Everything Everywhere Daily: History, Science, Geography & More - Liberia
Episode Date: April 16, 2023Every country in Africa is unique and has its own history. However, many African countries share a similar story over the last 150 years, having gone through European colonization and decolonization.�...� The nation of Liberia, however, has a history, unlike any other country in the world. From its founding to its modern-day governance, Liberia the story of the country is fascinating. Learn more about the West African country Liberia and its unique history on this episode of Everything Everywhere Daily. Sponsor If you’re looking for a simpler and cost-effective supplement routine, Athletic Greens is giving you a FREE 1 year supply of Vitamin D AND 5 free travel packs with your first purchase. Go to athleticgreens.com/EVERYWHERE. Subscribe to the podcast! https://link.chtbl.com/EverythingEverywhere?sid=ShowNotes -------------------------------- Executive Producer: Charles Daniel Associate Producers: Peter Bennett & Thor Thomsen Become a supporter on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/everythingeverywhere Update your podcast app at newpodcastapps.com Discord Server: https://discord.gg/UkRUJFh Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/everythingeverywhere/ Facebook Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/everythingeverywheredaily Twitter: https://twitter.com/everywheretrip Website: https://everything-everywhere.com/ Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Every country in Africa is unique and has its own history. However, many African countries share a similar story over the last 150 years, having gone through European colonization and decolonization.
The nation of Liberia, however, has a history unlike any other country in the world. From its founding to its modern day governance, the story of the country is truly fascinating.
Learn more about the West African country of Liberia and its unique history on this episode of Everything Everywhere Daily.
Do you ever climb into bed ready to sleep only to have your mind start racing the moment your head hits the pillow?
Thoughts bouncing around, replaying the day or jumping ahead to tomorrow?
That is exactly why Catherine Nikolai created Nothing Much Happens.
Each episode is a gentle, cozy bedtime story where, well, nothing much happens.
No drama, no tension. Nothing you need to follow closely.
Just soft narration, calming repetition, and soothing sensory details designed to help your mind slow down and your body relax.
It's not about entertainment.
about rest, and millions of listeners around the world use it every night to quiet their thoughts
and finally fall asleep. If you've ever struggled to shut your brain off at night, this might be
exactly what you've been missing. You can listen to Nothing Much Happens wherever you get your
podcasts. Episodes are every Monday and Thursday. Almost every border between African countries
was drawn by European power. There was a period known as the Scramble for Africa in the 19th century
when European countries fought to carve up Africa for themselves.
France, Britain, Belgium, Germany, Poland, Italy, and Spain all had colonies in Africa.
However, there were a few African countries that managed to escape colonization.
One was Ethiopia, which warrants an episode of its own, and the other was Liberia.
Ethiopia and Liberia couldn't have been more different from each other.
Ethiopia was a kingdom with an ancient rich culture.
Liberia was a republic with an elected government and a largely imported culture.
So what made Liberia so exceptional that it managed to escape European colonization?
The story actually starts in the United States.
In 1816, an organization known as the Society for the Colonization of Free People of Color of America was formed.
It later changed its name to just the American Colonization Society.
The organization was founded by a white, Slashire.
slave-owning Southerners who were concerned about the problem of freed slaves.
Slaves would often be freed by their owners when they died or they would buy their freedom.
After the Revolutionary War, the number of freedmen had grown significantly from 60,000 in 1790
to 300,000 in 1830.
The American Colonization Society wanted to ship all of the emancipated slaves back to Africa.
The idea was vehemently rejected by abolitionist groups as well as the free-belled.
black community. While their ancestors may have come from Africa, the only life they knew was in the
United States. Their homes, friends, and family were all there. Despite the rhetoric, the American
Colonization Society was not designed to help end slavery. It was actually designed to protect
slavery. The organizers felt that removing freedmen from the country would lessen the chance of
slave rebellions. The project was, by any measure, a failure. State chapters of the law
the Colonization Society, in particular Mississippi, Kentucky, and Maryland set up their own
small colonies in what became known as the Pepper Coast of Africa. But few people actually migrated.
Between 1820 and 1842, only 4,571 freedmen migrated to Africa. Those who migrated saw incredibly
high mortality rates due to disease. Only 40% of those who migrated were still alive in 1843.
By the conclusion of the U.S. Civil War, an estimated 15 to 20,000 emancipated slaves from the U.S. and the Caribbean had migrated to Africa.
A tiny fraction of the total population of freed slaves in the U.S.
Those who did migrate mostly did so because they were forced to do so.
Many slaves were offered their freedom on the condition that they migrate to Africa.
The small community of those who did migrate found themselves in a totally alien land.
They had nothing in common with the native people.
who lived around them. In fact, they often found themselves in conflicts with them. They spoke English.
They had American tastes and habits. This community became very tight-knit, and they began to marry
amongst themselves. The region formerly known as the Pepper Coast became renamed Liberia,
meaning land of the free. The migrants who live there called themselves Americo-Liberians.
On July 26, 1847, the group declared themselves independent and established the Republic of Liberia.
The capital was named Monrovia, after President James Monroe.
The flag was modeled on the U.S. flag, as was their constitution.
They were recognized by the United Kingdom in 1848 and France in 1852, but surprisingly,
not by the United States who had hatched the idea in the first place.
Southern states did not want to recognize a black black.
country, which is also why the U.S. didn't recognize Haiti right away. It wasn't until 1862 in the
start of the Civil War that the U.S. finally recognized both Liberia and Haiti. At that point,
all of the southern members of Congress were gone and could no longer stand in the way.
The new country was dominated by the small group of Americo-Liberians. They looked down on the
Native Liberians and organized the government and economy accordingly.
The Americo-Liberians became a ruling elite that controlled almost every aspect of the
government and the economy.
The Americo-Liberians restricted the vote to only their community and refused the franchise
to all the other Native Liberians.
While the Americo-Liberians held sway and weren't insular community, they did have
some differences.
Two political parties formed amongst the group, the Liberia Party and the True Wiggin.
Party, which were the first two political parties established.
The Liberia Party was made up mostly of poorer Americo-Liberians, and the True Whig Party was made
up of richer ones.
The Liberian Party won the first election in 1847, but the True Whig Party controlled it
22 years later in 1869.
The Liberian Party deposed the president in 1871, but the True Whig Party returned
to power in 1877, and stayed in power for over 100 years.
in effect, turning Liberia into a one-party state.
The creation of a stable government and a ruling elite,
as well as recognition by the major European powers,
ensured that Liberia was left alone as the Europeans carved up the continent.
However, they weren't totally left alone.
The British colony of Sierra Leone and the French colony of the Ivory Coast
both took significant amounts of inland territory which Liberia had claimed.
A major problem Liberia had was a lack of investment in infrastructure.
European countries made infrastructure investments in their colonies building roads and railways.
Liberia, not having an outside source of money, had a very difficult time being economically competitive.
Heading into the 20th century, Liberia retained close ties to the United States.
After the United States declared war on Germany in 1917, Liberia soon followed suit.
They didn't fight, but they did seize German economic assets in the country.
Liberia participated in the Conference of Versailles as well as the League of Nations.
In the 1920s, the Firestone Corporation to open up a large rubber plantation, turning Liberia
into the world's largest producer of rubber.
Heading into the later half of the 20th century, Liberia had a major problem.
After almost 150 years, the ruling America Liberians, which made up only 2% of the population,
still ran pretty much everything.
The other 98% of Native Liberians were shut out of any major positions in the government or the economy.
All of this came to a head on April 12, 1980, when Master Sergeant Samuel Doe led a coup against the government of President William Tolbert.
The coup was shockingly small, with only 17 other non-commissioned officers other than Doe taking part.
Tolbert and 27 other people were executed in the coup, including several top cabinet officials.
13 other government leaders were forced to face a kangaroo court trial and were later publicly executed.
Doe was a member of the Kron people, which was a small minority group in Liberia.
He claimed that the coup was to liberate the country from Americo-Liberian control.
His military government was known as the People's Redemption Council or PRC.
Doe's regime was seemingly right out of the African dictator's playbook.
There were several coups that he put down, paranoia set in,
there was a fraudulent election, and eventually in 1989, a civil war broke out.
The National Patriotic Front of Liberia, or NPFL, was led by Charles Taylor.
Taylor was an Americo-Liberian who organized several ethnic groups, which Doe had persecuted.
They attacked from neighboring Cote d'Ivoix and found a great deal of popular support because
Doe was so unpopular.
In August of 1990, the economic community of West African states sent 4,000 people to
to the country. On September 9th, while Doe was traveling to visit a peacekeeper base,
he was captured by a breakaway group from Taylor's Army known as the Independent National Patriotic
Front of Liberia, led by Prince Johnson. Doe was brutally tortured, including having multiple
body parts cut off, and his body was hung up on the streets of Monrovia. And the entire torture
incident was recorded on video. A civil war raged for years between Taylor's and Johnson's force,
and several other minor groups.
The war was exceptionally brutal,
with mass killings taking place around the country
and the use of child's soldiers.
Finally, after a negotiated settlement,
elections were held in 1997 with United Nations observers.
Charles Taylor won the election in a landslide
with 75% of the vote,
having run on one of the most bizarre campaign slogans
in world history.
Quote,
He killed my ma, he killed my pa,
but I will vote for him.
While President, Taylor tried to kill political opponents, was directly involved in the Sierra Leone Civil War, and stole over $100 million, which was about half of the government's revenue.
Soon after the election, a resistance group formed in northern Liberia known as the Liberians United for Reconciliation or Democracy, or L-U-R-D.
By the early 2000s, things were starting to spiral out of control.
Taylor's government was supporting rebel groups in neighboring Sierra Leone and Guinea, and those countries were supported.
supporting the L-U-R-D, and a third group known as the Movement for Democracy in Liberia,
or Model, just joined the fight.
Around this time, Charles Taylor had also been charged with war crimes by the United Nations.
But there was also another force that appeared, which changed everything,
the type of force which had never appeared in an African Civil War before.
Women.
The women of Liberia mass action for peace was founded by Lema Gabawi and
Ellen Johnson's surleaf.
Muslim and Christian women throughout the country
joined together in non-violent protests
to stop the war.
They managed to force the various parties
to the negotiating table in 2003 in Ghana,
and sent a delegation of their own
to ensure that a deal was brokered.
The settlement involved the resignation of Charles Taylor
and his exile to Nigeria,
as well as new elections in 2005.
The 2005 election had United Nations observers
and was one of the most peaceful and fair election,
in Liberia's history. The winner of the election was Ellen Johnson Sirleaf, one of the women
behind the Women of Liberia Mass Action for Peace Organization. She became the first woman elected
as the leader of an African country. In 2011, she and Lama Gabawi were awarded the Nobel Prize
for Peace. Since the end of the Second Civil War in 2003, Liberia has been rather stable.
Sir Leif was re-elected to a second six-year term in 2011, and in 2017 they had a peaceful transition
of power when George Wea was elected.
Wea is probably the most famous Liberian, and perhaps the greatest football player to have ever
come from the continent of Africa.
I should note one thing before I finish, the thing which Liberia is probably best known
for.
Ships flying Liberian flags of convenience.
Liberia has the second highest number of ships flying its flags.
behind only Panama. When I sailed to Antarctica, the ship I was on was a Liberian flagged ship.
There was a wedding on board, and when the captain concluded the ceremony, he said,
By the powers vested in me by the nation of Liberia. Flags of convenience are one of the largest
sources of revenue for the Liberian government and probably worth a future episode.
Liberia has had quite a history. From its founding as a colony for former slaves, to its one-party
ruled by a tiny elite, to two brutal civil wars, and to a current period of peace and stability,
it stands apart from every other country in Africa, and indeed the world.
The executive producer of Everything Everywhere Daily is Charles Daniel.
The associate producers are Thor Thompson and Peter Bennett.
I just want to thank everyone, including the show's producers, who support the show over on Patreon.
If you'd like to support the show, just head over to patreon.com, which is currently the only place
where you can get show merchandise.
Also, if you want to talk to other listeners about the show, head over to our Facebook group or Discord server, both of which have links in the show notes.
