By Sankofie | Published | No Comments

The meaning of the word seems to be limited to simply removing the colonizer but not the colonizing, returning to the point of the interruption, seeming not to go beyond thoughts of dismantling colonial impacts and structures and still having our agency defined as a function of colonial determination. Decolonization, as I hear it today, centres the colonizers and does not suggest to me, a progress that has propelled us ahead of the point of interruption. The word does not provide for us to rejoin and continue on our initial African, indigenous and other trajectories in a transformed way but seems to limit us to who we were at the point of interruption and nothing more.
So what am I looking for? I am looking for a word that allow us to return to our paths but somewhere forward of the point of interruption, that recognize the disruption and what has been learned through and from it. A word that puts people/s and the responsibility to self determine as the focal point of the summation of a restoration, a healing, a repair, a renewal, a reconciliation, a sanctification. Both Jamaica and Africa, where the interruptions occurred, are still suffering enduring, profound dislocation from the conquest of mind, body, spirit which colonization occasioned. I need a word that removes our identity, existence beyond the ambit of the colonizers. Instead of ‘reactively’ decolonizing I need a proactive word like ‘recentrifying,’ so I made it up, from the verb ‘recentrify’ which I also made up and define as: Recentrify
Recentrifying
Decolonization is not enough. We are stepping beyond it. We are ‘recentrifying’ our existence in ancestral balance—restoring, healing, sanctifying, carrying scar and wisdom into a future we define. Our task is ‘Recentrification.’
Just a thought
July 16, 2026
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