Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Table of Contents
- Translator's Preface
- Dedication
- Black German
- White Mother, Black Father
- Our Roots in Cameroon
- My Father's Story
- The Human Menagerie
- School
- The Reichstag is Burning
- Circus Child
- The Death of My Father
- Berlin-Karlshorst
- Undesirable
- As an “Ethiopian” in Sweden
- On My Knees in Gratitude
- The Lord is My Shepherd
- The Nuremberg Laws
- War Begins
- Hotel Excelsior
- Munich
- Hotel Alhambra
- Cinecittà
- Münchhausen
- Thoughts Are Free
- Forced Laborer
- New Quarters
- Air Raid
- Fear, Nothing but Fear
- Aryans
- A Miracle
- Liberated! Liberated?
- The Russians
- Dosvidanya
- Victors and Non-Victors
- Mixed Feelings
- Lessons in Democracy
- Displaced Person
- A Fateful Meeting
- An Excursion
- A New Family
- Butzbach
- Disasters Big and Small
- A Job with the US Army
- A Meeting with Some “Countrymen”
- Show Business
- Reunion with My Brother and Sister
- Workless
- Theater
- Radio
- Television
- Hard Times
- In the Sanatorium
- A Poisoned Atmosphere
- An Opportunity at Last
- The Decolonization of Africa
- Studying in Paris
- A New Beginning
- The Afrika-Bulletin
- Terra Incognita
- African Relations
- In My Father's Homeland
- Officer of the Federal Intelligence Service
- A New Afro-German Community
- Experiences
- Light and Dark
- Homestory Deutschland
- A Journey to the (Still) GDR
- Back to the Theater
- Loss and Renewal
- Last Roles
- Reflecting on My Life
- Thanks
- Explanatory Notes
- Chronology of Historical Events
- Further Reading in English
The Afrika-Bulletin
from Black German
- Frontmatter
- Table of Contents
- Translator's Preface
- Dedication
- Black German
- White Mother, Black Father
- Our Roots in Cameroon
- My Father's Story
- The Human Menagerie
- School
- The Reichstag is Burning
- Circus Child
- The Death of My Father
- Berlin-Karlshorst
- Undesirable
- As an “Ethiopian” in Sweden
- On My Knees in Gratitude
- The Lord is My Shepherd
- The Nuremberg Laws
- War Begins
- Hotel Excelsior
- Munich
- Hotel Alhambra
- Cinecittà
- Münchhausen
- Thoughts Are Free
- Forced Laborer
- New Quarters
- Air Raid
- Fear, Nothing but Fear
- Aryans
- A Miracle
- Liberated! Liberated?
- The Russians
- Dosvidanya
- Victors and Non-Victors
- Mixed Feelings
- Lessons in Democracy
- Displaced Person
- A Fateful Meeting
- An Excursion
- A New Family
- Butzbach
- Disasters Big and Small
- A Job with the US Army
- A Meeting with Some “Countrymen”
- Show Business
- Reunion with My Brother and Sister
- Workless
- Theater
- Radio
- Television
- Hard Times
- In the Sanatorium
- A Poisoned Atmosphere
- An Opportunity at Last
- The Decolonization of Africa
- Studying in Paris
- A New Beginning
- The Afrika-Bulletin
- Terra Incognita
- African Relations
- In My Father's Homeland
- Officer of the Federal Intelligence Service
- A New Afro-German Community
- Experiences
- Light and Dark
- Homestory Deutschland
- A Journey to the (Still) GDR
- Back to the Theater
- Loss and Renewal
- Last Roles
- Reflecting on My Life
- Thanks
- Explanatory Notes
- Chronology of Historical Events
- Further Reading in English
Summary
At the end of my studies I found a permanent salaried post with a publisher of economic journals in Cologne. I found a rented room, worked Monday to Friday in Cologne and traveled back to the family in Butzbach on the weekends. Finding an apartment in Cologne turned out to be a problem; the landlords we approached almost always refused to take a family with four children, a black father and a refugee mother. After a long search and with the help of a housing cooperative we were able to move our big family into a small terraced house in 1963.
In the mid-1960s I met Bertram Otto, the head of the Berto publishing house in Bonn; he published mainly Christian books, but had discovered a passion for the new Africa. He had succeeded in getting funding for a new German-language magazine that would report on political, economic and cultural events in Africa. He offered me the position of managing editor, because he knew that I was relatively knowledgeable about the topic. I didn't have to think long before I accepted. We stood in different political camps, but in relation to Africa we were on the same ground right from the start. We both wanted to correct the false image of Africa and Africans that existed in the German mind.
The Cold War gave an edge to the business of reporting on Africa. It split the world into two camps, into friend and foe. The young African states actually didn't want to be drawn into the conflict. But they needed aid and support for their national development and sought it from the two blocs.
The financial resources of the Afrika-Bulletin were very limited. The publishing house had rented three rooms in Cologne for the editorial team. Bertram Otto had to be thrifty. That also applied to the recruitment of colleagues who knew what they were doing but didn't have to be paid too much. They had to be people who were more interested in the cause than in the money. At first there were only two of us, and we wrote articles under various pseudonyms to hide the fact that two writers and a secretary made up the whole staff.
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- Black GermanAn Afro-German Life in the Twentieth Century By Theodor Michael, pp. 174 - 175Publisher: Liverpool University PressPrint publication year: 2017