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A decade of rise in thinking
By Kofi Akosah-Sarpong
“When events are coming they cast their shadow.” –
Thucydides, Greek thinker
“Only a fool learns from his mistakes. The wise man
learns from the mistakes of others.” – Otto von
Bismarck, Prussian German statesman and aristocrat
“A generational thinker is one who is able to sow seeds
for the future…” – Mensah Otabil, General Overseer of
the International Central Gospel Church, Ghana
Either from the perspectives of Thucydides, Otabil or
Bismarck, the decade that just ended saw remarkable rise
in thinking by Ghanaian elites about their progress,
more critically from within their cultural values up to
the global prosperity ideals. The shadows of this state
of mind is casting everywhere, from the remote northern
town of Bongo to the once slumbering elites in top
cities Accra and Kumasi, where generation of thinkers
(backed by the mass media) are emerging and being
encouraged, and the leaders learning from the mistakes
of others.
Largely pro bono (because of the higher thoughts of the
thinkers), the gradual but rapidly budding
Ghanaian/African enlightenment movement got remarkable
boost from leading opinion leaders across Ghana, Africa
and the international community. In the spirit of a
promising African Renaissance, the movement seeks to
simultaneously revive African traditional values, as the
basis for the real sustainable progress, by exposing its
enabling parts for policy development and highlighting
its inhibiting aspects for refinement.
Against this backdrop is the fact that the thinkers
agree that though there have to be respect of cultures
yet certain aspects of some of the cultures are more
progress-resistant than others that bounce harmfully
nation-wide, and this have to be refined through human
rights, freedoms, democracy and the rule of law under
the full glare of the Ghanaian/African experiences. The
new thinkers could rest assured that the implications of
the progress-resistant cultures are being addressed
internationally, too, and this is bound to aid their
mission. A new citizenship guide for potential
immigrants to Canada completely declares that new
Canadians cannot engage in “barbaric” cultural practices
such as female genital mutilation and human sacrifices.
“Multiculturalism doesn't mean that anything goes.
Multiculturalism means that we celebrate what's best
about our backgrounds, but we do so on the basis of
common Canadian values and respect for our laws,” Jason
Kenney, Canada’s Citizenship, Immigration and
Multiculturalism Minister said authoritatively.
Thucydides would say that the shadows of the coming
African enlightenment was graced in 2009 with George
Ayittey (of “African solution for African problems”
fame) was nominated by the US-based Foreign Policy
Magazine as one of the world’s leading thinkers in 2009
who "are shaping the tenor of our time" and, in the
African context, influencing the African rebirth. Still,
as 2009 was about to end, Mensah Otabil, the prominent
evangelist, encouraged and blessed the selfless thinkers
by stating that “a generational thinker is one who is
able to sew seeds for the future. A generational thinker
is not somebody who is only committed to what he wants
to enjoy today but somebody who says if ‘I run with this
race, I must make sure the next generation does not run
my race, the next generation must run its own race, I
must empower the next generation.”
Otabil’s encouragement doesn’t mean Ghana or Africa
hasn’t seen thinkers such as Kwame Nkrumah or Julius
Nyerere. There had been, but if, as Otabil’s “sew seeds
for the future” is anything to go by, then today’s new
generation of thinkers, while standing on the shoulders
of Nkrumah and associates, are at the same time
reasoning that Nkrumah and associates’ thinking weren’t
done deeply enough from within Africa’s culture as
nation-building architecture and that they failed to
play coherently with African traditional values in
Africa’s development process, as the Southeast Asians
have successfully done.
From Africa’s bureaucracy to development planning,
whether macro-development, activities of international
aid organizations or micro-projects, African cultural
values/institutions have not featured prominently as
similar ventures are, say, in South Korean communities.
Ayittey’s Indigenous African Institutions (1991), Africa
Betrayed (1992) and Africa in Chaos (1998) seek to fill
this gap by arguing that African leaders should develop
Africa from within African indigenous cultural values
and institutions and the tenets of democracy. This
doesn’t mean the wholesale blind appropriation of
African values but using democracy, the rule of law and
freedoms to enhance the enabling parts and refining the
progress-resistant aspects of the culture. In Africa
Betrayed, Ayittey argues that certain aspects of
Africa’s indigenous political systems in no way have
supported tyranny.
The thinkers’ key concern is the difficult issue of
culture at the center of efforts to tackle Africa’s
progress. When George Benson, then Minister of Ghana’s
Upper West Regional, noted that female genital
mutilation, early marriages, widowhood rites,
defilement, child trafficking and child labour continued
to impede the development of children in the region and
called on traditional rulers in the region to abolish
all “obsolete cultures” that partly gave rise to these
unconstructive practices, he was helping to open up the
African culture for progress.
The thinkers do not say there haven’t been a history of
oppression, slavery and colonialism. They agree but
argue that so have been other parts of the world and
that Africa should move on by relocating its development
thinking in Africa’s traditional values and from there
working it out into the global prosperity ideals. In
“What Works in Development?”, the case is made that
there are no policy pedals that consistently correlate
to increased growth and that there is nearly zero
relationship between how a developing area such as
Africa’s economy does one decade and how it does the
next. The missing link is Africa’s cultural values and
institutions as part of the policy pedals to correlate
progress. As Botswana teaches Africa, the most fruitful
correlation that would bring consistency in the
development process should be tying policy levers as a
growth factor into Africa’s cultural values and rolled
them into the global prosperity ideals. That would let
Africans control their growth from within their
traditional values and lessen much of the
inconsistencies that have increased poverty.
The little town of Bongo, in Ghana’s Upper East region,
rolled a noteworthy enlightenment dice for its progress
when its district chief executive, Clement Abugri Tia,
charged that there is “no scientific evidence” to
support the primordial belief in witchcraft as the cause
of death, accidents and other misfortunes that has seen
the accusers terrorized, harassed, threatened, killed,
banished or physically assaulted. Tia said witchcraft
accusations will be met with “arrest and prosecution.” A
new thinking by a new generation of elites convinced of
undoing the progress-resistant aspects of the African
culture!!!
Bongo’s attempts to deal with its progress from within
its culture are seen in Lawrence E. Harrison’s “The
Central Liberal Truth,” where most of the world’s
poorest nations undergo a complex web of
progress-resistant cultural influences. In either Bongo
or other parts of Ghana, there are the grave influences
of progress-resistant cultural practices such as human
sacrifices, Pull Him/Her Down (PHD), witchcraft, voodoo
and certain strange beliefs that spreads the erroneous
beliefs that life is unreliable and planning pointless.
These have created high levels of social mistrust that
have stifled progress, as America’s Francis Fukuyama
indicates in The End of History and the Last Man (1992).
And as Ghana’s Minister of Justice, Mrs. Betty-Mould
Iddrissu, has argued, this has made responsibility often
not internalized but put on external forces, mostly on
witchcraft, demons or evil spirits.
The culturally induced social mistrust is made worse by
the activities of growing prophets who peddle on the
extremely entrenched superstition of Ghanaians fuelled
by poverty and social distress. Worried by this negative
atmosphere, Ghana’s Chief Justice, Mrs. Georgina Wood,
boldly took on the so-called prophets when she enjoined
churches to refashion their programmes to give its
members enough time to labour to contribute to Ghana’s
progress (most churches’ activities cover the working
hours of the day) and also do away with “false miracles
and false prophecies” in a society where people are
prophetic crazy that emanates from their culture. “I
find it strange when I see churches holding meetings,
prayer camps and other church activities on working
days,” Mrs. Wood said in a voice meant to open up the
minds of superstitious Ghanaians for new thinking and
stimulate progress.
In Mrs. Wood, the relationship between the Ghanaian’s
spirituality and progress is profoundly puzzling that
touches on Ghanaians propensity for doom-mongering, a
cultural peccadillo that is impulsively rooted in the
progress-resistant aspects of the Ghanaian culture. As
Fukuyama tells us and as the German sociologist Max
Weber explains in The Protestant Ethic and Spirit of
Capitalism, while Europe’s progress cannot be discussed
without its positive spiritual origin, in Ghana it is
the opposite, with the churches openly stifling progress
and creating perpetual anxiety by cleverly playing on
Ghanaians’ traditional cosmology where evil
spirits/demons battle the Supreme Being (God) (to cause
misfortunes) that saturates the Ghanaians “social space
of everyday life,” as the British sociologist Phil
Hubbard would say.
How do Ghanaians tackle this fundamental progress
challenges? Certain parts of the Ghanaian culture, in
the face of poverty and anguish, where there haven’t
been scientific explanation as to whether, really, say,
witchcraft is responsible for deaths, vehicular
accidents, diseases, poverty, and other misfortunes.
Witchcraft speculation, a vital development obstacle,
blocks the mind from reasoning and usually ends by
deviously demeaning the human place in human
advancement.
The eerie image of a one-month-old baby called Mercy
accused of being a witch and afterwards abandoned to die
in Ghana’s Upper East region reveals society’s inability
to critically comprehend itself and evolve into the
global prosperity ideals. In baby Mercy, the Ghanaian
mind constricts, and they imagine themselves as
entrapped in some sort of witchcraft solitary
confinement, and being manipulated helplessly like
puppets by alleged witches such as Mercy to cause crisis
and poverty, to become an alcoholic, to murder, to get
sick, to accuse one’s mother as a witch and kill her, or
to cause crimes without the doers being responsible for
their actions. The thinkers want responsibilities and
the human agency heavily internalized as an embankment
against demons or evil spirits being responsible for
misfortunes, poverty, crimes and erroneous thinking.
It isn’t only the progress-resistant parts of the
culture that have occupied the minds of the thinkers for
the past decade; it is also how to appropriate the
enabling aspects of the culture for progress via policy
development as Botswana and other societies in Southeast
Asia have effectively done. From Bongo to planning
workshops in Kumasi, the thinking has been to weave the
Ghanaian culture into development planning in such a way
that it will be in harmony with Ghanaians’ psychic,
confidence and the global prosperity reasoning. Due to
long-running colonialism that created Ghana, the
problems have been that its development planning has
been done from the ex-colonial, Western development
paradigms that have dominated Ghana’s progress, as Y.K.
Amoako, the former chair of Economic Commission for
Africa, observes. The advocacy by the thinkers is to
retool and balance this situation as profoundly as
possible without any propaganda.
It is against this background that the appointment of
P.V. Obeng, touted as a de facto Prime Minister in the
long-running Jerry Rawlings’ military regimes, as chair
of the newly constituted National Development Planning
Commission, raised the nature of thinking that has
planned Ghana for the past 52 years. Despite all the
opportunities at their disposal for almost 20 years, PV,
Rawlings and associates couldn’t float a high level
Ghanaian/African culturally driven development
philosophies as the Southeast Asians have fruitfully
done. The dilemma with PV and the need for
ground-breaking development planning cooked in Ghanaian
traditional values was made clear when he gave a
post-appointment interview with the Accra-based Joy FM.
PV said his commission will espouse a “participatory
approach in planning and in development and ensuring
that all political stakeholders in national development
process.”
The thinkers quickly took PV to task for not openly
mentioning the participation of Ghanaian cultural
institutions and values such as the National House of
Chiefs as part of his “participatory approach.” The
concerns by the thinkers hinge on Ghanaians’ confidence,
psychic, psychology and their core innate values as part
of original nuances needed for planning their
sustainable progress. To the thinkers, this reveals that
PV hasn’t kept in line with Ghanaians’ current thinking,
their history, their souls, and, as Otto von Bismarck
says, “learn from the mistakes of others” about their
development processes and the global prosperity ideals.
Whether described as the African Renaissance or African
Enlightenment, it is a good epitaph for a decade where
new generation of thinkers was “able to sew seeds for
the future…” Now, through the thinkers, Ghana, and
Africa for that matter, is having coherent view of
itself in its development process in relations to the
global prosperity ideals.
Kofi Akosah-Sarpong, Canada, February 6, 2010
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