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The Chronicle of Independence: A Short Story

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  13 August 2021

Manthia Diawara*
Affiliation:
Department of Black Studies, University of California, Santa Barbara
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Extract

We used to play soccer with white boys in Kankan at Saint John, a Catholic elementary and junior high school. Then one day a girl by the name of Dusu told my mother that I had been in the worshipping house of the white people. When I came home my mother was crying, saying that the Devil had entered me. The other women in the compound gathered around her to express their surprise and distress as well. I could hear them talking about how the world had become a dangerous place since the era of the white man. Some said that nowadays the white men had driven Satan deep into the souls of some black men so much so that, like mad dogs, they had turned against their trainers themselves. Some said that the world was coming to an end, and others enjoined that it was all Sekou Toure’s fault. That day my mother locked me up and began whipping me.

Type
Insight
Copyright
Copyright © African Studies Association 1987 

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