Africa. Born Before Borders™

23 | What I Learned While Telling Africa’s Story

12 min · 8 de mar de 2026
Portada del episodio 23 | What I Learned While Telling Africa’s Story

Descripción

This is the penultimate episode of Born Before Borders. Over the past episodes, we’ve explored Africa’s history, identity, colonisation, independence, migration, and the global systems that continue to shape the continent today. But somewhere along that journey, something unexpected happened. The deeper I researched Africa’s past, the more I discovered a powerful truth: generations before us had already been asking the same questions. In this episode, I reflect on some of the biggest things I’ve learned while creating this podcast: the depth of African intellectual tradition, the vision of early post-colonial leaders, and the quiet awakening happening among younger generations today as more people reconnect with language, culture, and identity.

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episode 23 | What I Learned While Telling Africa’s Story artwork

23 | What I Learned While Telling Africa’s Story

This is the penultimate episode of Born Before Borders. Over the past episodes, we’ve explored Africa’s history, identity, colonisation, independence, migration, and the global systems that continue to shape the continent today. But somewhere along that journey, something unexpected happened. The deeper I researched Africa’s past, the more I discovered a powerful truth: generations before us had already been asking the same questions. In this episode, I reflect on some of the biggest things I’ve learned while creating this podcast: the depth of African intellectual tradition, the vision of early post-colonial leaders, and the quiet awakening happening among younger generations today as more people reconnect with language, culture, and identity.

8 de mar de 202612 min
episode 22 | African Borders artwork

22 | African Borders

Africa is not naturally unstable. It is structurally destabilised. In this episode of Born Before Borders, we examine one of the most protected myths of modern politics: that African borders are neutral lines on a map. They are not. Drawn in European conference rooms, these borders split ethnic groups, cut trade routes, fractured labour markets, and locked diverse societies into artificial states built for extraction We explore: * Why migration from and within Africa is often economic logic * How colonial economies were designed to export raw materials, not build internal value chains * Why national unity campaigns struggle inside structurally fragmented states * How centralised power turns elections into existential battles * Who benefits from keeping Africa politically divided * And what it would mean to move beyond inherited borders

15 de feb de 202614 min
episode 19 | Reclaiming Identity: African Names & Language artwork

19 | Reclaiming Identity: African Names & Language

Before borders were drawn, before colonial records and foreign tongues defined us, Africans named themselves with meaning. Names were history. And Language was philosophy. In this episode of Born Before Borders, we explore how African names and languages were disrupted, suppressed, and deliberately sidelined under colonial rule by design. We trace how naming systems carried memory, lineage, spirituality, and worldview, and how colonial power worked to replace them with labels that were easier to control. This is a deep dive into: * How African naming traditions functioned before colonisation * Why indigenous languages were banned, punished, and devalued * The psychological consequences of being taught to think and speak through borrowed frameworks * What it really means to reclaim identity today — without romanticising the past In the closing segment, we connect these themes to the present, examining current events in Venezuela and the long, consistent pattern of imperial intervention, economic warfare, and resource extraction that continues to shape the modern world.

4 de ene de 202614 min