The Doubt Called Africa

Lady Diana Ereyitomi Eyo-Enoette

Not all diplomats wear suits, some wear purpose – DeeEnvoy

Doubt is a dangerous weapon. It is sharper than the sword and more enduring than chains. Once you can make a people doubt their beliefs, question their faith, and look away from what makes them strong, you have defeated them.

This is the silent battle Africa has been fighting for generations not always with guns or overt oppression, but with doubt. Propaganda, often dismissed as “political games,” is simply a refined form of doubt: a calculated attempt to make you mistrust your own story, your own strength, your own path.

What is doubt? It is the seed of hesitation planted in the soil of your potential. What is propaganda? It is the watering of that seed until it grows into a tree of fear. And what is a mindset shift? It is the reclaiming of that soil pulling out the weeds of doubt and planting new seeds of courage, creativity, and conviction.

Africa’s doubt is not accidental. It is a move on the global chessboard, a strategy to silence, manipulate, and change our narrative. We dance to rhythms of doubt that have been carefully orchestrated, and often we don’t even realize it. We wear our bold cultural attire to force our voice into global rooms, but too often we speak not as Africa but as echoes of what we think others want to hear. We sit with the constant fear that our chair can be pulled from beneath us, so we shrink rather than expand.

Until we stop and think, until we recognize that creativity is not just showmanship but the very tool that makes us creators of our own destiny, economy, and vibrancy doubt will keep leading, and Africa will keep sinking into despair.

Our youth hold the key. If African youth can begin to invest in themselves, for Africa and within Africa, then we can shift the narrative. When we choose to believe in our capacity, own our voice, and build our future on our terms, doubt loses its power. Because the greatest victory over Africa was never colonization. It was the doubt that lingered after. And the greatest liberation will be the day we choose to silence that doubt and rise.

Doubt has become generational, inherited like an old wound. Yet the truth remains: we are worth more.

 

Africa Always,

Lady Diana Ereyitomi Eyo-Enoette

Honorary Consul & Special Envoy on Sustainability | London Embassy to Africa (Sovereign Kingdom of Hawaii)

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Adeniyi Ifetayo Moses is an Entrepreneur, Award winning Celebrity journalist, Luxury and Lifestyle Reporter with Ben tv London and Publisher, Megastar Magazine. He has carved a niche for himself with over 15 years of experience in celebrity Journalism and Media PR.

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