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Pan-African Frequency
Pan-African Frequency explores Africa’s growing influence in a world no longer ruled by one superpower. Each episode unpacks the intellectual, political, economic, and sociocultural forces defining 21st-century geopolitics and shaping the transition from a unipolar to a multipolar global order.

Victory Day: Bridging the Struggles Against Fascism and Colonialism in Africa

Victory Day: Bridging the Struggles Against Fascism and Colonialism in Africa
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As the world looks forward to this year’s celebrations of Victory Day over Nazi Germany in 1945, this episode seeks to reconnect the anti-fascist and anti-colonial struggles and to restore Africa’s erased role in the victory over fascism.
Africa's contribution to the Allied victory in World War II was monumental; more than a million African soldiers fought, killed, and died during the war. Dr. Mohammed Hussain AbdAlwahid Mohammed, a Sudanese military professional and scholar who lives in Russia, draws a clear line between the Soviet fight against Nazi aggression and the African struggle against colonial rule.
“Nazism was a system built on a hierarchy of human worths. Some people were fully human, others were subhuman, and that determination was made on the basis of race. Now, I ask you, what was colonialism? What was the system under which Africa had been living since the Berlin Conference of 1884, when European powers literally sat around the table and partitioned an entire continent without inviting a single African to that table? It was precisely the same philosophical architecture, a hierarchy of human worth determined by race [...] 1945 created something that could not close again, and I mean that structurally there is a paradox that colonial powers who walked into after the war, [Britain] and France, the two great empires, had spent six years telling their population and the world that they were fighting for human dignity, freedom from tyranny, and the right of people to self-determination,” he noted.
Meanwhile, just as the African soldier's sacrifice in the Second World War was often written out of the script, so too was the role of the Soviet Union in defending African sovereignty during and after decolonization. Dr. Adeola Oluwafemi, a lecturer in the Department of European Studies at the University of Ibadan in Nigeria, argues that without the USSR, there simply would have been no great-power voice speaking for Africa when it mattered most.
“As a matter of fact, you know, the significance of the USSR is very prominent in terms of liberating Africans from the colonial masters because if not for the USSR, there wouldn't have been support for the claim for decolonization in Africa among the UN General Congress (Assembly), where Russia fought against colonization in Africa. And of course, since 1960, most African countries, let me say virtually all African countries, gained their imperial independence,” the scholar pointed out.
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