Whitehouse Meeting on Ferguson - Dec 1, 2014

President Obama has convened a cabinet meeting on Monday December 1, 2014 to discuss the tough lessons learned from the ongoing unrest in Ferguson, Missouri. The meeting also included young people from civil rights and activist groups based in Ferguson , mayors,  and law enforcement officials from and across the country.

The topic was how to address the deteriorating relations  between the police and the communities they serve, and how to ensure that the divide is bridged. 

Tawanda Jones, AfroAmerica Network Black Woman of Year 2013

Tawanda Jones is the founder of the Camden Sophisticated Sisters Drill Team, Inc., a nonprofit organization based in Camden, New Jersey. Camden Sophisticated Sisters Drill Team empowers teen boys and girls, younger children, and even adults, all through the art of dance.  Tawanda Jones summarizes the mission of the organization she founded 27 years ago, when her high school dance team lost funding:

“I actually wanted the entire world to know that these young ladies are sophisticated and they are from Camden, New Jersey. They do exist, they are here.

 

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©2013 AfroAmerica Network. All Rights Reserved.

AfroAmerica Network
Person of the Year Series
December 15, 2013

Jakaya Mrisho Kikwete AfroAmerica Network Black Man of 2013 

BarackObamaJakayaKikweteSep242013-300x199Jakaya Mrisho Kikwete, the President of the United
Republic of Tanzania is considered as one of the
most in?uential among the current African leaders. In
fact, along with Angolan President Jose Eduardo Dos
Santos and  South African President Jacob Zuma,
Jaya Kikwete is perhaps the most important president
of modern day Black Africa.  The three presidents
have become the wise people the international
community consults before any major action
regarding Central, Eastern and Southern Africa. In 2013, Jakaya Kiwete has become the center  of the World attention, and has left a mark on the continent and the international community.

The icon of the struggle against oppression , Nelson Rolihlahla Mandela, passed away today December 5, 2013. As the South African President Jacob Zuma said, Although we knew that this day would come, nothing can diminish our sense of a profound and enduring loss. His tireless struggle for freedom earned him the respect of the world.

The death of Nelson Mandela should be an occasion, not only to mourn the loss of the person who epitomizes the success of overcoming oppression, but also to reflect on our own struggles against oppression, wherever it is and wherever and whoever we are.

While thinking about Mondela’s struggle against oppression, one question came to my mind: “Is there oppression that is not deliberate or by design?

- Even Roosters Dream to Fly & Legs of Tornado - The Human Who Outran the Wind

Book 1: Even Roosters Dream To Fly: The Epic of a German White Catholic Priest and Manzi, a Freedom Fighter and a Mythological King of Rwanda.

Book 2: Legs of Tornado: The Human Who Outran the Wind.

Authored by Felicien Kanyamibwa

Felicien Kanyamibwa, Leading the Chamber of Commerce (Board of Trade) and business leaders in a meeting with Rwandan Government in Kigali, Rwanda in 1989

Even Roosters Dream To Fly: The Epic of a German White Catholic Priest and Manzi, a Freedom Fighter and a Mythological King of Rwanda.
Authored by Felicien Kanyamibwa

Even Roosters Dream to Fly is a chronicle of a hunter-turned King Manzi. The story starts in prison, where the imprisoned king is narrating his long-life journey to his youngest son. Manzi was someone who was adventurous and inquisitive right from his childhood, hence he challenged everything that came his way.

Legs of Tornado - The Human Who Outran the Wind

Legs of Tornado: The Human Who Outran the Wind
Authored by Felicien Kanyamibwa

This is the tale of Maguru ya Sarwaya, Legs of Tornado, the human from a humble upbringing who outran the wind, defeated evil spirits, overcame his fate, became a respected clan chief, and triumphed ever after. Long ago, the people of Rwanda suffered through a terrible famine. The rains did not come to help the crops grow, the grass withered, and the soil became so dry that it cracked. 

Selma March with Martin Luther King, Jr

March 7, 2025 marks the 60th anniversary of the Selma to Montgomey, Alabama march, known as the “Bloody Sunday.”  In 1965  civil rights activists and marchers were beaten by the police while trying to march to Montgomery. The annual event, this year, took place amid persistently growing challenges to Voting Rights that were the foundation of the march. US Civil Rights and Racial Justice Activists and leaders have stressed that the dynamics leading to the ceremonies and gatherings  this year have been driven by a mixture of recognition of the accomplishments, fear in face of new challenges,  dejection, defiance, and determination for a renewal. 

DR Congo Thérèse Kayikwamba Wagner at the UN Security Council Meeting in February 2025

  Thérèse Kayikwamba Wagner, 42, is a Congolese political scientist and politician and DR Congo Minister of Foreign Affairs, International Cooperation and Francophonie.  Her public stand has been the highlight  of her achievements for over one year, since she took over the office. She has been at the diplomatic frontline dealing  with the invasion of the DR Congo by the Rwandan Defense Forces (RDF), under the cover of March 23 Movement (M23).  Hence AfroAmerica Network has included Thérèse Kayikwamba Wagner on the list of Most influential Black Persons as of 2025 (see AfroAmerica Network Most Influential Black Persons as of 2025)