It was in 1919, when Dubois represented the NAACP at the Paris Peace Conference that he decided on organizing a Pan-African conference, aimed at bringing Africa and Africa's problems to the knowledge of the entire world. Although the conference eventually was not organized, mainly because Dubois failed to coagulate sufficient participants and other African- American organizations, it reflected Dubois Pan-Africanism and the idea of double conscious.
Indeed, Dubois promoted and sustained the idea that, in order for Blacks to be free anywhere, they should be free everywhere. At that point, after the end of the First World War, there were only two free countries in Africa: Liberia and Ethiopia, the rest being European colonies. Dubois wanted to tie the Negro emancipation and civil rights campaigns in the United States with a more global idea of universal civil rights and Black emancipation on the African continent as well.
The conference was eventually organized in 1921, Dubois's intellectual approach was not successful in generating enough momentum to create any real change or action for the future. However, at the end of the conference, Dubois traveled to Africa for the first time and this was an opportunity to better understand Black roots and philosophy. He would continue to participate throughout his life to Pan-African conferences and he would meet with many of the intellectuals and revolutionaries who would obtain independence for the countries in Africa after 1945. It was also that Dubois would continue to protest against imperialism in Africa throughout his life and advocate for African independence.
Dubois has remained in history as a great civil rights...
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