Eze

  1. Nigerian pro helping damaged African American Museum Iowa


    - To help the African American Museum of Iowa get back on its feet after sustaining damage worth $720, 000 during the June 2008 floods that tore through the State of Iowa, C. Paschal Eze, a Nigerian professional in Iowa USA is organizing an online fundraiser from August 22-24 at http://blog.blackiowa.org tagged Count Me In Campaign. The online fundraiser which has been receiving favorable news media attention gives cultural preservation and education-loving individuals and organizations from around the world the opportunity to lend their valuable support to the African American Museum of Iowa in a convenient "point, click, and donate" manner using visible Donation Button. &qu…

  2. 'Holiday Inn ad mocks Africa' - Don't Africa Me author


    - From challenging China’s CCTV9 Culture Express host, Jennifer Hsuing, for calling Africa the “Dark Continent” in October 2007 to successfully getting Assemblies of God World Missions to remove the phrase “galavanting across the ocean to the Dark Continent” from its TalkingDrumsAfrica.org website in January 2008, Don’t Africa Me author, C. Paschal Eze, has continued to confront individuals and organizations he accuses of waging spirited geo-branding war on the African continent and thus hurting its vulnerable trade and tourism. This time, Eze has turned his attention to hotel giant Holiday Inn for its Africa denigrating TV ad that says “My uncle…

  3. Africa is no torture chamber


    - The problem however is that to very many people here in America and other western nations I have visited, everyone in Africa is poor, illiterate, sick, violent or corrupt. I call it the PIDIC syndrome in my well endorsed sixth book, Don’t Africa Me: “Their” geo-branding war, “Our” trade, tourism wounds, and Winning like China, which explains in factual terms how such stigmatization negatively affects trade and tourism in Africa.Thankfully, my various interviews on national and international media have giving me the opportunity to set the records straight, including the fact that a 1% increase in Africa’s share of world trade would generate $70 billion in…