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13.10.2010 Feature Article

Attempt to tarnish Nkrumah's good name must cease

Attempt to tarnish Nkrumah's good name must cease
13.10.2010 LISTEN

In the early 1970s, several years ago, I had the opportunity to work for one of the best companies in the world when it was at the height of its might as a marketing organisation introducing computer technology into the world. Its slogan was very simple - THINK.

At sales school we were taught never to talk about the competition. We were taught to know our products and services in and out. We were also taught everything about what the competition offered; technical specification, prices, special services and offers and how our products compared with the competition then referred to as the BUNCH that stood for Borroughs, Univac, NCR, Control Data and Honeywell.

We were well taught that the more you disparage the competition, the more potential customers felt that you had something to hide. That advice has served the company very well and though computers are more pervasive in use these days, having moved from the air conditioned rooms to the desktop and the laptop, the company still provides the backbone to most corporate computing establishments. The company remains solid, and the non disparaging instruction still works.

And so it is worrying that given the opportunity to lecture some students at some university in America, the lecturer chose to tarnish the image of the founder of our nation. The lecture incidentally has generated more column inches in the newspapers in Ghana than in America where the lecture took place.

I have had to think long and hard about why a Director of an Institute that bears Danquah's name will devote a whole lecture to Nkrumah, instead of extolling the virtues of Danquah. Did he agree to talk about Nkrumah because he had exhausted all the research and publications on Danquah in these few short years that the Institute has been in existence or did he gleefully seize the opportunity to assassinate the character of Nkrumah as a cheap shot, and in so doing disparage a whole continent with his revisionist version of Akyem history.

I have imagined what I would have done if asked to give a talk on Danquah, as I was recently asked to do on Nkrumah at a book fair. Would I have laid bare all the shortcomings of Danquah, to the whole world? I doubt whether I would have done that. I would most probably have told the organisers that there was not much to say about Danquah, and would probably have used the occasion to talk about politics and Ghana.

I suspect that I would have worked into the talk, something to project the image and standing of Nkrumah, but I would also have said some good things about Danquah. I would have talked about how Danquah, a political firebrand in those days of old was nurtured by the likes of more seasoned politicians such as FV Nanka Bruce and Akilagpa Sawyerr till he broke with them.

I probably would also have mentioned why Nkrumah broke with the UGCC and gone on to comment on why the UGCC failed to capture the imagination of the people in the anti-colonial movement. Though Danquah, in my view, did not realise the urgency of the agitation, hoping the power would have been naturally transferred to them, I would have praised Danquah and others for recognising the talents of Nkrumah and for providing him with the opportunity to put his skills to the fight for the independence of Ghana.

So why did the director of the Danquah Institute reject this opportunity that could have been used to project Danquah from the obscurity of politics in Ghana and exposed to the whole world? Was it because he did not think that Danquah really merited being espoused as a great African statesman or was it because he genuinely felt that none of the students would have had the faintest idea of who he was talking about.

Perhaps, the Danquah people still harbour this unhealthy obsession about Nkrumah or perhaps it is just their forever unforgiving nature because Nkrumah stole the prize so they will use every opportunity in the world to do Nkrumah down in the vain hope that some of the mud they sling will stick.

I pity the executive director of the Danquah Institute for not having much to say about their hero, except that he was one of many who fought for independence but lost to Nkrumah. I further pity him for his continuing ungraciousness several years after the battles for independence that pitted Danquah against Nkrumah.

I pity him for his inability to talk about the scholar that Danquah was, for failing to find a gem in the numerous tracts, pamphlets and letters he wrote. Is it because there is no basis for comparison with the several books that Nkrumah wrote that are being reviewed and republished and reprinted several years after his death.

Why did the director of Danquah Institute not produce the document that Danquah wrote to give the name of the new nation Ghana? Perhaps it is because contrary to the prevailing myth, Danquah was only one in a succession of many historians who argued that the people of the then Gold Coast had a historical lineage with those of the people first of the empires of Western Sudan.

Rev. J.B. Anaman was the first to claim the connection between the people of the Gold Coast the 'Genewa' Empire located near Timbuctoo whose capital was Ghanah. It was Lady Lugard, wife of the Governor-General of Nigeria Lord Lugard who first pulled together evidence to support that claim, suggesting in the process that Ghana might have been modern Walata.

She was followed by the Rev WT. Balmer, the first headmaster of Mfantsipim School, who argued in 1926 that Fantis, Ashantis, Ahanta and Akans formed part of the ancient kingdom of Ghana and popularised this through the history curriculum in schools. As Kimble indicates in the 'Political History of Ghana' it was Balmer's account that 'aroused the interest of the young J.B. Danquah who realized political possibilities of the idea…n his Akim Abuakwa Handbook published in 1928'. So Dr. Danquah was not the progenitor of the idea; he exploited the work of Lady Lugard and Balmer and even then proceeded cautiously. Why does he not research and bring to light the many revisions that Danquah made, first Akanland, then when reminded that the nation would be bigger than these groups, then AkanGa, then Khana when further challenged? Should some of those obscure tracts not be rehabilitated to make interesting reading about the mind of Danquah and his concept of Akanfo rather than this constant bashing of Nkrumah which serves no purpose?

The politics of envy never wins anyone an election, negative campaigning really only serves to call to question what you are hiding. My advice to Mr. Gabby Asare Otchere-Darko is that he must leave the name of Nkrumah alone and concentrate on his veneration of Danquah. Stealing and tarnishing the name of Nkrumah will not add an inch to the stature of Danquah as Iago observed with these words.

Good name in man and woman, dear my Lord,
Is the immediate jewel of their souls.
Who steals my purse steals trash; 'tis something, nothing;

'Twas mine, 'tis his, and has been slave to thousands;

But he that filches from me my good name
Robs me of that which not enriches him, And makes me poor indeed

I would further advise the Executive Director of the Danquah Institute that Nkrumah was a man of destiny, he must not be resented for seating down at table with his supposed betters for as the Ga say, 'a child who knows how to wash his hands properly is allowed to share the same bowl with the elders'.

Nkrumah certainly knew how to wash his hands properly. And of course he was human, if they are disappointed that there were mishaps along the way, it was because he grasped the bull by the horns and led the country to independence, again an old African proverb that reminds us that the 'child who agrees to go to the stream to fetch water is the one most likely to break the pots' and not those indolent ones who do not want to work hard but take the glory later on.

Perhaps if the military government that toppled Nkrumah had not been so intent to obliterate his name from everything Ghana, there would have been no need for his rehabilitation and everything Nkrumah would have been seen in the proper perspective as the one who won for us our independence and who was bold in his work in the social, economic and political transformation of our country.

For me, Danquah played an important role in the history of Ghana, he was a good scholar but did not fulfill his potential because he lacked the political acumen of timing his moves. Danquah was a respectable intellectual and the Danquah Institute must do more to project his contribution to the colonial struggle, but certainly not at the expense of disparaging Nkrumah.

Nkrumah could see further because he stood on the shoulders of those of like of Casely-Hayford, Akilagpa Sawyerr, F.V Nanka-Bruce, and yes Dr. Danquah, and for that we must applaud his place and time in the history of this nation and Africa and for completing the work of those who came before him. Nkrumah never dies!

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