The Tears of a Fool and the Dreams of a Panafricanist
By Emmanuel Mumba Katyoka
“I said experience should speak, gray hair should teach…….but it is the spirit in man, the breath of the most high that gives understanding” Job 32:7, 8
I have waited long to express my thoughts, waited for my youthful zeal to be tempered by the experience of life and the benefits of gray hair. For life will oft give wisdom and experience in exchange for ones years. I waited for life, waited to give it my years, hoping that somehow time would afford me a greater measure of wisdom and understanding.
I tried to hold my peace long enough for a few gray hairs to appear but “my thoughts within me are like a fire locked up in my bones”
For as I look on Africa the continent of my fore-fathers, I see a continent shaped like a question mark. It is as though a question was asked…but went unnoticed, faded with time until only a question mark remained; leaving behind a puzzle that has continued to defy the intellects of philosophers, scholars and statesmen alike.
For Africa is a continent faced with a multiplicity of problems, intricately woven into a tapestry of misery, pain and despair. Is there hope for
Africa? You ask;[pullquote]Millions of Africans cannot see beyond the hunger, civil war, corruption, bad leadership, unfulfilled political promises and a future that looks bleak by the day; having been told it is in the skin[/pullquote],
Africa has many questions. Questions you see etched on the brows of a million labourers failing to make ends meet, questions you see on the swollen stomachs of fatherless malnourished children in the streets asking how they got here, Questions that you see lurking behind the smiles of prostitutes prowling the dark streets of many a city across the continent.
Searching the major news networks of the world, one cannot help but observe how poverty continues to wear an African face. Our forefathers dreamed of pan-Africanism, today we Dream of an ‘African renaissance’. Yet Like one who dreams he eats and awakes hungry, the hopes of the masses remain unrealized and the rat race continues unabated. Is there hope for Africa?
The Tears of a Fool
Legend has it that when Alexander the great reached the banks of the river tibre, he broke down and cried “there are no worlds to conquer.” Unbeknown to him, his tears were nothing more than the creation of his map writer’s ignorance. For the map Alexander held in his hands showed him that the world ended at the river tibre.
Millions of Africans cannot see beyond the hunger, civil war, corruption, bad leadership, unfulfilled political promises and a future that looks bleak by the day; having been told it is in the skin, it is genetic, it’s a curse from God, it’s a Blackmans problem, and it’s an African problem. Nothing can change.
So like Alexander, they weep. But Unbeknown to Africa, its misery like that of Alexander is nothing but the creation of the map writer’s ignorance.
For God does not make winners or losers, he only makes ‘choosers’ and choice is more powerful than chance. Africa needs to make choices; Choices of leadership, education systems and priorities.
Africa needs to choose the future over today. To choose the best among its sons to lead the way into the future; for though Africa has no shortage of leaders, Africa has a shortage of visionaries. For Leaders can only look but visionaries can see. Africa has needed a microscope to see a cell and a telescope to see the stars. But in order to see the future, Africa will need visionary Leaders. Those who can discard the map of limitation and look to the ultimate map writer who said “If you can only believe….. All things are possible…….”
For a nation or a people to overcome the challenges of backwardness and economic stagnation requires effective knowledge management and a sustained commitment to attaining thought leadership. Africa needs to focus and manage its learning needs beyond the attainment of literacy and basic education towards research and development.
Man has explored space and discovered that the universe continues to expand at the speed of light. We in Africa need to explore the ‘universe of ideas’ and expand our reach in the areas of science, technology and research with thought at the speed of light.
We need to think. Thoughts are free. But thoughts do not cost the same. Some thoughts are worthless, some costly, others- worth a million dollars.
We in Africa, need to define a new standard of thought, vision,conduct and achievement. Poverty does not grow out of the soil of Africa, It is manmade. Blaming the past and burying our heads in the sands of neo colonialist conspiracy theories will not take Africa forward. Africa needs to use its imagination to see a future worthy of its endowments.
I believe God shaped Africa like a question mark, in order to let us know that the key to resolving the many challenges that beset our continent and indeed the third world, lies in our ability to question and challenge the status quo, To question our poverty, to question the boundaries of our expectations and to begin to place a demand on our ability. Africa has been great before. Africa was the continent of the great pyramids, the continent where paper was invented and yet today the continent suffers from widespread illiteracy.