- Edward Wilmot Blyden
Infobox Christian biography
name = Edward Wilmot Blyden
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img_capt = c 1860s, London
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birth_name =
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birth_date = 3 August 1832
birth_place = Saint Thomas (now Virgin Islands)
death_date = 7 February 1912
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nationality = Liberian?
denomination =
known for = "Father of Pan-Africanism" Liberian ambassador and politician
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workplace =
education =
occupation = educator, writer, diplomat, politician
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partner =
children =
website =Edward Wilmot Blyden (
3 August ,1832 –7 February ,1912 ) was anAmerico-Liberian educator, writer, diplomat, and politician inLiberia andSierra Leone , and an important convert toIslam .Early life
Blyden was born in
Saint Thomas, U.S. Virgin Islands (then under Danish rule) to free parents on August 3, 1832. His father was of Igbo descent. [http://news.sl/drwebsite/publish/article_2005148.shtml] Blyden arrived in Liberia in 1850 and was soon deeply involved in its development. Blyden's descendants still reside in Freetown, and one of his descendants is the controversialSylvia Olayinka Blyden who is also an editor of the Awareness Times. Blyden married Sarah Yates anAmerico-Liberian mulatto who was from the prominentAmerico-Liberian Yates family. Sarah Yates was the niece of Liberian vice president,Hilary Yates and she gave birth to three children with Blyden. Blyden later on (inFreetown, Sierra Leone ) had a relationship with Anna Erskine anAfrican American fromLouisiana who was also the granddaughter of themulatto President ofLiberia James Spriggs-Payne . Blyden had five children with Anna Erskine and his descendants in Sierra Leone are descended from this union. He died inFreetown, Sierra Leone , on February 7, 1912 and was buried atRacecourse Cemetery in Freetown, Sierra Leone.Blyden believed that Black Americans suffering discrimination had a role to play in the development of
Africa by leaving America and returning to the African continent. He was critical of African-Americans who did not associate withAfrica [ [http://www.cwo.com/~lucumi/africans.html Africa For The Africans! ] ]Career
From 1855-1856, Blyden edited the Liberia Herald and wrote A Voice From Bleeding Africa.
As a diplomat, he served as an ambassador for Liberia to Britain and
France . He also spent time in other British colonies in West Africa, particularlyNigeria andSierra Leone , writing for early newspapers in both colonies.Blyden was the
Liberia nSecretary of State (1862-1864) andMinister of the Interior (1880-1882).In addition to holding many positions of leadership in politics and diplomacy, he also taught classics at Liberia College (1862-1871) and served as its president (1880-1884). From 1901-06, Blyden directed the education of Muslims in Sierra Leone.
Writings
As a writer, Blyden is regarded widely as the "Father of
Pan-Africanism "; his major work, "Christianity, Islam and the Negro Race" (1887), pushed forward the idea that Islam, a major religion in sub-Saharan Africa, has a much more unifying and fulfilling effect on sub-Saharan Africans, while Christianity, also a major religion in Africa which was mostly introduced by its European colonizers, had a demoralizing effect. This idea would play a major role in the 20th-century revival of Islam among African-Americans, which ran parallel to the rejection of Christianity as a "white man's religion".His work "Christianity, Islam and the Negro Race" caused the most controversy in Britain not because of its content but because of disbelief that a black African had written it. [ [http://www.columbia.edu/~hcb8/EWB_Museum/about_pic.html Edward Wilmot Blyden Photograph ] ]
Works
* "Africa for the Africans," <
>, Washington, January, 1872.
* "African Life and Customs," London, C.M. Phillips, 1908.
* "West Africa Before Europe," London, C.M. Phillips, 1905.
* "The Call of Providence to the Descendants of Africa in America. A Discourse Delivered to Coloured Congregations in the Cities of New York, Philadelphia, Baltimore, Harrisburg, during the Summer of 1862," <>, New York, 1862.
* "Christianity, Islam and the Negro Race," London, W.B. Whittingham & Co., 1887; 2nd Edition1 888; 3rd Edition 1967 University of Edinburgh Press.
* "The Elements of Permanent Influence: Discourse Delivered at the 15th St. Presbyterian Church, Washington, D.C., Sunday, February 16 1890" Washington. R. L. Pedleton, printer, 1890.
* "Liberia as a Means, Not an End." Liberian Independence Oration July 26, 1867; African Repository, Washington. November, 1867.
* "The Negro in Ancient History, Liberia: Past, Present, and Future," Washington, M'Gill & Witherow Printer, <>.
* "The Origin and Purpose of African Colonization." A Discourse Delivered at the 66th Anniversary of the American Colonization Society, Washington, D. C., January 14, 1883, Washington, 1883.
* "A Vindication of the African Race; Being a Brief Examination of the Arguments in Favor of African Inferiority" (First Published in Liberia, in August, 1857), <>, New York, 1862.
* "Report on the Falaba Expedition 1872. Addressed to His Excellency Governor J. Pope Hennessy, C.M.G. by E. W. Blyden M.A." Published by authority Freetown, Sierra Leone. Printed at the Government office., 1872.
* "Liberia at the American Centennial." << Methodist Quarterly Review>>, July, 1877.
* "America in Africa," Christian Advocate I., July 28, 1898, II August 4, 1898.
* "The Negro in the United States," A.M.E. Church Review, Jan. 1900.References
See also
*Christianityportal
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