A Place of Remembrance for an Entire Continent

ANCOM is a sacred space dedicated to honoring the millions of Africans who resisted, suffered, and perished during centuries of colonization and the transatlantic slave trade — echoing the AU’s landmark February 2026 resolution.

--Our Mission

Why ANCOM Exists

Whereas the AU currently lacks a memorial that commemorates victims of colonization and the transatlantic slave trade, and ignoring this dark period of racial terrorism in our past delegitimizes the emotional wounds of the victims’ descendants, this inaugural continental memorial will offer a more restorative experience for everyone involved.

This will strengthen the historic and familial ties between the African Union and the African Diaspora and serve as a symbol of collective healing for African nations and their global descendants.

Besides calling on the international community to acknowledgement and repentance, the memorial aims to foster a new era of truth, shape ongoing debates on reparative justice, strongly support the AU resolution’s international recognition, and ensure that the experiences of African communities during colonization are neither forgotten nor overlooked.

-- Historical Context

Centuries of Colonization & Its Legacy

Colonization reshaped Africa’s political borders, economies, languages, and social systems — leaving legacies that continue to influence the continent and global systems today.

15th–19th Century
Early Contact & The Transatlantic Slave Trade
European engagement with Africa began in the 1400s when Portuguese explorers established trading posts along West Africa's coast. From the 16th to the 19th centuries, the Transatlantic slave trade forcibly transported approximately 12 to 12.5 million Africans to the Americas. Historians estimate 1.5 to 2 million died during the Middle Passage alone. Many more perished in slave raids, forced marches to the coast, and captivity.
 
Late 19th–Early 20th Century
The Scramble for Africa
By the late 1800s, European powers shifted from coastal trade to full territorial conquest. The 1884–1885 Berlin Conference formalized the division of African territories — without African representation. Between 1885 and 1914, nearly the entire continent was divided among European empires. One of the most notorious examples was the Congo Free State under Leopold II, where forced labor and brutality led to an estimated 8–10 million deaths.
Mid-20th Century
Decolonization
After WWII weakened European powers, ideas of self-determination gained worldwide support. African veterans who had fought in the war returned to still-colonized societies. Their wartime experiences fueled nationalist movements. Over 50 colonized territories gained independence through the sacrifices of their people. In 1960 alone — the "Year of Africa" — 17 African countries gained independence.
 
February 2026
Birth of ANCOM
African Union leaders adopted a resolution describing slavery and colonialism as genocide and crimes against the people of Africa. Member states designated November 30 as the "African Day of Tribute to African Martyrs and Victims of the Transatlantic Slave Trade, Colonization, and Apartheid." ANCOM was established to support and amplify this historic resolution.