Dr. Ivan Van Sertima
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 AUGUST 22 - 31, 2008 |
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A Tribute to the life of
Dr. Ivan Van Sertima
literary critic, linguist, poet and anthropologist.
1935 - 2009
THE GUYANA CULTURAL ASSOCIATION NEW YORK
Inc./Guyana Folk Festival
share with you the passing of Dr. Ivan Van Sertima a former
professor of the University of Rutgers and an important son
of the soil of Guyana.

Ivan van Sertima
(26 January 1935 - ) is a Guyanese-British historian,
linguist and anthropologist. He is a noted for
his Afrocentric theory of pre-Columbian contact
between Africa and the Americas.
Early life and
education
Van Sertima
was born in Kitty Village, Guyana, on 26 January
1935, when it was still a British colony. He has remained a
British citizen. Van Sertima's father Frank Obermuller was a
trade union leader. Van Sertima completed primary and
secondary school in Guyana, and started writing poetry.
He went to London in 1959 for university. In addition
to producing an array of creative writing, Van Sertima
completed undergraduate studies in African languages and
literature at the School of Oriental and African Studies
of the University of London in 1969, where he
graduated with honors. During his studies he became fluent
in Swahili and Hungarian languages.
He worked for several years in Great Britain as a
journalist, doing weekly broadcasts to the Caribbean and
Africa. In doing field work in Africa, he compiled a
dictionary of Swahili legal terms.
In 1970 Van Sertima immigrated to the United States, where
he entered Rutgers University in New Brunswick,
New Jersey for graduate work.
Career
Van Sertima began his
more than 30-year teaching career at Rutgers as an
instructor in 1972. In 1977 he completed his master's
degree. He is Associate Professor of African Studies in the
Department of Africana Studies. As editor of the Journal
of African Civilization and author of numerous books, he
has addressed topics in literature, linguistics,
anthropology and history. Van Sertima has written a number
of books in which he argues that the Ancient Egyptians
were black
His 1976 book They Came Before Columbus was a
bestseller and achieved widespread fame for his claims of
prehistoric African influences in Central and South
America. It did not receive much professional attention when
published, and has been criticized by academic specialists.
Van Sertima also treated the topic of African scientific
contributions in his essay for the volume African
Renaissance, published in 1999. This was a record of the
conference held in Johannesburg, South Africa in
September 1998 on the theme of the African Renaissance.
His article is titled The Lost Sciences of Africa: An
Overview. In it he presents early African advances in
metallurgy, astronomy, mathematics, architecture,
engineering, agriculture, navigation, medicine and writing.
He notes that such higher learning, in Africa as elsewhere,
was the preserve of elites in the centres of civilizations,
rendering them very vulnerable in the event (as happened in
Africa) of the destruction of those centers.
On July 7, 1987 Van Sertima appeared before a United States
Congressional committee to challenge giving credit for the
discovery of America to Christopher Columbus.
Condolences may be
sent to his wife:
Jacqueline Van Sertima
347 Felton Avenue
Highland Park, NJ 08904
or
www.info@journalofafricancivilizations.com
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GUYANA FOLK FEST
GUYANA CULTURAL ASSOCIATION OF NEW YORK
1368 E. 89 STREET SUITE 2, BROOKLYN
NEW YORK 11236, U.S.A.
TEL: 718.209.5207 FAX: 718.209.6157
WEBSITE: www.guyfolkfest.org
E-MAIL: info@guyfolkfest.org
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