‎Africa’s first reparations festival set to take place in Nairobi in October ‎

‎An unprecedented ‎continental festival to reclaim history, resist injustice and repair Africa’s future.

KBC Digital
5 Min Read

Hundreds of people, including artists, musicians, policymakers, ‎philanthropists, activists and cultural educators, are expected to be in Nairobi on the 22 and 23 ‎October for the groundbreaking reparations festival.

The WAKATI WETU: It’s Our Time – To ‎Resist, Repair and Reclaim will take place at the Entim Sidai wellness sanctuary.

‎Over the course ‎of two days, festival participants will discuss and strategise on a carefully selected list of issues ‎ranging from climate justice to economic justice; from historical injustices to contemporary ‎legacies of the slave trade and colonialism.

‎The Wakati Wetu festival is the first of its kind in Africa. It coincides with the African Union’s ‎(AU) theme of the year, which calls for justice for Africans and people of African descent ‎through reparations. The festival seeks to draw significant public attention to the issue of ‎reparations.

‎During the two-day activity series, the organisers have curated a series of sessions ‎aimed at unpacking the limited public knowledge and interest in reparations in Africa, as well as ‎exploring what civil society can do to change this trajectory.

‎Five different organisations spread across Africa and the diaspora have come together to ‎organise this groundbreaking event. Dr Liliane Umubyeyi is the Co-Founder of the African ‎Futures Lab (AFaLab), one of the conveners of the festival.

She said a principal reason for ‎organising the festival this year is to elevate and socialise the discourse on reparatory justice on ‎the continent.

‎She noted that the festival intends to demonstrate how and why reparatory ‎justice should be approached from an intersectional lens. She said: “Climate change, debt crisis, ‎forced migration, and deepening socio-economic inequalities are not disconnected phenomena; ‎they are contemporary expressions of a global system of racial domination that remains ‎structurally intact.”

‎Mr William Carew, Head of Secretariat of the African Union ECOSOCC, supporter of the festival, ‎echoes those sentiments.

Mr Carew said the “Wakati Wetu festival is unprecedented for many ‎reasons. However, primarily, it provides a platform for multisectoral interaction among policymakers, civil society groups, cultural actors, and ordinary people.

As the civil society organ ‎of the African Union, we collaborate to hold such gatherings as testaments to the AU’s ‎determination to bring ordinary Africans along our collective journey to achieve the Africa we ‎want.”

‎It is worth recalling that in February of this year, the Assembly of Heads of State of the African ‎Union (AU) declared 2025 the Year of Justice for Africans and people of African descent, with a ‎focus on reparations. This declaration was then followed by the AU’s decision to extend the ‎theme of the year to a Decade of Reparations, spanning from 2026 to 2036.

This milestone was ‎the culmination of collective efforts and collaboration between civil society organisations,
‎various organs of the African Union and Member States.

‎The Wakati Wetu festival is also ‎coming at the back of calls by various African leaders for the reform of the current global ‎systems and structures that continue to subjugate and dominate Africans and Afro-descendants ‎globally. It is, therefore, a momentous opportunity for the reparatory justice movement to take ‎the debates outside of conference rooms to the fields of public imagination and conversation.

‎Organisers of the festival have indicated that this year’s event is a precursor to what they hope ‎will be the beginning of such gatherings over the next decade.

‎“This year’s event is just the ‎opener. The campaign for justice, healing, and accountability will continue until it is resolved. ‎We are therefore calling on all Africans and people of African descent who are interested in the ‎total liberation and genuine development of Africa, to join us at Entim Sidai, as we chart a path ‎for a continent that is free from racial and colonial entrapments,” Dr Umubyeyi added. ‎

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