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Eating Ghanaian/African Food is
Good for You
By Kofi
Akosah-Sarpong, Ghanadot
Kofi Akosah-Sarpong ponders on Ghanaian Health
Minister, Courage Quashigah’s suggestion that
Ghanaian/African traditional food is good for health
Ghanaian Health Minister, Mr. Courage Quashigah, for
long in the forefront of the “African Renaissance”
process, has been attempting to awaken Africans to their
superb values in their development process. And nowhere
is this notable than being healthy through eating
healthy traditional food in the broader development
process. The sense here is touting how good traditional
Ghanaian/African food is, not only in the global context
where Ghanaian/African traditional food is not featured
prominently, compared to other Southeast Asian
traditional food, but also in the context of the health
care delivery system in Africa’s progress.
Quashigah’s campaigns for balanced nutrition by
consuming healthy traditional Ghanaian food, as a
bulwark against “preventing ill health,” is as vital as
curative measures in the face of severe inadequate
health infrastructure. Such observation comes in the
face of similar admonitions in Japan, a country
fascinated by Ghanaians/ for their ability to mix their
traditional values with the dominant Western neo-liberal
ones in their development process. As Quashigah is
complaining, some Japanese elites think their country’s
traditional healthy food is giving way to the fatty
Western food. Bryan Walsh, in article in the US-based
“Time” magazine (June 06, 2007) entitled “Lamenting the
Decline of the Home-Cooked Meal in Japan,” makes the
case that despite Japanese traditional food emphasizing
“the balance of nutrition” and “need to have fish,
vegetables, soup at every meal," pretty much of healthy
Japanese meal “prepared by mother and eaten on tatami
mat by the entire family,” as is case with traditional
Ghanaian homes, is declining. Drawing parallel from
Japanese nutritionists and public officials concern,
Quashigah echoes the same concerns that with the
ascendancy of Western fatty food globally, Ghanaians are
increasingly drifting from their healthy traditional
food that “cures for ailments” and “that one could take
to minimise the occurrence of diseases.”
As the world becomes more interdependent, there are
corresponding inherent problems normally associated with
the inappropriate mixing of cultures because of their
glitter, as Quashigah and the Japanese blame the decline
of their traditional “diet on the arrival of Western
fast-food chains over the past several decades.” This is
driven by the pull and push of cultures – the uninformed
Ghanaian thinks drinking the American exported “Coca
Cola” and “French fries” are cool and eating less their
healthier traditional food is equally cool. As an
Asante, I am not brought up eating heavily fried foods –
my Caucasian Canadian doctors tell me to go the Asante
way and not to eat too much Western fatty-rich food
because they are not good for my health. A Nigerian told
me that the World Health Organization (WHO) says
Nigerians (more those from the southern part of the
country) are among the people with the best eye-sight in
the world because they eat more of their native green
vegetables and palm oil.
The lessons here are that Ghanaian indigenous foods,
with its heavy emphasis on green vegetables, like the
famed healthy Arab/Mediterranean foods, are among one of
the healthiest in the world. Japanese nutritionists and
health experts are worried that “millions of Japanese
schoolchildren grew up eating like their American
counterparts, while the government told their parents
that traditional Japanese food was nutritionally
deficient.” Quashigah has sensed this Japanese trend in
Ghana and has cautioned professional caterers against
the use of unwholesome foodstuff and ingredients as a
way of cutting down cost and making enormous profits for
themselves. He said using unwholesome ingredients for
food, posed great danger to the Ghanaian health, as this
could lead to food contamination or poisoning, and urged
health and quality control inspectors to intensify
monitoring, to ensure that caterers did not compromise
quality for the sake of commercialization. The
contention is not unchecked global commercialization has
twisted Ghanaians thinking against their healthy
traditional food norms but Ghanaians have been blinded,
through the misappropriation of Western foods, to demean
their healthy traditional food.
For sometime, there are worries by Ghanaian health
experts and nutritionists that consumption of healthy
traditional Ghanaian/African food is declining, while
intake of fatty Western food has increased. This is
against worsening private and public sanitation
situation country-wide. Ghanaian children are
increasingly becoming confused about the benefit of
their traditional foods and Western fatty ones.
Inadequate public health information is responsible.
Quashigah’s touting of the importance of nutrition as
part of the general health care delivery system do not
prominently raise the health benefits of Ghanaian
traditional foods, especially “developing a new
curriculum that would incorporate nutrition in the
training of health professionals in order to promote
good feeding.” If such best practices are mixed with the
objectives of the United Nations anti-poverty venture
Millennium Development Goals it will deepen Ghanaians’
health. The unhealthy food consumption is scarier even
at health centres: Quashigah observes that even in
hospitals there are problems of families entering with
“different foods,” most times the Western fatty foods,
some of which often worsened patients’ health situations
due to their poor nutritional and fatty contents."
Like the Japanese, against the back drop of Ghanaians
caught up at increasing work, traditional family
pressures, schooling, and mounting pressures of poverty,
Ghanaians are having problems going for “balanced,
healthy traditional meals” not only prepared at home but
traditionally eaten with the family. No doubt, Quashigah
has advised caterers, more trained in Western schools
than Ghanaian ones, to consider the introduction of
indigenous healthy Ghanaian dishes, not only for its
“higher nutritional values,” but as source of medicine,
as the Chinese will tell you, against the Western ones,
“most of which led to obesity, diabetes and heart
problems.”
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