Africans and american blacks are two different things. Our ancestors may have come from the continent, but there's 400 years of separation and a completely different and unique culture developed in isolation.
American black culture is not a 'continuation' of African culture. It is its own thing.
There's nothing wrong with admitting there is a difference. That doesn't mean there's enmity or hate or discord, but the reality is that the African and the ADOS cultures are so far apart that there is a clear difference.
Most Africans that come here don't want to live amongst black Americans. They'd rather band together and form their own communities and there is NOTHING wrong with that. They are amongst their people.
Let's be real. Africans, in large part, DON'T see African Americans as the same thing, and they can't really, because most African Americans don't even know what tribe they came from. In Africa, there is no such thing as 'everybody is African.' It's national, and really, even more granular than that-- it's tribal. Ethiopians don't see themselves as Nigerians and vice versa.
People have been talking that pan african stuff for decades and inothing ever comes from it. It's almost always black americans wanting to identify with Africa and not Africans pulling blacks into their culture. I haven't seen a huge contingent of black folks leave for Africa or Africans pooling money together to get their 'lost African American brothas' back to the motherland.
There's nothing wrong with accepting the reality that there are two completely different cultures. Many white Americans may have their lineage in the UK somewhere or in Germany, but they will be considered AMERICAN if they go over there.
Is there any scholarly research or paper/book you can prove what you say?
As in have you ever discussed it in a classroom or offline?
Where you learn the above from