The following is an excerpt from Chapter III of the 6th Congress Political Report, The Theory of African Internationalism by Chairman Omali Yeshitela.
The African People’s Socialist Party was able to resolve all the most important outstanding questions left unresolved after the U.S. government defeat of the Black Revolution of the 1960s through the scientific approach of the theory of African Internationalism. This is an approach grounded in dialectical materialism.
The political theory of African Internationalism distinguishes the Party not only from the white left but also from any other African Liberation organization on the planet today. African Internationalism is a theory developed from the African Independence tendency throughout our history, notably the organization and movement led by Marcus Garvey in the 20th century.
African Internationalism is based on materialism
The Party views the world in a scientific way, through the lens of materialism as opposed to the religious or cultural nationalist worldview called idealism.
Idealism is an erroneous, petty bourgeois view that sees ideas, gods or the spiritual or other greater power as the primary force that determines reality. Idealism teaches that there are aspects of life or the universe that are static and unknowable.
African Internationalism is based on materialism, the understanding that our experience of the world is a product of our material conditions and that the world is tangible, completely knowable through our senses, existing independently of our minds. The materialist worldview of African Internationalism informs the African working class that the world can be changed and that it is our responsibility to change it. African Internationalism is a theory that requires action—the unity of theory and practice.
Dialectical materialism is the understanding that all things are in a process of coming into being and dying away. There are contradictions found in the unity of opposites. For example, there is both unity and struggle in the dialectic of the oppressed and the oppressors.
Without the oppressor there would be no oppressed. It is in the interest of the oppressed to resolve this contradiction by destroying the oppressor and liberating themselves. The dialectical materialism of African Internationalism allows us to understand that imperialism—born at our expense—is in the process of dying away and that the oppressed are on the ascendency, rising up striking out at the contradiction of imperialist domination.
Thus, the Chairman describes the current world situation as “an uneasy equilibrium between the past and the future,” describing the deepening struggle of the oppressed against the oppressor.
The dialectical materialist theory of African Internationalism is the viewpoint of the African working class, empowering us to understand the objective truth about how the world got to be the way it is and how we must change the world by uniting and liberating Africa and African people everywhere.
African Internationalism recognizes that the struggle against “racism” is a “self-defeating waste of time that denies Africans our national identity and dignity.”
“Racism” is an idealist concept, invented by the colonizers, that “relegates us to the Sisyphean task of winning acceptance from and often becoming one with our oppressors,” instead of leading us to win our liberation and independence.
African Internationalism understands that African people are not a race but a nation of people forcibly dispersed across the globe. African people, wherever we are located, are a colonized nation of people struggling for African liberation.
African Internationalism: European wealth and African impoverishment are as a result of European assault on Africa
The material conditions faced by African people the world over have their origin in the assault on Africa by an impoverished, disease-ridden, feudal Europe that enslaved African people, colonized us, stole our land, labor and resources, amassing unprecedented wealth for Europe and giving birth to capitalism.
Europe’s assault on Africa and the world proves that capitalism was born from imperialism, and not, as the Soviet revolutionary V.I. Lenin believed, that imperialism was the last stage of capitalism.
The motivating factor of history is the need for human beings to produce and reproduce life. African people, along with other oppressed and colonized peoples, have spent the past 500 years forcibly producing and reproducing life for Europe, North America and the white population, not for ourselves.
To have the entire African nation and other colonized nations producing and reproducing life only for the benefit of the white nation rescued Europe from their oppressive conditions, creating the basis of imperialism and the massive wealth and power of European nation today.
The essential question is that capitalism is parasitic. A parasite is an organism that lives on or in an organism of another species, known as the host, from which the parasite obtains nutriment. An example of a parasite is a blood-sucking organism such as a tick or a tapeworm. White power is the parasite—Africans and colonized peoples are the hosts.
Capitalism was born parasitic—it could not exist without enslavement, genocides, colonialism and terror waged against oppressed peoples of the Earth. Capitalism continues to be parasitic, stealing the resources of the oppressed through resource wars, neocolonialism and economic domination. If capitalism were deprived of the stolen resources of Africa and other colonized nations, capitalism would quickly die.
Slavery and colonialism gave rise not only to capitalism but also to the capitalist ruling class as well as the white middle class and the working classes. All white people sit on the pedestal of the oppression of Africans and others. Coming pt 2
The African People’s Socialist Party was able to resolve all the most important outstanding questions left unresolved after the U.S. government defeat of the Black Revolution of the 1960s through the scientific approach of the theory of African Internationalism. This is an approach grounded in dialectical materialism.
The political theory of African Internationalism distinguishes the Party not only from the white left but also from any other African Liberation organization on the planet today. African Internationalism is a theory developed from the African Independence tendency throughout our history, notably the organization and movement led by Marcus Garvey in the 20th century.
African Internationalism is based on materialism
The Party views the world in a scientific way, through the lens of materialism as opposed to the religious or cultural nationalist worldview called idealism.
Idealism is an erroneous, petty bourgeois view that sees ideas, gods or the spiritual or other greater power as the primary force that determines reality. Idealism teaches that there are aspects of life or the universe that are static and unknowable.
African Internationalism is based on materialism, the understanding that our experience of the world is a product of our material conditions and that the world is tangible, completely knowable through our senses, existing independently of our minds. The materialist worldview of African Internationalism informs the African working class that the world can be changed and that it is our responsibility to change it. African Internationalism is a theory that requires action—the unity of theory and practice.
Dialectical materialism is the understanding that all things are in a process of coming into being and dying away. There are contradictions found in the unity of opposites. For example, there is both unity and struggle in the dialectic of the oppressed and the oppressors.
Without the oppressor there would be no oppressed. It is in the interest of the oppressed to resolve this contradiction by destroying the oppressor and liberating themselves. The dialectical materialism of African Internationalism allows us to understand that imperialism—born at our expense—is in the process of dying away and that the oppressed are on the ascendency, rising up striking out at the contradiction of imperialist domination.
Thus, the Chairman describes the current world situation as “an uneasy equilibrium between the past and the future,” describing the deepening struggle of the oppressed against the oppressor.
The dialectical materialist theory of African Internationalism is the viewpoint of the African working class, empowering us to understand the objective truth about how the world got to be the way it is and how we must change the world by uniting and liberating Africa and African people everywhere.
African Internationalism recognizes that the struggle against “racism” is a “self-defeating waste of time that denies Africans our national identity and dignity.”
“Racism” is an idealist concept, invented by the colonizers, that “relegates us to the Sisyphean task of winning acceptance from and often becoming one with our oppressors,” instead of leading us to win our liberation and independence.
African Internationalism understands that African people are not a race but a nation of people forcibly dispersed across the globe. African people, wherever we are located, are a colonized nation of people struggling for African liberation.
African Internationalism: European wealth and African impoverishment are as a result of European assault on Africa
The material conditions faced by African people the world over have their origin in the assault on Africa by an impoverished, disease-ridden, feudal Europe that enslaved African people, colonized us, stole our land, labor and resources, amassing unprecedented wealth for Europe and giving birth to capitalism.
Europe’s assault on Africa and the world proves that capitalism was born from imperialism, and not, as the Soviet revolutionary V.I. Lenin believed, that imperialism was the last stage of capitalism.
The motivating factor of history is the need for human beings to produce and reproduce life. African people, along with other oppressed and colonized peoples, have spent the past 500 years forcibly producing and reproducing life for Europe, North America and the white population, not for ourselves.
To have the entire African nation and other colonized nations producing and reproducing life only for the benefit of the white nation rescued Europe from their oppressive conditions, creating the basis of imperialism and the massive wealth and power of European nation today.
The essential question is that capitalism is parasitic. A parasite is an organism that lives on or in an organism of another species, known as the host, from which the parasite obtains nutriment. An example of a parasite is a blood-sucking organism such as a tick or a tapeworm. White power is the parasite—Africans and colonized peoples are the hosts.
Capitalism was born parasitic—it could not exist without enslavement, genocides, colonialism and terror waged against oppressed peoples of the Earth. Capitalism continues to be parasitic, stealing the resources of the oppressed through resource wars, neocolonialism and economic domination. If capitalism were deprived of the stolen resources of Africa and other colonized nations, capitalism would quickly die.
Slavery and colonialism gave rise not only to capitalism but also to the capitalist ruling class as well as the white middle class and the working classes. All white people sit on the pedestal of the oppression of Africans and others. Coming pt 2