
6391 Article(s) by:
Golda Gatsey
Golda Gatsey is a freelance writer and customer relationship manager.


Liberating Ourselves from our Liberators
The truth of our global age is that autochthony, nativism, or heritage no longer define us exclusively. So, solidarity based on phenotype or heritage is dangerous.

How the Dutch government polices unwanted black bodies
Often championed as a human rights defender, the Netherlands continuously fails miserably in politically protecting and socially including refugees.

New Ways of Seeing The World
An interview with director Tala Hadid and producer Danny Glover of “A Narrow Frame of Midnight,” set amidst political turmoil in Morocco.

Letters to Hlompho Letsielo
In May 2015, Lesotho lost one of its most vibrant and creative minds, the photographer Hlompho Letsielo.

Dave Chappelle’s mother worked to free Congo
Yvonne Seon, later a college professor, thought Lumumba was a “decisive leader” that “cared deeply about his people.”

Black in Israel
The film ‘Red Leaves’ is a timely depiction of the Ethiopian-Israeli struggle.

The deal with China’s new military base in Djibouti
When are African states establishing joint military bases to secure trade routes or fight off piracy instead of diversifying the source of foreign influence on their territories?

What former Chadian dictator Hissène Habré’s July trial in Senegal means for his victims

Hamba kahle, Raphael Tenthani
Weekend Music Break No.74

Talking China in Africa at the PEN World Voices Festival in New York

Goodbye B.B. King. Here he is playing live in Kinshasa, then Zaire, 1974

Vice News and the war against Boko Haram
It’s not really about Nigeria, and it’s not for Nigerians. Rather it’s a story, popular in America, about brave soldiers fighting terrorists.

The old is dying and the young ones have just been born
These young ones who have just been born do not respect authority simply because the rules say they should.

We are angels, victims of everybody
Looking inside ourselves and working on the dark hearts of our colonial crap.

Annual NGO ranking shows that the “white savior” status quo remains intact

Let’s talk about Charlayne Hunter-Gault’s e-book on “Corrective Rape” in South Africa

Black Film, White Masks
Namibian filmmaker, Perivi John Katjavivi: The black voice in cinema occurs on the margins and is filtered, distorted, watered-down, negotiated, corrupted.

To be young, privileged and black in a world of white hegemony
To bear witness to the cacophony of Rhodes Must Fall, as though trying to recall the days of a revolution I was born too late to witness.