Saturday, October 5, 2013

Re: USA Africa Dialogue Series - Fwd: Nigerians abroad to remit $21bn in 2013 -World Bank


Dear La Vonda R. Staples,

It's good to feel so much energy from you.

Yes, we take our hats off to the angelic home remittance entrepreneurs who are keeping hope alive in Mama Africa – " love and faith in action" - just as Mama Africa / Nigeria during the oil boom years when the £Sterling was the equivalent of the Naira, was the country from which contract workers from Ghana, from India and Pakistan in particular were legally authorised to remit half their salaries to help swell the subcontinent's economy. An Indian colleague told me that Nigeria was the goose that laid the golden eggs  – another told me it was a tree whose fruits would be shaken for all it's worth and an early Taliban from Waziristan said that he hoped that his remittances would contribute to  the manufacture  of Pakistan's first Islamic bomb.

In Sweden, every African worth his salt is here to make money...

You wonder and I too wonder, we wonder why they spend some of our folks spend "7 billion United States dollars on hair" – and skin-lightening creams to fulfil skin-whitening dreams. Such a waste of foreign exchange   to obtain which boatloads of immigrants have lost their lives in the quest to get to Europe – by boat.  The prospect of an Atlantic crossing is obviously still as hazardous as it was a few centuries ago; Europe is a little closer, the tip of Italy almost touching Tripoli...

My Better Half is in Paris for the weekend , so when you get this please let me know so that I'll give you a call immediately - and shout as much as I want on the phone so that you can really hear me and I promise I won't even mention Pastor Joshua...

We Sweden

 
On Saturday, 5 October 2013 19:12:45 UTC+2, La Vonda R. Staples wrote:
Thank you for this.  I have a hard time these days doing my own research.  I try to keep a clear line between what is fact and what is emotion and I've argued that sometimes African Americans do not behave in a very African way. Sometimes I feel that calling ourselves African is like a pauper usurping a throne.  My admiration for the remittance economies of Africa, with all that they attempt to do for their families, quite nearly places these sisters and brothers of the continent into the realm of demi-gods.  I wonder why is it that we spend, in example, 7 billion United States dollars on hair when our children occupy forty percent of those who are food challenged.  I also wonder why does any Black American woman continue to throw this money away when it hasn't caused them to attain any other goal than having hair on her head.  In my traditionalist and, patriarchal (as I've been told that I am) mind, the only reason a woman should spend that much money on something she throws away is to get a husband.  Our 73 percent rate of illegitimacy exhibits that husbands are not attained with the purchase of hair from the locally overpopulated for of self-denigration:  the Korean hair selling man (and woman).  

One nation of people sends their children out into the world.  Those children, in return, help to pay for jumpers and tuition and books and passage to other nations and the wealth is constantly circulated within the community to the greater good.  The word "remittance" means more to me than an economic value.  Remittance, to me, is love and faith in action.  I can't believe that the first time I heard the word was in an intercession course in African politics.  I took the course during the winter break (January) 2009.  It wasn't any type of advanced learning experience, although I was at the end of my graduate student career the course was only a 2000 level (sophomore) offering.  It wasn't the course.  It was the teacher.  An individual who opened my eyes, after nearly five decades of haunting this planet in darkness, to what it means to truly function as a community analogous to the whims and perception of former slave masters or colonizers.  The remittance number says, proudly, "we will not be what you need to see."  I thank this teacher, at every turn, for that defining moment in my intellectual development.  

Thank you,

La Vonda R. Staples


On Fri, Oct 4, 2013 at 4:35 PM, Cornelius Hamelberg <cornelius...@gmail.com> wrote:

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--
La Vonda R. Staples, Writer
BA Psychology 2005 and MA European History 2009

"If your dreams do not scare you, they are not big enough."
 
Ellen Johnson Sirleaf, This Child Will Be Great; Memoir of a Remarkable Life by Africa's First Woman President.

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