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Nana Akuffo Addo and the Prophets
By Kofi Akosah-Sarpong, Ghanadot
How do you fathom a highly rational man and one of his
country’s leading intellectuals, who have used pretty
much of his life-time fighting the irrational - from the
dark periods of military dictatorships to crass human
rights violations - the subject of immense prophetic
interpretations? The curiosity borders on the fact that
his formidable campaign machine, with its American-style
campaign offices at Adabraka, a suburb of Accra, the
capital, and himself have not responded to such
prophetic chants, creating all kinds of superstitious
feelings, against rational thoughts, in a culture where
superstition is everyday diet in its development
process.
Is it because he has no grasp of the implications of his
country’s cultural norms, values and traditions in its
progress like most of its elites? Or is it because of
his immense Western education – from London to Paris,
key centres of the groundbreaking European Enlightenment
movements that opened the world into its on-going
progress - he has, like most his country’s elites, lost
feel of the nuances of the very environment his
country’s progress is to be driven from? Ladies and
Gentlemen, join me in analyzing Nana Akuffo Addo, the
63-year-old outgoing Minister for Foreign Affairs,
Regional Integration and NEPAD and one of the key
presidential aspirants highly touted to win easily the
December congress of the ruling New Patriotic Party (NPP)
to pick up the over 20 presidential candidates, as
prophesied by one Prophet Amos Sarfo Adu, owner of
Soldiers of Christ Ministry, one of Ghana’s booming
spiritual churches that are fertilized by a society
mired in disturbingly deep prophetic culture.
In the days and months to come, as the 2008 general
elections gathers steam, the influence of prophets,
Voodoo priests, Malams, Shamans, juju-marabouts and
other spiritualists are on the ascendancy, as the
Crusading Guide’s Kumasi-based James Donkor reports of
Prophet Sarfo Adu prophesizing that Nana Akuffo Addo has
being chosen by “the Almighty God told me that He (God)
has chosen Nana Akuffo Addo to be the President of Ghana
from 2009 to 2016.” Prophet Sarfo Adu said he had
prophesied in the same manner about the incumbent
President John Kufour and “that God spoke about
President Kufuor in 1996 and commanded him (Kufuor) to
visit him (Prophet) in 1998 and in 1999 at the late J.Y.
Manu’s house in Accra and prayed for him in 2000 before
the elections.” The issue is not to debase the prophets,
the trouble is how their incredibly excessive influence
on the entire Ghanaian life weakens rationalization of
the development process, so much so that even the
elites, like Nana Akuffo Addo, who are expected to
radiate high-level reasoning to illuminate the
developmental path, are under the heavy sway of the
prophets, Voodoo priests, Malams, juju-marabout mediums,
Shamans, and other spiritualists to the injury of
Ghana’s larger progress.
As Ghana’s 2008 general elections closes in,
spiritualists of all stripes, from afar and near in
continental Africa, are not only ritualizing to help
politicians like Nana Akuffo Addo, more for material
gains than the spiritual health of Ghana, win elections
but also interpret political events in prophetic terms.
Newspapers, part of the objective society, like the
political parties, equally more attuned to material
gains than the rational growth of Ghana, are caught in
the cross-current of the bumbling spiritualists. Like
the “Crusading Guide,” newspapers realizing how the
gullible public is moved by such enticing tales of the
prophetic in the realm of the political, and how this
sells newspapers, give the prophetic interpretations of
the Nana Akuffo Addos much more coverage to the
detriment of high-level analyzes and reasoning needed to
lighten up the development process in a country which
certain parts of its culture hamper its progress.
Added to this is the Nana Akuffo Addo’s well-built
campaign machine not distancing itself from the prophets
and other spiritualists, as a way of rationalizing the
electoral process, by issuing statements to the effect
that the success of Nana Akuffo Addo’s emerging as a
potential winner of the ruling NPP presidential
candidate is shaped by hard work, strategy, long-term
planning, brutal dedication, steadfastness, and his
long-running struggles for Ghana’s democracy, to the
risk of his life, that have endeared him to his party
and Ghanaians, and not any unseen forces manipulating
Ghanaians to elect him.
Kofi Akosah-Sarpong, Canada, July 26, 2007 |