Arts and Culture

Soyinka proposes Heritage Voyage of Return as slave trade reparations

NOBEL laureate Professor Wole Soyinka has weighed in on the reparation for Africa debate, recommending what he termed ‘The Heritage Voyage of Return’.

The issue of reparatory justice for Africa for the trans-Atlantic Slave Trade has been raging for years, with different individuals suggesting various forms of compensation.

Professor Soyinka shared his idea on Tuesday, March 25, in a keynote entitled ‘Remembrance, and the Reparatory Ethos, 2025’ he delivered at the United Nations’ annual ceremony in observance of the International Day of Remembrance of the Victims of Slavery and the Transatlantic Slave Trade, under the theme ‘Acknowledge the past. Repair the present. Build a future of dignity and justice.’

It was held at the UN Headquarters in New York. It was an official plenary meeting of the UN General Assembly. Others who spoke at the event were UN Secretary-General António Guterres, President of the 79th session of the UN General Assembly Philemon Yang of Cameroon and Permanent Representatives of all 193 UN member states.

For Professor Soyinka, ‘The Heritage Voyage of Return’ differs from previous propositions. His proposal, he said, “is a lived-in exposition as a moving Remembrance monument, a transitional warehouse of a continent’s past, present and future, a vibrant statement on a continent’s interrupted history. A special Honour Gallery will house artifacts looted from the African continent but since returned under the spirit and ethos of Restitution. Seminars. Readings. Africa-themed films. 

“Documentaries. Installations. Clinics and lifestyle parades. Music from Africa and the Diaspora. A unique library and manuscript collection. Archeological retrievals. An exhumed slave vessel. The boat will take off from the Diaspora, make a call at representative ports of Slavery connection, positive or negative, on its way to the West African coast. A television crew on board broadcasts events to the rest of the world. Primarily for descendants of the enslaved, it is also open to others—that is, others who are equally embroiled in the quest for a new humanity that embraces, not excludes, that is curious, not foreclosed, that still lays claim to conscience as the touchstone of the rational species.”

Continuing, the Nobel Laureate explained that the “nature of reparatory justice that befits the magnitude of slavery wrongs can only be symbolic, gestural. Yes, but also morally and therapeutically propulsive, one that goes to the core of a continent’s humanity, vividly expressed in its arts and spirituality. It is a symbolic voyage of return, one that stands to become an annual fixture.

“Effectively, it offers no more than a continuation of UNESCO’s work on the Routes of Enslaved Peoples, beamed deservedly, at the African continent. HVR is a voyage of Learning, Leisure, and Linkage. It is not only feasible, it is imperative. Yes, such a voyage presumes to teach the world, to bring the world into confrontation with centuries of wrongs and possibly a recovery of its lost humanity.

“It is however not designed to be a vessel of recrimination, but a floating festival of peaceful options and neglected knowledge. Glorified tourism? Why not? But Tourism “with an attitude”. This is a return, not just to a wronged continent, but a return of the world to its holistic potential, to what it can be, shorn of irrational concepts, embedded prejudice, lust for power and domination. It will be manifested as a first furlong in a voyage towards, put simply, a re-insertion of human in that grossly depleted word: humanity.”

READ ALSO: Why I considered myself failed mechanic — Wole Soyinka

Akintayo Abodunrin

Recent Posts

Youths must stop seeing policy as abstract, should spearhead conversations that affect them —Omolola Lipede, social entrepreneur, UNECA Fellow

Omolola Lipede is the Chief Programme Officer at Kayode Alabi Leadership Initiative (KLCI), the Regional…

20 minutes ago

‘Fuel prices have gone up, food is unaffordable, now, education, our only ladder out of poverty, is being taken away from us’

At the Petroleum Training Institute (PTI) in Effurun, Delta State, fresh matriculants sat in neat…

45 minutes ago

Some etiquettes our parents teachers taught us

Good manners or etiquettes include a range of behaviours that promote respect, kindness and consideration…

1 hour ago

NIGERIAN JOLLOF RICE: A delightful meal for any occasion

Nigerian jollof rice is a beloved dish across West Africa, and when infused with a…

1 hour ago

‘PDP built strong individuals, ignored strong institutions, these strong individuals are now destroying the party with impunity’

The feverish defection of politicians and their supporters from one political party to another, mostly…

2 hours ago

Nigerian agriculture should go beyond cutlasses, hoes; it needs intellectual youths, tech to blossom —Olayemi Ojeokun, Nigerian US-based agronomist, sustainability advocate

Olayemi Ojeokun is a Nigerian US-based scholar, agronomist, and sustainability advocate. In this interview by…

2 hours ago

Welcome

Install

This website uses cookies.