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Commentary
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invite commentaries from writers all over. The subject is about
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but we are not necessarily responsible for the opinions expressed
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Superstition? It’s Complicated…and Dangerous
By Jack Toronto
What the heck is going on in Ghana? To a middle class
Canadian it seems bizarre. After spending millions since
1935 on juju charms to win games, including nearly
US$1-million during its dismal 2009/2010 season, the
Fabulous Kumasi Asante Kotoko football club has finally
banned juju from its operations. One of the country’s
top soccer clubs has only now realized that winning
depends on skill, conditioning and teamwork? Weird!
Much more troubling is Kofi Akosah-Sarpong’s September
Afro News article on a UNICEF report detailing
widespread charges of witchcraft against African
children, charges that result in severe punishment, even
death. And now Canadian journalist Karen Palmer weighs
in with her new book, Spellbound: Inside West Africa’s
Witch Camps, on the plight of women banished from their
homes on the basis of witchcraft accusations ”proven” by
a trial that often features a traditional ceremony
involving the slaughter of a chicken. If the chicken
dies with its beak in the sky, the woman is innocent. If
it dies with its beak in the ground, the woman is
guilty.
While researching her topic Palmer lived in Gambaga in
north eastern Ghana, the site of one of the country’s
witch camps. I once travelled from Bawku to Tamale
through Gambaga. It’s the most desolate area I saw
there. The financial costs are staggering. Have millions
of dollars been spent on juju instead of development,
healthcare, fair and impartial justice systems and
education? It certainly seems so. The decimation of
human resources is overwhelming. Energy that might have
gone toward improving African lives has been squandered
on punishing people on the basis of irrational beliefs.
What to do? Kofi Akosah-Sarpong, inspired by 18th
Century writer Thomas Paine’s “Age of Reason,” calls for
an African Century of Reason. Palmer sees improved
quality of life, including health services, as
essential. In an interview with The Vancouver Sun’s
Juliet O’Neill she said, “ Part of it is the
overwhelming insecurity that people feel. They just
don’t have enough to eat. They aren’t very healthy. They
don’t have great access to education or medicine.
There isn’t enough being done to help these communities
get ahead. If there were fewer kids who were dying
mysteriously there would be less chance of someone being
blamed for that mysterious death. That was the
conclusion I came to.” Uh…sure, but we’ve heard this
before. Why is it so difficult to effect rational public
policy or improved healthcare when the need is so
obvious? It’s time to introduce my brother, Robert
Clement, to these pages. Robert lived in Ghana from 1969
to 1971 working on and around Lake Volta for The Volta
River Authority, a United Nations Agricultural
Development program and The World Health Organization.
Living for weeks at a time in isolated villages he
learned much more that I did about the Ghanaian belief
system that undergirds witchcraft.
His full beard earned him the nickname of “Kwabena
Abojesen,” almost as cool as “Jack Toronto.” When I
discussed my ideas for this column with him, Kwabena
replied by paraphrasing Shakespeare: “There are more
things in heaven and earth, Jack, Than are dreamt of in
your philosophy,” his point being that modern science
and reason do not provide all the answers. A Ghanaian
co-worker told Robert that it is impossible for a non
African to understand the traditional Ghanaian world
view. The same beliefs that legitimate witchcraft also
support the positive results achieved by traditional
healers, results that Robert saw first hand.
And it’s not that Africans lack the ability to observe
their environment and draw sensible conclusions as to
how the world works. It’s just that the logic of
traditional African explanations is based on a very
different set of assumptions. For example Robert was
chatting with villagers about ways to improve their
water supply. Small mud-skipping fish covered the bottom
of the reservoir and he suggested removing the fish as a
simple first step toward improved cleanliness. The
response: “Oh, no. If we take away the fish the water
will disappear. Wherever you find fish you find water.”
We all make basic assumptions on which we build our view
of the world and these assumptions are very resistant to
change. This is not just about Africa. Superstitions
trump rational thought everywhere. Africa’s poverty is
not unique. In Vancouver many living in the downtown
east side don’t have enough to eat. They aren’t very
healthy. They don’t have great access to education or
medicine. There isn’t enough being done to help this
community get ahead.
Kofi Akosah-Sarpong is right. Africa needs greater
reliance on reason and accurate information. Karen
Palmer is right. Desperate people deprived of effective
health care will resort to superstition to cope with
tragedy. But work to bring about change will not happen
until we realize that we’re all in this together and
that will be the most difficult attitude change of all.
Contact : jacktoronto@telus.net
Source : http://www.theafronews.ca/2011/01/02/4958/
(January 2, 2011
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.......More |
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Ghana president says 'no' to
troops in Ivory Coast
Washingtonpost, Jan 7, Ghanadot - The president
of Ghana on Friday said his country is not able to send
troops to oust the leader of Ivory Coast who is
unwilling to cede office after losing last month's
presidential election. ...More |
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President Mills must be
truthful
Press Release, Jan 7, Ghanadot - The
President has finished his meeting with
journalists at the castle to mark two years of
his administration. Questions were asked about
the many broken promises of the NDC government;
from the drastic reduction in fuel prices to
one-time premium payment for the NHIS. On all
these broken promises..... ..More
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Superstition? It’s Complicated…and Dangerous
Commentary, Jan 8, Ghanadot -
What the heck is going on in Ghana? To a middle class
Canadian it seems bizarre. After spending millions since
1935 on juju charms to win games, including nearly
US$1-million during its dismal 2009/2010 season, the
Fabulous Kumasi Asante Kotoko football club has finally
banned juju from its operations.
.
...More
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The Mo Ibrahim Prize and the
impending implosion in Sudan
Commentary, Dec 7, Ghanadot
- But, in case you wonder what this prize has to do with
the trouble in Sudan, I will point out the moral clarity
Mr. Ibrahim shows about the situation in his article on
Sudan and ask why he omits assessing President Omar
Hassan Ahmad al-Bashir’s efforts ...More
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