|
|
Commentary
Page
We
invite commentaries from writers all over. The subject is about
Ghana and the world. We reserve the right to accept or reject submissions,
but we are not necessarily responsible for the opinions expressed
in articles we publish......MORE
|
Betty Mould, superstition and progress
By Kofi Akosah-Sarpong
Ghanadot, August 10, 2009
Those who think Africans are dull and cannot think
should quietly come to Ghana and view what is happening
in the electrifying development scene. The picture isn’t
anxiety about Ghana’s new found oil or its return as
number one cocoa producer in the world or its
post-Barack Obama mindset where Ghanaians think “Yes, we
can.”
The prospect is Ghanaian elites, like other African
elites, for long seen as weak, wobbly, mired in
intellectual low ceiling, autistic and their inability
to think from within their traditional values and
institutions in relation to the global prosperity ideals
for progress shaking off such stigmatization.
From Tain to Bongo, from George Ayittey to Courage
Quashigah, Ghanaian small towns and elites are
increasingly thinking out loud through their traditional
values and institutions. In a holistic manner unseen
years ago, the positive and negative aspects of their
culture are under immense scrutiny in the larger
progress scheme. The thinker George Ayittey coined the
term “African solution for Africa’s problems.” The
theologian and president Kwame Nkrumah muted the
motivational mantra “African personality” to drum home
Africans’ self-esteem after decades being messed-up by
colonialism and the trans-Atlantic slave trade.
It was the Ghanaian, Y.K. Amoako, who observed, as then
chair of the United Nations Economic Commission for
Africa, that Africa is the only region in the world
where its development paradigms are dominated by foreign
development paradigms. The implications are that
Ghanaians and Africans aren’t thinking, in all
philosophical and practical terms, from within their
traditional institutions and values, for their progress.
Such views have confirmed the old colonial notion that
Africans cannot think well enough or the late Senegalese
President Leopold Senghor’s argument that Africans are
good at expressing their emotions rather than thinking.
In philosophical and thinking requisites, this has made
Ghana, as the “Black Star of Africa,” seen as no more or
less than propaganda and emotional “Star,” without any
logical and material substance, and not any place in
Africa where deep and grand African-orientated thinking
and philosophies should emanate from. But moving away
from years of one-party systems and military juntas that
beclouded Ghana’s thinking, philosophizing, human
rights, the rule of law, freedoms and democracy,
Ghanaians, more their elites, are fast emerging as
having the ability to think, rationalize, and
philosophize from within their traditional institutions
and values in relation to the global prosperity ideals
for progress.
In 2008, the small, remote town of Tain revealed Ghana’s
democratic potency by effectively resolving the
democratic impasse when it helped elect President John
Attar Mills – Mills worn the elections by mere but
significant 40,000 votes. (It was a democratic record in
the world and charged the newly elected US President
Barack Obama to come to Ghana as his first sub-Sahara
African visit to tout Ghana’s democracy as progress
fertilizer for Africa). Tain laid bare any fear and
superstition that “something will happen.” The
enlightened Vice President John Mahama, then a Member of
Parliament, had told Tain citizens “nothing will happen”
and that they should vote rationally.
In 2009, Bongo, another humble small town, in relation
to the current thinking, banned witchcraft that has been
responsible for stifling progress for long time
including deaths and other human rights violations,
saying it has no scientific bases. Bongo is increasingly
being replicated Ghana- and Africa-wide.
In-between all these, the culture and progress
discussions have been upward, with the mass media,
academics, ex-Presidents Jerry Rawlings and John Kufour,
traditional rulers, political heavy weights, women’s
organizations, religious bodies and civil society
organizations taking on the culture in Ghana’s
development process.
In a remarkable feat as the culture-progress gets
exciting, Mrs. Betty Mould-Iddrisu, the Attorney General
and Minister of Justice and formerly the head of Legal
and Constitutional Affairs of the Commonwealth
Secretariat in London, UK stirred the culture-progress
thinking uphill when she enjoined “religious
organizations and civil society groups to partner
government to eradicate superstitious beliefs” in
Ghana’s development process, reports the Ghana News
Agency. “…the effects of superstition on society were
worrying and that it was endangering efforts to build a
healthy society based on hard work, goodwill and honesty
among other social virtues.” In further attempts in
tackling the complicated arithmetic of progress muddled
by certain aspects of the Ghanaian culture, Mrs. Betty
Mould-Iddrisu additionally charged that “the government
was committed to the eradication of superstitious
beliefs and would apply the laws to punish people who
abused the rights of others.”
Who said democracy, the rule of law, freedoms and human
rights aren’t good for durable progress for Africa and
Ghana, more so considering Ghana’s and Africa’s
political histories and cultures? Whether Libya’s Muamar
Gaddafi believes it or not, there is no clash of African
development philosophies here. Ghanaians have seen all
these before – from Kwame Nkrumah to Julius Nyerere to
Kamuzu Banda to Sekou Toure to Gamal Abdul Nasser.
How do Ghanaians confront deadly superstitions that have
made them less progressive or autistic in their
development process over the years? Betty Mould-Iddrisu
gives some solutions: “personal responsibility” and not
some demons accountable for accidents or misfortunes or
deaths. “Personal responsibility in the determination of
one’s fate” and not some evil spirits. No “blind
reliance on some spiritual processes to automatically
change one’s fortunes from poverty to riches overnight”
that normally comes in the form of human sacrifices,
witchcraft, or fearsome traditional juju-marabou
rituals. “Civil society must not shy away from openly
discussing the effects of superstition on the social and
spiritual lives of the people.” What Betty Mould-Iddrisu
didn’t add are the Ghanaian journalists who have been
radically taking on the inhibiting parts of their
culture, in a remarkable atmosphere of press freedom, as
an enlightenment mission.
In Betty Mould-Iddrisu, “The Black Star of Africa” is
flowering as an enlightened corporate entity,
simultaneously as a thinker and philosopher and it is
expected to radiate African-wide in the continent’s
progress.
Kofi Akosah-Sarpong, Canada, August
10, 2009
|
|
|
|
.......More |
|
|
|
|
Government to review Children’s Act
Accra, Aug. 10, Ghanadot/GNA – Government would
review the 1998 Children’s Act (Act 560) to assess the
extent of its implementation and effectiveness in order to
chart a new course for the country’s children, Mr Stephen
Amoanor Kwao Minister of Employment and Social Welfare,
stated in Accra on Monday....
More |
|
|
Friends bid farewell to H.E.
Fabrizio
Accra, Aug 10, Ghanadot- The outgoing Italian
Ambassador to Ghana, H.E. Fabrizio De-Agostini, and his wife
were over the weekend treated to a private farewell luncheon
by Mrs. Frances Akuete at her residence in Tema.
.
..More |
|
|
|
Government to procure free school uniforms from China
Accra, Aug 10, Ghanadot - Authentic information
reaching Ghanadot revealed that the Government of Ghana is
on its way to procure fabric for free school uniforms from
China...
More
|
|
|
Betty Mould, superstition and progress
Commentary, Aug 10, Ghanadot - Those
who think Africans are dull and cannot think should quietly
come to Ghana and view what is happening in the electrifying
development scene.. ...More
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
SPONSORSHIP AD HERE |
|
|
|
|
|