If you don’t remember, you will repeat the blunder
E. Ablorh-Odjidja
October 18, 2018
I thought I was done with writing on the National
Cathedral theme. I wasn’t.
I forgot one thing - to deal sufficiently with the
purpose of a National Cathedral.
In my view, the purpose should be clear and
justified by our history and our link with slavery.
A nation like ours needs atonement from that
association with slavery.
Accordingly, any building planned as a sacred
national space for God must be a place for
contemplation, penitence, and renewal of hope.
A new shining edifice, no matter how architecturally
remarkable, will, not generate automatically, a
remembrance or reason for atonement.
The best architect, with a mere design concept,
cannot supply the spiritual need to fill this place.
Repentance is what it takes.
I am a Christian by heritage.
That said, I have no expertise or authority on
Christianity or any other religion to offer.
But I do have a sense of history and regret - and a bit
of common sense with which to go along to ask for a
different approach to establish a national cathedral.
To encounter the Truth and Reality of our past, people
with our kind of history and need for repentance
(Christians, Muslims, Traditionalists, and alike), must
have a sacred space with a unifying motif for penitence.
This proposed ultra-new building cannot do it at this
time. Maybe
in time, such a new edifice may acquire a spiritual
presence like a shrine.
But why overlook our old castles, the museum
pieces that stand begging for some different and
positive branding than the slave fort image brought from
the past?
The Osu or Elmina castle, for use as a National
Shrine/Cathedral can be a perfect fit.
A conversion to such status will not add a
sectarian color to ceremonies held within them, nor
would it acerbate any religious differences between us,
since it would carry a non-schismatic resolve.
But consider this uplifting image:
An edifice, once a fort for holding slaves, now
becomes a binding force for contemplation, regret, and
hope for a better future.
No huge funding, relatively speaking, must be needed to
transform the castle into a shrine, since it will not be
meant as a place for comfort or hubris.
Likewise, no old buildings will be bulldozed, or a new
one built as proposed for the current National
Cathedral.
The low cost of converting an existing castle into a
humble place of assembly leaves little room for
corruption or the perception of it as would otherwise be
the case for the building of a completely new
ultra-modern cathedral.
There is no denying that we have a part of our history
to regret.
The incidence of slavery from our shores – of humans
held in these castles and then led in chains into
servitude.
The castles are still standing as witnesses and beckon
us to use their spaces as sacred places of worship.
Spaces that are already expiated by the blood of
hordes of ancestors who were trafficked through them as
slaves.
As spaces for worship, the sanctity of sacrifice within
the walls of these castles is already assured.
God did not ask for the bloody sacrifice.
But the aura of perpetual sacrifice is already
established in them.
The vile inhuman acts of slavery are already
etched on their surfaces.
These castles may just as well be turned into
shrines and symbols of penance now -
in dedication to
the God of all humanity, miscreants, and victims alike.
To these castles, now National Cathedral/Shrine, we can
come from all religious sectors to contemplate, hold
ceremonies, and pray for strength for the right approach
to tackle the future.
I had previously suggested an open space like the Black
Star Square for national worship. But on second thought,
the square must be reserved only for the vainglorious
parades (in the hot sun) for our armed forces as
penitence for the useless coups of the past.
The only presence of soldiers at the castle/National
Cathedral should be at the front grounds, posing as
standing guards, in silence and solemn posture for all
days and hours of the week.
For those who would walk past the soldiers into the
interior space of what once was a slave castle to
worship, they can join a refrain borrowed from a Jewish
song, or something with similar meaning from our
languages:
“There are people with hearts of stone, and stones with
hearts of people.”
The sense can then be collectively understood.
Past experiences as well as those of the present
have in part originated from the hearts of our people -
some stupid people with hearts of stone.
Conditions created by government policies in Africa that
push people to flee the continent in the present day.
Sights of people in leaky boats, risking lives
for greener pastures abroad, indeed, are the reenactment
of the pains of slavery.
Truthfully speaking, the escapes on the leaky boats to
countries abroad today are voluntary.
But the conditions propelling the escape are not.
These people are forced out by the bad conditions
that our politicians, the people with hearts of stone,
produce at home.
These are our people.
They have become the perpetrators of the same
acts and conditions created for the slave trade that we
ask others to be mindful of for reparations today.
So, if we ever need to cry for God’s forgiveness and
repair, as we wish with the National Cathedral, that cry
must come from the old slave castles, where some of our
ancestors colluded with the slave traders and thereby
offended God.
Our moment of catharsis will happen when we
collectively say within this Castle/National
Cathedral/Shrines, Never Again!
E. Ablorh-Odjidja, Publisher www.ghanadot.com,
Washington, DC, October 18, 2018.
Permission to publish: Please feel free to publish or
reproduce, with credits, unedited. If posted on a
website, email a copy of the web page to
publisher@ghanadot.com. Or don't publish at all.
|