Post-colonial African education system failing African economic renaissance

November 8, 2013  <http://www.herald.co.zw/author/shingirai/> Shingirai Huni
<http://www.herald.co.zw/category/articles/opinion-a-analysis/> Opinion &
Analysis

 <http://www.herald.co.zw/wp-content/uploads/2013/05/kwame.jpg> Description:
Kwame Nkrumah

Kwame Nkrumah

Panganai Kahuni
IN my last instalment I promised to unravel how the West was threatening
humankind through production and use of weapons of mass destruction. After
giving it a critical thought, I later decided to first deal with how
Africa’s education system was failing to nurture intellectuals academics and
scholars with an ideological grounding that makes Africa’s economic
renaissance a reality.

Bob Marley, in one of his greatest songs said “emancipate yourself from
mental slavery”.
This musical maxim can form a doctoral thesis that could inform Africa’s
education system on how to produce curricular that focuses on African
industrial development.

It is a song that if all African academics were nurtured to give the song an
African philosophical thought, African Renaissance would have been achieved.

Unfortunately, most African education systems still practice western models
of teachings that continue to produce intellectuals/academics of neo-liberal
western philosophical thinking that prides on westernisation of Africa.

Ideologically, Africa’s education system, to a large extent, is failing to
produce educated people with an Afro-centric philosophical grounding poised
to raise Africa to greater heights of industrialisation and economic
independence.

The post-colonial education system has sadly failed to take advantage of the
Pan-African ideological system that was laid by African liberation
nationalists such as Nkrumah, Kenyatta, Nyerere and many others.

Instead of nurturing intellectuals that are African in spirit and mind the
system has continued to produce Intellectuals of Euro-centrism that critise
Afro-centrism not for its development but for self-enrichment as what those
in the opposition camps in Africa are doing.
Some African academics in positions of business leadership or were in
position of political leadership continue to tell African philosophies with
European meaning.

Imagine such people of high academic stature criticising African economic
strategies such as Industrial and Agricultural revolution in Ghana and land
reform and Indigenisation in southern Africa.

I am not saying critiquing such economic policies is bad but the critique
must be aimed at developing ideas that would have been generated by those
being criticised.

Criticising for the sack of advancing Western ideas that are meant to
continually enslave Africans should be regarded as academic corruption and
hypocrisy.

When academics and intellectuals engage in politics of criticising
developmental policies in a way of advancing Western hegemonic dominance of
Africans resources, one wonders how we as Africans would create employment
for the thousands of youths that finish University and are not able to
create or get employment.

Nkrumah believed that Africa can only be developed and emancipated by
Africans themselves and that no foreign power could claim to have an
altruistic interest in the continent.

Nkrumah also stressed that Africans must rely upon themselves for their own
development instead of running about cap in hand after foreign aid or
assistance.

Nkrumah pointed out that neo-colonialism uses foreign investments as one of
its weapons for denying Africa control of its sovereign resources. He
highlighted that Africa was not against foreign investment as such but was
against its misuse and the attempt to use foreign investment to control
direct and manipulate the political and economic future of Africa’s
development that would make Africa a neo-colonial continent.

Fellow Africans, remember the mushrooming of non-state actors, civil society
groups, neo-liberal human rights groups NGO, all funded and founded by
Western aid agencies such as Ford, USIAD who are wolves in sheep skin that
preach democracy, good governance, the rule of law and many such other
pseudo rights of righteousness. All these institutions of evil that seem to
practise Godly ventures in Africa are run by African academics and
intellectuals that have been produced by African education systems.

The questions that arise are: Why are African scholars fond of betrayal
rather than being assertive as was the case with Nkrumah, Chitepo, Nkomo, OR
Tambo and others.

I was fascinated by what Mbeki said to academics and scholars at a public
lecture at Unisa whose contents were published in the New Africa Magazine
October 2013 edition when he questioned the intellectuals why they always
wanted an African story to be either told or written by foreigners who
structure it for their own Western political interests.

This was after he had attended the inauguration of President Mugabe and he
was talking about the demonisation of the land reform by the Western and by
some Western funded scholars.

This was a challenge by Mbeki to African scholars.

Panganai Kahuni is a Political Socio-Economic commentator

           Thé Mulindwas Communication Group
"With Yoweri Museveni and Dr. Kiiza Besigye Uganda is in anarchy"
           Kuungana Mulindwa Mawasiliano Kikundi
"Pamoja na Yoweri Museveni na Dk. Kiiza Besigye Uganda ni katika machafuko"

 

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