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Pretend to overlook Nkrumah to forget why Africa must
unite E. Ablorh-Odjidja,
Ghanadot.com December 17, 2013
I am amused by debates in the Ghanaian
media about Nkrumah and Mandela, as to whose contributions, and therefore
reputation, should be considered the greatest.
But I also understand the
need for the debate. For the deniers of Nkrumah's legacy, it is to cause a shade or two to darken the great
Nkrumah's achievement.
Ever since Nkrumah was deposed in the coup of
February 24, 1966, these folks have been seeking to kneecap his legendary policies. Thankfully as
always, there are those who do not begrudge Nkrumah's achievements and are ready
at any time to defend him.
To the disappointment of the deniers,
Nkrumah’s legacy continues to loom larger everyday.
His
core belief that African unity was
necessary became a common and permanent thread in the
developmental aspirations of ordinary folks on the continent.
The defeat
of apartheid in South Africa,
with Mandela at the helm, has proven to be a spectacular
achievement on the continent and this, for some,
has provided the opportunity to raise issues about
Nkrumah's contribution in this regard.
President Nkrumah, the deniers claim, had less to do
with the defeat of apartheid in South Africa. He had refused to
meet with
Mandela when the latter came to Ghana 1962 for help.
For this reason, the deniers in Ghana were willing to
defend the protocol at the ceremony in South Africa
during Mandela's burial.
At this ceremony, many viewers could not help
but
notice the dead silence about Nkrumah, as other names of past
presidents in Africa, among others of the world, were mentioned and lauded as
having been helpful in the liberation drive against the
apartheid system.
The deniers had 1962 as
justification. They were willing, for the sake of
spite, to deny their own country's contribution; for
Ghana got the same silent treatment as Nkrumah at this
ceremony. And were not offended that Ghana's heroic contributions in the fight against colonial
dominations in
Southern Africa were also suppressed. In the 60s, the Southern Africa liberation
movement was not about freeing Mandela. it was about liberating a whole
continent. Nkrumah was one of the leaders of that
fight, if not the foremost one.
The historical time
line within which Nkrumah and Mandela operated makes the ongoing comparison between
them unnecessary.
Simply stated, Nkrumah was
before Mandela.
Julius Nyerere, the late revered president of Tanzania, on a visit
to Ghana on March 6, 1997 said, "liberation movements (of the era)
came to Ghana to discuss the common strategy for the liberation of the continent
from colonialism.”
And further that “Kwame Nkrumah was the great crusader of
African unity. He wanted the Accra Summit of 1965 to establish a union
government for the whole of independent Africa. But we failed."
Nyerere continued, "Kwame, like all great believers,
underestimated the degree of suspicion and animosity which his crusading passion
had created among a substantial number of his fellow heads of state."
Nyerere
was a fact witness to
the liberation movements of that
era and the resulting animosity generated by Nkrumah's
support for the activities of these movements.
Of interest also should be the animosity that faced Nkrumah
in Ghana at that time. It had the support of foreign influences,
including the CIA, that worked to bring the end to Nkrumah's regime in
February of 1966.
Left in place after 1966 are today's deniers and
sympathizers of that inglorious 1966 coup; even years after it
had been revealed that the so-called “glorious revolution” was after all never
that spontaneous or glorious.
These are the same folks who want to pitch
Mandela's reputation against Nkrumah's; the intention
being to strip and replace Nkrumah's dominant
impact on the politics of the continent with Mandela's.
Or to depict
Nkrumah's achievements for Africa as ordinary compared
with that of
Mandela.
For this, the deniers would gladly overlook the snub,
as Ghana and Nkrumah's memory were obscured that day.
As if in studied presentations,
not one of the speeches departed from the obscurantism. It
was to prove helpful for the deniers in future debates on
Nkrumah.
It must be stated
emphatically that South Africa became free partly because of Nkrumah’s support
for liberation movements across the continent.
His cry “the independence of Ghana is meaningless unless it is
linked with the total liberation of Africa” was a cornerstone statement of this
support.
By the time Mandela was put in prison in
1967, Nkrumah was already out of power. But the objectives the two had were
intertwined. To be blunt, the universal acceptance of
Mandela today is about the bloodshed he spared South Africa, with his "reconciliation"
policy, when he became the
president in 1994. "Reconciliation" was huge and pivotal.
But it wasn't the thought of "reconciliation"
that subdued the Boar immediately prior to 1994. It was the fear of
the fervor of a liberated continent that Nkrumah’s message
had ignited across Africa, resonating to reach white, black and colored in South
Africa.
To understand the full weight of Nkrumah's message, try to
envisage former colonial masters gathering at his funeral to rejoice at the
prospect of a united Africa. That, certainly, would be an impossibility.
Yet, universally, this same group accepted Mandela's
“reconciliation” concept as a political triumph. No need to ask why because "Reconciliation" was an opened benefit
for them.
The joy in the debate must, therefore, not be about
elevating the
spirit of “reconciliation” over the necessity for a united Africa, for which
Nkrumah was a foremost advocate.
Ghana became independent when the apartheid brand in
South Africa was still one of the most virulent colonial dominations in Africa.
Nkrumah took apartheid on. Prime Minister Hendrik
Frensch Verwoerd became his instant political target
after 1957. In 1960, the Sharpeville massacre
happened and it provoked
protests marches in Ghana, with Nkrumah the obvious instigator. Support for liberation movements in
Africa went up. Many from Southern Africa came to Ghana for help and got it.
Oliver Tambo
of the ANC met with Nkrumah in Accra in 1960. Robert Subokwe of the Pan African
Congress of South Africa (PAC), considered more dangerous than the ANC
by the apartheid regime, was favored more by Nkrumah. (There is a road named after Subokwe in Ghana.)
Mandela didn’t meet Nkrumah in 1962 probably because of
the latter's support of Subokwe’s PAC. After all, PAC was
more in line with Nkrumah's pan-Africanism in intent.
Regardless, the
armed wings of PAC and ANC later came together to form Umkhonto we Sizwe (MK),
soon after the Sharpeville massacre.
Ghana’s aggressive attitude against the apartheid
regime all this time was unabated and widely known.
It
was expressed in political speeches and pronouncements. In commerce, airlines
flying in transit from South Africa were not allowed a stop in Accra.
Recall that there was a Bureau of African Affairs in Ghana, set up by Nkrumah for
the very purpose of liberating settler colonies in Africa. South Africa,
Zimbabwe, Mozambique and Angola were predominant settler countries of this era.
Ghana's resources were spent on these African liberation
movements.
Barely days after the so-called “spontaneous” coup of February 24,”
1966, the coup plotters claimed there were militant training camps in Ghana under the
aegis of the Bureau of African Affairs. The CIA confirmed the same in a report
in March 4, 1966.
True, the Bureau was very active under Nkrumah. It organized in 1958,
1960, and 1961 the All Africa People (AAPC) conferences in Accra.
The
primary objectives of the AAPC conferences were to defeat the colonialist, the
settlers in Southern Africa and to solidify as well as resist the formation of
neocolonialism in the newly independent states of Africa.
Luminaries such
as Patrice Lumumba, Kenneth Kaunda of Zambia, Holden Roberto of Angola Hastings
Banda, President of Malawi and Julius Nyerere of Tanzania attended some of these
conferences.
So who exactly got the help for
which Nkrumah "squandered" Ghana's resources, since none
of it went to Mandela or South Africa, one must ask the
deniers?
On the day of
the burial of President Mandela, all about Nkrumah
was promptly forgotten. Only the victory over apartheid and "reconciliation" was
celebrated. And on center stage were the very colonial masters, whose vested interest
in keeping Africa balkanized Nkrumah fought hard against.
The
theme of African unity forgotten for the day or perhaps forever in South
Africa.
Nkrumah died in 1972. Mandela just left us. We praise Mandela
for his saintly presence on earth, understand and appreciate his concept of
reconciliation. But there should be no need to trade Africa Unity for this
concept. The reasoning behind ‘"Africa must
unite" theme that Nkrumah provided must be kept alive in order for Africa and Africans to
survive.
E. Ablorh-Odjidja, publisher, www.ghanadot.com,
Washington, DC, December 17, 2013
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