Africans from where?
-Ethiopia.
-Sudan.
-Congo.
-Jamaica.
-Benin.
-Trinidad.
-Senegal.
-The United States.
-Gabon.
-Mali.
-Brazil.
-Nigeria.
-Guadeloupe.
-Guinea.
-Tanzania.
-Cuba.
-Canada.
-Zimbabwe.
-Colombia.
-Venezuela.
-Chad.
-Liberia.
-Peru.
-Cameroon.
-Cape Verde.
-Mayetta.
-Togo.
-Ecuador.
-Ghana.
-Zambia.
-Argentina.
-Gambia.
-Central African Republic
-Mexico.
-South Africa.
-Botswana.
-Bolivia.
-The Comoros Islands.
-Haiti.
-Malawi.
-de Madagascar.
-Réunion Island.
-Burundi.
-The Netherlands.
-Guyana.
-Lesotho.
-Rwanda.
-The Democratic Republic of Congo
-Mauritania.
-The Dominican Republic.
-Somalia.
-Saint Lucia.
-Sierra Leone.
-Eritrea.
-Honduras.
-Angola, etc.
This, I think, is how we must understand the geography of Africa and Africans themselves in the 21st century. A global vision of the continent fits better the reality of a transcontinental Africa. Them geographic boundaries of the continent just not satisfactory at all if a proper account of the global african reality we wanna give. When talking 'bout Africans and Africa, we necessarily must look way beyond "the Skull*" or "the Head*", which be metaphorical designations that somehow describe the geographical shape of the motherland.
P.S: "the skull" or "the head" can be understood both as "that which is forward", "the leadership"; or "the intelligence", "the conscience".
-Sudan.
-Congo.
-Jamaica.
-Benin.
-Trinidad.
-Senegal.
-The United States.
-Gabon.
-Mali.
-Brazil.
-Nigeria.
-Guadeloupe.
-Guinea.
-Tanzania.
-Cuba.
-Canada.
-Zimbabwe.
-Colombia.
-Venezuela.
-Chad.
-Liberia.
-Peru.
-Cameroon.
-Cape Verde.
-Mayetta.
-Togo.
-Ecuador.
-Ghana.
-Zambia.
-Argentina.
-Gambia.
-Central African Republic
-Mexico.
-South Africa.
-Botswana.
-Bolivia.
-The Comoros Islands.
-Haiti.
-Malawi.
-de Madagascar.
-Réunion Island.
-Burundi.
-The Netherlands.
-Guyana.
-Lesotho.
-Rwanda.
-The Democratic Republic of Congo
-Mauritania.
-The Dominican Republic.
-Somalia.
-Saint Lucia.
-Sierra Leone.
-Eritrea.
-Honduras.
-Angola, etc.
This, I think, is how we must understand the geography of Africa and Africans themselves in the 21st century. A global vision of the continent fits better the reality of a transcontinental Africa. Them geographic boundaries of the continent just not satisfactory at all if a proper account of the global african reality we wanna give. When talking 'bout Africans and Africa, we necessarily must look way beyond "the Skull*" or "the Head*", which be metaphorical designations that somehow describe the geographical shape of the motherland.
P.S: "the skull" or "the head" can be understood both as "that which is forward", "the leadership"; or "the intelligence", "the conscience".