Joseph Ki-Zerbo
(1922-2006)

Burkinabč Human Rights & Political Activist
1997 Right Livelihood Award Winner

birthdate: June 21
birthplace:
Toma, Burkina Faso

Joseph Ki-Zerbo of Burkina Faso was a History professor, politician and one of Africa's greatest thinkers. Forced into exile in 1983 after a revolutionary government came into power, he returned to his country in 1992 and founded and chaired his own political party, the Party for Democracy and Progress, and served in the Burkina Faso parliament until 2006. Joseph Ki-Zerbo wrote many books about African history and culture, including the world-famous 1972 book, History of Black Africa, that became internationally used in African History classes throughout the world. He was a strong advocate for a unified Africa, and argued first against colonialism and then after African nations won their independence, for African nations to be allowed to develop on their own without Western interference. He believed that the knowledge of indigenous cultures should be integrated into new technologies, not thrown away and replaced with Western ideas. In 1980 he founded the Center for African Development Studies to provide resources, research and ideas for African development. In 1997 Joseph Ki-Zerbo received the Right Livelihood Award (often referred to as the Alternative Nobel Prize) ...for a lifetime of scholarship and activism that has identified the key principles and processes by which Africans can create a better future.”

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