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Bono For President: Missing the Point?

Bono For President

Wednesday, July 20, 2005

Missing the Point?

This is an Op-Ed in the New York Times by an African man responding to the Live 8 Concerts. Thanks to Jessica and Bob. My comments follow.

All Rock, No Action

By JEAN-CLAUDE SHANDA TONME
Yaoundé, Cameroon

LIVE 8, that extraordinary media event that some people of good intentions in the West just orchestrated, would have left us Africans indifferent if we hadn’t realized that it was an insult both to us and to common sense.

We have nothing against those who this month, in a stadium, a street, a park, in Berlin, London, Moscow, Philadelphia, gathered crowds and played guitar and talked about global poverty and aid for Africa. But we are troubled to think that they are so misguided about what Africa’s real problem is, and dismayed by their willingness to propose solutions on our behalf.

We Africans know what the problem is, and no one else should speak in our name. Africa has men of letters and science, great thinkers and stifled geniuses who at the risk of torture rise up to declare the truth and demand liberty.

Don’t insult Africa, this continent so rich yet so badly led. Instead, insult its leaders, who have ruined everything. Our anger is all the greater because despite all the presidents for life, despite all the evidence of genocide, we didn’t hear anyone at Live 8 raise a cry for democracy in Africa.

Don’t the organizers of the concerts realize that Africa lives under the oppression of rulers like Yoweri Museveni (who just eliminated term limits in Uganda so he can be president indefinitely) and Omar Bongo (who has become immensely rich in his three decades of running Gabon)? Don’t they know what is happening in Cameroon, Chad, Togo and the Central African Republic? Don’t they understand that fighting poverty is fruitless if dictatorships remain in place?

Even more puzzling is why Youssou N’Dour and other Africans participated in this charade. Like us, they can’t help but know that Africa’s real problem is the lack of freedom of expression, the usurpation of power, the brutal oppression.

Neither debt relief nor huge amounts of food aid nor an invasion of experts will change anything. Those will merely prop up the continent’s dictators. It’s up to each nation to liberate itself and to help itself. When there is a problem in the United States, in Britain, in France, the citizens vote to change their leaders. And those times when it wasn’t possible to freely vote to change those leaders, the people revolted.

In Africa, our leaders have led us into misery, and we need to rid ourselves of these cancers. We would have preferred for the musicians in Philadelphia and London to have marched and sung for political revolution. Instead, they mourned a corpse while forgetting to denounce the murderer.

What is at issue is an Africa where dictators kill, steal and usurp power yet are treated like heroes at meetings of the African Union. What is at issue is rulers like François Bozizé, the coup leader running the Central Africa Republic, and Faure Gnassingbé, who just succeeded his father as president of Togo, free to trample universal suffrage and muzzle their people with no danger that they’ll lose their seats at the United Nations. Who here wants a concert against poverty when an African is born, lives and dies without ever being able to vote freely?

But the truth is that it was not for us, for Africa, that the musicians at Live 8 were singing; it was to amuse the crowds and to clear their own consciences, and whether they realized it or not, to reinforce dictatorships. They still believe us to be like children that they must save, as if we don’t realize ourselves what the source of our problems is.

Jean-Claude Shanda Tonme is a consultant on international law and a columnist for Le Messager, a Cameroonian daily, where a version of this article first appeared. This article was translated by The Times from the French.

.........

It is necessary to point out that this is just one person's voice being heard. Not the whole picture. Granted, this man probably knows a lot more than I do about these situations, however there are always going to be a mix of reactions when one people group tries to do something on the behalf of another people group. Example: Iraq. While some might argue (with good reason) that American is not in Iraq for he Iraqis, you can look at the situation as an example because that is why the U.S. is saying it's there. Some Iraqis when interviewed claim to be grateful for Suddam being out of power. Some say things were better when he was around. Some say they hate the United States.

The fact is, life is more complicated than we ever allow for when we are speaking of someone else, especially someone or many someones whom we've never met. We, for the sake of simplicity, decide that an African is a person who needs food and water and AIDS education. We don't think of them interms of individuals...people with problems large and small...an aching foot that prevents a trip to the water source, poor eye sight, a broken heart from a lost loved one, a torn garment...their last one. What people need can either be decided by them or by outsiders. The same conclusion will never be drawn. Whenever we are outside, looking in, we simplify...it makes us feel like we have done something. It makes us feel we have tidied something up. We make assumptions to solve problems so there are less problems. If someone decided to make assumptions or draw conclusions about problems of American women...they may or may not hit any of the issues that are actually MY problems. What are major issues for women in America? Reproductive rights, better public schools for children, affordable health care...only one of those issues really would affect me as an individual. If the other two were deemed worthy of advocacy and perhaps change was instituted by a particular group championing those causes...it really wouldn't matter THAT much to me and if interviewed I might respond much like Mr. Tonme does in saying they are missing the point and focusing on the wrong issues. His issue is democracy. Well other people from historicaly non-democratic nations accuse "us" of pushing democracy on people and ignoring their culture and way of doing things. I find his comments to be whiny. I am not sure he realizes what hard work it is to get middle America to bat an eyelash at African Poverty and Injustice. I am not sure he realizes how our natural state of being is reclined in front of the television, unplugged from anything ugly or hard or unpleasant. I am not sure he knows how easy it is to not give a shit. If he did, perhaps he would look at the steps Live 8 and related efforts are making as progress.

1 Comments:

  • Jessi, I totally agree with you about the whiny part.

    The first five minutes I was ubber-pissed at Jean Claude. Who is he to say we’ve insulted his country? Who is he to tell us we are only entertaining ourselves for an evening to “clear our consciences.” Who is he to tell us to stop talking about Africa? We are trying to raise awareness and help around the globe. We are trying to get off the couch and be good and a little less self-involved. We are signing online declarations, dammit.

    Anyway, I think this, with most things, is a pride issue on both sides. Mr. JEAN-CLAUDE may have a bit too much pride as far as how much the West could actually help bring an end to poverty (resulting, I’m sure, in the spread of stronger democracy – I mean I’ve never really been hungry, but I imagine if I was, I wouldn’t be too confident in my ability to revolt and overthrow a powerful dictator…) and also, how important it is that we DO speak on their behalf. I think he contradicted himself. It seems he DOES want the West to speak on Africa’s behalf, but he wants us saying different words. Like Jessi said, maybe he is right that we downplay or trumpet the wrong issues, but don’t tell us to sit the bench and remain silent. You totally need us, dude.

    And the second is our pride, the West, who, I agree, sometimes sees Africa as the hip cause-of-the-moment or a child to be saved. Remember when all those 12-year-old youth group kids would wear those “Abortion is Murder” t-shirts? Or remember that time you thought you were really blessing someone by going to Friday Night Supper or mentoring an abused kid, when the whole time they were really blessing you? These same things happen with Africa, with Live 8, with Bono, with Sojourners, with the ONE Campaign. (All things I take immense pride in for being involved in/informed about – is this a problem?) We end up looking down on something, coming up with simple solutions to complex problems, making t-shirts or bracelets, holding rock concerts, etc. The tiny stabbing truth of someone from Africa revealing that we might not know what we’re talking about fully -- this is why I think the article made me so angry.

    Honestly, and I can only speak for myself, but I rarely remember “the men of letters and science, great thinkers and stifled geniuses” who inhabit Africa, and the Africans themselves who “at risk of torture rise up to declare the truth and demand liberty.” And when I do think of these people, in my head they are always Westerners, not Africans.

    The thing is that good will still be happening on earth, no matter what our intentions. As long as we keep talking. And doing stuff. No matter how misguided.

    In conclusion, SHUT UP Jean Claude – but also, thank you very much. Also Jessi, I thought the comparison to women’s issues was smart.

    This article was really challenging and awesome. Thanks a lot guys.

    By Blogger Class of 2000 officers, at 1:36 PM  

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