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The
Evil of the Bibiani Hunchback Ritual
By Kofi Akosah-Sarpong
How do fathom the fact that despite advances in science
and technology, despite advances in human reasoning some
people somewhere in Bibiani, a town in Ghana’s Ashanti
Region, credulously believe that a hunchback’s hump can
be ritualistically cut off for rituals, among reasons,
to make them successful?
Psychoanalytically, while such fatal rituals are part of
the ancient Ghanaian/African culture, it is hardly an
everyday practice and is at the fringes of the culture,
where some few people, normally moved by either
desperation or envy of somebody’s wealth or success
engage either wrong-headed traditional spiritualists or
bad-hearted juju-marabou mediums for such rituals to
make them rich or successful. Still, over the years,
such fringe lethal rituals have been enriched by certain
parts of juju-marabou rituals. It is, therefore, not
surprising that almost all those arrested for the
Bibiani hunchback ritual murder are Muslims, a virtual
pointer to the speculations that the ritual might have
been performed by a juju-marabou spiritualist.
Modern science and some aspects of the Ghanaian culture
see hunchback differently, at least those who want to
use hunchbacks for certain dark ritual practices.
Science says hunchback, or humpback, a deformity of the
back shaped like a hump, called kyphosis, is an abnormal
backward curve to the vertebral column or a person whose
back is bent because of abnormal curvature of the upper
spine. On the other hand, traditionally, certain
Ghanaians believe superstitiously that hunchbacks are
evil, freaks of nature and therefore can be killed
ritualistically for varied reasons. As part of the
ritual, normally, part of the hump is cut off and the
hunchback is left to bleed to death. In the Bibiani
case, the hunchback was tied to a rope, like a dog, and
part of his hump cut off, and left to bled to death.
But as Ghana is increasingly being modernized, its dark
cultural practices are receiving intellectual attention.
Nana Akufo-Addo, the December 2008 presidential
candidate for the ruling National Patriotic Party, talk
of modernizing the Ghanaian society – part of this, I
understand, is refining the inhibitions within the
culture that have been stifling progress. While some
call for further modernization of the education system
to incorporate all aspects of the culture, others
question what Ft. Lt. Jerry Rawlings and his horde of
revolutionaries were doing all these years during their
almost 20 years in power in the face of all these
cultural inhibitions that have been stifling Ghana’s
progress.
In avant-garde Rawlings’ own home region, Volta, despite
the indigenes hard work and immense love for education,
there are perceptions that certain dark cultural
practices such as juju are partly responsible for the
area being one of the poorest in Ghana. Not surprising,
the Volta Physically Challenge Independent Group, an
association of disabled people, has urged “the public to
help the Police to fight the inclinations towards the
murder of physically challenged persons for
superstitious reasons.”
However, you need not be a historian or psychologist to
understand that this isn’t larger Ghanaian character,
but some very few wrong-headed individuals who are prone
to evil deeds. What Hannah Arendt might call the
“banality of evil” may provoke surprising predictability
of explanations but in the final analysis 99 percent of
Ghanaians are even afraid to dabble in the cutting off a
hunchback’s hump for rituals. Yet, the few, with their
juju-marabou medium accomplices, are threat to the
larger Ghanaian society. As the rapper Cardinal-Marshall
would say, they are “dangerous” to the Ghanaian society.
This is despite the view that such dark cultural
practices are counter-productive in the long run and is
evil. But it is impossible to think about Ghanaian
civilization, possibility, evil, or, of course, the
Supreme Being, without confronting the culture’s dark
aspects. Despite such thoughts circling in the Ghanaian
brain, none of the governments Ghanaians have had for
the past 51 years have thought that the easiest way to
solve Ghana’s problems is to engage in the dark parts of
culture by either undertaking mass human sacrifices or
assembling enmass juju-marabou spiritualists to
ritualize to end poverty or cure diseases or make Ghana
a First World country.
Despite its amorphous, intellectually unmanageable
nature, Ghanaians believe there is evil, as their
cosmology and other spiritual practices say, and some
spend a lot of time vainly contemplating about it. The
abduction and ritually cutting off of the Bibiani
hunchback’s hump is one of them, regardless of its
primitive bewilderment.
Nana Akufo-Addo and his like-minded modernization folks
have a lot of work before them in helping to refine the
dark aspects of the Ghanaian culture for progress. For,
despite Jean Baudrillard arguing in The Transparency of
Evil that all freedom has been accomplished in the
post-orgiastic age, all inhibitions erased, all limits
eliminated, all barricades torn down, in Ghana certain
components of its culture are barriers, limiting,
inhibiting, and stifling progress.
By Kofi Akosah-Sarpong, Canada, August 19, 2008
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