Courtesy of Elizabeth Seaton
Earle E. Seaton provides us with a powerful example of
what happens when the Diaspora meets the Continent. This son of the African
Diaspora made significant contributions to the struggle for independence in
Tanganyika and later in building the young nations, Tanzania, Seychelles, and
Uganda.
Seaton was born in Bermuda February 29, 1924. He graduated from Berkeley
Institute as class Valedictorian in 1941. He attended Howard University in
Washington, DC; Seaton met his wife Alberta Jones at Howard. Seaton graduated
from Howard in 1945 and then joined London University to study law. Pan
Africanism was ripe in Britain at the time Seaton was there. The 5th Pan
African Congress had just met in Manchester in 1945. The Congress was organized
by leaders from Africa as well as the Diaspora; Jommo Kenyatta, Kwame Nkrumah,
and Peter Abrahams from South Africa were among the Congress' organizers.
Seaton was in London in the aftermath of the Pan African Congress, a time when
Pan-African consciousness was ripe. Seaton met Thomas Marealle from Tanganyika
in Britain and the two became friends. He learned to speak Kiswahili and became
acquainted with East Africans in Britain.
Marealle helped convince Seaton to move to Tanganyika from Britain. He moved to
Tanganyika in August 1948 and opened a law office. The Tanganyika African
Association consulted Seaton on legal matters. One of his first major cases
with significant implications for the territory was to prepare a case at the UN
on behalf of the Meru people. Seaton appeared before the UN Trusteeship Council
in 1952 and once again presented his case on behalf of the Meru. Seaton and
Japhet Kirilo wrote a small book entitled The Meru Land Case that presented the
Meru case against land appropriation.
The
Meru case was the first instance of indigenous people petitioning before the UN
Trusteeship Commission. The British were evicting the Meru to open up land for
settlers-Afrikaners and Europeans- at the time. Seaton and Japhet Kirilo
travelled to New York to petition the UN on behalf of the Meru. Seaton
presented the Meru case at the UN Trusteeship Council and the General Assembly.
Kirilo presented to the UN in Swahili and Seaton translated to English. The
presentation of the Meru case to the UN was widely publicized in East Africa;
it helped raise political awareness in the territories. As Nyerere would later
recount: “It was the Meru Land case which first attracted international attention
to the Trusteeship Territory of Tanganyika in the post-War world…The fact that
the matter was apparently the exclusive concern of one of the tribes should not
lead to underestimation…” Indeed, Seaton made significant contributions to
raising political awareness in Tanganyika, and as such, made contributions to
the independence struggle.
The Seaton family
moved to Houston, Texas in 1953. Seaton earned a PhD in international relations
from the University of Southern California in 1961. His work on behalf of
Tanganyika was not left unrecognized; the Tanganyika government recruited
Seaton to work in the Ministry of Foreign Affairs after independence. Seaton
returned to Tanganyika in 1962 and spent the next 10 years serving the nation,
first in the Ministry of Foreign Affairs 1962 to 1964, as a judge from 1965 to
1969, and lastly, as Tanzania’s Legal Counsel at the UN from 1969-1971. Nyerere
recognized the important contributions Seaton made and thus recruited him to
come to Tanganyika in 1962.
Courtesy of tanzaniaphotos @twitter
Seaton returned to Bermuda in 1972 and served as the
first black judge in his home country. This would not be the last time he made
his mark in East Africa. He moved to Seychelles in 1979 and became the
country’s Chief Justice. He was the first black to hold the position. Seaton
retired as the Chief Justice in 1980 and moved to the US. Once again, Seaton
responded to the call to go back to East Africa in 1990. He moved to Uganda in
1990 to serve as the Appellate Judge in the Supreme Court. He returned to the
US in 1992 and passed away in 1993.
Seaton made significant contributions to the independence struggle in Tanganyika; furthermore, he helped to build the young nations of Tanzania, Seychelles, and finally, Uganda. Seaton presents one example of how people of the African Diaspora have made significant contributions to African nations. Africans will remember Earle E. Seaton as a trailblazer!
Seaton made significant contributions to the independence struggle in Tanganyika; furthermore, he helped to build the young nations of Tanzania, Seychelles, and finally, Uganda. Seaton presents one example of how people of the African Diaspora have made significant contributions to African nations. Africans will remember Earle E. Seaton as a trailblazer!
© Azaria Mbughuni
azmbughuni@gmail.com
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