From Colonial Pioneers To Presidents: Rethinking The Northern Narrative

For decades, people from Northern Ghana have been unfairly branded with stereotypes --- warlike, uncivilized, uneducated, non-progressive. Yet history and reality tell a different story. From colonial-era pioneers like Chief S. D. Dombo and IGP Bawa Yakubu, to national heroes like Col. Zanlerigu and Salifu Dagarti, and modern leaders including Dr. Hilla Limann, Aliu Mahama, Dr. Mahamudu Bawumia, and John Dramani Mahama, Northerners have shaped Ghana at every stage of its journey.

The Danger of Stereotyping
Stereotyping is a lazy way of thinking. It reduces complex individuals into simplistic categories, erasing the rich diversity of people’s lives. For Northerners, this generalization has led to stigmatization, discrimination, and misplaced prejudice. It has created invisible barriers in education, employment, and leadership, making some people from the North feel they must work twice as hard to prove their worth.

Stereotyping also fuels social division. It encourages an “us versus them” mentality, undermining national cohesion. Instead of seeing each other as partners in building Ghana, stereotypes drive suspicion and mistrust between ethnic groups.

The Reality of Northern Achievement

Colonial and Immediate Post-Colonial Contributions: Despite colonial neglect, where education and infrastructure were deliberately concentrated in the South, Northerners found ways to break through and serve the nation.

Modern Achievements
Northern Ghana has continued to produce towering figures who have reached the highest echelons of public service:

From politics to academia, business, and the military, Northerners have consistently demonstrated resilience, leadership, and vision.

The Human Cost of Stereotyping
When a young Northerner is told, directly or indirectly, that he or she is “less intelligent” or “less civilized,” it leaves scars. Many grow up battling low self-esteem because of labels they never deserved. Some internalize these stereotypes, while others channel their frustration into proving the doubters wrong. Either way, it places an unnecessary psychological burden on an entire group of people.

The Way Forward
Ghana cannot afford to sideline or stigmatize any section of its citizenry. National unity depends on embracing diversity and breaking down the walls of ignorance. Education, dialogue, and inclusive policies are crucial in dismantling stereotypes that hold us back. Above all, we must learn to see people as individuals, not caricatures of where they come from. Northerners, like all Ghanaians, deserve to be recognized not for the myths others tell about them, but for their own talents, achievements, and humanity.

FUSEINI ABDULAI BRAIMAH
+233208282575 / +233550558008
afusb55@gmail.com

Ghanaian essayist and information provider whose writings weave research, history and lived experience into thought-provoking commentary.

Disclaimer: "The views expressed in this article are the author’s own and do not necessarily reflect ModernGhana official position. ModernGhana will not be responsible or liable for any inaccurate or incorrect statements in the contributions or columns here."

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