefit of Africans but to enhance their own fortunes.

In Black Nationalism in America, John H. Bracey Jr., August Meier and Elliott Rudwick argue, "In the arena of politics, black nationalism at its mildest is bourgeois reformism, a view which assumes that the United States is politically pluralistic and that liberal values concerning democracy and the political process are operative."

Dean E. Robinson, meanwhile, argues that "modern black nationalism drew upon strategies for political and economic empowerment that had analogies in the wider political landscape" and that, shaped by circumstances in America, black nationalists merely began to "do what other 'ethnic' groups had done" — i.e., "pursue their interests in a pluralistic political system, subsumed by a capitalistic economic one".

Criticism by black feminist activists

Black feminists in the U.S., such as Barbara Smith, Toni Cade Bambara, and Frances Beal, have also lodged sustained criticism of certain strands of black nationalism, particularly the political programs which are advocated by cultural nationalists. Black cultural nationalists envisioned black women only in the traditional heteronormative role of the idealized wife-mother figure.

Patricia Hill Collins criticizes the limited imagining of black women in cultural nationalist projects, writing that black women "assumed a particular place in Black cultural nationalist efforts to reconstruct authentic Black culture, reconstitute Black identity, foster racial solidarity, and institute an ethic of service to the Black community."

A major example of black women as only the heterosexual wife and mother can be found in the philosophy and practice called Kawaida exercised by the US Organization. Maulana Karenga established the political philosophy of Kawaida in 1965. Its doctrine prescribed distinct roles between black men and women. Specifically, the role of the black woman as "African Woman" was to "inspire her man, educate her children, and participate in social development." Historian of black women's history and radical politics Ashley Farmer records a more comprehensive history of black women's resistance to sexism and patriarchy within black nationalist organizations, leading many Black Power era associations to support gender equality.

Black nationalist hate groups

Black nationalism and antisemitism

Further information: African American–Jewish relations and Nation of Islam and antisemitism

Due to the high-profile nature of changing African American–Jewish relations, there is much research on antisemitism among black nationalist groups and individuals. In the late 1950s, both Muslim and non-Muslim black nationalists engaged in antisemitism. Some activists argued that American Jews, as well as Israel, were "the central obstacle to black progress" and that Jews were "the most racist whites", or they portrayed Jews as "parasitic intruders who accumulated wealth by exploiting the toil of black people in America's ghettos and South Africa". Some black nationalists have alleged that black people "are the original Semites", have engaged in Holocaust trivialization, or may even be Holocaust deniers.

Notable black nationalist leaders who have professed antisemitic sentiments include Amiri Baraka, Louis Farrakhan, Kwame Ture, Leonard Jeffries and Tamika Mallory among others.

Black nationalism and the Southern Poverty Law Center

Main article: List of organizations designated by the Southern Poverty Law Center as hate groups § Black separatist and black nationalist

The Southern Poverty Law Center (SPLC) said that while black nationalist and black separatist hate groups exist, "The black nationalist movement is a reaction to centuries of institutionalized white supremacy in America," and it also notes that there is a lack of high-level political support for black nationalist and black separatist groups as opposed to white supremacist groups. According to the SPLC, black nationalist groups face a "categorically different" environment than white hate groups in the United States; while white supremacy has been championed by influential figures within the Donald Trump administration, black nationalists have "little or no impact on mainstream politics and no defenders in high office".

The SPLC has designated a number of black nationalist groups as hate groups, including the Black Riders Liberation Party, The Israelite Church of God in Jesus Christ, the Israelite School of Universal Practical Knowledge, the New Black Panther Party, the Revolutionary Black Panther Party and The United Nuwaupians Worldwide.

The Southern Poverty Law Center has previously been criticized for conflating black nationalism with hate more generally. It later clarified that "black nationalists are assessed as a loose-knit network of various hate groups, charismatic leaders, as well as unaffiliated individuals who may identify as black nationalists, but do not associate with black nationalist groups," and reiterated that "violent black nationalists" were distinct from other forms of black activism. They also challenged the notion that black activists of diverse ideologies should be grouped as "black identity extremists" by the FBI.

In October 2020, the SPLC announced that it would no longer use the category "black separatism", in order to foster a more accurate understanding of violent extremism and avoid creating a false equivalency between black separatism and white supremacist extremism. This change in the terminology which is used by the SPLC also includes the removal of "black nationalism" as a category of hate groups from the SPLC's website.

See also

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