Friday, March 09, 2007

Mrs. Amy Jacques Garvey (1896-1973): Pan-Africanist In Her Own Right

Amy Jacques Garvey

(1896-1973)

Amy Jacques Garvey, wife of Marcus Garvey, did not derive her legitimacy from the status of her husband. She was a leading Pan-Africanist and Black Nationalist in her own right. Standing by her man through thick and thin, always advancing the cause of black liberation, she played influential roles in the movement as journalist, feminist and race activist.

Born in Jamaica, she moved to the USA in 1917 where she encountered the charismatic Marcus Garvey, who was the driving force for the movement instilling race pride and seeking race redemption for people of African descent. The United Negro Improvement Association (UNIA) galvanized and energized Black people from Harlem, USA, to Capetown, South Africa. At this time, Marcus Garvey was in his glory. and after 1922, when he married Amy Jacques, they both personified the movement.

In 1919, she became the Secretary General of the UNIA, a post she held for over half a century proselytizing and propagating Garvey's philosophy of black consciousness, self-help and economic independence. From 1924 to 1927, she was the associate editor of the UNIA's newspaper, The Negro World, where she advanced her feminist/nationalist ideas with the inauguration of a new page entitled "Our Women and What They Think."

Like Yaa Asantewaa, she chided the men to assert their manhood or else the women would have to pick up the struggle. She warned that " ... Negroes everywhere must be independent, God being our guide. Mr. Black man, watch your step! Ethiopia's queens will reign again, and her Amazons protect her shores and people. Strengthen your shaking knees, and move forward, or we will displace you and lead on to victory and glory."

While her husband was in prison on charges of mail fraud in connection with Black Star Line (his shipping line), she acted as his personal representative, rallying to his defense, making speeches to the branches of the UNIA and lobbying for his release. In order to raise funds for his defense, she published two volumes of Philosophy and Opinions of Marcus Garvey, a collection of his speeches and writings.

After his release from the Atlanta Federal Penitentiary, he was taken to New Orleans and deported from the USA, never to return. She returned to Jamaica with him and they subsequently toured England, France and Germany, all the while continuing her writing as contributing editor of The Negro World. When Garvey moved to England, she remained in Jamaica with their one-year -old and four-year-old sons.

After Garvey's death in 1940, she continued the struggle for Black Nationalism, becoming contributing editor to The African, a journal published in Harlem in the 1940s, and founding the African Study Circle of the World in Jamaica toward the end of the decade. In 1944, she wrote her outstanding piece, "A Memorandum Correlative of Africa, West Indies and the Americas", which she sent to representatives of the UN pressing them to adopt an African Freedom Charter. In 1963, she published her own book, Garvey and Garveyism, and later published two collections of essays, Black Power in America and The Impact of Garvey in Africa and Jamaica.

On July 25, 1973, Amy Jacques Garvey died as she lived, active in the struggle for black empowerment and liberation.
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Books

Daughters of Africa: An International Anthology of Words and Writings by Women of African Descent: From the Ancient Egyptian to the Present, Margaret Busby (ed.), Ballantine Books, 1992.

Garvey: Africa, Europe, the Americas, Rupert Lewis and Maureen Warner-Lewis (eds.), Africa World Press, 1994.

Garvey and Garveyism, Amy Jacques Garvey, Collier Books, 1970.

The Philosophy and Opinions of Marcus Garvey, compiled by Amy Jacques Garvey, Frank Cass, 1967.

Race First: The Ideological and Organizational Struggles of Marcus Garvey and the Universal Negro Improvement Association, Tony Martin, Majority Press, 1996.

The Veiled Garvey: The Life and Times of Amy Jacques Garvey, Ula Yvette Taylor, University of North Carolina Press, 2002.

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