In our series of letters from African journalists, Sierra Leonean-Gambian writer Ade Daramy mines an archive of photos featuring US President John F Kennedy, who set the template for US relations with Africa.

Before Kennedy became president in 1961, his country had made little attempt to understand the rapid changes that Africa was undergoing.

By the time he was assassinated in 1963 the picture had radically changed.

In his short time in office, Kennedy had received at the White House either the leader of every independent African state – numbering more than two dozen at the time – or its ambassador.

President John F. Kennedy greets President of Senegal Léopold Sédar Senghor
Senegal’s President Léopold Sédar Senghor, a key figure in the anti-colonial movement in Francophone countries, flew into Washington in November 1961

A year before he became president, 17 African countries had gained independence from their colonial masters, and aware that the world was changing, Kennedy knew that a new relationship needed to be forged.

That relationship was based on supporting the new African nations.

It was a foreign policy outlook that essentially survived, given the occasional tweak, until President Donald Trump’s efforts to replace it with his more transactional approach.

It was reported that Mr Trump infamously used derogatory language when talking about the continent, and Kennedy’s predecessor, Dwight D Eisenhower, had his own negative views.

He told Togo’s President, Sylvanus Olympio, that the reason the US shared one ambassador between Togo and Cameroon was because he did not want his diplomats to “have to live in tents”.

President John F. Kennedy speaks at arrival ceremonies for President of Togo, Sylvanus Olympio
Togo’s President Sylvanus Olympio was greeted at the airport by Kennedy in March 1962

During the 1960 election campaign, Kennedy repeatedly criticised Eisenhower’s administration for “neglecting the needs and aspirations of the African people” and stressed that the US should be on the side of anti-colonialism and self-determination, not on the side of the colonialists.

Once in power, Kennedy invited African leaders for state visits and laid out the red carpet.

Haile Selassie being greeted by President Kennedy
Ethiopian Emperor Haile Selassie, one of the founders of the Organisation of African Unity in May 1963, was welcomed to Washington by first lady Jacqueline Kennedy and the president in October of that year

Accompanied by first lady Jackie Kennedy, he would greet each of them – including Ethiopia’s Emperor Haile Selassie and King Hassan IV of Morocco – when they arrived in the country.

Haile Selassie being driven through Washington
Haile Selassie was driven through the streets of the US capital

There were also guards of honour, lavish dinners and visits to the ballet, the theatre and places of historical interest.

President Kennedy hosting a state dinner
Félix Houphouët-Boigny, Ivory Coast’s first President, and his wife, Marie-Thérèse Houphouët-Boigny, were invited to a formal dinner during their visit in May 1962

The visits were all highlighted in the media and the public was encouraged to come out and cheer.

Kennedy and his guests would be driven through streets festooned with welcome banners and cheering crowds and, weather permitting, in an open-top car.

Of course, there was an element of realpolitik in all this. The Soviet Union was making similar overtures to African states seeking to distance themselves from former colonial masters.

On assuming office, Kennedy knew he had to act quickly to make friends with the emerging African nations.

President John F. Kennedy delivers remarks at arrival ceremonies in honour of President of Guinea, Ahmed Sékou Touré.
Guinea’s President Ahmed Sékou Touré, who in 1958 led the country to independence from France two years before most of its other African colonies, was in Washington in October 1962

In the Oval Office, he told the National Association of Colored Women’s Clubs: “I believe that… if we live up to the ideals of our own revolution, then the course of African revolution in the next decade will be towards democracy and freedom and not towards communism and what could be a far more serious kind of colonialism.”

A month after his inauguration, he asked Vice-President Lyndon B Johnson to go to Senegal to meet President Léopold Sédar Senghor, who he saw as a key ally in trying to get Francophone countries on-side.

Then another month later, Kennedy launched the Peace Corps – which sent young Americans across the globe – and in August 1961, invited to the White House the first set of volunteers getting ready to head to Ghana and Tanganyika.

The assassination of Congolese independence hero, Patrice Lumumba, with suspected CIA involvement, three days before Kennedy took office is a reminder that Cold War battles with the Soviet Union were also being played out on the continent.

President John F. Kennedy meets with William V.S. Tubman, President of Liberia
William Tubman, the president of Liberia, whose capital is named after former US President James Monroe, sat down with Kennedy in October 1961

But I would argue that Kennedy was genuinely interested in the development and advancement of the continent. African leaders who fought hard for independence were not naïve and took Kennedy at his word: that the relationship could be mutually beneficial.

His untimely death was keenly felt in Africa – especially as his successor, Johnson, did not share his drive for cementing relations.

Now, 60 years on, President Jo Biden is starting to shape his policy towards Africa.

In a statement earlier this month, he said the US was ready to be Africa’s “partner, in solidarity, support, and mutual respect”.

Biden’s words echoed Kennedy’s commitment – now we are waiting to see if the actions match the rhetoric.

More Letters from Africa:

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Photos by Robert Knudsen, Cecil Stoughton, Abbie Rowe, White House photographs, John F Kennedy Presidential Library and Museum, Boston

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