After traveling the country for over a month and living in the Ashanti Region for four weeks, I have finally returned to Accra, where I left on the journey September 15th. This time around it is unsurprisingly different. I live in a homestay at the University of Ghana, Legon, and have been doing last-minute assignments here on campus. So this time the university isn't my shocking first impressions of Accra, Ghana, West Africa, and Africa, but rather just a rather beautiful university that is a shocking and heavenly escape from Accra's intensity and Ghana's reality.
And I see college students roaming around, studying in the library, smiling and laughing just as I would have if I were studying at Columbia, or if I had been enrolled here the entire semester. I must admit part of me wonders what kind of experience I would have had here in Ghana if I had just been enrolled as a student, which many Americans do (there are a ton of Obrunies here). I wouldn't seen half of the things I've written about, and probably would never have gotten to know the rest of Ghana in depth. It's an interesting thought experiment though, especially after the intensity and visceralness of the past two months.
We arrived here on Tuesday, and until Saturday we have to finish assignments and make arrangements for Independent Study Project time, which goes until December 6th. My ISP will be on Kwame Nkrumah, the man who led the de-colonization movement here in Ghana, the first country in all of Africa to get its independence (the topic is interesting but not my ideal choice. I need this to count for history credit so I can breath the next three semesters at Columbia. If I could I would study drumming and just learn to play for the next month). Sir George Padmore and W.E.B. Du Bois both came here to live here upon invitation by Nkrumah, and I know Du Bois died and is buried here. In fact, I will be doing research at the archives of the Du Bois Center, where he is buried, as well as the Nkrumah Mausoleum, where obviously Nkrumah is buried.
On November 14th I plan to head to Cape Coast to finish my research with the help of my advisor, Rabbi Kohain Palavi. We met with this man a few weeks ago, and he knows a ton about African liberation struggles, Pan-Africanism (he himself is from Mt. Vernon, NY, and told us he went to high school with Denzel Washington), and pretty everything else that's dope about Africa and the Diaspora. I plan to be there for two weeks, by which time I'll hopefully be done with my ISP and I'll spend the rest of the time traveling to various parts of Ghana, hopefully visiting friends I've made in Winneba, Kumasi, and the village Naama. On December 6th I'll be back in Accra to present my final project, and on December 13th it's back to NYC.
Things are completely different now that I'm no longer traveling with 14 other students under a completely structured itinerary. It's amazing to roam about with freedom here in Legon, and really be a college student again. I'm looking forward to doing research on Nkrumah, who it appears was overthrown simply because the CIA didn't like the prospects of an independent, intelligent, socialistic Africa (and if you think that's bad, look up what happened to Patrice Lumumba in Zaire, now known as the Congo). I spent much of my teenage years learning what the CIA did to Latin America, and now I've repeated the process for Africa.
People in America look at Africa's disparate poverty and underdevelopment, just like they look at Latin America's gross inequality, and wonder what happened. Did we just develop too fast and left the rest of the (colored) world behind? Sadly, many people seem to think that's exactly what happened, not understanding that it was our own shadow government, the undemocratically appointed national security institutions, that has actively sought to de-stabilize and disrupt the regions of the world seeking to rid itself of the yolk of colonialism and now neocolonialism. It makes me sad that a country founded on principles of freedom behaves like this. I guess it was always about freedom for certain people though. And what's scary is that this is only what we know 30 or 40 years after the fact. The CIA and other institutions go in to a country like a hitman, and the documents are classified for 30 years or so, or until they are obtained by the Freedom of Information Act, all in the name of "national security." Of course, why Ghana was a threat to the national security of the ol' Red, White, and Blue remains a mystery to me. For those Columbians interested in going into politics, maybe you could tell me some day?
Thursday, November 5, 2009
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ReplyDeleteGreat posts cuz! Can't wait to read more. Sounds like you're really having some frame-shaking experiences. And some reinforcing ones as well. I would've responded sooner, but I've been doing a fair amount of self-questioning/reflecting myself. Teaching 7th grade English in Oakland has been a lot to handle and it takes every ounce of attention and mental power to even be mediocre at it.
ReplyDeleteWhatever happens for the rest of your trip, you're going to have a lot to chew on for your remaining semesters at Columbia. Soak it all in and see where it takes you, both mentally and geographically. Write, write, write, that's what I tell my students (when channeling my mother).