AFRICAphonie AFRICAphonie is a Pan African Association which operates on the premise that AFRICA can only be what AFRICANS and their friends want AFRICA to be.
bakwerirama Spotlight on the Bakweri Society and Culture. The Bakweri are an indigenous African nation.
Bate Besong Bate Besong, award-winning firebrand poet and playwright.
Bernard Fonlon Dr Bernard Fonlon was an extraordinary figure who left a large footprint in Cameroonian intellectual, social and political life.
Dr Godfrey Tangwa (Rotcod Gobata) Renaissance man, philosophy professor, actor and newspaper columnist, Godfrey Tangwa aka Rotcod Gobata touches a wide array of subjects. Always entertaining and eminently readable. Visit for frequent updates.
Fonlon-Nichols Award Website of the Literary Award established to honor the memory of BERNARD FONLON, the great Cameroonian teacher, writer, poet, and philosopher, who passionately defended human rights in an often oppressive political atmosphere.
George Ngwane George Ngwane is a prominent author, activist and intellectual.
Jacob Nguni irtuoso guitarist, writer and humorist. Former lead guitarist of Rocafil, led by Prince Nico Mbarga.
Martin Jumbam The refreshingly, unique, incisive and generally hilarous writings about the foibles of African society and politics by former Cameroon Life Magazine columnist Martin Jumbam.
Nowa Omoigui Professor of Medicine and interventional cardiologist, Nowa Omoigui is also one of the foremost experts and scholars on the history of the Nigerian Military and the Nigerian Civil War. This site contains many of his writings and comments on military subjects and history.
Postwatch (Cameroon) A UMI (United Media Incorporated) publication. Specializing in well researched investigative reports, it focuses on the Cameroonian scene, particular issues of interest to the former British Southern Cameroons.
R. E. Ekosso Rosemary Ekosso, a Cameroonian novelist and blogger who lives and works in Cambodia.
The Ilongo Sphere Novelist and poet Ilongo Fritz Ngalle, long concealed his artist's wings behind the firm exterior of a University administrator and guidance counsellor. No longer. Enjoy his unique poems and glimpses of upcoming novels and short stories.
The Post Online (Cameroon) PostNewsLine is an interactive feature of 'The Post', an important newspaper published out of Buea, Cameroons.
Victor Mbarika ICT Weblog Victor Wacham Agwe Mbarika is one of Africa's foremost experts on Information and Communication Technologies (ICTs). Dr. Mbarika's research interests are in the areas of information infrastructure diffusion in developing countries and multimedia learning.
Watch France Purpose of this advocacy site: To aggregate all available information about French terror, exploitation and manipulation of Africa
I look at your sores And I feel the pain of our misery I walk in your squalor And I sense our impotence I witness your slow decay And my soul slowly dies.
As Dr. H. N. Endeley joins ancestors Cheery with decorum and splendor Admirers applaud his grand feats Shinning like lights on mountain tops
Buea University captures global spotlight Like Olympic winners on universal spotlight As maiden Registrar, Dr. Endeley set standards Both friends and foes emulate and salute
A Fako native is fallen A Hero is fallen Together in grief we join. Nganjo is lifeless Herbert is Breathless Citizens in Fakoland together stand, Citizens in Diaspora bemoan Honor those who served. Tribute to the fallen; As in EML Endeley Family of the fallen, So too, Nganjo is fallen Bears our debt in grief. Today another funeral; In Fakoland, one too many Honors this one taken. One man's duty done; Prosperity continues.
Moms prepare their wares for the market place Dads sharpen their cutlasses for the farms. Moms heat up (ekwakoko ya weku). Children get up reluctantly from their cozy beds when the 3rd rooster crows. And line up with their buckets, for the stream to fetch water.
Some Bakweri people in Great Soppo owned horses When I was growing up in that village as a small boy, going to school In the late 1940s of the just-ended century. And on the Mission Hill too there were horses On which white missionaries sometimes rode For the fun of it for they also had their station wagons. Maybe it was because of those horses That I came to write About a womanwho never betted on the races, not being a gambler, But who nevertheless was always dreaming of a big black horse On which a man sometimes came riding through her farm, A big black horse that sometime was No. 6 And at other times it was marked No. 9 And always it was painful to her Whenever that man came riding through her farm As if it was no longer her private property But the village common or the Town Green On which any black horse could gallop And any cow graze.
Fiery crown of the Kpes
Guarding refugees on exile from lands ancestral
Brooding brow wreathed with cloud waves high and low of tide
Mirror reflecting flitting emotions experienced below awesome giant.
From sources mysterious, rivers and fountains red molten
Are belched suddenly
The invincible floods preceded by shivers earth-shaking
Prelude to gigantic vomits
Coughing out earth's bowels devouring
Terror of generations
Never committing the error of annihilating species menaced by extinction
Seeking protection grace within arms colossal.
Solid flanks of forest green repel invasion onslaughts
Petering out into savannah lush
Dancing brushes waving gaily in soft breezes without caprice
I stand at the salute
my right hand aloft and my head salaamed
to the great Olympus of West Africa
the colossus, citadel and sanctuary of the Bakweri-men of old
from the daring exploits of early despots in the name of
explorers and patriarchs
substituting native despotism for white civilization
and bringing Christendom into heathendom
from the traffickers of black gold
from the ruthless Hun with his sticks spitting out fire and death
the pogrom of a hostile and stubborn race
the rape of a people by a people
But KUVA LIKENYE stood his ground in complete defiance of the carnage
the hero of his emasculated people
and you roared, shook and fumed in wrath
belched out smoke, fire and brimstone
The terrestrial brotherhood scampered in panic and pitched
their bastion in Douala
but that was a long, long time ago
before my father's father
But there you are ! Moli mo FAKO! LAIR OF IFASA MOTO!
bulwark of ages
still dominating the scene
indomitable, majestically dormant
the Giant Pyramid of West Africa
I salute! I salute you!
We are proud of Who we are.
We are proud of What we are.
We are proud of 'a Time'... this Time.
We are proud too of This Place.
We are proud of You watching over us – Might of Mystical Myth
... to prejudice, a silly void.
Culture is not for sale.
Shadows travel far
but Custom is all we have and this forever will remain our Fortress.
Our Gods are silent... but not for long.
We can smell our day of victory, close at hand.
Snails on our backyard have grown wings...
They are racing to hail the reign of Moma 'a Njoku –
Our Sacred Beast... prowling its preys, turning them into Ancestral things.
We are proud to declare the freedom of our Spirits.
We... bona fide children of N'yango Eze ... (Mother Earth)
Are already proud... of 'a Day' to Come.
Simon Mol. Africa... My Africa /Afryka... Moja Afryka (A bilingual poetry collection in English and Polish) by Simon Moleke Njie. VERBINUM (Wydawnictwo Księży Werbistów, Warsaw 2002)
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