History was finally conceived
in the barren chapters of the Africa FIFA Under-20 World Cup Championship in
Egypt when the Black Satellites of Africa lifted the World Cup Trophy for the
first time in the full glare of the 68,000 spectators gathered at Cairo
International Stadium, after defeating Brazil.
Whilst the Egyptian and the
Ghanaian flags were blowing the wind of victory down West and Central Africa
almost to a point of tatters, the vuvuzela’s of South Africa, just like the
proverbial African cock at dawn, was waking up the remaining Southern and
Eastern African countries to the historic glory. From the length and breadth of
the continent, the spirit of solidarity rarely experienced by the separate
countries of Africa reverberated in the streets and at public spaces amid
singing, drumming, dancing shouting and of course “vuvuzeling”.
The significance of this
historic football feat to the African people cannot be overemphasized.
Different people, however, accorded different significance to the event. Here
are some views from Ghana. According to the President of Ghana, Professor John
Evans Attah Mills, the historic victory is a timely wake up call to all
Ghanaians irrespective of their party colours to unite as one people for the
urgent task of national development.
Another Ghanaian who called at
a local radio station in Accra asserted that the victory shows the supremacy of
Ghana as a major football nation in Africa and at the world stage. The next
caller made a rather interesting statement. He remarked, “Ghana is seen as the
Brazil of Africa, but today, Brazil will be seen as the Ghana of South
America”. To these people and million others, the victory is simply, a national
affair and…maybe rightly so.
Ordinarily, the event did not
seem any different from the obvious, until one reached out for the Pan-African
lens. Through Pan-African lens, things looked more profound. The victory and
the history of the Satellites went far beyond the threshold of national
consciousness. It is a herald to the manner and form that the unity of the
separate, pseudo-independent African states, some as big as Nigeria, others as
small as Gabon, some as stable as Botswana whiles others as turbulent as
Guinea, will finally unveil. Let us explore three findings under Pan African
lens.
Firstly, the victory was won
not by the senior national team, the Black Stars but rather the junior under 20
side, the Black Satellites. The significance of this is that, the current
senior leaders of Africa may not necessarily be those to materialize the
prospect of African unity government judging from their desultory attitude to
issues of African unity. The hope seems to reside in the youthful generation.
It is a common knowledge that, effecting fundamental changes become more
difficult and unattractive as people advance in age. Not surprisingly
therefore, a change as
drastic and urgent as the
political unification of African people, remains a wild goose chase from the
colonial aftermath till today.
Research converge on the notion
that, the youth are more open to new ideas, more daring and often blind to old
standing vendetta that breeds mistrust and obstruct cooperation among nations.
The example of the youthful Nkrumah, who engineered a fundamental change of
African independence, and black liberation, comes to mind readily. The late
youngest US president John F. Kennedy and the recent Noble Peace Prize
laureate, Barrack Obama, who is currently working to fundamentally reform the
long standing health care system of US is noteworthy.
The time is long overdue for
the old leaders of Africa to constitute themselves into a team of advisors,
take to the comfortable passenger seats and allow the younger generation the
opportunity to drive the affairs of the continent to true political and
economic unity. The economic viability of the separate states of Africa, some
hardly numbering two million, created by former colonial powers for their own
interest is still eluding. A federation has the promise of greater economic
strength by allowing small and weak nations to pool their resources, both
economic and human. It is only in this way that smaller nations can ever
achieve the kind of economies of scale needed to effectively develop themselves
through massive industrialization.
The second observation is that,
the Black Satellites won the FIFA World Cup by a rich combination of expertise
from both local and foreign-based players. The link is unmistakably obvious:
the political unification of Africa would be realized more smoothly by close
collaboration between Africans and foreigners. Foreigners in this context refer
to all individuals and groups outside Africa who share in the vision of African
unity. They include but not limited to Diaspora Africans, the Americans,
Europeans and Asians.
This position may justifiably
provoke the sensibilities of some hard-lined Pan-Africans, who drawing from the
history of injustice in Africa by foreigners, may propose an only African
approach. However, just like the Black Satellites, we cannot do it all by local
talent. The yoke of slavery, remember, was broken not by the victims alone. The
genuine zeal and good intentions of Abraham Lincoln, William Henry Seward among
others can be hardly ignored. Traveling the world with over 150 international
students drawn from all corners of the globe makes me appreciate the fact that
there are sincere Americans and Europeans out there with the right technology,
expertise, logistics and capital to collaborate with Africa in her quest to
achieving true emancipation.
The last observation under my
Pan-African lens is the fact that more than 65% of the world champions, the
Black Satellites, came from the lower socio-economic bracket of Ghana. Some are
from the streets, others from slums whiles others come from the rural
communities with no basic amenities. The point is that, these people defied all
obvious challenges and reasonable uncertainties in poverty, hunger and diseases
to emerge as world champions!
Similarly, Africa is
overwhelmed by concrete challenges including corruption, political instability,
unequal level of developments, ethnic conflicts and mistrust among its leaders.
The lesson is that, as Africans, if we look at our continent and all we see are
the challenges, and not the equally abundant riches and opportunities open to
us as a people in this point in our history, we are bound to scare ourselves
off our renaissance vision. Remember the European Union (EU) was created in
equally daunting political and economic atmosphere in 1993. The political
courage and selfless enthusiasm, backed by the right ideological map is what
has been the missing link all this while in the continent’s march to a unity
government.
To those postulating gradualist
approach to African unity with very brilliant explanations to why Africa cannot
unite now let it be remembered that Africa’s readiness has never happened in
the past, not in the present and shall never be in the future. In the 60s, the
excuse was, “Africa is not ready”, in the 90s the excuse was “Africa is not
ready”, in the present the excuse is, “Africa is not ready”. In 50 years from
now, the excuse shall be, “Africa is not ready”. Instead of researching for
plausible reasons to explain why Africa is not ready for a political union, we
can apply those same mental exertions to searching for answers to the question,
“why Africa is ready now”. It takes courage and strong will, riddled by
plausible bullets of doubts from pessimists to achieve anything significant.
Fellow Ghanaians, Africans,
Diaspora Africans and friends of African unity, as we celebrate the historical
feat of the Black Satellites and many more to come, let us not forget we can
always stretch our necks to appreciate things past our artificial national
boundaries to the larger African renaissance consciousness. Simply put, see
through the Pan-African lens and you surely will see beyond the colonial
footprints that divide us as a continent against our unity and ourselves.
No comments:
Post a Comment