Dear Daryl,
With the greatest respect, the
various colonialists who came to the shores of our Motherland -
culminating in the British who were the last to occupy our country -
were never our masters. Neither were we their slaves. We need to stop
using that demeaning and derogatory phrase, 'colonial masters'.
The
fact of the matter is that the colonialists were the sly-occupiers of
the landmass, which became known as the Gold Coast colony - which they
succeeded in colonising because we had an effete and corrupt ruling
élite. Full stop.
Our pre-colonial traditional ruling élites were
opportunistic, unprincipled and worshipped wealth to the exclusion of
everything else. That was our undoing as a people - and our ending up as
a colonised people: before the astute and racially-aware Nkrumah
arrived on the scene, to lead our liberation from colonisation.
Please
note that India had Maharaja's, who, in pre-colonial India, were more
powerful, vastly more influential and wealthier, than all our
traditional pre-colonial ruling élites, bar none. Some were truly
magnificent rulers by any standard.
Yet, India's nationalist
leaders understood clearly that inherited privilege is the greatest
enemy of meritocracy. Since they intended to create a modern
nation-state in the newly-independent India, they resolved to strip the
Maharajah's of all their privileges and vestigial powers, as soon as
practicable and prudent. Prime Minister Mrs. Indira Ghandi, stripped
away the last vestigial powers of the Maharajahs in 1971.
Please
note that today, India is infinitely more prosperous, and has ended up
becoming a global power to be reckoned with - while corruption is slowly
destroying Ghanaian society, setting back the clock-of-progress and
impeding our forward march, as a people. Pity.
The question we
must ponder over is: What do we expect when potential scientists,
lawyers, engineers, medical doctors are enslaved by a traditional
system, which is today's bastion of tribal-supremacy across Ghana, and
serve out their lives carrying their fellow humans beings in palanquins,
on their heads, in the name of preserving our 'rich cultural heritage'?
Is that monstrosity and human-rights-abomination not symbolic of all
that is wrong with our country? Haaba.
Yours in the service of Mother Ghana,
Kofi.
Wednesday, 26 February 2020
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