The Africa We Want : The urgent call to restore African languages for true liberation

6 min

Abdelmonem Fawzi

Language is the soul of a people. It is not merely a tool for communication but the living essence of identity, culture, and belonging.

Our mother tongues weave the intricate fabric of who we are, shaping worldviews, preserving histories, fostering solidarity, and transmitting traditions across generations.

When we speak our indigenous languages, we affirm our heritage and connect deeply with our communities.

Yet, when foreign tongues supplant them, the consequences are profound: eroded identities, uprooted generations, and a lingering sense of cultural dislocation.

The intimate bond between language and identity is undeniable. As Frantz Fanon, the revolutionary thinker and Pan-Africanist, powerfully argued, a colonized people’s adoption of the colonizer’s language internalizes their worldview, breeding inferiority complexes and hindering genuine liberation.

Mastering the oppressor’s tongue often means embracing their standards, while suppressing indigenous languages constitutes profound cultural theft.

True decolonization, Fanon asserted, demands reclaiming native tongues to rebuild authentic selfhood and collective power.

This insight remains as urgent today as during the struggles against colonialism.

In stark contrast, Europe exemplifies linguistic pride through multilingualism, a cornerstone of the European Union.

The EU’s Charter of Fundamental Rights guarantees citizens the right to interact with institutions in any of its 24 official languages, safeguarding linguistic diversity as a pillar of unity and identity.

Africa, however, has often undervalued its own rich tapestry of over 2,000 languages.

Colonial legacies have fostered tribal divisions, viewing speakers of different tongues as outsiders or aliens.

This self-imposed fragmentation undermines continental integration and perpetuates elusive dreams of true liberation and unity.

Nonetheless, a beacon of hope emerges from the African Union (AU).

In a landmark move aligned with its Year of Reparatory Justice, the AU has appointed Kim Poole, a distinguished founding fellow of the Teaching Artist Institute from Baltimore, United States, to the African Languages Week Coordinating Committee (ALWCC).

Poole, renowned for her innovative work in arts, education, and cultural advocacy, brings international acclaim to this vital role.

Her mission: to lead the revitalization of African languages across the continent and diaspora as an essential act of reparatory justice.

Operating under the African Academy of Languages (ACALAN), the AU’s dedicated body for linguistic promotion, the ALWCC seeks to decolonize education, governance, and cultural expression.

Poole views language restoration as holistic reparations: “Reparations isn’t just about financial restitution, but about restoring everything that was stripped from us”.

For her, language is a pathway to healing and empowerment.

“Language is how we tell our stories,” she declares. “If we are serious about reparatory justice, we must ensure that our stories are told in our own tongues.”

Poole’s efforts will culminate in African Languages Week 2026, a milestone event uniting artists, educators, and leaders to deploy creative strategies for revival.

Initiatives include embedding African languages in music, theatre, literature, and digital platforms, developing community-based education programmes, and leveraging arts to spread global awareness.

This appointment marks a historic bridge between the African Diaspora and the continent, positioning Poole as a pivotal force in reclaiming linguistic sovereignty.

The challenges are immense. Africa’s publishing sector starkly illustrates neglect: 95% of books produced are textbooks, starving readers of fiction and poetry that nurture imagination and creativity.

Building indigenous languages into vehicles for knowledge, science, education, and professionalism demands deliberate political and cultural investment.

Africans must actively learn one another’s languages, granting them the currency needed for pan-African communication and solidarity.

The persistent elevation of colonial languages rests on a debunked myth: that Western tongues alone embody modernity and civilization.

Counterexamples abound in the Global South – China and Singapore have modernized spectacularly while centring their indigenous languages, proving decolonization and progress can coexist.

Africa stands at a crossroads. We must develop our languages into instruments of prosperity and innovation, or remain shackled by colonial tyranny.

Indigenous languages, intertwined with native knowledge, values, and histories, form the unfinished package of postcolonial liberation.

Restoring them is not nostalgia, but revolutionary justice.

By reclaiming our tongues, we reclaim our future, fostering a united, empowered “Africa We Want” where cultural pride fuels continental renaissance.

The post The Africa We Want : The urgent call to restore African languages for true liberation appeared first on Egyptian Gazette.

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