Across Africa, a storm is gathering. The abandoned youth-excluded from governance, profiled as threats rather than partners-are striking back through insurgencies, kidnappings, protests, and migration. But why has a generation once full of talent and promise turned so desperate? Africa: Vengeance of the Abandoned traces this crisis to the continent's rupture with its indigenous leadership traditions. Before colonisation, societies anchored youth in responsibility and service through age grades, initiation, and communal structures. Philosophies like Ubuntu in the South, Ibu Anyi Danda in the West, and Ujamaa in the East fostered inclusion and collective strength. Their dismantling left a vacuum still unfilled today. Both a lament and a call to action, this book draws on African folklore, proverbs, and parables to argue for a Pan-African renewal. By returning to ancestral wisdom-restoring dialogue, inclusion, and indigenous problem-solving-we may yet calm the storm and reclaim the abandoned. The question remains: will Africa act in time, or will the storm prevail?
Steve Okey Onwuka is a seasoned diplomat with almost two decades of service and an MBA in Global Leadership. At the frontline of African diplomacy since 2008, he has been a pioneer Chief of Protocol of the ECOWAS Commission, shaping diplomacy with integrity and finesse. His blend of practical statecraft and academic grounding in leadership studies informs this urgent call for a return to Africa's indigenous wisdom as a path to renewal.