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Blaxit: Tired of Racism, Black Americans Try Life in Africa
Posted on 2/18/24 at 5:21 pm
Posted on 2/18/24 at 5:21 pm
quote:
Jes’ka Washington lives in a six-bedroom house on a hill with avocado trees and a spectacular view, not far from the rabbit farm she runs. For less than $50,000, Shoshana Kirya-Ziraba and her husband built a four-bedroom, two-bathroom house on family farmland with goats, turkeys and about 1,000 chickens. Mark and Marlene Bradley now call themselves islanders and the owners of three homes cooled by ocean breezes.
All of them are Black Americans who found their new homes in Africa. They are enjoying the substantially lower cost of living and, more important, they said, the absence of the racism and discrimination they experienced in the United States.
The COVID-19 pandemic and the racial reckoning in the wake of the murder of George Floyd led some Black Americans to seek a different way of life abroad. It’s a movement that some are calling Blaxit.
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Those moving to Africa are also looking for an ancestral connection. Their migration is less about money and more about acceptance, a path that many intellectuals and artists have taken before.
Today, a new life in Africa is open to people of varied professions who can work remotely. Immigration has been fueled by vocal proponents on social media and by government programs like Sierra Leone’s path to citizenship and Ghana’s Beyond the Return campaign. According to the Diaspora Affairs Office of Ghana, at least 1,500 African Americans moved to the country between 2019 and 2023. Despite the potential concerns for newcomers — including a wave of extreme anti-LGBTQ policies across the continent — Black Americans are still making the trip.
Washington, 46, of Houston, relocated to Rwanda in 2020. Kirya-Ziraba, 40, moved to Uganda from Texas in 2021. The Bradleys, who are in their 60s, settled in Zanzibar in 2022.
Ashley Cleveland, 39, a mother of two who runs a company that helps foreigners invest in and grow their businesses in Africa, relocated from Atlanta to Dar es Salaam, Tanzania, in 2020 and is now based in South Africa. She said she appreciates that in much of Africa, race is “an abstract concept.”
“Seeing Black African people on the money, on the billboards, you immediately eliminate your Blackness,” she said. She welcomed this change for her children, who were 9 and 2 when they left the United States. Her older daughter, whose skin tone is deep brown, was no longer “bullied because of her complexion.”
quote:
The Exodus Club has been helping people in the African diaspora move to the continent since 2017. R.J. Mahdi, 38, a consultant for the group, moved from Ohio to Senegal 10 years ago.
Mahdi said he had seen an increase in the number of Black Americans relocating to Africa in the past several years.
“There are 10 times as many coming now as there were five or six years ago,” he said. By his estimate, demand for the Exodus Club’s services has grown at least 20% every year since its founding, when it had about 30 clients.
Becoming a “repat” felt empowering to Mahdi as a Black Muslim, he said. In the United States, about 14% of the population is Black, and just 2% of Black Americans are Muslim. In Senegal, however, nearly everyone is Black and Muslim.
“For more reasons than one, we’re at home,” he said.Kirya-Ziraba, who is Jewish, said that when she moved to Uganda to join her husband, Israel Kirya, she went from being “a minority within a minority” to being surrounded by those who share her race and faith. Kirya-Ziraba, who worked for a commercial real estate company in Texas, now runs the Tikvah Chadasha Foundation, a nonprofit supporting Ugandan women and disabled children. She and her husband live in Mbale, a small city that is home to the Abayudaya Jewish community, which has about 2,000 members.
In the United States, Kirya-Ziraba said, her identity came with qualifications: “Other Black people try to qualify my Blackness because I’m Jewish, and other Jews try to qualify my Judaism because I’m Black.”
In Uganda, she no longer faces “a thousand cuts” of racism, she said. For years she had made accommodations, big and small, to try to control other people’s perceptions: smiling to appear nonthreatening, buying nicer clothes to avoid being mistaken for a domestic worker, and straightening her hair to be seen as more professional. She knew she had been acquiescing, but, she said, “I didn’t know the extent until I didn’t have to do any of that.”
Kirya-Ziraba also went from a one-bedroom apartment in the States to a 2-acre family compound in Uganda. Her home is a stone’s throw from the homes of her parents-in-law and her sister-in-law and the large chicken coop. Her in-laws helped her husband build their house.
“It’s just so nice having all of this additional family support,” she said.
Africa isn’t a refuge for all, though. Anti-LGBTQ sentiment is sweeping across the continent. In Uganda, the Anti-Homosexuality Act enacted last year punishes gay sex with life imprisonment and in some cases death. Similar bills have been introduced in other African countries, such as Ghana and Kenya.
Some LGBTQ people interviewed countered that the United States is no safe haven either. They pointed to violence against transgender people, a growing number of anti-LGBTQ bills and the Human Rights Campaign’s declaration of a “state of emergency for LGBTQ+ Americans.” These interviewees said that depending on what a person was looking for, and with discernment, Africa could still be a good option for LGBTQ people.
Davis Mac-Iyalla, 52, an LGBTQ rights activist and the executive director of the Interfaith Diversity Network of West Africa, suggested that instead of deterring immigration, the grim trends could drive it, “if our African brothers and sisters are coming knowing the challenge and want to join us in the struggle.” Just as international volunteers headed to Ukraine to offer support, he imagined, Black Americans might feel called to help in the fight for LGBTQ equality.
Posted on 2/18/24 at 5:24 pm to stout
People leaving and making better lives for themselves?
Posted on 2/18/24 at 5:24 pm to stout
quote:
Some LGBTQ people interviewed countered that the United States is no safe haven either. They pointed to violence against transgender people, a growing number of anti-LGBTQ bills and the Human Rights Campaign’s declaration of a “state of emergency for LGBTQ+ Americans.” These interviewees said that depending on what a person was looking for, and with discernment, Africa could still be a good option for LGBTQ people.
Yeah America is so terrible. Not letting 8 year olds transition. How oppressive.
Give me a fricking break
quote:
Africa isn’t a refuge for all, though. Anti-LGBTQ sentiment is sweeping across the continent. In Uganda, the Anti-Homosexuality Act enacted last year punishes gay sex with life imprisonment and in some cases death. Similar bills have been introduced in other African countries, such as Ghana and Kenya.
Eh.. maybe america isn’t so bad and intolerant after all …
This post was edited on 2/18/24 at 5:28 pm
Posted on 2/18/24 at 5:28 pm to Lawyered
quote:
They pointed to violence against transgender people
Posted on 2/18/24 at 5:29 pm to stout
Why is it necessary to include lgbtq thoughts into this? Please let us know how black repatriation is affecting climate change while you are at it. Many will return when they realize they aren’t “special” or a “victim” anymore.
Posted on 2/18/24 at 5:32 pm to Darth_Vader
Why can’t these people accept there are only two genders?
Posted on 2/18/24 at 5:32 pm to LSUNWO1988
quote:
Why can’t these people accept there are only two genders?
Liberals are all science denying loons
Posted on 2/18/24 at 5:34 pm to stout
4 bans.
3 strongly worded PM's
3 strongly worded PM's
Posted on 2/18/24 at 5:35 pm to Bamafig
quote:
Why is it necessary to include lgbtq thoughts into this? Please let us know how black repatriation is affecting climate change while you are at it. Many will return when they realize they aren’t “special” or a “victim” anymore.
Feminists do the same thing, hence TERFs exist.
Posted on 2/18/24 at 5:35 pm to stout
quote:
For less than $50,000, Shoshana Kirya-Ziraba and her husband built a four-bedroom, two-bathroom house on family farmland with goats, turkeys and about 1,000 chickens
Posted on 2/18/24 at 5:38 pm to stout
Sounds like a lot of posters on PT board who hate this country and love Russia.
Posted on 2/18/24 at 5:39 pm to stout
Well 6 down 44 million to go......fiw
Posted on 2/18/24 at 5:40 pm to stout
I mean if you feel that strongly about your perceived hardships then by all means go. I am positive the reality of it being Africa will eventually rear its ugly head and America won’t look so bad then.
Oh and if you do decide to go, please bring as many poor, slighted victims with you. Thanks!
Oh and if you do decide to go, please bring as many poor, slighted victims with you. Thanks!
This post was edited on 2/18/24 at 5:41 pm
Posted on 2/18/24 at 5:40 pm to stout
So they are enjoying life where they are in the top 1%... imagine that.
Posted on 2/18/24 at 5:40 pm to rmnldr
quote:
For less than $50,000, Shoshana Kirya-Ziraba and her husband built a four-bedroom, two-bathroom house on family farmland with goats, turkeys and about 1,000 chickens
Sounds like paradise as long as you don't need running water or care where you shite.
Posted on 2/18/24 at 5:41 pm to stout
quote:
Jes’ka
They aren't fooling me, nope. She's a Jessica, no matter how badly botched the spelling, nor the useless punctuation, just a boring old Jessica.
Posted on 2/18/24 at 5:43 pm to stout
We should stop giving money to Mexicans and fund this instead
Posted on 2/18/24 at 5:44 pm to Bamafig
quote:
Why is it necessary to include lgbtq thoughts into this?
What do you think the B in lgbt stands for?
Posted on 2/18/24 at 5:45 pm to BayouBlitz
quote:
Sounds like a lot of posters on PT board who hate this country and love Russia.
I think the goal of everyone is to move away from white democrats
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