The stories that we still have to confront
Chimamanda refers also to another issue that we always have to bear in mind when we reflect on our past, particularly our early origins. What, she asks, if our story was to start with the indigenous people, rather than with Columbus? At one time, stories about our people started with the arrival of Columbus, as if there was nothing before. It is for that reason that we celebrated “Discovery Day.â Columbus was said to have discovered us. Once when I wrote a piece questioning the concept of âDiscoveryâ, Strolling Scribbler, writing in the Vincentian newspaper responded and asked “If Columbus did not discover us, then who did?â When one American, after looking at one of the characters in one of her novels became shocked that African males were such abusers, she had to inform her that she had read American Psycho, featuring a serial killer. With that kind of thinking she had to conclude that all American males were serial killers.
The Single Story shows a people as one thing over and over again. It was meant to denigrate us. So, some of our parents and grandparents didnât want to hear anything about Africa. Some of them in North America refused to allow their children to look at Alex Haleyâs “Rootsâ. What we have to do is to confront the negatives and pull out the positives that can help to empower us. So, our resistance against the British and French speaks about our resilience and ability to survive and maintain our humanity intact and many different aspects of our culture.
But it is even more than this; for, as Chimamanda states, our cultures and lives are filled with many overlapping stories. Our societies are therefore complex, shaped by a multiplicity of forces. “The single story creates stereotypes…but they are incomplete. They make one story become the only story.â
Dr Adrian Fraser is a social commentator and historian.