Chairman Omali Yeshitela

Omali Yeshitela, founder of the African Socialist International
Omali Yeshitela is increasingly becoming recognized by Africans around the world as the foremost leader in the struggle for Africa’s liberation. He has taken the legacy of Marcus Garvey, who built a worldwide organization of millions of African people with the vision of an Africa for Africans, at home and abroad.

Then known as Joseph Waller, Omali Yeshitela tore down a racist mural from the walls of St. Petersburg, Florida’s City Hall in 1966. The mural depicted Africans with exaggerated big lips and other exaggerated features happily entertaining white people on the beach.
As Chairman of the APSP, Omali Yeshitela has been responsible for solving many of the theoretical questions left unanswered with the defeat of the Black Power Movement of the 60s and the imperialist front of neocolonialism to push back the African Liberation Movement throughout the world. Yeshitela developed the theory of African Internationalism, which defines capitalism as a parasitic system that was born from the enslavement of African people and the oppression of colonized peoples worldwide.
In 1982, the African People’s Socialist Party passed at its Congress the resolution to build the African Socialist International (ASI). From that point on, Chairman Omali Yeshitela began traveling around the world taking his theory of African Internationalism to organize African people around the world to build the ASI, an international party of African revolutionaries with one strategy that would take our struggles around the world out of isolation.
This work took Yeshitela throughout Europe, and in 1999 the APSP held the first Conference to Build the African Socialist International in London, England. Since then conferences have been held annually in London leading up to this year’s conference that should set the stage for the founding Congress of the African Socialist International.

Omali Yeshitela is pictured here with Thami Ka Plaatjie, former Secretary-General of the Pan Africanist Congress of Azania; Winnie Mandela; and Gaida Kambon, National Secretary of the APSP (left to right).
Omali Yeshitela is indeed the premiere leader of the International African Revolution, carrying on the legacy of Marcus Garvey, Kwame Nkrumah and Patrice Lumumba. With the building of the African Socialist International, Africa’s liberation is indeed on the horizon, and Omali Yeshitela is at its helm.