Bigger Than Africa digs deep into Black History

Nobel Laureate Wole Soyinka in Toyin Ibrahim Adeyeke’s “Bigger Than Africa.”
Photo courtesy American Public Television
‘Bigger Than Africa,’ Toyin Ibrahim Adeyeke’s award-winning documentary about the enduring influence of the Yoruba culture, will air on public television stations across the U.S. as part of Black History Month programming.
Distributed by American Public Television (APT), the film will be also available for two years on PBS.org and the PBS Video app (available on iOS, Android, Roku, Apple TV, Android TV, Amazon Fire TV, Samsung Smart TV, Chromecast and VIZIO).
The film premieres on Saturday at 11 p.m. on WORLD and is now available on PBS.org and the PBS Video App.
APT said on Monday, Feb. 9, that when the slave ships docked in North America, Brazil, and the Caribbean, Africans carried with them hundreds of cultures, traditions, and belief systems.
But APT said it was the Yoruba culture, in particular, which survived slavery to take root across the New World.
The Port of No Return of the Republic of Benin in Toyin Ibrahim Adeyeke's 'Bigger Than Africa.'
The Port of No Return of the Republic of Benin in Toyin Ibrahim Adeyeke’s ‘Bigger Than Africa.’ Photo courtesy American Public Television

Featuring interviews with experts including Afrobeat musician and activist Femi Kuti, former President of the Federal Republic of Nigeria Olusegun Obasanjo, Nobel Laureate and playwright Wole Soyinka, ‘Bigger Than Africa’ traces the journey from the “ports of no return” in West Africa to destinations across the Americas, and back again, revealing how Yoruba identity, spirituality and traditions endured, evolved in the Diaspora and continue to thrive today, states the APT.

It said ‘Bigger Than Africa,’ which has been screened at the United Nations, won Best Documentary at the Charlotte Black Film Festival, the Jury Special Award at the Festival International du Film Panafricain de Cannes, and Best Documentary at the International Houston Black Film Festival.
It was also nominated for an Africa Movie Academy Award for Best Documentary. The film was produced by Motherland Productions Inc.
“Bigger Than Africa is a unifying documentary,” said Adekeye, a Nigerian-born, Los Angeles–based director. “It helps West Africans understand what became of those taken during the trans-Atlantic slave trade, while giving descendants of the enslaved a deeper sense of the lives, cultures, and histories that came before the Americas and are woven into their very being.”
APT is the leading syndicator of high-quality, top-rated programming to the nation’s public television stations.
Founded in 1961, APT distributes 250 new program titles per year and nearly one-half of the top 100 highest-rated public television titles in the U.S.
APT’s diverse catalog includes prominent documentaries, performances, dramas, how-to programs, classic movies, children’s series, and news and current affairs programs.