|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Reviews
A review of the arts and literature .....More
|
The Anecdotal African in Dilemma
James Shikwati
"The African voice is weak because it remains
anecdotal; no measurements - no voice!" a friend
once told me. In my recent trip to New Delhi, a
Ugandan of Asian origin tore into this thesis when
he dismissed a delegate's presentation thus: "We
cannot rely on this presentation because it draws
heavily from OECD, World Bank and IMF data; this is
not the African narrative." He said.
In his book "Silences in African history between
syndromes of discovery and abolition;" Dr. Jacques
Depelchin eloquently points out that the African
story has remained on silent mode because the system
of oppression has never changed for the last 500
years. The system simply mutated from relating with
Africans as savages to be colonized to that of poor
people to be developed.
For Jacques, the World Bank, the International
Monetary Fund and other Western institutions are
simply tools used to perpetuate the old order of
capitalism. The Western world suffers the "discovery
syndrome" that only recognizes what is perceived
from its own worldview and negates all else. His
(Jacques Depelchin's) thesis goes further to discuss
the "abolition syndrome" by Westerners - that is
they cause a problem and position themselves as
liberators. For instance Westerners enslaved
Africans and later positioned themselves as
abolitionists and human rights advocates (which
gives the false impression that the Africans
themselves never bothered to resist slavery); they
plunder the continent and continue to impoverish the
continent through their international institutional
prescriptions - and position themselves as anti -
poverty advocates (giving the impression that the
Africans forever sit and wait to be "developed").
Debate on merits and demerits of capitalism aside,
Jacques' book is a must read for any African seeking
to understand the apparent silence emanating from
Africa. For instance he quotes Micere Mugo's story
on a Kenyan girl who was unable to write her school
assignment on Kenya's history because... "The
history does not want to be written." According to
the story, the father to the girl, a freedom fighter
during the MAU MAU uprising had been captured,
jailed and tortured. When he came out of jail, he
had lost his mind.
The young girl could not relate to history because
the grandfather who would have acted as its main
source had raped her. (It is not stated whether the
grandfather raped her at gunpoint as part of a
psychological weapon to destroy resistance). The
only measurable evidence available to us on the
history of Kenya's colonial struggle is as told by
the British; the rest is anecdotal! Should Africans
continue on this silent mode?
Jacques Depelchin's book provides a good starting
point to interrogate available literature and
develop new tools through which the African voice
can cease to be merely anecdotal. History may have
refused to be written courtesy of the existing
institutions, but the fact that history is not
always about one individual; the African people must
take responsibility and write their own story.
Africa urgently needs a secure premise on which it
can base its development agenda other than the
current state of "silences."
We may disagree with the Western measuring
instruments but Africans must urgently measure,
unzip their mouths and talk to the world. The
Western societies have for a long time pushed for
reason and logic as opposed to whim and prejudice.
In the process, they developed measuring instruments
that guide their affairs, which in the African
context (as pointed out by Jacques) simply helped to
reinforce their prejudices against Africans. The
dilemma facing Africans at the moment is how to
objectively pin point the measuring tools that
enhance such prejudices; develop a new set that can
enable the African voice to get out without inviting
long range missile warheads from Western capitals.
Is the election of Barack Obama as the first African
American president an indication that the West is
ready to accommodate genuine African voices and or,
is it simply a perpetuation of the old order of
accepting only those that mirror the West?
By James Shikwati
Mr. Shikwati is the Director of
Inter Region Economic Network
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
ECOWAS nationals are not qualified to vote in Ghana
Accra, Dec. 19, Ghanadot/GNA – A statement issued by Dr. Sam
Amoo, National Security Coordinator for the National
Security Council on Friday December 19, 2008 said “All citizens
from the Economic Community ....More |
|
|
EC asks security, electoral
officers to coordinate their activities
Tamale, Dec. 19, Ghanadot/GNA- Mr. Sylvester
Kanyi, Northern Regional Director of the Electoral
Commission (EC) has appealed for effective coordination
between security officers and personnel of the EC to
ensure proper conduct of the 28 December 28 Presidential
run-off elections.
...More |
|
|
|
NDC denies
threat allegations
Accra, Dec 19, Ghanadot - John Dramani Mahama, running mate
of John Evans Atta Mills, flag bearer of the National
Democratic Congress (NDC) has denied rumours linking the
party to supposed threats to the lives of certain prominent
personalities .More |
|
|
NPP polling agents urged to
be vigilant on December 28
Kumasi, Dec 19, Ghanadot/GNA – Mr. Charles Oduro Acheampong,
a New Patriotic Party (NPP) activist in Kumasi, urged party
polling agents to be vigilant during the presidential
run-off, scheduled for December 28, to prevent any rigging ...More
|
|
|
|
|
SPONSORSHIP AD HERE |
|
|
|
|
|