They Were Not Ahead of Their Time—Time Was Held Back

People often say that leaders like Patrice Lumumba, Kwame Nkrumah, Thomas Sankara, or even Sukarno were “ahead of their time.” But that’s not true. They went ahead of their time. They weren’t some sort of futuristic, utopian dreamers. They were astute, grounded, clear-minded men who had a lucid understanding of how things should be. Their visions weren’t fantastical—they were rational, pragmatic, and rooted in justice. They simply recognized what had been done to Africa and what was being done to Africa. They understood, without confusion or delusion, what sovereignty and liberation truly required.

Had they been leaders in the West, no one would have called them revolutionary. They would have been considered logical, sound, reasonable men with a clear grasp of economics, politics, and fairness. The fact that their ideas were seen as radical speaks not to their extremism—but to the brutal, deliberate suppression of African progress by Western powers. If you were an African leader in the 1950s, 60s, 70s, or 80s, and you had a rational mind, a vision for sovereignty, and an understanding of economics—you were labeled a revolutionary just for pursuing what was fair and obvious.

They weren’t ahead of their time. Time was frozen. The West refused to let Africa live in the present. Not just Africa—the entire Global South. But nowhere was this resistance to progress more violently enforced than in Africa. Relationships between countries evolve—sometimes dramatically in just months. But the relationship between Africa and the West has remained tragically consistent for a thousand years: subjugation, extraction, looting, and pillage.

The West Froze Africa in Time—By Force

So while it was the 1960s for Nkrumah or Lumumba, it was still the 1760s for the West. They kept Africa trapped in the past through assassination, coups, invasions, and puppet governments. Through predatory lending, coercive neoliberal policies, manufactured debt, and exploitative trade agreements, they held Africa back. And when they couldn’t send soldiers—they sent consultants. They didn’t kill leaders only—they killed futures.

When you stop a people in time, you’re not just stealing their resources—you are erasing their potential. You’re destroying generations unborn. What might have been invented, built, discovered, dreamed—never gets to exist. The brilliance of Sankara, the courage of Lumumba, the vision of Nkrumah—these weren’t miracles. They were the natural state of a liberated African mind. Their deaths were not just assassinations—they were amputations of history and possibility.

When You Kill Leaders, You Kill Futures

The West didn’t just kill men—they assassinated ideas. They created psychological warfare across time. If you convince a people that liberation is impossible, that sovereignty is naïve, and that dignity is unrealistic—you don’t need to conquer them. They remain conquered within.

We must remember: when we talk about Sankara, Nkrumah, Lumumba, Sukarno—we’re not talking about extraordinary outliers. We are talking about what should have been the norm. They weren’t dreaming of utopias—they wanted their nations to function normally. The West just refused to allow it.

They had the relative power to block African progress. But that power is fading. The old wolf still has fangs, yes—but the Global South is raising lions of its own.

Ibrahim Traoré: A Lion Among Wolves

Among these lions stands Ibrahim Traoré. What he represents is nothing short of historic. Not just for Africa, not just for the Muslim world, but for the Global South—and indeed the world. Traoré has emerged as one of the most consequential leaders of our time.

Yes, I call him a Muslim leader—and that offends some people. But it’s a fact. Traoré doesn’t shout his faith from rooftops. He doesn’t use religion for performance. But he is a Muslim. And some fake Pan-Africanists, brainwashed by CIA-manufactured ideology, would rather erase the faith of 500 million African Muslims than accept that truth. They’ve fallen into the old colonial trap—divide and rule. They can’t reconcile being African and being Muslim.

Yet today, the most admired leaders in Africa—from Burkina Faso, Niger, Senegal, to South Africa—are Muslims. Just because Traoré doesn’t fit your shallow stereotype of religiosity doesn’t make him any less part of our Ummah. He’s a Muslim leader, an African leader, a global leader.

Pragmatic Resistance, Civilizational Self-Respect

Traoré did not lead just another coup. He overturned a system of neocolonialism. He is not swapping one Western puppet for another—he is tearing out the roots of foreign domination. He understands, better than most, that sovereignty without control over your economy is a lie. That security under colonial patronage is an illusion. And that freedom under Western tutelage is impossible.

He is the revolutionary archetype of the 21st century. Forged in the fire of insurgency and economic warfare, he is fighting not just in the deserts—but in boardrooms, at embassies, and in diplomatic halls. Every meeting with a Western diplomat is combat. Every handshake is a maneuver. Because the same people smiling across the table are the ones paying mercenaries to kill him in the desert.

Traoré: A Historic Shift in the Global Struggle

There have been over 20 assassination attempts against him. A coup attempt was just stopped—backed by the French and Americans. The overthrown leader he replaced is in exile in Ivory Coast, which has its own alleged role in destabilizing Burkina Faso.

So yes, Traoré is under threat. And yes, there is a continent-wide protest planned on the 30th of this month to support him and Burkina Faso. The world must stand up—not just Africans. Because what Traoré represents is bigger than one man, one country, or one religion.

This is not idolization. It’s recognition. Ibrahim Traoré represents a paradigmatic shift. His actions echo across the Sahel, the Ummah, the Global South. He proves that liberation is possible. And that’s why the global order fears him. Because if Africa breaks free, the entire Western-dominated system crumbles.

Burkina Faso: The Frontline of a Global Revolution

The old imperial tower was built assuming American dominance would last forever. But now, the West is trying to move its Jenga tower onto unfamiliar terrain—into the Global South—without letting it fall. And they will try to eliminate every variable that threatens that fragile transition.

But Burkina Faso is a variable they can’t control. It represents variance, divergence, decentralization—the very things that threaten their consolidation of power. Traoré is the “glitch in the matrix.” But the matrix itself is a virus. And the instinct for liberation—it’s not a bug in humanity. It’s a feature.

That is why we must protect Ibrahim Traoré. Not because he is perfect—but because he is pivotal. He embodies civilizational dignity, strategic resistance, and the sacred struggle for justice. His leadership is not just important for Africa—it’s vital for all of us.

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