The Coalition is building the legal architecture, funding infrastructure, and cultural foundation for Pan-African return. This is not a petition. It is a plan.
"The displacement was not voluntary. The return cannot be left to chance. Africa First is the insistence that African people everywhere have a sovereign claim to the continent of their origin β and that claim requires infrastructure, not sentiment."
For over 400 years, the African continent has been systematically drained β of people, of labour, of wealth, of cultural memory. The transatlantic slave trade did not merely move human beings across an ocean. It severed the legal, ancestral, and sovereign relationship between a people and their land.
Africa First is the insistence that this severance is not permanent, not legal, and not acceptable. It is not nationalism. It is not isolationism. It is the recognition that before the African diaspora can build durable power anywhere, it must first build it somewhere it owns.
That somewhere is Africa. And the return to it requires the same infrastructure as any sovereign project: legal frameworks, logistics networks, capital allocation, and cultural coherence. CRDEA exists to build each of these β funded, in part, by the community it serves.
The demand for return is as old as the diaspora itself. It has never lacked moral authority or popular support. What it has always lacked is infrastructure and legal standing.
Free Black shipowner Paul Cuffe financed and organised the first repatriation voyage of African Americans to Sierra Leone β decades before any government endorsed the idea. He understood that return required ships, capital, and logistics. Not just will.
Marcus Garvey's Universal Negro Improvement Association mobilised millions across the diaspora behind the Back-to-Africa movement β and the Black Star Line, a diaspora-owned shipping enterprise built to execute it. The U.S. government prosecuted Garvey, deported him, and dissolved the infrastructure. The idea was never defeated. It was suppressed by force.
Ghana's first President argued that African political independence without continental unity was incomplete sovereignty β and that the diaspora was not a separate people but an extension of the same political body.
The African Union formally recognised the global diaspora as the Sixth Region of Africa β an acknowledgment that those displaced by slavery retain a political and cultural relationship to the continent. The declaration exists. The legal enforcement mechanisms still do not.
Developing and advancing a Right of Abode framework β a legal instrument that would compel African Union member states to formally recognise diaspora descendants as rights-bearing returnees.
Country-by-country mapping of the practical infrastructure of return: housing markets, residency pathways, banking access for non-citizens, business registration frameworks.
CRDEA.store is the commercial engine. Every unit of apparel sold, every print purchased, every book that leaves the library funds the legal work and logistics infrastructure.
Two ways to move the mission forward right now.
Every purchase from CRDEA Supply Lines directly funds legal research, policy advocacy, and logistics planning behind Right of Abode.
Shop Supply LinesHard analysis on Right of Abode barriers, policy shifts, African Union developments, and diaspora economics. No noise. No compromise.
Enter the Intel Room"Every time someone asks what this means, you explain the mission. That conversation is also the work."Shop Vanguard β
"Your walls are a political statement. Make them say something worth saying."Shop Heritage Prints β
"You cannot build what you cannot argue for. The library gives you the argument."Browse the Library β