The Spiritual Economy of Dependence

There is no land holier than the land of your origin. God does not become closer because one travels thousands of miles in search of validation. Too often, we have been conditioned to believe that spirituality must be imported, certified elsewhere, or experienced on foreign soil before it becomes meaningful.

Every year, millions leave Africa for religious pilgrimages. Christians travel to Israel, Muslims journey to Mecca, and followers of Buddhism visit India. These journeys generate enormous wealth, tourism, infrastructure development, and global influence for those nations.

But one uncomfortable question remains: what about Africa?

Why must Africans always be the consumers of other people’s spiritual economies while neglecting the spiritual, cultural, and historical treasures within our own continent? Why do we so easily believe that holiness only exists elsewhere? Is God absent from Africa? Is the Creator not present on African soil?

This is not an argument against pilgrimage or learning from other civilizations. Travel can inspire growth and understanding. But when a people begin to see foreign lands as inherently superior spiritually, culturally, or intellectually, they slowly detach from their own dignity and potential.

Africa has ancient civilizations, sacred histories, powerful traditions of community, and deep spiritual consciousness. Yet many Africans spend fortunes seeking meaning abroad while local heritage sites, historical centers, and cultural institutions remain neglected.

The issue is larger than religion. It reflects a mindset shaped by centuries of dependency where validation, legitimacy, and even divine approval seem to come from outside the continent. As long as Africa sees itself primarily as a marketplace for others rather than a producer of value, wealth, ideas, and influence will continue to flow outward.

No nation develops by constantly worshipping itself as inferior.

Perhaps the real awakening will begin when Africans understand that dignity does not require foreign endorsement, and that the divine can meet a person anywhere, including on the soil beneath their own feet.

Author has 27 publications here on modernghana.com

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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