The Dilemma of the Blackman: Enhancing the African’s Dignity
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About this ebook
Sorie I Kamara
I was born in Freetown, Sierra Leone, West Africa on the 2nd of July 1945, to Momoh Kamara and Fatmata Batulu Tarawally, who later made the pilgrimage to Mecca earning the titles of Alhaji and Haja. I started school at the Buxton Primary 1950 – 1956, Class I – IV then Government Model School, Standard V, January – December 1957. After the Selective Entrance Exam, I got into the St Edward’s Secondary School January 1958 – June 1963, then did the Sixth Form at the government’s Prince of Wales Secondary School. I got a scholarship from the then USSR to study medicine with a course in Russian at the Kharkov University in the Ukraine September 1965 – June 1966. After successful completion, I gained entrance into the Odessa Medical Institute September 1966 – June 1972. I met and befriended many other Africans my age, from countries like Ghana, Nigeria, Congo Brazzaville, Tanzania and Sudan. After medical school, I returned home to start work in my profession. I worked for five years then, with a scholarship, I left for France to train in Ear, Nose, and Throat Surgery. By the end of three years, I met a Swedish professor who made it possible for me to go improve on my training in Sweden. I spent two years there before returning home. I worked in Freetown for a few years before being posted to Bo, the 2nd largest city, where I worked for seven years then back to Freetown, where I became head of ENT Surgery after the retirement of my bosses In 1996, I was elevated to head Connaught Hospital, the largest referral hospital and luckily elected as President of the Sierra Leone Medical and Dental Association – SLMDA. I later emigrated to the US, where I studied and graduated in Health Information Management. That helped me secure a job at Kaiser Permanente, where I worked for fourteen years till my final retirement. It was in Bo that a situation developed between Muslims and Evangelical Christians when an American preacher was to hold a religious rally at the local football stadium. Tension was so whipped up that cooler heads with the security people had to prevail. It was then it dawned on me that these people were misguided to stand at each other’s throat for religions that were brought to them, hence The Dilemma of the Blackman. I then gave a public lecture at the Hotel Sir Milton in August 1994, organized by the English Speaking Union of the Commonwealth. Since that time, I had not been able to particularly concentrate on the topic because of my many different distractions until I retired finally in the US.
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The Dilemma of the Blackman - Sorie I Kamara
Copyright © 2021 Sorie I Kamara. All rights reserved.
No part of this book may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted by any means without the written permission of the author.
This is a work of fiction. All of the characters, names, incidents, organizations, and dialogue in this novel are either the products of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously.
Published by AuthorHouse 01/22/2021
ISBN: 978-1-6655-1486-6 (sc)
ISBN: 978-1-6655-1493-4 (e)
Any people depicted in stock imagery provided by Getty Images are models,
and such images are being used for illustrative purposes only.
Certain stock imagery © Getty Images.
Because of the dynamic nature of the Internet, any web addresses or links contained in this book may have changed since publication and may no longer be valid. The views expressed in this work are solely those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of the publisher, and the publisher hereby disclaims any responsibility for them.
To my
grandchildren and great-grandchildren and to Black
people and those yet unborn. I hope they will realize that what
they see glittering before them is not all gold. Their ancestors
were killed and subjected to the most inhuman treatment
the human being can exert on a fellow human. Religion
is good for spiritual satisfaction. But which religion?
As a people, we have lost the full sense of our being,
we hang in a limbo of cultural confusion, social incoherence,
political chaos, economic despair and moral purposelessness.
We have, in this condition, come to believe
500 years of European propaganda
and brainwashing, that we are inferior to the
European and his ways, his thought
system, his material civilization, his skin color,
and that his God is superior to ours.
by an act of retrievance and reconnection, the true history,
The culture of Africa, our religious institutions and philosophic
Notions of man and the world must be
recovered, properly researched and
written down.
—Professor Kofi Awoonor
CONTENTS
Preface
Chapter 1 Early Religious Beliefs
Chapter 2 Marriage
Chapter 3 The Transatlantic Slave Trade
Chapter 4 Colonial Period
Chapter 5 The Coming of Islam
Chapter 6 Abuse of African Religious Beliefs
Chapter 7 Effect of Foreign Domination on Africans
Chapter 8 The Advantages and Disadvantages of Foreign Religions in Africa
Chapter 9 Post-independence Africa
Chapter 10 Removing the Interruption of the Intellectual Chain
Conclusion
PREFACE
As more and more Africans become disillusioned with
the lack of political, social, and economic gains from the
modern state, loyalty to the tribal order is spreading.
—BBC African Perspective, Children of the Drum
Fellow Blackman,
Since this program was first aired on the BBC African Service, and the advent of social media, a lot has happened vis-à-vis Black issues and problems. Among these are the continuous random killing of young Blacks in the United States and the wretched treatment they receive in Western Europe.
For me, the most important event in history is the diminishing role, power, or influence of Britain in world affairs, as Britannia no longer rules the oceans and the increasing awareness of the problems black people still face at the hands of white people.
Walter McRae, a Black West Indian theologian, describes a Blackman as somebody who is
• Black in color,
• Black in Negroid characteristics [black curly hair, flat wide nose, thick lips, dark brown eyes, and prominent heels]¹
• Black in black ancestry
• [and black in thought].²
Religion is a way people feel they can worship what they believe in—God Almighty or a Supreme Being or the Ultimate, be it Christianity, Judaism, Islam, Buddhism, Hinduism, or Shintoism. Religion carries many different meanings to many different people.
All these religions could be related to certain population groups—for example, Christianity to Europeans and people of European descent, Judaism specifically to the Jews, Islam to the Arabs and Arab-related people, Hinduism to the Hindi-speaking people of India, Buddhism to China and Chinese-related people of Asia, and finally Shintoism specifically to the Japanese.
It is also a clear fact that these religions are expressed with the cultures of the peoples they are identified with, as no definite line could be drawn between their respective cultures and their religions.
What about the Blackman or African? What religion identifies him?
If you are deeply religious, I will urge you to separate religion (the way you feel you can worship what you believe in) and faith (the belief you have in the way you worship).
If you overlap the two, then you will totally misread the message, and your reaction will be hostile. But if you can separate the two, then the message will come home, awakening you.
You may not have looked at the issues as presented. I have presented the issues this way for you to reflect on yourself, your people, and the Black diaspora. Some of the issues may offend and even annoy you, as you may have undergone a great psychological metamorphosis since childhood. But one thing that has not and will never change is your Blackness, and I want that Blackness to act as a restraining force on you.
I wish you a pleasant reading.
CHAPTER 1
Early Religious Beliefs
A nthropology, or rather social anthropology, has finally settled on the belief that humans, as Homo sapiens , first appeared in that part of Africa where the Rift Valley is.
As the population increased, so did groups, societies, and communities. Curiosity set in as to how or why they were there and who or what was responsible. Who created the environment they were living in and the forces that let them be who they were? They became curious about everything that concerned their lives.
Early Africans believed that there was a supernatural being overseeing all their activities—hunting, feeding, shelter, farming, and all aspects of daily life.
As their numbers increased, what has been described as the mass migration
started, when Africans started to explore that vast continent called Africa.
As the migration expanded, so too did their beliefs in the Supernatural Being—that he was directing their lives and their every move in ways they could not understand, as he could not be seen. The fact that he could not be seen created a serious problem, as they could only attempt to talk to him, rather than see him. That confusion, in my opinion, led them to devise the many ways of communicating with him, which have resulted also in the many different names, all meaning the same.
In Africa, there are many names for the Supernatural Being, as each tribe has its own. The environment or locality played a huge role in their everyday lives—most importantly, how to satisfy the unseen power.
Farming was especially important in the lives of early Africans, and since the yields depended on the unpredictable weather, something had to be done to satisfy that Supernatural Being; hence, prayer and worshipping took shape. This was the early sign of religion, if religion can be understood to be one’s connection to his or her Creator.
Irrespective of where the Africans migrated on the continent, one common thread of belief permeated—that there was a Supernatural Being who was all-powerful but whom they could not see but could talk to. This confusion was fueled by the environment they happened to find themselves in and the forces influencing them.
One grave and, I daresay, deliberately wicked mistake by Europeans at the time was their refusal even to try to understand the psyche of the African people they met. They approached the Africans from a presumption of superiority, like that expressed by Sir Samuel Baker in his address to the Ethnological Society in London in 1866: Without any exception they are without a belief in a Supreme Being. Neither have they any form of worship nor idolatry nor is the darkness of their minds enlightened by even a ray of superstition. The mind is as stagnant as the morass which forms its puny world.
Nothing could be more misleading—Baker’s words simply demonstrate his ignorance of anthropology at the time. But during those times, the British Empire dominated the world, and anything said by them was unchallenged.
From what I have described, it should be abundantly clear that religion, or the belief in God or a Supernatural Being, has always been fundamental in the daily lives of Africans, then and now. Any attempt to separate the African from his or her belief in the Supernatural Being and the environment is totally missing the point, but Europeans constantly do that to satisfy themselves and their gullible populations about their superiority over Black people.
Religion or the belief in a Supernatural Being is in the everyday life of the Black African, as expressed in the different names given to God among the many different tribes in Africa. Each tribe