Embassy of the Republic of Cameroon, Washington, DC

Speech by His Excellency Joseph Charles Bienvenu FOE-ATANGANA, Ambassador of the Republic of Cameroon to the United States of America at the Celebration of the 37th National Day at the Hampton Conference Center in Maryland on May 29, 2009

 

  • County Executive for Prince Georges County, Honorable Jack Johnson;
  • Distinguished Guests,
  • My fellow Cameroonians and Friends of Cameroon;
  • Ladies and Gentlemen;
  • Welcome.

 

  • Welcome to all the Traditional Rulers here present;
  • Welcome to the Cultural Leaders and their groups;
  • Welcome Students and Alumni Association groups;
  • Welcome Political Leaders; Community Leaders and various other organizations here present; 
  • Most importantly, I would like to welcome the Women, the Youth and the Children - the future of our great nation, Cameroon.

It is an honor and a privilege for my wife and I, as well as the entire personnel of the Embassy of Cameroon in Washington DC to welcome you to this beautiful auditorium of the Hampton Conference Center.
We are assembled here today to celebrate in a special way the 37th National Day of Cameroon. I wish to recall that the May 20 National Day symbolizes the Unity of all Cameroonians. It came about as a result of the Peaceful Revolution of May 20, 1972 when Cameroonians voted overwhelmingly in a National Referendum to institute a Unitary State to replace the Federation of East and West Cameroon that had existed since October 1st 1961.

I am aware that many of you have come from far and wide to join in today’s festivities; some from distant corners of the Washington Metropolitan Area, while others have come from other States in this vast country that constitutes the United States of America.  By so doing, many of you have scarified your time, so precious in America, or abandoned other important activities.
I thank you for your patriotism and commitment to the national cause.

Brothers and Sisters, I am here today to introduce myself to you as your humble “Servant-In-Chief”. My name is Joseph Charles Bienvenue Foe-Atangana and I was recently appointed to the position of Ambassador to the United States of America. To summarize my job description, I represent the Cameroon government in United States, but more importantly, I am here to serve the Cameroonian Community living in United States. It is my responsibility to make sure that all government services available at the Cameroon Embassy in Washington D.C. are made available to you as Cameroonians in Diaspora, and I pledge to you today, that I will do anything within my powers to make sure that nobody undermines your rights as a Cameroonian.
 
Let immediately address the very important issue of “who is a Cameroonian”. A Cameroonian is anyone who was born in Cameroon, has Cameroonian parents or became Cameroonian through marriage or other means irrespective of what color your passport is. To me, a Cameroonian is someone who struggles to direct resources and development to Cameroon whenever they can irrespective of their social or financial status. To me, a Cameroonian is someone who loves Cameroon and wants the best for Cameroon and feels the pain of Cameroonians deep in their heart when Cameroon suffers irrespective of where they live. To me, a Cameroonian is someone who’s umbilical cord, or that of their parent, or that of their parents’ parent, is buried under a plantain or cocoyam stem in Cameroon. It does not matter to me who you are, where you are, or what you are, today. Brothers and sisters, you are the people I am here to serve.

The location from which I will be serving you is the Cameroonian Embassy. On that note, I would like to take this opportunity to remind all of you that the Cameroon Embassy is your first home away from Cameroon. If you do not remember the address, it is on 2349 Massachusetts Avenue, North West, Washington, D.C. 20008. The phone number is (202) 265-8790.

Let our Embassy, or our home away from home, be the place where we collectively roll out an implementation strategy for the covenant we make today to turn the Cameroonian Diaspora community into a major driving force on the road to make Cameroon a developed nation someday. I call upon you to use your embassy as a “facilitating place” for your America connections to converge in our strategy to drive investments to Cameroon. I call upon you to come to the embassy when you have problems so we can brainstorm on the best solutions, in the best interest of our fellow Cameroonians. This, my dear brothers and sisters is what I ask of you.

On my part, I pledge to you that I will be your faithful “Facilitator-in-Chief”. I will not tolerate an embassy where Cameroonians are frustrated unnecessarily by disgruntled civil servants. Our standards of excellence in customer service at the embassy should be nothing less than what is common in our host country. I can guarantee you of the highest standards of professionalism from my fellow diplomats at the Embassy and I hereby ask each and every one of you, my fellow Cameroonians, to feel free when you come to your Embassy. No Cameroonian is more Cameroonian than another. I do not care what party you belong to and whether you are Western, Eastern, Southern, or Northern Cameroonian. I do not care whether you speak French, English or any of the 250 dialects in Cameroon. We will all be treated with the same level of dignity at our Embassy.
 
In my travels, I have visited numerous countries and read about others whose economies are driven by the members of their community in the Diaspora: Senegal; Ghana; Togo; Ireland; Israel; Nigeria, and so on.  All along, I have been haunted by this question: Why not Cameroon? I agonized over this for a long time until when President Paul Biya appointed me Ambassador to United States of America.

When I met the first group of Cameroonians here, my vision became clearer. I saw so much talent, resources and motivation in the Cameroonian community in the United States of America. Suddenly, it occurred to me that perhaps fate has put us together in America at this special moment when the son of an African is President of the USA. It suddenly occurred to me that in the history of every nation, each generation has to leave its own mark so that when they are no longer there, their children, their grand children, and their great grand children can stand tall amongst children of all nations and say – our parents, our grand parents, and our great grand parents were perhaps the greatest human beings that walked upon this earth. Yet, every so often, one generation has the opportunity to distinguish itself from the rest. My vision tells me that we have that opportunity today. It tells me that by the time we are done, we would look like giants compared to others.

But before we begin this journey, let us take some time today to honor those through whose sweat and tears we now travel the World as free Cameroonians. Let us take some time out to celebrate this special day that we have set aside to honour our Cameroon, the country we love so dearly. Let us celebrate the 20th day of May in honor of the country that God gave us.

But for those of us present here today let May 20th be even more symbolic as a day when we made a covenant amongst ourselves that we will collectively standout as giants amongst other generations as we focus on leveraging our connections in United States to help turn Cameroon into a developed nation someday.
 
Most importantly, let us remember to celebrate our national day every year as a means to review our performance in the previous year on this long journey towards developing our nation through our dynamic Cameroonian Diaspora community. Let the Cameroonian generation in Diaspora that watched Obama become President of United Sates be the ones that would step up and make Cameroon the greatest nation it can be.
In order to preserve our unity we have to take our destiny into our two hands and not just sit and wait for providence. As the Head of State, President Paul Biya aptly reminded us in his end–of-year message to the nation on the 30th of December 2008: “Heaven helps those who help themselves”.

        For those of us who reside in the United States of America, it demands that we should live in peace, unity and solidarity with each other; that we should be forever patriotic; that we should at all times defend, promote, and sustain the good image of our country instead of competing to tear it down.
We Cameroonians of the Diaspora should consider ourselves, each and everyone of us, and at all times, as Ambassadors of our country to the United States of America. We should always respect the laws and institutions of our host country, but spare no effort, when the need arises to rise up in defense of the values and ideals of our own fatherland. This is the Head of States clarion call to the entire son’s and daughters of Cameroon as symbolized by the theme for this year’s National Day celebration: “Armed Forces and the Nation: For the Promotion of Social Peace and Development”.

Long Live United States of America,
Long Live Cameroon,
Long Live the Cameroonian Community in Diaspora

 

Copyright © 2006 Cameroon Embassy, Washington, DC & GlobeScope Inc.