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The Daily
Graphic and the Enlightenment
By Kofi Akosah-Sarpong*
It was the German thinker Karl Max who
observed that the human mind is linked by invisible
thread. Marx could be interpreted in many ways but the
sense here is how rapid the Ghanaian enlightenment
movement is briskly spreading among Ghanaian elites,
both at home and in the diaspora. They are using it in
their various situations to influence change. Part of
the reason for such remarkable spread is that people and
institutions are convinced of its relevance; it is free
spirited and pro bono.
From Kumasi Asante Kotoko, transportation experts,
medical practitioners, politicians, journalists, women’s
organizations, non-governmental organizations,
anti-corruption crusaders, lawyers, traditional rulers
to bureaucrats, as Marx would say, all minds are linked
by some invisible thread, as if they all in one room
debating the enlightenment as they attempt to rigorously
ruminate through the Ghanaian/African culture for
progress. The trend is on ascendency.
Part of the reason for the crusade is to free the
Ghanaian/African from some noxious ignorance, erroneous
beliefs and strange thinking that have asphyxiated their
progress. Again, part of the reason is to appropriate
the enabling aspects of the Ghanaian/African culture for
policy development and greater progress. The evolving
enlightenment game is holistic, playing with multiple
issues at the same time.
Though it has its distinct African sagacity, the
playground of the on-going enlightenment movement is
similar to the situation in the 18th-century European
Enlightenment period, as recounted in Philipp Blom’s new
work A Wicked Company: The Forgotten Radicalism of the
European Enlightenment (2010), where a Paris salon run
by Baron Paul Thierry d’Holbacha was turned into a
philosophical playground for many of the “greatest
thinkers of the age” and from there part of the European
development philosophy ballooned.
In the Ghanaian context, the playground is everywhere,
from newsrooms to the mentality that
witchcraft-is-responsible-for-mother’s-death. Samples:
Ex-President John Kufour has said in Lagos, Nigeria that
Africa’s high corruption is partly due to certain
aspects of its culture. Kumasi Asante Kotoko, after 75
years, banned the irrational juju spiritual from its
operations. Transportation experts advise that vehicular
accidents aren’t caused by evil spirit. George Ayittey
says some of the African culture promotes tyranny.
Development experts complain of the tyrannically
egocentric Big Man syndrome that inhibits dialogue,
induce oppression, stifle freedoms and human rights, and
undermine democracy.
Medical practitioners, the clergy and traditional rulers
tell Ghanaians to spend more on the living for better
life and less on the dead which receive higher
expenditure. Editorialists say evil spirits aren’t
responsible for crime but human agency. Educationists
call for more inclusion of Ghanaian/African cultural
sensibilities in the curriculum. Policy planners are
being enjoined to adequately factor in Ghanaian/African
cultural values in policy development.
Broadly, these are all attempts to build on what earlier
African sages such as Kwame Nkrumah and Julius Nyerere
had thought about. They held the sacred idea of Pan-Africanism
and its associated African Personality not only as
unifiers but also ways of correcting historical and
psychological dilemmas the African faces from
colonialism, the trans-Atlantic slave trade and the
discriminatory international political economy.
Unlike Nkrumah and associates era, today, Pan-Africanism,
as feel-good-mixed-bag philosophical doctrine of
yesteryears, is being taken to different level by the
Ghanaian/African enlightenment thinkers, who are
simultaneously wrestling with the refinement of the
obstacles within the African culture that have been
hindering progress and the appropriation of the enabling
parts for advancement. The thinkers are aided by new
high powered researches, think tanks, positive values of
globalization, the new media, new technologies, mass
communications gadgets and transnational
Ghanaians/Africans who are increasingly connecting the
global prosperity ideals to their home countries.
It is in such atmosphere that high profile Ghanaians
such as former United Nations chief, Kofi Annan, and
chair of Ghana’s National Development Planning
Commission, P. V. Obeng, who have been in the Ghanaian
policy development scene since 1994, joining the
enlightenment deliberations. But of supreme distinction,
because of its age, vast experiences and its immensely
powerful communications outreach nation-wide, is the
60-year-old Accra-based Daily Graphic, the state owned
newspaper, joining the enlightenment dialogues.
For some time, most Ghanaian mass media such as The
Ghanaian Times, The Ghanaian Chronicle, The Daily Guide,
The Accra Daily Mail, The Enquirer, Gye Nyame Concord,
Joy FM, Peace FM, Adom FM, Ghanaweb, Citi FM, Public
Agenda, Heritage, Crusading Guide, among others, have
carried the enlightenment case. As part of the broader
attempts to refine some inhibitions within the
Ghanaian/African culture, the Daily Guide, as an
outstanding example, have been employing solution
journalism to elaborately interpret certain constraining
Ghanaian/African cultural practices and their hazardous
implications to better living, human rights, freedoms,
democracy, rationality, the rule of law, and prosperity.
In this regard, the enormous Daily Graphic could be
humble enough to borrow some enlightenment lessons from
the much younger The Daily Guide. For the Daily
Graphic’s union with the enlightenment campaign reveals
its act of humility.
Established along with the London, UK-based Sunday
Mirror by Cecil King (of the London Daily Mirror Group),
the Daily Graphic is Ghana’s number one newspaper, with
string of sister publications. Like Ghana’s
rough-and-tumble development history, the Daily Graphic
has seen a large number of editors of diverse background
swinging in its editorial room, sporadically replaced by
respective governments – both military juntas and
civilian regimes. The most notable was in 1979 when it
was rechristened the People's Daily Graphic under the
Ft. Lt. John Jerry Rawlings military junta, ostensibly
to “remind the people that it belongs to them,” as a
blurb says.
For the past 60 years, the Daily Graphic revealed the
muddled philosophical grounds of Ghana’s and Africa’s
development thinking, a thinking not determined by
Ghana’s and Africa’s cultural values. At issue aren’t
dancing and traditional fines arts but how
Ghanaian/African cultural values should tell the
rational basis of Ghana’s and Africa’s progress. Today
it is socialism, tomorrow it is capitalism, the next day
it is social democracy, on Monday it is a mixture of
everything.
We saw this mix-up more in the almost 20 years of the
Jerry Rawlings military juntas and civilian
administrations – heavily circling in their minds
Soviet-Cuban-type socialism and European-type
capitalism, if Ghana/Africa is Russia, Cuba or Europe.
Or psychologically, as if Ghana and Africa have no
traditional development values of their own that need to
be appropriated for progress. In all these jumping
around, Ghanaian/African cultural values, as rational
underpinning to motivate Ghana/African progress, were
virtually nil.
As much as the Daily Graphic knows, yes, Kwame Nkrumah
and Julius Nyerere, among others, were passionate Pan-Africanists
and profoundly touted the virtues of Pan-Africanism and
the African Personality but African bureaucracies from
their time to now do not reflect these cultural virtues
in their practices as the Southeast Asians have
fruitfully done. Of philosophical interest to the Daily
Graphic is the fact that their editorial philosophies,
for the past 60 years, have not been genuinely
entrenched and interpreted in Ghanaian/African cultural
values as motive force to influence policy making and
progress, compared to the Okinawa, Japan-based The Asahi
Shimbun or the Seoul, South Korea-based Gook-Min Ilbo
that reflect the Southeast Asian Renaissance.
As variously heard from the enlightenment thinkers and
reiterated by P.V. Obeng, who reflects Nkrumah and
associates inadequacies as a long-time de facto Prime
Minister under Jerry Rawlings’ regimes, national
planning strategically didn’t factor in
Ghanaians’/Africans’ traditional values in policy
development. However, the Japanese, through their
Renaissance, did that, part of which has resulted in
their superb management system microwaved from within
their cultural values. One aspect is called Kaizen
(Japanese for "improvement" or "change for the better")
which could be replicable anywhere, as they will tell
you. Born into the Pan-African doctrine, the Daily
Graphic had been expected to be chief influencer to box
in the Obengs and the Ghanaian system into planning from
within Ghanaian/African cultural values in the
development process.
On the other side of enlightenment coin, as Kofi Annan
re-echoed, is the tweaking of the inhibitions within the
Ghanaian/African culture that have been blocking
progress. Annan mentioned the destructive Pull Him Down
(PHD) syndrome, a situation where Africans, like crabs
pulling each other down as they attempt to climb out of
a trap, destroy each other as they attempt to progress.
While part of the reason may be tribalism, other reasons
may be the easy access to negative juju-marabou
spiritual medium and other wrong-headed spiritualists to
bring the progressive African down.
In 2008, newly elected President John Atta Mills, aware
of the micro-level PHD projected into the macro-level,
that have seen the unhelpful practice of new governments
either discontinuing or destroying development programs
of the previous governments, said that, “policies and
programmes currently in the pipeline, initiated by the
last administration, which supported positive national
development, must be thoroughly reviewed, preserved and
added to the new initiative that would be recommended.”
The end product of Annan, Mills and Obeng views, as
replication of the enlightenment thinkers, is
long-running convoluted national development policies
that aren’t helpful to the Ghanaian/African progress and
psychology, and that have feeble rational realities. Y.K.
Amoako, the ex-chair of the UN Economic Commission for
Africa, would add that part of the reason for this state
of affairs, sadly, is that Ghana/Africa is the only
region in the world where their development hypotheses
are driven by foreign paradigms to the detriment of
their rich cultural values.
Shaking itself from such false sense, the Daily Graphic
in an editorial soberly entitled Ensuring Long-Term
Development (27 October 2010), revealed its new
philosophical realities, or something like that, that
incorporates the on-going enlightenment stance, as taken
up by Annan, Obeng, and others.
Refreshingly, said the Daily Graphic, “In a matter of
five days, a negative aspect of African politics, which
is very rife in our dear nation, has been brought to the
fore. First, it was former UN Secretary-General,
Busumuru Kofi Annan, who slammed the way African
governments took delight in undoing the work of their
predecessors for political advantage. He noted that
instead of focusing on how to build on the good
initiatives of their predecessors, governments sometimes
spent half of their terms dismantling the work of their
predecessors with the intention of making them
unpopular…
“Then, in a positive response to the concerns raised by
Mr. Annan, the Chairman of the National Development
Planning Commission (NDPC), Mr. P. V. Obeng, advocated
the inclusion of all political parties on the commission
to ensure that long-term national development plans were
sustained and not truncated by the pull-him-down
syndrome which had permeated our political landscape …”
While the enlightenment crusade welcomes the Daily
Graphic’s innovative thinking, of concern is lack of
open mention of Ghanaian/African cultural values as part
of the inclusion into national planning. Whether in
Annan or Obeng, as echoed by the enlightenment thinkers,
the onus unweavingly rest with Ghanaian/African
bureaucrats, the Daily Graphic and other mass media,
elites (as directors of progress) and Obeng’s National
Development Planning Commission. The National House of
Chiefs, as gleaners of culture, will be superb national
policy sounding board. Once again, in floating this new
development thinking, where all Ghanaians “co-author and
own” the national planning (as the Daily Graphic
fittingly said), the ownership and authoring should be
pollinated in Ghanaian/African cultural values.
This is for psychological, historical and psychic whys
and wherefores such as refining the ““PHD” syndrome and
opening the floodgates for true development on all
frontiers … It is also the way to achieve sustainable
development that can lead to long and healthy lives,
enlightenment and knowledge and access to resources
needed for a decent standard of living and be able to
participate fully in the decision-making process,” as
Daily Graphic contends.
Having recovered itself from years of misperception, the
editorial room of Daily Graphic is expected to become
the hot incubator for the new development thinking,
where Ghanaian/African traditional values will be used
to prepare new clear cut realistic national policies. In
this context, with its mature age, enormous national
outreach and vast mass communications powers, the Daily
Graphic becomes the philosophical playground for the
emerging Ghanaian/African development thinking in the
21st century.
It is in this thermosphere that a new African journalism
philosophy, brewed from within Ghanaian/African cultural
values, will be famously hatched, as driver of
re-invigorated Ghana/Africa progress. Such new thinking
will fit into the backdrop of the younger The Ghanaian
Chronicle saying that “It is instructive to note that
the incoherent implementation of development projects by
successive governments is inimical to the forward march
of the country’s development agenda.”
Whether in Annan, Obeng, The Ghanaian Chronicle or the
Daily Graphic, at issue is development thinking that
emanates from the core ideals of Ghanaian/African
traditional values, histories and experiences such as
the legacies of colonialism. And the product of this
mixture can aptly be called, both philosophically and
practically, the African Consensus.
The African Consensus, in the face of the Daily
Graphic’s new editorial beliefs, will be a response to
the USA-based Time magazine’s Michael Schuman jadedly
asking, “India vs. China: Which is the best role model
for the developing world?” While India or China may be
of shining development footnote to Ghana/Africa, of
progress intelligence is the fact that their successes
are partly driven by their core traditional values and
histories, swayed by their elites and mass media.
China’s Confucianism and progress; India’s Sanskritism
and advancement. Yes, as Schuman indicated, “every
up-and-coming poor nation wants to “be like China.”” But
how to be like China involves clear weighty thinking by
each poor nation’s elites. And that means reasoning from
within the poor nation’s cultural elements and
experiences.
After 60 years of the Daily Graphic existence and after
53 years of Ghana’s birth, after many tumbles within its
editorial room, the Daily Graphic, among other emerging
enlightening media houses, doubts the development
policies currently running Ghana, and by extension
Africa. The policies aren’t realistic, they are
convoluted, and they aren’t overwhelmingly informed by
Ghanaian/African cultural values.
Ghana and other African states were founded on
ex-colonial Western development paradigms that didn’t
adequately factor in Ghanaian/African cultural values,
the Daily Graphic’s new real thinking calls for a
re-orientation of the country’s development paradigms,
manufactured from within Ghana’s and Africa’s cultural
values. Once again, the strategy is to appropriate the
enabling aspects and refine the inhibiting values for
progress. Globally, the Daily Graphic is warming up to
the enlightenment thinkers who draw from the global
prosperity ideals. From Southeast Asian to Europe,
nations that have prospered, and sustained it, have done
so from within their core cultural values and play them
with other worldly prosperity ideals.
Time’s Schuman indicates that “The rise of China has
made the West doubt the continued validity of its
cherished principles of democratic, fee-market
capitalism ... The old “Washington Consensus,” based on
a devotion to free markets and free enterprise, is being
replaced by the “Beijing Consensus.” But is China’s
Beijing Consensus really the winning formula for poor
nations? Larry Summers, Obama's assistant on economic
policy, raised the idea in a recent speech that India's
political-economic model, which he labeled the “Mumbai
Consensus,” may in the end win the day.”
Consequently, this question from Schuman will be
appropriate to the Daily Graphic’s new bearing: “So
what's a better model for” Ghana’s and Africa’s
progress? “– the Mumbai Consensus or the Beijing
Consensus?” Though the best model for Ghana and Africa
isn’t either but the one from within themselves,
occasionally, Ghanaians/Africans and the Daily Graphic
could draw lessons from the Chinese and Indian models.
And that means the Daily Graphic, with its vast
communications powers, will join the enlightenment
thinkers in giving birth to the African Consensus.
There surely have to be an African Consensus, if
Ghanaians/Africans are to live sustainably real
comfortable lives. As we are experiencing from Ghanaians
from diverse stations of life getting involved in the
selfless enlightenment campaigns, this will be assisted
by researchers, the mass media, thinkers, traditional
institutions, opinion leaders and elites. This will aid
the Daily Graphic in its new thinking, help grow the
real Ghana/African development philosophy, and open the
way to the renewal of Ghana’s and Africa’s progress.
*Kofi Akosah-Sarpong is a journalist and academic.
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