
Organised by the African Renaissance Foundation (AREFO), in partnership with the African Door of Return Experience (ADORE), the Lagos State Government, and Badagry Local Government, the festival welcomed dignitaries and returnees from Brazil, Cuba, the United States, the United Kingdom, and many parts of the African diaspora. It was a vivid reminder that Africa’s heartbeat continues to echo across continents, calling her children home.
In his profound address, Nobel Laureate Prof Wole Soyinka described the festival as more than remembrance; he called it the opening chapter of a global return. The African story, he said, remains incomplete until its descendants in the diaspora reconnect with their ancestral homeland. Soyinka will lead the historic intercontinental Heritage Voyage in 2026, sailing from Brazil to Badagry, retracing the slave route, but this time as a triumphant journey of dignity and rebirth. “What started as a memorial has now evolved into a movement,” he declared, “no longer about loss, but about pride, reclamation, and renewal.”
Mrs Abike Dabiri-Erewa, Chairman of the Nigerians in Diaspora Commission (NiDCOM), revealed that over 2,000 returnees from Brazil and Cuba will be part of this 2026 voyage. She stated that President Bola Ahmed Tinubu is personally expected to welcome them home. “They return not as captives,” she declared, “but as kings and queens.” She described the festival as an emotional, spiritual, and economic reconnection, a reversal of history’s greatest injustice.
Lagos State Governor Babajide Sanwo-Olu, represented by his Special Adviser on Tourism, Arts and Culture, reaffirmed Lagos’ commitment to transforming Badagry into a world-class heritage tourism destination. He announced that the state is constructing a permanent Door of Return Monument, a global symbol of hope and renaissance. “What was once a passage of pain now becomes a gateway of power, pride, and prosperity,” he declared.
One of the most moving moments came from Dr David Anderson, an African American returnee and founder of ADORE. He recalled receiving a prophetic vision during his first visit to Nigeria in 2018, not of sorrow, but of joy. “This shall no longer be called the Point of No Return,” he proclaimed, “but the Joy of Return.” He revealed that he has acquired 10 acres of land in Badagry to build a world-class cultural and healing resort, where Diasporans will reconnect not with the trauma of slavery, but with the greatness of African civilisation.
Diaspora voices brought emotion and authenticity. Brazilian citizen Eliza Macimento, once a resident of Ile-Ife, said she was deeply moved to stand on the same soil where millions were taken away. “This is not just symbolic, this is healing,” she said. Carolina from Rio de Janeiro came with her children, saying it was important they see Africa not as a distant past, but as home. She noted that Brazil has over 130 million Black people, the second-largest Black population in the world, yet most have never stepped foot on African soil. “This journey,” she said, “is how we begin to heal the wound of history and end the battle against racism.”
Jeffrey Daniels of the legendary music group Shalamar electrified the gathering with his message of unity. “Africa is not just history, Africa is destiny,” he proclaimed. “Wherever we come from—America, Cuba, Brazil, the UK—we are one people. We must return not only physically, but mentally.”
Cuba’s Ambassador, Miriam Morales Palmero, spoke from the heart, celebrating the unbreakable bond between Africa and Cuba. Quoting historian Fernando Ortiz, she said: “Cuba without the blacks would not be Cuba.” She called the festival a spiritual bridge reconnecting two cultures that never truly separated.
Lagos lawmakers, including Hon Bonu Solomon, pledged strong government support for all initiatives that draw the Diaspora back home. He described Badagry as not just historic, but sacred ground, a place of pain transformed into prophecy fulfilled.
The festival exploded with the grandeur of African culture—majestic masquerades, royal processions, ancestral rites, boat regattas, traditional chants, and the mystic Zangbeto guardians. Every moment echoed a single message: Africa is not waiting to be remembered, she is rising to be re-embraced.
Hon Babatunde Hunpe of Badagry offered a heartfelt closing, declaring Badagry the global capital of return. Once a departure point of sorrow, it now stands as a living altar of healing, hope, and Pan-African rebirth.
The Door of Return is no longer just a monument. It is a movement. A reversal. A resurrection. A homecoming. A future in which Africa no longer mourns; she leads her children into a new chapter of power, prosperity, and unity. (SUN)



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