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African Evangelists Destroy Artifacts [A Rejoinder] Print E-mail
Written by Chika Ezeanya [Welcome to NVS]   
Thursday, 25 October 2007

 Re: African Evangelists Destroy Artifacts                                      
by Chika Ezeanya 


The article, “African Evangelists Destroy Artifacts,” written by Dulue Mbachu, for the Associated Press, and published on page A17 of the Washington Times Newspaper of Thursday, September 6, berates the destruction of African cultural heritage, in the manner of burning of idols of worship by Africans. Mr. Mbachu focused his discourse on the activities prevalent in Achina, a village community in the south eastern part of Nigeria. Achina, Mr. Mbachu rightly noted, forms a part of the region where the Igbo-Ukwu bronze pot was discovered in 1958, which proved evidence of advanced mettalurgy in the Eastern part of Nigeria over 10 centuries ago. The article attributes the rise in poverty, occasioned by the Structural Adjustment Program of the 1980’s, to the growth of Pentecostal or evangelical Christianity in Nigeria. Mr. Mbachu blames Pentecostalism in Nigeria for advocating the destruction of shrines and identified a particular Pentecostal preacher, Dr. Uma Ukpai with destroying over one hundred shrines in one district, in December 2005. The article further decries the lapse in the Nigerian conservation law that makes the National Commission for Museums and Monuments unable to prosecute desecrators of ancient artifacts.

      There is need to be differentiate, between Mr. Mbachu’s modern day idols of worship and other artifacts, such as the Igbo-Ukwu, Benin and Ife Bronze works, various wood carvings, drums, wall carvings and statues. While the idols assume the role of deity in the lives of the indigenous peoples, the other carvings were of social, economic, cultural, aesthetic and domestic or even other spiritual significance in the ancient cultures that produced them. In essence, the later, more than anything else embodies the socio-cultural and historical legacy of Africa. One major disadvantage of the introduction of Western styled Christianity into, is the grouping together of idolatry with other cultural practices of Africa and championing their total annihilation. The repression of African culture through religion is more noticeable with Christianity, although Islam is not exempt. By accepting Christianity, the native African was convinced to part with his history, culture, values and social identity, which was exemplified through; dance, drama, folklore, and several traditional practices that required the use of artifacts, but is distinct from idolatry. Mr. Mbachu seems oblivious of this distinction as he equates African culture and tradition with the worship of idols, but the truth is that religion plays a recognizable but not completely dominant role in the traditional African society.

      Mr. Mbachu’s dismay at the destruction of the artifacts is understandably borne out of a desire to conserve what is left of the indigenous culture and values of Africa.  However, in mounting a crusade for conservation, one must not think like the harbingers of Western Christianity by not being able to differentiate between the positive and negative aspects of traditional African practices, and determine which is to be preserved or disposed. In this instance, one begins to question the sort of legacy that idolatry has bequeathed the present day African. The answer is not far fetched; the history of idol worship in most parts of Africa is drenched in the blood of the innocent. Human sacrifice existed widely in several parts of Africa abut 100 years ago and until present, is still practiced by many across the continent. The sacrifices are not made to the air; the throat of the virgin is slit at the feet of some ‘artifact’, the blood of the day old child is sprinkled on the breasts of some carved image and the skull of some captives is smashed against an idol.

      Just about 30 minutes drive from Achina, is Okija, a serene village in Nigeria where in 2004, dozens of bodies were discovered in decomposed and semi decomposing state, at the foot of a shrine or “artifact’ as Mr. Mbachu would rather we call them. The discovery was made after it was revealed that the governor of the state, where both Okija and Achina is located was taken to the shrine by his political godfather just before the elections. At the shrine, the gubernatorial aspirant vowed, that should the godfather use his political clout to institute him as the next governor, he would make remittances from the revenues of the state totaling about $10 million monthly, into the godfather’s personal account, in appreciation of ‘services’ rendered. This monthly remittance is money earmarked for the payment of salaries, construction of access roads, building and maintenance of schools and hospitals and to generally keep the state running on a month by month basis. The governor did later confess to bewildered Nigerians, that he swore loyalty before the “artifact”, calling on death upon himself and family should he fail to leave workers without their salaries, school children without teachers or indeed defraud the state in order to pay the godfather.

      Has Mr. Mbachu ever lost any relative of his, or a friend or someone he knows to ritualists? Has he ever seen mutilated and decomposing corpses on the street of Nigeria especially during festive seasons, with eyes, private parts and other organs gorged out, of innocent citizens on their way home after a hard day’s journey, kidnapped and killed to sacrifice to the “artifacts”. If Mr. Mbachu is a keen follower of Nigeria’s socio political issues, he would remember the Otokoto Crisis in Owerri in 1998, just about two hours drive from Achina in South Eastern Nigeria, where an 11 year old boy was kidnapped and used for money rituals by the city’s wealthiest mafia. This group of bloodthirsty hounds prior to this discovery had held the city hostage with ritual murders and all manners of atrocities for years. The social uprising that followed the discovery of the boy’s mutilated body parts at the feet of an “artifact’ went on for months. The mafias were killed by the angry mob with their shrines and properties running into millions of dollars destroyed.

       Moreover, in a day when not many Nigerians can afford two nutritionally balanced meal a day,  families, who engage in worshiping idols are made to bear heavy financial burdens in the form of statutory sacrifice of cows, goats, chicken and even money to keep the gods appeased or risk incurring its wrath. Impoverished villages organize annual festivities in deference to these gods, where most of their scanty harvests are offered for continued protection and provision. Worse still, is the psychological bondage that adherents undergo out of fear of consequences of disobedience. A most pathetic case is that of a 14 year old extremely brilliant pupil, who was plucked away from school and bundled home to the village by his parents, ostensibly because the idol named him as the next high priest after his late uncle. The family washed their hands off his education and consigned him to a life of making sacrifices and ‘hearing’ from the ‘artifact’ on behalf of the villagers.

      In essence, the people who burn idols and shrines do so out of desperation and as a last resort, knowing that keeping the idols spell nothing but trouble. In the cases where the idols were removed and kept in an unsecured Nigerian museum, experience has shown that the worshippers, who see these idols as their source of life, prosperity and hope for sustenance go to any length to retrieve them and continue with business as usual. The surest path to liberation for the communities, who want to be free from the shackles of idolatry, is their destruction or sale to a remote and foreign country. In counseling abusive victims, the first thing adviced is a separation from the abuser, the withdrawal of the abused to a safe house. The place of safety for Africans is severance from the objects that make us kill our brothers, drive us to penury, and has kept us redundant for centuries. Mr. Mbachu failed to note that in all the villages where Dr. Uma Ukpai has convinced indigenes to do away with idolatry, there has been, 0% incidence of human sacrifices, the taxing of poor villagers to contribute ‘food’ to the idol, or the wastage of the African youth in serving the idol.

      As Africans, we should be wise to think beneath the surface and learn from our experiences. The story written by Dulue Mbachu, sounded more like what a Western reporter would write about the continent. It lacked depth, and the understanding of the social and cultural terrain, expected of an African. In sincerity, to say that one expected anything else from the write-up would have been foolhardy; for an African writer to be given prime space in the Washington Times, complete with pictures and a map of Nigeria affixed in one corner, he must have something derogatory to say about the continent. Just like Samos Samora’s documentary on HIV/AIDS in Africa which CNN gladly aired on December 1, 2005 and re-aired severally, only the worst about the continent is fit for global consumption. Either kwashiorkor suffering families, young boys straddling AK47 or pictures of emaciated HIV/AIDS victims, or just about anything condescending to evoke pity and enforce the western reader’s superiority complex sells.

      What Dulue Mbachu fails to grasp is that thinking and writing like the West robs every African, resident and in the Diaspora, including Mr. Mbachu of every shred of respect in the global community of nations. Until African writers, film makers, entrepreneurs and even students revolt and stop thinking and acting with an expectancy of being validated by the West, the question of progress and development in the continent will remain unanswered. It is imperative for the African to shift his paradigm of thought from euro-centrism, towards first, a dissection of the processes that define him as a human being, in a unique culture, although subsumed in a wider global culture, and from there, ascend towards a knowledge of what should be and what should not be. The artifacts and every other manifestation of the greatness of our ancestors, we must preserve with all our might, but the few surviving symbols of man’s inhumanity to man and continued yoke imposed by our forbears out of ignorance, we must destroy. For only by emphasizing the positive, can we bequeath the legacy of true greatness, which the world must some day come to appreciate, to the next generation.   

 

 


 

Chika A. Ezeanya is a Ph.D. student of African (Development and Policy) Studies at Howard University in Washington DC. She holds an M.A. in International Relations from the University of Warwick in Coventry England, with specialization in International Trade. Prior to taking up temporal residence in the United States for graduate studies, Chika worked at the Oil & Gas Desk of one of Nigeria’s foremost commercial banks. As part of a larger group concerned with portfolio management and business development, Chika was in charge of the financial transactions of the major upstream and downstream oil companies operating in Nigeria. She was able to garner invaluable firsthand experience of the Nigerian economic and business climate and the operations of multinational companies in developing countries. Her one year stint with the Foreign Operations Desk also exposed her to global import and export regulations, and the dynamics of international trade between sub-Saharan Africa and Asia, Latin America and Western Europe.  
 

At the age fifteen after reading Walter Rodney’s book, How Europe Underdeveloped Africa, Chika Ezeanya took up African development as a matter of personal responsibility and later, scholarship,. She believes that the future of Africa lies with Africans and not with the morsels offered by Europe and America directly, or through their agents. She is persuaded that until Africans start looking inwards to promote their authentic selves, devoid of self loathing and inferiority complex, the reality of a developed Africa would remain a mirage. 

Chika writes to build, to instill in every person of African origin, resident and in the Diaspora a sense of self-worth, a re-discovery of the personality trait of the ancient black man that enabled him conquer territories, build the pyramids and export the knowledge, which formed the basis of modern civilization to Greece. At the dawn of self realization, Chika believes the African would realize that the task ahead of him is not greater than the power within him. Unmovable power, dating millions of years, but being overshadowed by the forces of oppression fostered by the absence of a knowledge of the truth by the oppressed.




RobotRobot is offline 
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 # 1

Posted by Robot| 24.10.2007 21:31

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lionkinglionking is offline 
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 # 2

Chika,

Ritual murder is a criminal offence. The solution to ritual murder is for the law enforcement authorities to identify the perpetrators and bring them to justice and not to destroy shrines and export artifacts.

Traditionalists have a right to practice their faith and to have the sanctity of their shrines and artifacts respected just like churches and mosques.

If we are to draw an analogy from your argument that shrines and artifacts should be destroyed or exported because some have been the site or cause of ritual murders, do we then burn down Catholic cathedrals in Europe at which torture and murder were routinely committed during the Inquisition? Do we burn down Anglican churches in England that were built from the proceeds of slave trade?

Coming back to Nigeria, do we burn or export Pentecostal churches where rape, child abuse and even murder are committed routinely? Remember the Most Holy Rev. Emeka King? Remember the Celestial prophetess who burnt innocent children's arms alleging they were witnesses?

All religions have their dark and sinister side. This your Eurocentric perspective on traditional religion is most unbecoming of an African development studies expert.

Posted by lionking| 24.10.2007 22:49

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DoubleWahalaDoubleWahala is offline 
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 # 3

Lionking, I couldn't have put it better myself.

The considerable thought, which went into writing this piece, was interwoven with sentiments. This is quite understandable, since we're dealing with matters pertaining to life, religion/spirituality.

However, as Lionking observed, this should not stop us from rendering to Ceaser......

Yes. You get the drift.

DW

Posted by DoubleWahala| 24.10.2007 23:53

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Jah GudaJah Guda is offline 
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 # 4

Hi Chika,

I read your article but did not fully comprehend. Not because of your style of writing, it’s because of your Beauty.

Sorry to detract or divert the contents of your article, I just can’t help letting you know that you are Very Beautiful, you are a Gem.

Posted by Jah Guda| 25.10.2007 08:24

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Ebe2Ebe2 is offline 
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 # 5

Jah Guda, Jah Guda, Jah Guda!!!!! How many times I call you? Take ya time o! No be only you sabi fine woman o!

Posted by Ebe2| 25.10.2007 09:49

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sandylomosandylomo is offline 
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 # 6


=Jah Guda;2091812981>Hi Chika,

I read your article but did not fully comprehend. Not because of your style of writing, it’s because of your Beauty.

Sorry to detract or divert the contents of your article, I just can’t help letting you know that you are Very Beautiful, you are a Gem.



J-G baba! Chief Osomo of NVS. Since the 1st day here wey i don see your avatar na im i know say somtin dey:lol:. Caryy go jare my big brother. I am sure Chika is grinning and blushing:redface::redface: like ripe tomatoes as we speak. :D

Back to the original discussion jare b4 somebodi accuse Sandy of derailing another thread.

Sandy Out!

Posted by sandylomo| 25.10.2007 10:07

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FjordFjord is offline 
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At the age fifteen after reading Walter Rodney’s book, How Europe Underdeveloped Africa, Chika Ezeanya took up African development as a matter of personal responsibility and later, scholarship,. She believes that the future of Africa lies with Africans and not with the morsels offered by Europe and America directly, or through their agents. She is persuaded that until Africans start looking inwards to promote their authentic selves, devoid of self loathing and inferiority complex, the reality of a developed Africa would remain a mirage.



How very good! Youngsters should find the time to read such books while they do M&B and other brain candy material. Everyone her can help.

Walter Rodney's book is very readable; all of the book is available online at this location. Print out, and distribute. Of course, Rodney was murdered by familiar forces.

.

Posted by Fjord| 25.10.2007 10:20

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denkerdenker is offline 
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 # 8

..well balanced epilogue of rejoinder embellished in glamorous prettiness of the author

radiating in its magnificence hollistical natural adornment of jay supreme BEING...what a

pure might and magic of beauty...my dear sista i'm impressed!


...could dis author bi our wonderful and highly intelligent Amy...just wonderment...:D

Posted by denker| 25.10.2007 10:28

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EulalieEulalie is offline 
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 # 9

Ms. Chika,
An interesting piece, with some very good arguments. While there are some aspects of our culture and traditions that have promoted cohesion and traditional administration of our societies in the past, many of such practises bear no relevance to today's realities, even in Africa. Societies are dynamic and must continue to evolve and change to reflect the new realities, and some times such change occurs through interventions such as the destruction of shrines where crimninal activites such as murder are sanctioned. What is an artefact to the western mind, can be an object of oppression to the people. I agreemostly with your thesis. We can not look at such events with such a simplicity. There are underlying layers that need to be peeled off and examined first....

Posted by Eulalie| 25.10.2007 13:10

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Chidi AnyaecheChidi Anyaeche is offline 
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 # 10

The author wrote ..."Just like Samos Samora’s documentary on HIV/AIDS in Africa which CNN gladly aired on December 1, 2005 and re-aired severally, only the worst about the continent is fit for global consumption. Either kwashiorkor suffering families, young boys straddling AK47 or pictures of emaciated HIV/AIDS victims, or just about anything condescending to evoke pity and enforce the western reader’s superiority complex sells". Well this is absolutely true about Africa and more true about Nigeria, lets not deny it otherwise we will be deceiving ourselves and indeed posterity. Tell me any positive thing about Nigeria since the Independence?

Posted by Chidi Anyaeche| 25.10.2007 16:38

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