The time is now for African women to lead and the African National Women’s Organization (ANWO) is the engine that builds those leaders.
Armed with the theory of African Internationalism, the revolutionary theory of practice, ANWO is the only organization for black women that exposes and organizes around the core contradiction of our oppression, colonialism.
We do not make the “only” claim lightly. In the three years since we were established by the African People’s Socialist Party, we’ve seen the vapid, clique-like activism of feminists which usually doesn’t organize on the critical issues that impact the lives of poor working-class African women.
Instead, the main goal is to strengthen their visibility and influence in the realm of white power.
ANWO organizes because we see an end to African oppression
Feminist and other African women activists would rather hold a parade that says “black women lead,” stage a die-in, and bask in the glory of their own sense of self-importance.
Meanwhile, they will not organize against the assault on African mothers fighting to get their children back into their custody.
They will not organize prison rides to support African women in prison.
They will not organize revolutionary childcare collectives.
They will not support African women with deep contradictions brought on by colonialism.
No, their activism has no end, whereas, we do have an end.
We see the end of our suffering as colonized African people because we understand that capitalist colonialism, not patriarchy, is the cause of desperate conditions of African people everywhere.
Capitalism is rooted in the means of production and the exploitation of African resources and people.
When we take our resources back and use our labor in our self-interest, we will destroy capitalism as a world-wide system.
When African women throw their babies in the trash in Occupied Azania (South Africa), this is directly tied to capitalist colonialism.
African people do not own the means of production and therefore are living in some of the deepest poverty, while nearly all of the white settlers own the land and the means of production.
It is also a direct result of capitalist colonialism when African women are held hostage by the welfare state.
Their lives tied to the pittance offered as benefits from the State that usually causes poor women to jump through hoops, opening up their entire lives to inquiry.
ANWO knows why this is happening to our women. We do more than write think pieces about these contradictions.
We organize the affected women and any other African woman or man that understands that something else must be done to shift the balance of power that leaves African people at the whim of white power imperialism in the form of colonialism.
We believe that we must make a revolution and that is the only solution.
African women don’t need #blackgirlmagic; we need African Internationalism
“Black girl magic” is a phrase that is touted by the African petty bourgeoisie to celebrate the aspirations of the African petty bourgeoisie; like becoming CEO of an imperialist company, wearing an expensive dress or helping the imperialist space program beat the Russians to the moon.
It’s an absurd notion to attribute anything we do to magic─something that can’t be explained.
It is as if a smart, skilled or capable African woman is so abnormal that the only way to describe her excelling amongst white people is magic.
You see, an African woman worker will see that if an African woman wins a race, it’s because she worked hard, put in the hours and trained to be the best. It’s not magic at all.
The African petty bourgeoisie, however, likes to make common everyday things seem unattainable to the masses of our people.
Africa doesn’t need “black girl magic,” Africa needs politically astute revolutionary working class African women who know how to struggle and win!
ANWO Organizing to win
Over the last few months, ANWO has been organizing toward our first international convention that happened on March 24 and 25 in College Park, MD, right outside Washington, D.C.
We won African women and men to the importance of holding up the necessity of African women in revolutionary organization.
There is still much work to be done. While there are African women who should be organizing, the contradictions of colonialism sucks us back into the bowels of despair.
ANWO, however, will not let African women become the food on which colonialism feeds itself.
The convention was the place for us to state our objectives, layout out what is important to the lives of working-class African women and chart a strategy where we can push back colonialism by being active participants in the struggle for African freedom.
We look forward to showing you the highlights from this convention in the next Spear, but until then please visit us at http://anwouhuru.org for updates and resolutions from the convention.
Uhuru!
Forward Ever! Backward Never!
Victory to the African Working-Class!
Victory to African women!