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  1. Malcolm Ivan Meredith Nurse, better known by his pseudonym George Padmore, was born on 28 June 1903 in Arouca District, Tacarigua, [3][4] Trinidad, then part of the British West Indies. His paternal great-grandfather was an Asante warrior who was taken prisoner and sold into slavery at Barbados, where his grandfather was born. [5] .

  2. Jan 19, 2007 · A journalist, radical activist, and theoretician, George Padmore did more than perhaps any other single individual to shape the theory and discourse of Pan-African anti-imperialism in the first half of the twentieth century.

  3. Later in 1933, George Padmore became aware of the Comintern’s intent to become aligned with colonial powers that oppressed African people, so he gave up his ...

  4. James and George Padmore, both of whom came from Trinidad. From the 1930s until his death in 1959, Padmore was one of the leading theorists of Pan-African ideas. Also influential were Léopold Senghor and Aimé Césaire, who were natives of Senegal and Martinique, respectively.

  5. Apr 29, 2020 · George Padmore was a radical anti-imperial activist most well-known for his leadership of the Communist International’s Negro Bureau in the early 1930s, his key role in organizing the 1945 Manchester Pan-African Congress, and as a political mentor to Kwame Nkrumah, first prime minister of Ghana.

  6. www.afa-afa.org › panafricanist-leaders › george-padmoreGeorge Padmore — AFA-AFA

    May 31, 2023 · Padmore dropped out of Howard's law school in 1928 and joined the American Communist Party, adopting the name George Padmore shortly thereafter. He quickly established himself as an expert on imperialism and race and rose to prominence within the party.

  7. May 29, 2018 · The political activist and journalist Malcolm Nurse adopted the name George Padmore in 1927. He was born in rural Arouca, Trinidad, in the British West Indies. However, his childhood and teenage years were spent in a middle-class suburb in the island's capital, Port of Spain.

  8. Malcolm Ivan Meredith Nurse, know as George Padmore, was born into an emerging black middle-class family in Trinidad in 1902. In 1924 he married Julia Semper and left for further education in the United States later that year.

  9. 'George Padmore is a fascinating figure whose life and thought bear on many of the most important aspects of modern history: race, radical anti-colonialism, the end of empire and the role of the USSR.

  10. George Padmore's Impact on Africa: A Critical Appraisal IN Ims biographical study of George Padmore, Professor Hooker con-cludes that his subject "died the father of African emancipation."' This claim is both valid and startling; although Padmore undeniably worked for African liberation, his role has been something of an