Virtual World Celebrities
Home | Sign In | Join Now | Find Friends | Learn More | Help Center | Media Center
Home > Weblo Celebrities > Great Hero > MARCUS GARVEY
MARCUS GARVEY

MARCUS GARVEY

Register Celebrity Site
New! Click Add/Edit Content button beside categories below to add/edit content Make Offer
Owner Profile WEBLOJAM  Offline Now! Offline Now!  |  Send a Message Send a Message  |  Add as a Friend Add as a Friend  |  Share Share  |  Report Abuse Report Abuse  |  

Asset Summary

Votes:1
  Vote Now
Poor Good
 
Rate   Rate 1Rate 2Rate 3Rate 4Rate 5
Score   5/10
Hits   334  
Stats  
Country   Jamaica
Initially Purchased   2007-12-18
Return   1700.00%
Updated   One month or more
Pictures Photo Gallery
Videos Video Gallery
Comments Comments
Owner Message Owner's Message
Description Biography
Asset Community Asset Community
News News
Owner Others Assets Owner's Other Assets
Poll Poll
Latest Visitors Latest Visitors
MARCUS GARVEY Store View All Products              Expand/Collapse
Marcus Garvey and Universal Negro Improvement Association Papers Marcus Garvey and...
Price: $69.78
Philosophy and Opinions of Marcus Garvey, Or, Africa for the Africans Philosophy and Op...
Price: $11.95
Marcus Garvey and Universal Negro Improvement Association Papers Marcus Garvey and...
Price: $18.40
Marcus Garvey and Universal Negro Improvement Association Papers, November 1927-August 1940 Marcus Garvey and...
Price: $62.55
Philosophy and Opinions of Marcus Garvey Philosophy and Op...
Price: $170.00
Marcus Garvey - A Giant of Black Politics Marcus Garvey - A...
Price: $8.79
Marcus Garvey And Universal Negro Improvement Association Papers Marcus Garvey And...
Price: $59.95
Selected Writings And Speeches Of Marcus Garvey Selected Writings...
Price: $1.99
Recent Updates Expand/Collapse
No recent updates. Suggest / add some content for this asset.
Related Fan Sites
Bob Marley

Latest Visitors to MARCUS GARVEY

sarkozy
sarkozy
more than a day
WEBLOJAM
WEBLOJAM
more than a day
justinottawa
justinottawa
more than a day
Webloid
Webloid
more than a day
jammar
jammar
more than a day
gully
gully
more than a day
mhoonshine
mhoonshine
more than a day

MARCUS GARVEY News

Read All News         Add/Edit Content  Expand/Collapse
Letter of the day: So many ahead of US achievement Letter of the day: So many ...   Nov 12, 2008 18:35:04
We produced Marcus Garvey who has been a beacon of light to many in the world, especially the US in the early 20th century; and notice that CNN played ...View Full Article
Valve explosion at Petrojam refinery in Kingston Valve explosion at Petrojam...   Nov 12, 2008 18:35:04
A safety valve exploded at the Petrojam refinery on Marcus Garvey Drive in Kingston Saturday resulting in an oil spill that has affected the nearby...
D'Cup quarter-final spots up for grabs D'Cup quarter-final spots u...   Nov 12, 2008 18:34:46
Rusea's are coming off a big victory over Marcus Garvey at the same venue and will be confident of returning to the last eight in successive season...
BET's 'AMERICAN GANGSTER' Takes on J. Edgar Hoover and COINTELPRO ... BET's 'AMERICAN GANGSTER' T...   Nov 12, 2008 18:34:46
... implacable enemy of Communism, Hoover was often at odds with left-leaning Black leaders throughout his reign, including Marcus Garvey and Paul ...
Read All News

MARCUS GARVEY Photos

View Photo Gallery         Add/Edit Content  Expand/Collapse
Back
Next

MARCUS GARVEY Videos

View Video Gallery         Add/Edit Content  Expand/Collapse
Back
Next

Message from the Publicist of MARCUS GARVEY

Expand/Collapse
GREAT HERO

MARCUS GARVEY Biography

Add/Edit Content  Expand/Collapse
Marcus Garvey(1887-1940)
  
Black Nationalist, Pan-Africanist; The father of contemporary black Nationalism.

Born in St. Ann's Bay, Jamaica, on August 17, 1887, Marcus Garvey was the youngest of 11 children. Garvey moved to Kingston at the age of 14, found work in a printshop, and became acquainted with the abysmal living conditions of the laboring class. He quickly involved himself in social reform, participating in the first Printers' Union strike in Jamaica in 1907 and in setting up the newspaper The Watchman. Leaving the island to earn money to finance his projects, he visited Central and South America, amassing evidence that Black people everywhere were victims of discrimination. He visited the Panama Canal Zone and saw the conditions under which the West Indians lived and worked. He went to Ecuador, Nicaragua, Honduras, Colombia and Venezuala. Everywhere, blacks were experiencing great hardships.

Garvey returned to Jamaica distressed at the situation in Central America, and appealed to Jamaica's colonial government to help improve the plight of West Indian workers in Central America. His appeal fell on deaf ears. Garvey also began to lay the groundwork of the Universal Negro Improvement Association, to which he was to devote his life. Undaunted by lack of enthusiasm for his plans, Garvey left for England in 1912 in search of additional financial backing. While there, he met a Sudanese-Egyptian journalist, Duse Mohammed Ali. While working for Ali's publication African Times and Oriental Review, Garvey began to study the history of Africa, particularly, the exploitation of Black peoples by colonial powers. He read Booker T. Washington's Up From Slavery, which advocated black self-help.

In 1914 Garvey organized the Universal Negro Improvement Association and its coordinating body, the African Communities League. In 1920 the organization held its first convention in New York. The convention opened with a parade down Harlem's Lenox Avenue. That evening, before a crowd of 25,000, Garvey outlined his plan to build an African nation-state. In New York City his ideas attracted popular support, and thousands enrolled in the UNIA. He began publishing the newspaper The Negro World and toured the United States preaching Black nationalism to popular audiences. His efforts were successful, and soon, the association boasted over 1,100 branches in more than 40 countries. Most of these Branches were located in the United States, which had become the UNIA's base of operations. There were, however, offices in several Caribbean countries, Cuba having the most. Branches also existed in places such as Panama, Costa Rica, Ecuador, Venezuela, Ghana, Sierra Leone, Liberia, Namibia and South Africa. He also launched some ambitious business ventures, notably the Black Star Shipping Line.

In the years following the organization's first convention, the UNIA began to decline in popularity. With the Black Star Line in serious financial difficulties, Garvey promoted two new business organizations — the African Communities League and the Negro Factories Corporation. He also tried to salvage his colonization scheme by sending a delegation to appeal to the League of Nations for transfer to the UNIA of the African colonies taken from Germany during World War I.

Financial betrayal by trusted aides and a host of legal entanglements (based on charges that he had used the U.S. mail to defraud prospective investors) eventually led to Garvey's imprisonment in Atlanta Federal Penitentiary for a five-year term. In 1927 his half-served sentence was commuted, and he was deported to Jamaica by order of President Calvin Coolidge.

Garvey then turned his energies to Jamaican politics, campaigning on a platform of self-government, minimum wage laws, and land and judicial reform. He was soundly defeated at the polls, however, because most of his followers did not have the necessary voting qualifications.

In 1935 Garvey left for England where, in near obscurity, he died on June 10, 1940, in a cottage in West Kensington.

Impact of Marcus Garvey

By Dr. John Henrik Clarke

When Marcus Garvey died in 1940 the role of the British Empire was already being challenged by India and the rising expectations of her African colonies. Marcus Garvey's avocation of African redemption and the restoration of the African state's sovereign political entity in world affairs was still a dream without fulfillment.

After the bombing of Pearl Harbor, December 7, 1941, the United States would enter, in a formal way, what had been up to that date strictly a European conflict. Marcus Garvey's prophesy about the European scramble to maintain dominance over the whole world was now a reality. The people of Africa and Asia had joined in this conflict but with different hopes, different dreams and many misgivings. Africans throughout the colonial world were mounting campaigns against this system which had robbed them of their nation-ness and their basic human-ness. The discovery and the reconsideration of the teachings of the honorable Marcus Mosiah Garvey were being rediscovered and reconsidered by a large number of African people as this world conflict deepened.

In 1945, when World War II was drawing to a close the 5th Pan-African Congress was called in Manchester, England. Some of the conventioneers were: George Padmore, Kwame Nkrumah, W.E.B. Dubois, Nnamdi Azikiwe of Nigeria, and Jomo Kenyatta of Kenya. Up to this time the previous Pan-African Congresses had mainly called for improvements in the educational status of the Africans in the colonies so that they would be prepared for self-rule when independence eventually came.

The Pan-African Congress in Manchester was radically different from all of the other congresses. For the first time Africans from Africa, Africans from the Caribbean and Africans from the United States had come together and designed a program for the future independence of Africa. Those who attended the conference were of many political persuasions and different ideologies, yet the teachings of Marcus Garvey were the main ideological basis for the 5th Pan-African congress in Manchester, England in 1945.

Some of the conveners of this Congress would return to Africa in the ensuing years to eventually lead their respective nations toward independence and beyond. In 1947, a Ghanaian student who had studied ten years in the United States, Dr. Kwame Nkrumah returned to Ghana on the invitation of Joseph B. Danquah, his former schoolmaster. Nkrumah would later become Prime Minister. In his fight for the complete Independence for the Gold Coast later to be known as Ghana, Kwame Nkrumah acknowledged his political indebtedness to the political teachings of Marcus Garvey.

On September 7, 1957, Ghana became a free self-governing nation, the first member of the British Commonwealth of Nations to become self-governing. Ghana would later develop a Black Star Line patterned after the maritime dreams of Marcus Garvey. My point here is that the African independence Explosion, which started with the Independence of Ghana, was symbolically and figuratively bringing the hopes of Marcus Garvey alive.

In the Caribbean Islands the concept of Federation and Political Union of all the islands was now being looked upon as a realizable possibility. Some constitutional reforms and changing attitudes, Born of this awareness, were improving the life of the people of these islands.

In the United States the Supreme Court's decision of 1954, outlawing segregation in school systems was greeted with mixed feelings of hope and skepticism by African-Americans. A year after this decision the Montgomery Bus Boycott, the Freedom Rides and the demand for equal pay for Black teachers that subsequently became a demand for equal education for all, would become part of the central force that would set the fight for liberation in motion.

The enemies of Africans, the world over were gathering their counter-forces while a large number of them pretended to be sympathetic to the African's cause. Some of these pretenders, both Black and White, were F.B.I. and other agents of the government whose mission it was to frustrate and destroy the Civil Rights Movement. In a different way the same thing was happening in Africa. The coups and counter-coups kept most African states from developing into the strong independent and sovereign states they had hoped to become.

While the Africans had gained control over their state's apparatus, the colonialist's still controlled the economic apparatus of most African states. Africans were discovering to their amazement that a large number of the Africans, who had studied abroad were a detriment to the aims and goals of their nation. None of them had been trained to rule an African state by the use of the best of African traditional forms and strategies. As a result African states, in the main, became imitations of European states and most of their leaders could justifiably be called Europeans with Black faces. They came to power without improving the lot of their people and these elitist governments continue until this day.

In most cases what went wrong was that as these leaders failed to learn the lessons of self-reliance and power preparation as advocated by Marcus Garvey and in different ways by Booker T. Washington, W.E.B Dubois, Elijah Muhammad and Malcolm X. Africa became infiltrated by foreign agents. Africans had forgotten, if they knew at all, that Africa is the world's richest continent, repository of the greatest mineral wealth in the world. They had not asked themselves nor answered the most critical question. If Africa is the world's richest continent, why is it so full of poor people? Marcus Garvey advocated that Africans control the wealth of Africa. He taught that control, control of resources, control of self, control of nation, requires preparation, Garveyism was about total preparation.

There is still no unified force in Africa calling attention to the need for this kind of preparation. This preparation calls for a new kind of education if Africans are to face the reality of their survival.

Owner's Other Assets

Expand/Collapse
ELKE THE STALLION Celebrity profile
ELKE THE STALLION
Hits: 9856
Return: 27400.00%
Votes: Good   +8
DEELISHIS Celebrity profile
DEELISHIS
Hits: 5821
Return: 14300.00%
Votes: Good   +6
DEMI LOVATO Celebrity profile
DEMI LOVATO
Hits: 26309
Return: 33500.00%
Votes: Good   +19
 Featured Celebrities   New Celebrities
DENISE MILANI DENISE MILANI
Owned By: balpin
Hits: 28340
Return: 94700.00%
Votes: Good   +113
Ana Hickmann Ana Hickmann
Owned By: yavanna
Hits: 20737
Return: 144800.00%
Votes: Good   +13
Lady GaGa   'Stefani Joanne Angelina Germanotta' Lady GaGa ...
Owned By: whiteshadow
Hits: 76309
Return: 91100.00%
Votes: Good   +153
Jessica Biel Jessica Biel
Owned By: yavanna
Hits: 31543
Return: 225700.00%
Votes: Good   +102
Royce Gracie Royce Gracie
Owned By: silas82
Hits: 668
Return: 600.00%
Votes: Good   +13
NASCAR NASCAR
Owned By: SpeedX55
Hits: 18365
Return: 117200.00%
Votes: Good   +111
Available Celebrities
Akio Kaneda
Date of Birth 13 October 1954, Tokyo, Japan Height 5' 6¼" (1.68 m)... Harumi | Kaneda ...
Maxime Raoust
Date of Birth 26 June 1989Pour info.... Javray) Maxime Raoust (Anselme) ...
Charlie Almloef
Date of Birth 24 December 1889, G
Nate Persing
Date of Birth 4 October 1982, Selinsgrove, Pennsylvania, USA Nickname Nate Shock Height 6' (...
Michael Waite
Height 5' 11" (1.80 m)Michael Waite... Directions (with Michael Waite)
Susana Beltran
Date of Birth 12 August 1942, Rosario, Santa Fe, Argentina Trivia Anita BeltrSearch Result Page...
 Community Topics  Community Members Visit MARCUS GARVEY Community          
MARCUS GARVEY - Community
Topics Total Posts
Welcome to MARCUS GARVEY
 
0
 
Add New Topics  
 

Polls

 
No content has been added to this space by the member. Come back and participate in this poll.
 

Comments

See All Comments         
Total Comments (4)
To post comment you should be logged in.
Webloid
Comment By: Webloid
Date: Dec 26, 2007 17:00:01
Webloid approved!
WAREMAN
Comment By: wareman
Date: Dec 22, 2007 13:17:44
Great, Rate Booker T. Washington!
gully
Comment By: gully
Date: Dec 20, 2007 18:58:55
excellent site
justinottawa
Comment By: justinottawa
Date: Dec 18, 2007 16:04:37
Questions & Answers             Expand/Collapse
 
Terms of Service | Privacy Policy | Company Info | Contact Us | | Add Weblo to My Favorites | Media Center | Help | Advertise | Site Map
Copyright © 1994-2009 Weblo.com Inc. All rights reserved.
All times on the site are indicated in Eastern Time Zone (US & Canada)