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Culture on national planning
By Kofi Akosah-Sarpong
Ghanadot, August 6, 2009
Fifty-two years on, the Kumasi workshop on culture and
development planning for district planning officers
reveal the shallowness of Ghana as a development ideal.
It also demonstrates lack of intellectual detail of
project Ghana, as it pride itself as the centre of
higher thinking in Africa’s progress. The “Black Star of
Africa” as small-minded short of larger grand thinking
to resolve Africa’s progress challenges.
On the other hand, the Kumasi workshop also discloses a
nation that has discovered errors in its development
philosophy and is now making amends towards its
correction. As Y.K. Amoako will tell you, Africa is the
only region in the world where its development paradigms
are dominated by foreign development paradigms to the
detriment of its rich cultural values and institutions.
Botswana is exception though. Botswana quickly balanced
its progress tender after independence from British
colonialism in 1966 by complementing its culture values
and institutions with the global development ideals and
it is not surprising that it has the best development
indicators in Africa.
Some African intellectuals such as George Ayittey (of
“African solution for African problems” fame) have
strongly argued for equilibrium between African
sensibilities with the global prosperity ideals in
Africa’s progress. The World Bank has suggested same.
And drawing from the wisdom of the global prosperity
experiences and African commentators of the likes of
Wole Soyinka, Chinua Achebe and George Ayitteh, US
President Barack Obama said in Accra, Ghana on July 12
that whether in democratic growth or any development
venture for that matter, African traditional values and
institutions should be considered in the overall
schemes.
The Kumasi workshop rode on the back of these growing
thoughts, but at certain disconcerting altitudes, the
Kumasi workshop also sounded like a Western
anthropologist teaching Ghanaian policy-makers what is
their own culture. Still, at some point, the workshop
sounded more like textbook recitations than the
practical nitty-gritty of the Ghanaian culture used
everyday by Ghanaians to move around their daily living.
While all Ghanaians were born and socialized into their
culture, at deeper level some have vague sense of it and
their contact with the forces of globalization is
eroding their deeper sense of their culture, making a
good number have an indistinct sense of their
traditional values.
Against this backdrop is the fact that colonialism
demeaned the Ghanaian/African culture, making sense of
Y.K. Amoako’s observation that Africa is at the mercy of
foreign development paradigms, as if it has nothing of
its own – the African elites, as directors of progress,
weak, confused, shallow and autistic in the face
development challenges. This has created long-term
psychological and confidence crisis. The Kumasi workshop
and similar ventures nation-wide would help right this
glitch. But the higher harmonization of this trends rest
with new generation of Ghanaian elites, as drivers of
development, the National House of Chiefs, as key
custodians of culture, and the Ghana Civil Service, as
key radiator of national planning.
The Kumasi workshop should have brought in those who
deal with everyday practical cultural matters, the like
of the Asantehene Osei Tutu 11, Agbogbomefia Torgbui
Afede Asor XIV, and Okyehene Osagyefo Amoatia Ofori
Panin, as part of the trainers and beamed nation-wide so
as to get a better sense of what could be expected in
weaving the Ghanaian culture into policy development.
The success of this could be replicated nation-wide,
more so for the bureaucrats at the Ghana Civil Service,
who are disturbingly entrenched in Western development
paradigms against the cultural sensibilities of the very
people they purport to serve.
How do you fathom this, you don’t understand me from
within my values but you want to save me, you want to
develop me. That’s the situation between the Ghana Civil
Service and Ghanaians’ development process in relation
to their traditional values and institutions. The Kumasi
workshop will agree with this supposition.
Culture and development workshop for policy planners?
That’s superbly new proposal as Ghana wakes up from the
slumber of its development process by projecting higher
thinking and balances wheeled by its on-going democracy,
human rights, the rule of law and freedoms. Despite the
acknowledgement by participants that the Ghanaian
culture has failed to informed policy-making over the
years, the Kumasi workshop was more about the positive
aspects of the Ghanaian culture, failing to discuss the
inhibiting aspects of the culture that have blocked
progress for long, long time.
Before the Kumasi workshop, President John Atta Mills,
in line with current thinking, had told Ghanaians in his
recent Western and Brong Ahafo regions working visits to
extricate themselves from the inhibiting aspects of
their culture that impede their progress. You don’t
progress if you think beyond all reasonable doubts that
witchcraft is responsible for all accidents and that
witchcraft causes crimes and that human sacrifice will
bring success and that pulling one down as he or she
attempts to progress is cool.
The Kumasi workshop should have work around the Atta
Mills advise and discuss some of the negative parts of
the culture that have made the Ghanaian less progressive
over the years – the Pull Him/Her Down syndrome, the
“Big Man” syndrome, witchcraft as responsible for
misfortune, extreme paternalism, excessive reliance on
juju-marabou mediums, strange and erroneous believes
emanating from the culture, human sacrifices, among
others.
Regardless of this, the Kumasi workshop is a welcomed
start as Ghana and Africa increasingly discover itself
as a development project from within their traditional
values and institutions in relation to the global
prosperity principles.
Kofi Akosah-Sarpong, Canada,
August 6, 2009
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