Filosofia Theoretica: Journal of African Philosophy, Culture and Religions.
Vol 1 No 1 ISSN: 2276-8386 (Print) E-ISSN: 2408-5987 2021
Filosofia Theoretica: Journal of African Philosophy, Culture and Religions. Vol 2 No 1
Filosofia Theoretica: Journal of African Philosophy, Culture and Religion
FILOSOFIA THEORETICA:
JOURNAL OF AFRICAN PHILOSOPHY,
CULTURE AND RELIGION
Published by
Congress on African Philosophy and Religion (CAPAR)
Department of Philosophy, University of Calabar
ISSN: 2276-8386
i
Vol. 2 No. 1
January – June, 2013
Editorial Board
Dr. Jonathan Okeke Chimakonam
Kanu, Ikechukwu Anthony (OSA)
Professor Chris Ijiomah
Dr. Leo Ochulor
Sunny Nzie Agu
Dr. Mulumba Obiajulu
Dr. Oduora Asuo
Aniyom Grace
Editorial Consultants
Professor Godfrey Ozumba
Professor Andrew Uduigwomen
Professor Udobata Onunwa
Professor Edward Nelson
Professor Innocent Asouzu
Professor Udo Etuk
Professor Emmanuel Ezedinachi
Professor Stephen Egarievwe
Professor Dorothy Olu-Jacob
Assoc. Prof. Kyrian Ojong
Assoc. Prof. Uduma O Uduma
Dr. Asira E Asira
Editor-in- chief
Managing Editor
Assoc. editor I
Assoc. editor II
Secretary
Member
Member
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University of Calabar
University of Calabar
University of Birmingham UK
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University of Calabar
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University of Calabar
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University of Calabar
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Ebonyi State University
University of Calabar
NOTE TO CONTRIBUTORS:
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Filosofia Theoretica: Journal of African Philosophy, Culture and Religion
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January – June, 2013
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THE ‘NEW’ FILOSOFIA THEORETICA: AFRICAN
JOURNAL OF PHILOSOPHY, CULTURE AND RELIGION
Formerly published under the title Filosofia Theoretica: African
Journal of Invention and Ideas, by the Graduate Research Unit
(GRU), Department of Philosophy, University of Calabar, Nigeria
and edited by Prof. G.O. Ozumba, has now been adopted by
Congress on African Philosophy and Religion (CAPAR) and
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v
Vol. 2 No. 1
January – June, 2013
CONTENTS
Editorial
Idea of African Numeric System
Jonathan M. O. Chimakonam Ph.D
Is African Philosophy Progressing?
Ada Agada
217 - 221
223 - 238
239 - 273
Trends in African Philosophy: A Case for Eclectism 275 - 287
Kanu, Ikechukwu Anthony (OSA)
The Theory of Forces as Conceived by Igbo-
Africans
Obiajulu Mulumba Ibeabuchi Ph.D
The Administration of Justice in Pre-Colonial
Efik Land
Inameti, Etim Edet
On the Sources of African Philosophy
Kanu, Ikechukwu Anthony (OSA)
Ethnicism and Religious Crisis in Nigeria: A
Stumbling Block to National Development
Nwabuiro Ideyi
Igbo Communalism: An Appraisal of Asouzu’s
Ibuanyidanda Philosophy
Innocent Chukwudolue Egwutuorah
289 - 313
315 - 335
337 - 356
357 - 401
403 - 415
Filosofia Theoretica: Journal of African Philosophy, Culture and Religion
Book Review
417 – 427
Editorial
The issues concerning African studies addressed in this volume are
quite diverse and original. As we continue to develop, propagate
and promote a new phase of African philosophy, culture, history
and religion where creative originality perfectly blends with
established traditional resources, the frontiers of our knowledge are
extended in many useful ways. In keeping with our vision and
reputation as the most original academic resource in African
studies, we present a cache of interesting articles for the
researchers and general readers.
Chimakonam further develops his African numeric theory. In it he
shows just how unique African number system is following the
uniqueness of African thought system. His presentation of it falls
under the category of group identity akin also to the structure of
African ontology. In this interestingly original work the author
presents a design of African basic numerals, a set of other
mathematical/logical signs and the idea of the African conception
of infinite number. Adopting and implementing some of these
would no doubt reposition Africa.
From Benue State, Ada Agada writes about the future of African
philosophy with immense passion and a call for originality. He
asks if any progress has been made and if any is being made. His
observation across the history of African philosophy is that just a
little progress has been made following the dearth of originality,
individuality and creativity among African philosophers. In this
instigating paper, he argues that much of what has been done is
ethno-philosophy
constitutes
backward-looking.
A few
philosophers like Senghor and recently Asouzu are leading the
pack in a forward construction of African philosophy. To develop
African philosophy, actors must rationally engage in new
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January – June, 2013
constructions albeit, from African perspectives. This, the author
calls his theory of Consolationism which operates with the doctrine
of mood. Thus for him, African philosophy has progressed from
the rhythm of Senghor to the joy of being of Asouzu and now to
consolationism which is the radicalization of Asouzu’s
Ibuanyidanda philosophy. Readers will find issues treated in this
paper highly inspiring.
From the University of Nigeria Nsukka, Kanu writes about the
need to push forward the development of African philosophy
through his theory of eclectism. Various schools in African
philosophy are not to be castigated for their lack of philosophical
perfection. Much academic energy for him is wasted in this
endaevour. Actors should seek an eclectic means of sifting and
welding together the best part of these schools for a consummate
understanding of the focus of African philosophy. By unifying the
ancient and the modern, the universalist and the particularist,
African philosophy takes shape. It is at the point of this romance,
the author says, that authentic African philosophy is realized.
Scholars of African philosophy are enjoined to take the thesis of
this paper seriously.
Obiajulu writes from Nnamdi Azikiwe University Awka and
discusses the popular African theory of forces from the Igbo
metaphysics. The theses of his paper include: confirmation of
much of Tempelsian observation in the Bantu and further
systematization of the Igbo-African metaphysics. With great
passion and creativity, Obiajulu excavates philosophical resources
from the original Igbo-African worldview and in an incredible
intellectual somersault blends them into a metaphysically pact
theory in African philosophy. Charms, ike, ogwu, etc., are some of
the concepts he worked with. His, obviously charts a new course
for African philosophers and philosophy.
From the University of Calabar, Inameti writes about the
administration of Justice in pre-colonial Efik land. Dwelling on the
Filosofia Theoretica: Journal of African Philosophy, Culture and Religion
original jurisprudence of the Efik people of Eastern Nigeria,
Inameti laments the erosion of a credible legal system which
offered true justice as against the porous system imposed by the
colonialist where the ability to argue well determines the direction
justice swings in the court as against the true condition of things.
Tapping into African thought system, Inameti explains various
ways native Africans nay Efik determine justice more efficiently.
His paper makes a passionate proposal for a “judi-cultural
renaissance” as a pivot for a new social orientation and justice
delivery system in Africa nay Efik land.
Back to the University of Nigeria Nsukka, Kanu investigates the
sources of a true African philosophy. African philosophy, if it is to
be, must have sources different from that of the West. It is the
originality of such sources that speaks volume about the
uniqueness of African philosophy. Reeking with great passion, the
author seeks to discover some of such sources which include:
African Historical Experience, African Traditional Prayers, Songs,
Symbols, Languages, Artistic Expressions, African Names, Myth,
Folk Tales, and Proverbs. He focuses on the ability of the African
philosopher to filter philosophy from these sources and tap into
their relevance for the present and future societal demands.
Ideyi Nwabuiro writes from Ebonyi State University and looks at
the tense issue of ethnic and religious crises in Nigeria. Philosophy
aims at making men better who in turn make their society better.
But where men have degenerated into bigots and tribalists,
philosophy becomes helpless at developing the society. Ideyi
laments the situation in Nigeria where men have abandoned
philosophy for religion as the source of their redemption in this
existential world. Part of the problem that results in the case of
Nigeria are religious bigotry and tribal sentiments which are
inimical to society’s development. Ultimately, he argues that a
desire for the realization of man’s existential well-being is the
mother of all his desires in the world- the first and last rung on the
ladder of his existence. And it is not religious bigotry that can
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January – June, 2013
achieve that for him rather, it is a sane philosophical orientation
that he needs.
From Imo State University, Egwutuorah makes a case for African
communalism following Asouzu’s theory of Ibuanyidanda
ontology. The individual he says, is not self sufficient but has
many needs which he cannot supply to himself. Hence, human
beings agreed to submit voluntarily to a system and were bound to
live in unison and solidarity. This is like a form of social contract
that established the original African societies. The efficiency of
this could be demonstrated in Asouzu’s Ibuanyidanda as a result
this innovative paper seeks to modernize African communalism by
modeling it after the highly regarded Igbo-philosophy of
complementarity as systematized by Asouzu. The author skillfully
knits together a brand of communalism that would suffice for
modern African societies. In the event of the massive failure of
liberal democracy in much of Africa, Egwutuorah’s thesis becomes
highly recommended.
In concluding this issue, C. B. Nze writing from Madonna
University produces an efficient review of the scintillating classic
by J. O. Chimakonam entitled Introducing African Science:
Systematic and Philosophical Approach. He says that this book
presents African science from the philosophical perspective.
Theorizing under this subject, he says that Chimakonam maps out
African thought system for the first time and systematizes African
logic on top of which he laid the bricks of African science. In his
accolades the author declares: “Only history and posterity would
probably come to understand what invaluable impact this noble
project would make to the life and story of the black man wherever
he is in the world. Indeed, this is a book right on time but ahead of
its time!”
As the African proverb says “whatever dance that comes along in
your generation, dance it for that makes you a member of your
generation”, it is the dance of the present generation of Africa’s
Filosofia Theoretica: Journal of African Philosophy, Culture and Religion
intellectuals to chart a new course for African philosophy, history,
culture and religion. We applaud all the scholars who use our
journal’s platform to lend their voices to the future of Africa. They
are the champions of our time and the makers of the new Africa.
Through the creativity in their pens, they seek to inaugurate a
better and progressive Africa. Hakuna Matata!
Editor -in- Chief
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Filosofia Theoretica: Journal of African Philosophy, Culture and Religion
IDEA OF AFRICAN NUMERIC SYSTEM
Jonathan M. O. Chimakonam Ph.D
Department of Philosophy
University of Calabar
jonathansphilosophy@gmail.com
1.
Numbering in African Thought
In Africa, sometimes we number our gain and try to ignore our loss
not because they cannot be numbered but because in African
thought, numbering is not just a question of signs but strictly, it is a
question of things. We also number our dept because they are
things although belonging to other people. From origin, man has
always had a sense of numbering. The ancient Chinese, Indians
numbered by group difference; the Persians numbered by group
identity. The Greeks and the Romans developed a numeric system
of individual identity and worked out the symbols I, II, III, IV, V,
VI, VII, VIII, IX, X as their numerals. It was the Arabians who
gave the world a much more flexible symbol of individual identity;
1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10.
In all of this period, the African man had his sense of numbering
based on group identity whose symbols consisted of lines I, II, III,
IIII, IIIII, IIIIII, IIIIIII, IIIIIIII, IIIIIIIII, IIIIIIIIII. In this way, he
numbered his flocks, his wives, his children, his wealth, his assets,
his credits, his dept and even his age. One year was a period
between the beginning of one rainy season and another. The
African drew these lines in the red earth walls of his inner
chamber. Up until the coming of western civilization, the African
retained his system of group identity because it offered a clear
expression of his idea of number. He also has idea of bundle, five
IIIII is half a bundle; ten IIIIIIIIII is a bundle and so on, bound
by a horizontal bar in the middle or two horizontal bars on top and
below as in tying with rope. Numbers for the African are not just
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abstract accretions but representations of things. For example the
number ten is not an individual sign, it consists of ten signs; it is
not a concept, they are signs representing ten things. It could be ten
tubers of yam, ten baskets of oranges or ten kegs of oil. The
bottom line is that it is ten things. The concept ten is abstract, such
abstraction does not make empirical sense to the African, and it is
empty. This shows that for the African, numbers are adjectival in
nature. They are not names! They merely qualify quantitative
things in African thought system.
As a result of this radical conceptual difference between the
African and the western/Arabian numeric systems, Africans
encounter problems with the system introduced during colonialism.
a.
As a child in school, arithmetic becomes a meaningless
subject.
b.
c.
d.
e.
f.
g.
h.
He crams the signs and memorizes the structures without
understanding.
In businesses and transactions he labours to remind himself
that ten Cedi or Rand note is Cedi or Rand numbered into
ten.
The individual identity numeric system becomes a
complicated puzzle.
Numbers are detached from their ideas; this makes it
difficult for the African to think within the system.
Any numbers say 1000 is meaningless and is therefore
difficult to think with.
To make sense of any number say 1000, an African must
first integrate the empty sign with the idea of one thousand
things. This slows down his thinking.
It is not easy for the African to be taught to see numbers as
sign plus ideas because the Arabian signs were not
generated from his system of group identity.
For all the reasons enumerated above, and also for the fact that the
signs of group identity Africans use in the olden days would not
Filosofia Theoretica: Journal of African Philosophy, Culture and Religion
suffice for modern demands in arithmetic and business
transactions, we develop here a new numeric system generated
from the system of group identity. This new system we hope would
denote in the mind of the African number plus its idea, such that
when an African employs the sign , he knows in his mind without
difficulties that it means three things. In this way, it is hoped that
the new signs would become flexible for him to think with unlike
the empty Arabian numerals and the cumbrous group identity
signs.
There are eleven basic numbers in the new African numerals
known as the tọọala. These tọọala numbers are generated with sign
language and technical intensions such that each evokes a certain
image of something at least and as such they are the foundation of
the African numeric structure.
Additional considerations have been made in order to make them
mathematically convenient. Some of those considerations include
forming the unit in single digit, the tens in double digits and the
hundreds in triplets, etc., just like in the Arabian numerals. In fact
the fundamental reason for forming the African numerals is the
creation of an image-driven figure structure. The Arabian numerals
do not provide that to the African mind.
All humanity thinks mathematically i.e. in shapes and sizes, in
angles and points, in figures, ratios, fractions and in percentages
but the African additionally, must correlate these with images. A
ratio has an image-the image of the ratio of … without this, the
ratio makes no meaning to the African. Until it is ratio of or
fraction of, it is ratio or fraction of nothing and is therefore not
worth talking about. What we wish to portray here is that
abstraction is not a veritable reasoning process for Africans.
Consider the table of numeric meaning below:
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Table. a : Table of numeric meaning
N/O
(Arabian)
MEANING N/O(African
) tọọala
MEANING
1
One
One thing
2
Two
3
Three
Two things
Three things
4
Four
Four things
5
Five
Five things
6
Six
Six things
7
Seven
Seven things
8
Eight
Eight things
9
Nine
10
Nine things
Ten
Ten things
0
Nought/zero
All things
This image-driven conception of numbers in African thought
system can be further explained by the interpretation of the eleven
basic numbers. We understand that numbers for the African have
meanings and these characterize the images they reflect on the
mind.
Filosofia Theoretica: Journal of African Philosophy, Culture and Religion
Let us consider the interpretation of the tọọala numbers in the table
above. We notice that the eleven African basic numerals can be
grouped into three categories, the number “one” which is singular,
the “all” number which is all encompassing and the rest which are
plurals. The number one is called Ume-ezu (defective and
imperfect), the all number is called Ezumezu (perfect number)
while the rest are called Izumezu (imperfect numbers).
The number one is defective because when multiplied or divided
by another one yields no new result and it is imperfect because like
the rest of the imperfect numbers it contains no other numbers
apart from itself. The latter has sufficed for the explanation of
imperfect members. Then the perfect number is so-called because
it is the all-number, it contains every other number in itself. In
African numeric system, it is not called zero or naught but the all
number. It not only contains every number but every number is
reducible to it, this shows it contains itself as well.
There are also a set of numbers called Njikoka numbers and
Nmekoka numbers. An integer is an Nmekoka if it is formed by
progressive increase of single digit numbers from two to nine. The
Njikoka numbers are the various permutations of integers from
double-digits to multi-digits. The first Njikoka number is ten
whereas the first Nmekoka number is two. In an earlier paper, it
was wrongly captioned that the first …integrativist whole number
is two, one remains fractional until it is added to another one or
any other number1. The question of abstraction raised earlier also
needs further explanation. It is not that Africans are not capable of
abstract reasoning such found in individual identity of Arabian
numeric system but that to adopt such rivals their already
1 Jonathan Okeke Chimakonam, “Toward Integrative and Eliminative
Epistemologies: From Facts to Fancies” Integrative Humanism Journal (2.1)
p.164. This stands corrected here, two is the first complementary whole number
and not the first Integrativist whole number.
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entrenched complementary and integrative ontology. It is only
natural that to ensure numeric intelligibility, uniformity of thought
among a people is imperative. Importantly, Africans do not make
outright demarcations in their ontological and mathematical
thoughts. There are strong connections among all areas of African
thought. In the idea of African philosophy of mathematics integers
which are mathematical objects are thought of as signs or symbols
representing objective things. Both mathematical objects and
objective realities are mere empty signs on their own until they
conglomerate or form an amalgam; the former numbering,
measuring and grouping or classifying the latter and the latter
giving the former a pseudo-objective existence by receiving its
predication2.
The arithmetical apparatus for checking the value of different
categories of tọọala number is what we may here call the
“quadcheck”, below is a quadcheck table:
Table. b : Quadcheck table
CATEGORY
QUADCHECK ANALYSIS
Defective &
imperfect
↔ ↔ ↔ ↔ ∴ ↔
2
Jonathan O. Chimakonam. “Metric System In Igbo Thought Long Before The
Arrival Of The Europeans: A Systematization”.Paper presented at The 11th
Annual Conference of the Igbo Studies Association on “Ohaka: The Community
is Supreme” Held at Modotel, Enugu, Nigeria June 27-29, 2013. In colonial
times Igbo pupils found it difficult to follow the logic of number abstraction not
because they do not understand what say number 5 means but because the Igbo
linguistic culture presents number in predicative form. Thus the two ways
present confusion which derail progress in mathematical studies. The first set of
Igbo trained teachers understood this having faced the challenge themselves
hence they adopted the highly successful predicative format. For example; otu –
otu oloma, abua – oloma abua, ato – oloma ato, etc.
Filosofia Theoretica: Journal of African Philosophy, Culture and Religion
229
complementary
/ Nmekoka
↔ ↔ ↔ ↔ ∴ ↔
Imperfect ↔ ↔ ↔ ↔ ∴ ↔
Imperfect ↔ ↔ ↔ ↔ ↔
Imperfect ↔ ↔ ↔ ↔ ∴ ↔
Imperfect ↔ ↔ ↔ ↔ ∴ ↔
Imperfect ↔ ↔ ↔ ↔ ∴ ↔
Imperfect ↔ ↔ ↔ ↔ ∴ ↔
Imperfect ↔ ↔ ↔ ↔ ∴ ↔
Integrative/
Njikoka
↔ ↔ ↔ ↔ ∴ ↔
Perfect ↔ ↔ ↔ ↔ ∴ ↔
The above analysis is interpreted for example one plus one
equals two times the sum of two and one which is three, equals six
divided by the remote preceding number two equals three minus
the remote preceding number three equals the all-number,
therefore one equals zero. In the same way, the rest could be read
(see the section on mathematical signs).
We find in the above table that number ten is a Njikoka or
integrative number; integrative, because it contains two numbers or
that it is more than one digit. If a single digit number is more than
one it is an Nmekoka or complementary number e.g. two to nine.
Other double or multi digit numbers that are identical such
Vol. 2 No. 1
January – June, 2013
as etc., are called jiga number i.e. equal integration. All
numbers that are more than one are called a Jikọọ or (double or
multi-digit number). Number ten is the first integrative number
while number two is the first complementary number in the range.
But number Ø is a complementary number because it contains all
possible numbers belonging to different categories; it is therefore
the most complemented number.
According to the group identity thesis in African philosophy of
mathematics, the number one does not exist ontologically. Every
being exists in relation to another or others therefore one, cannot
possibly exist since it stands alone. Yet if one is added to another
one or subtracted from another one, it becomes a meaningful
number. If on the other hand, one is multiplied or divided by
another one, it remains meaningless and non-existent. One plus
one is two; one minus one is zero, these are meaningful numbers in
the integrativist theory but one times one is one; and one divided
by one is also one. The integrativist ontology holds that being
exists only in relation to another. No reality that is isolated exists
and since African mathematical thought holds that mathematical
truths describe the features of experience, one ( ) which does not
describe anything in the network of experience does not exist. On
this count also, we substantiate the position that the number is
defective. This is also a point of debate between the two schools of
thought in African philosophy of mathematics i.e. the integrativists
and the complementarists. While the former views the number one
as meaningful only when it is in a network of other numbers
constituting a necessary link of. The latter sees it as meaningful
outside a networking of other numbers because any network of
numbers without the number one is incomplete. In this way, the
number one serves or constitutes a missing link of reality. Note the
expressions necessary link and missing link of reality the present
Filosofia Theoretica: Journal of African Philosophy, Culture and Religion
author has adumbrated this in the forthcoming book co-authored
with Prof. Godfrey Ozumba3.
On the whole, what the above table shows through the algorithm of
quadcheck analysis is that every number is reducible to the all
number which makes the all-number the only perfect number
comprising of every other number whereas the number one is not
only imperfect but defective. Let us consider a simplified
quadcheck analysis for two selected numbers:
( ) ↔ , ↔ , ↔ , ↔
( ) ↔ , ↔ , ↔ , ↔
We can readily observe that in the analysis of number , two of the
four yield as their results, whereas in the analysis of number ,
none yields as its result which shows an adequate capacity of
flexibility and interaction with other numbers in the network.
The negative numbers are not often reflected in African numeric
system because they represent realities that no longer exist. The
present author makes this case in his treatment of the Idea of Igbo
thermometer:
You may have also noticed that the Igbo
thermometer does not read in negative numbers e.g. -5,-10, -20 etc., this is because such integers do not
form standard mathematical expressions in Igbo
thought system. We do not say by implication that
the mathematical sign of subtraction does not exist
3G. O. Ozumba and J. O. Chimakonam, Njikoka Amaka: Further Discussions
on the Theory of Integrative Humanism. (A Contribution to African Philosophy).
Forthcoming
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Vol. 2 No. 1
January – June, 2013
in Igbo thought, what we wish to emphasize is the
image created when we make such expressions -5 in
Igbo thought does not make reference to 5 objects
that do not exist but to 5 objects that existed, so it
becomes trivial and sometimes misleading to add
the minus sign ‘-’. The important difference marker
here is ‘time’ such that when we talk of 5 objects
that existed we do not look out for the sign ‘-’ but to
the time indicator which conveys the accurate
image.4
Therefore, in African numeric system, negative numbers
are not functionally represented due to concerns for
confusion.
2.
Some Signs in African Mathematics/Logic
In African numeric system, signs are not just empty symbols, they
are prognostics. There are two main technical reasons why we
choose to create some new signs rather than adopt all of the signs
of classical mathematics and they are: (a) to create image-driven
signs and (b) to give the mind of the learner a new configuration in
order to avoid a possible confusion with already popular western
mathematical principles. If Africans are to think in original way,
then there must not be confusion between their mathematical
framework and the already popular classical framework such that
mastering the newly articulated African mathematical framework
does not in any direct form become reducible to learning the
classical mathematics. If the reducibility theory survives in the
operational discourse of the newly articulated African
mathematical principles, then the goals of this construction have
4Jonathan O. Chimakonam. “Metric System In Igbo Thought Long Before the
Arrival of the Europeans: A Systematization”. Paper presented at The 11th
Annual Conference of the Igbo Studies Association on “Ohaka: The Community
is Supreme” Held at Modotel, Enugu, Nigeria June 27-29, 2013.
Filosofia Theoretica: Journal of African Philosophy, Culture and Religion
come to nullity. As a result, the study of African mathematics must
be non-reducible at least directly to the study of classical
mathematics. The learner must therefore, come upon this subject
with a mind similar to the Lockean tabular rasa i.e. setting aside
anything he must have learned in classical mathematics. His two
reference points are to be this note and his natural African thought
system. The table below shows some signs and their
interpretations.
Table. c : Table of signs
S/N
SIGN ORIGINAL
NAME
ngụkọ
ENGLISH
TRANSLATION
Multiplication
mgbakọ
Addition
Nwepụ
Subtraction
→ Bukarịa
Greater than
← Pekarịa
Less than
Bukarịa
mọ’hara
Greater or equal to
Pekarịa
mọ’hara
Less than or equal to
↔ Hara/ Hara
ọnụ
Equality/identity
Ahaghị
Not equal
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/ Kebie Division
( ) Mkpokọ Parenthesis
[ ] Nchịkọ Square bracket
{ } Nkwakọ Braces
. kpọm Point/period
Nkeji Ratio
⇔ Bụ-out Equivalence
Site-na Wedged-implication
Sitelu-na Wedged-reduction
∨/∧ Ma-ọbụ/Na Disjunction/conjunction
∼ Ọbụghị Negation
↕ (iff) Belụ-sọ If and only if
Detuo Provable/derivable
Mezuo Satisfiability
Anọghị Opposition
Esoghị Inconsistency
Emezughị Not satisfiable
≅ Isoghị Contraries
C
Filosofia Theoretica: Journal of African Philosophy, Culture and Religion
Edetughị
Not Provable/derivable
Zutuo
Deducible
Ezutughị
Not deducible
3.
Agụsị- Agụsị (Agụkata -Agba – Awaa) : The Idea of
Infinity in African Number System
Once upon a time in the Ibo country, the moon was dim and the
stars lit up the sky in great numbers; an elder spoke to a youth
“son, look up into the sky, can you see the stars? And when the
youth answered yes, he asked him to number them. Thus the youth
began, otu, abụọ, atọ, anọ, ise, isii, asaa, asatọ, itenanị, iri, …otu
naari, puku abụọ, nde-atọ, ijeri-anọ, nzeri-ise…nzeri – nzeri- nzeri
… the youth stopped and the elder asked: are you finished? When
the youth answered yes, the elder asked again; how many are they?
And the youth responded, “agụkata-agba-awaa” which literarily
means “counting till the jaw breaks” and figuratively “numerable
innumerability” or “countably –uncountable” hence the concept of
agụsị-agụsị. These explain the idea of infinity in African numeric
system. It is not that imaginary number series which is endless or
limitless or unknown; on the contrary, the infinite for Africans is
that idea of numbers which though countable in itself cannot
possibly be counted by man. So it is in itself countable but which
no man can count. Any man who attempts such a project would
surely fail because his jaw would break thereby preventing him
from completing the project. The analogy above shows two things
that the stars are countable but that man cannot do this.
The Western idea of infinity which translates to the concept of
agwụ-agwụ (endlessly endless) is different from agụsị-agụsị
(countably uncountable) which depicts the African idea of infinity.
In African thought, numbers are not different from the things they
are predicated upon. All the numbers in existence are in one-to-one
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correspondence with all the things in existence. In other words,
numbers have equal cardinality with things. This is to say that for
the set whose elements are all the known numbers and the set
whose elements are all the known things; the elements of the two
sets can be paired off without remainders. So it is not the case that
one set has the next cardinality greater than the other. We may
have the set whose elements are unknown numbers, and the set
whose elements are unknown things, yet the two are necessarily of
equal cardinality.
From the forgoing, we arrive at four different sets, two for
numbers and two for things. Out of these, one of the two sets of
numbers and things is known while the other is unknown. The
question that arises here is; does the set of known numbers for
example have equal cardinality with the set of unknown things?
The answer is no! But this does not mean as it should be in the
Western idea of infinity that the set of unknown things has the next
cardinality greater than the set of known numbers. In African
thought, this could go either way; as a matter of fact, there is no
way of knowing which has the greater cardinality, we may tag this
“the problem of cardinal indeterminacy”. What this also shows is
that the two sets could possibly have equal cardinality-this is also
against the idea of infinity in western thought.
It is important to explain here that even the unknown sets are
countable. The fact that it is not known to man does not change
anything. Numbers do not exist if there are no things to predicate
them upon. Numbers in African thought are numbers of things.
The only set that cannot be numbered is the empty set, but the
empty set does not exist in African thought because there are
always things5. We cannot even imagine it because we cannot
imagine nothingness!
There is a way Africans express infinity that is strict. For example
they do not say “there are infinite properties” to depict the attribute
5cf. Jonathan Chimakonam Okeke. “An Investigation into the Nature of
Mathematical Meaning”. Filosofia Theoretica…1.1, 2011. P. 2 - 4
Filosofia Theoretica: Journal of African Philosophy, Culture and Religion
of agwụ-agwụ (endlessly endless) as it is in Western thought; this
is called categorimatic expression of infinity. Africans however
say, “there are infinitely many properties”, to depict the attribute of
agụsị-agụsị
(countably
uncountable),
this
is
called
syncategorimatic expression of infinity. In the latter idea, the set of
unknown things is perfectly countable in itself even though it is
uncountable to the man who does not know it. If a man named
Madume fills up a sack with kolanuts which he has carefully
counted, the set of kolanuts in the sack would be unknown to say,
Emenike who has not counted it. However, that it is unknown to
Emenike does not mean that the set of kolanuts in the sack is (a)
infinite (b) innumerable (c) has no equal cardinality with the set of
any known numbers.
On the contrary what it means is that (a) it is uncountable to
Emenike who does not know the set of kolanuts in the sack. In this
work we have chosen to call this anti-categorimatic (relative)
expression of infinity where what is countable to one man is
relatively uncountable to another man. We call another expression
of infinity possible or non-categorimatic (absolute) if there exists a
set of unknown things which are uncountable to the set of all men
but countable to the set of all non-men. The idea here is that if a set
of things exists but which is unknown to all men, it is nonetheless
countable to entities other than men in-so-far as it exists. So such a
set of unknown things may be possibly infinite to men but not
actually so in itself. Thus the non-categorimatic (absolute) is an
inferential extension drawn from the anti-categorimatic (relative)
expression of infinity.
In African thought we also say:
↔ thing
↔ things
↔ things
…n↔ n things, where the unknown number n has equal cardinality
with unknown things, called n things. This shows that the set of
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January – June, 2013
unknown things is in one-to-one correspondence with the set of
unknown numbers. Thus, for every unknown thing in the set, there
corresponds an unknown number in the other set. In this way, it is
possible to pair off every element in the set of unknown things
with the elements in the set of unknown numbers without
remainders. In other words, none of the two unknown sets could
possibly have greater credibility than the other.
Filosofia Theoretica: Journal of African Philosophy, Culture and Religion
IS AFRICAN PHILOSOPHY PROGRESSING?
Ada Agada
No 35 Ameh Street, Zone H/B, Otukpo
Benue State, Nigeria
adaagada2002@yahoo.co.uk
; adaagada@gmail.com
Abstract
Any attempt at writing the history of African philosophy is
doomed to be frustrated by the glaring absence of originality,
individuality, and creativity in the body of works that come under
the heading of African philosophy. In the first place, most of what
is called African philosophy is in fact ethno-philosophy, consisting
chiefly of researches into the traditional worldviews of various
African tribes in the light of Western philosophy. In this
intellectually instigating paper I attempted the question whether
African philosophy is progressing by showing that there has been
some progress, albeit a slow one. I demonstrated this by tracing the
development of a genuine African rationalism from Senghor’s
famous idea of negritude to Asouzu’s recent notion of
complementary reflection, which finds culmination in the emergent
synthesis of consolationism. In the latter rationalism, veiled in
Senghor’s metaphysical vision and liberated in Asouzu’s robust
individualism, aspires to a completion never before seen in African
philosophical thought. I concluded by saying that the time has
come for African thinkers to make African philosophy a tradition
that will command universal respect by the radicalization of
individual initiative with ethno-philosophy serving only as the
foundation of our 21st century inspiration.
Keywords: African Philosophy, History, Schools, consolationism,
Asouzu
1.
Introduction
African philosophy has failed to make remarkable progress or gain
universal recognition in the four to five decades it has existed as a
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philosophical tradition for reasons ranging from poor attitude
towards research, preference for Western philosophy on the part of
African philosophical scholars, the seeming absence of original
thinkers, among others. While M.A. Makinde avers that African
philosophical scholars ignore African philosophy in the belief that
it is not worth being taught in schools and D.A. Masolo thinks that
African philosophy is caught up in a crisis of identity, Innocent
Asouzu asserts pointedly that the main problem with African
philosophy is ethno-philosophical commitment and fixation.1
Lamenting the obstacles in the way of the growth of African
philosophy (which have in fact made the endeavor of producing a
history of African philosophy a ridiculous exercise), Oguejiofor
notes that “while African philosophy claims equal standing with
other philosophic traditions, while it demands the same attention
and respect accorded to many other traditions, it is pertinent to note
this lacuna [the absence of creativity] that is no longer found in
many regional philosophies.”2 It is beyond dispute that the
Europeans have European philosophy while the Americans have
American philosophy. The Indians have Indian philosophy and the
Chinese have Chinese philosophy. Yet any reference to African
philosophy brings an expression of amazement to the faces of non
Africans while Africans look away from their fellow Africans in
guilt. This guilt of the Africans arises from the knowledge that
there is very little creativity and originality in the minds of African
philosophical thinkers. We have produced professors instead of
thinkers. In the absence of the kind of creativity and originality that
animate ancient, medieval, modern, and contemporary Western
philosophy, trying to write a history of African philosophy is like
putting the cart before the horse.
It is true that ethno-philosophy (which encompasses communal and
traditional African thought, and the scholarly endeavor of their
systematization in the light of Western philosophy) marked one
tremendous leap for African philosophy, but it is only a stage, a
foundational level, of African philosophy.
Filosofia Theoretica: Journal of African Philosophy, Culture and Religion
We are confronted with the naked fact that African philosophy has
remained synonymous with ethno-philosophy long after its
conception. Here the real failure lies in the inability to note the true
status of ethno-philosophy as the foundation of African philosophy
and nothing more. We have failed over the years to build on this
foundation laid by Tempels, Mbiti, Wiredu, Gbadegesin, Makinde,
Sodipo, etc. We have so far failed to initiate the movement from
the particular-particular through the particular-universal to the
universal-universal, which last stage is the glorious stage of the
African mind unveiled before the world as the mind of man, a
revelation of humanity. Can we really count the achievements of
African philosophy outside the dominant school of ethno
philosophy? Senghor’s negritude and Nyerere’s ujamaa, for
instance, which are often touted as fine examples of sophisticated
political philosophy, belong in reality to ethno-philosophy and
political science while the socialist ideas of Nkrumah belong to
Marxism.
In response to Wiredu’s call for the decolonization of African
philosophy, a project geared at entrenching the uniqueness of
African philosophy by eliminating or at least diluting Western
philosophical influences, ethno-philosophers have generally
emphasized African traditional worldviews at the expense of
incisive thinking. The decolonization project taken to its extreme
in the elevation of ethno-philosophy to the status of the definitive
African philosophy (that is, identifying ethno-philosophy with
African philosophy itself) is contradictory because the idea of an
absolutely unique African philosophy is a myth. African scholars
have all (without a single exception) systematized the traditional
thoughts of their ethnic groups in the light of Western thought, a
heritage of their Western education and a testimony to the futility
of any extreme interpretation of Wiredu’s call for the
decolonization of African philosophy.3 Decolonization may be
good, but it is in itself not sufficient. Creativity and originality can
accomplish this decolonization without our even noticing it, as we
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can already see in complementary reflection and the emergent
synthetic philosophy of consolationism. Indeed, consolationism is
precisely the fulfillment of Wiredu’s call for a ‘decolonized’
African philosophy.4 If it is correct to interpret Wiredu’s call for
the decolonization of African philosophy as a demand for a level
of originality and creativity sufficient to distinguish African
philosophy from Western philosophy, then consolationism fulfills
Wiredu’s demand since it insists on a way of philosophizing that
traces its inspiration to African traditional thought and the African
experience rather than ancient Greece while committing itself to
creativity and intellectual rigor.
We cannot understand or seek to understand Western philosophy if
we have nothing to learn from that tradition. What is required of us
is to be creative and original. Perhaps it is good for us to remember
what some scholars say about the African origin of Greek
philosophy5 even if we cannot help agreeing with Agbakoba that it
is simplistic and ultimately futile trying to trace the origin of
philosophy in general to a particular society or culture when the
question of man – his origin, his beginning – remains essentially
unanswered.6 A ‘pure’ tradition is impossible. We must frown at
all exaggerated claims to uniqueness in African philosophy, and,
indeed, every other philosophy. If we subscribe to the school of
thought which holds that “reality evinces itself complementarily …
in full consideration of all possible relation,”7 then we will realize
that cross-cultural fertilization of ideas does not demean the value
of the philosophy a particular culture produces. All philosophies
arise from the human existential condition and have the same
concerns. This worthy cause destined to take African thought to
the next level and earn worldwide respect for the African mind
finds some sympathy in Aja who has called for a shift away from
unproductive polemic to a culture that honors diversity and
creativity, virile enough to support scientific thinking and profound
enough to retain a distinct African identity in spite of the influence
Filosofia Theoretica: Journal of African Philosophy, Culture and Religion
of foreign traditions.8 And Derrida is insistent on the untenability
of all exaggerated claims to uniqueness:
Philosophy does not have one sole memory. Under
its Greek name and in its European memory, it has
always been bastard, hybrid, grafted, multilinear
and polyglot. We must adjust our practice of the
history of philosophy, our practice of history and of
philosophy, to this reality which was also a chance
and more than ever remains a chance.9
Philosophy essentially is an investigation of the nature of reality.
Since reality is ultimately one the answers to the fundamental
questions of philosophy available to philosophical investigators
across cultural divides are identical. With this in mind, Derrida can
assert that Western philosophy is not a unique or pure tradition. In
the course of its development it has borrowed ideas from the
thought systems of alien cultures like ancient Egypt, as Afrocentric
thinkers never tire to point out. It is therefore no embarrassment for
African philosophy to borrow ideas from Western philosophy.
Western philosophers cannot do the fertile thinking which alone
can save African philosophy. Our destiny is in our hands. Two
developments have taken place in African thought with Nigeria as
the focal point which must help take away the shame of the black
intellect
and comfort concerned intellectuals. The first
development, significant for putting forward the bold claim of a
system independent of ethno-philosophy, is the coming of
complementary reflection as a philosophical current. Asouzu is the
brain behind this movement. In its sheer originality,
complementary reflection has no rival in African thought outside
the sphere of ethno-philosophy which we insist is a foundation
which alone cannot earn African philosophy international prestige.
Yet, while the independence and originality of Asouzu is
commendable, his thought retains the essentially polemical
character of the works of those philosophers who wasted decades
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in unproductive controversies. Asouzu’s works, far from being
profoundly constructive, are essentially methodological. The
pathfinder is still obsessed with showing us how African
philosophy should be conducted. This tendency in Asouzu betrays
the powerful impact of the controversies over the existence of
African philosophy on the master. It is a tendency at once positive
and negative. It is positive because it is a promise of future
constructive thinking. It is negative because it is very much
polemical. For African philosophy Asouzu is a critical Kant
without the constructive genius of the Königsberg colossus.
The second development which is going to be a fuller realization
of the constructive promise of Asouzu is the emergence of
consolationism which acknowledges its solidarity with
existentialism and the rationalist tradition of Europe.
Hence, this bold work seeks to answer the question: Is African
philosophy progressing? We feel that there has been a progress,
but a progress so slow, so meager, that it may count as stagnation
given the fact that we are talking about the tradition of an entire
continent, a whole race. The valuable legacy is that a foundation
has been laid, on which we emergent African thinkers can build,
taking our inspiration from the example of Asouzu. Thus we shall
trace the little progress made so far in four movements. The first
movement will take us from the worldviews of the tribe to the
foundation school of ethno-philosophy. The second and third
movements will take us from the vision of Senghor to the
rationalism of Asouzu. The fourth movement will terminate in the
emergent synthesis of consolationism.
2.
Transition from the Worldviews of the Tribe to the
Higher Comprehension of Ethno-philosophy
No one can disagree with Mbiti who asserts that philosophy of one
kind or another supports the thought and practice of every
people.10 This rule of life is applicable to the tribes of Black Africa,
Filosofia Theoretica: Journal of African Philosophy, Culture and Religion
some of whom lacked a tradition of writing before the coming of
the West. The African tribe, like all pre-critical tribes in other
continents, developed simple explanations of animate and
inanimate phenomena as the human mind struggled to make a
meaning of the complex totality that is existence. These
explanations are what we may call worldviews. They come out
strongly in the speech of the community, in dance, proverbs, wise
sayings, religious ceremonies, rites of passage, creation myths,
myths about human destiny, etc.11 The Idoma tribe to which this
writer belongs never produced thinkers who wrote formal works
on the soul’s immortality, but the problems associated with the
mind and the fate of consciousness appear in Idoma worldviews.
The practice of offering sacrifices to the ancestors during difficult
times and calling for their intercession are indications of belief in
the soul’s immortality. Not only are the dead still in existence in
the spiritual realm, but they may also return to the physical world
as new-born babies.
The present author’s meditation on the Idoma notion of otu has led
him to a greater, infinitely sublime, appreciation of Senghor’s
famous assertion about the emotionality of the African and the
rationality of the European. Otu literally means ‘mind’ in Idoma,
but the term holds more meaning for the philosophy of mind. On
the one hand, otu can be understood as the mind and on the other
hand as the brain. It can also refer to the bodily organ called the
heart. But then this latter reference stands only to the extent that
the heart is the symbol of emotion, or as it is symbolized as the
seat of emotion. It is the brain and not the heart which coordinates
our emotional responses to environmental stimuli. The heart as an
organ pumps blood and supplies oxygen to all parts of the body.
The brain on the other hand is the centre of the complex neuronal
processes that produce mental phenomena such as thoughts and
feelings. The identification of the heart with emotion is a universal
human prejudice. The Idoma do not escape this prejudice. The
‘heart’ identified with otu is in reality the brain or the mind in its
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January – June, 2013
physical moment. In its pure moment otu is simply mind, an
immaterial thing. Otu as mind is not the same as otu as brain,
hence a duality is posited. Yet this duality must accommodate a
certain kind of interactionism, a degree of physicalism, since the
mind and the brain connect.12 Ultimately mind and brain are one in
their origin in something more primitive. We see at once that the
tribe’s worldview carries the complexities of the mind-body
problem. Here as in other places, the subject matter of African
philosophy and Western philosophy agree. It may be true that as
soon as the Western-trained African philosopher tries to
comprehend the worldview of the tribe his Western education
colors his thinking and leads him to Western categories or
instigates the desire to bring the original African inspiration in a
forced agreement with Western thought.
Since most parts of Africa never had a tradition of writing before
the age of colonialism we are never going to have a philosophical
tradition devoid of the influences of Western philosophy. Indeed,
purity in philosophy is impossible as Derrida has so eloquently
noted. Thus we return to the concept of otu which the tribe
presents variously as mind, brain, and heart. The ethno-philosopher
easily rules out the heart as an authentic meaning of otu, for the
heart is only a metaphor in this context. The mind is the seat of
emotion as subjective experience, although emotion seems to have
a bodily foundation in the brain. The consolationist thinker
transcends the comprehension of the ethno-philosopher and notes
the proper meaning of otu which is consciousness. For the term
consciousness tends towards the reconciliation of mind and body
since it approaches the great problem in the philosophy of mind
from a monistic standpoint. Thus we put the great problem of the
soul’s immortality simply: Can consciousness survive the
disintegration of the body?
Clearly, philosophy lies brooding in the worldviews of the tribe.
The ethno-philosophers have struggled to extract a higher
meaning, a greater systematization, a more complete vision, from
Filosofia Theoretica: Journal of African Philosophy, Culture and Religion
the worldviews of the tribe. In this regard we can say ethno
philosophy marked the first progress in African philosophy, a
progress that promised much for the future, and yet a promise
betrayed by the scandalous indolence of African thinkers who are
content hopping around in the shadow of the Western intellect.
This leads to intellectual dependence on the West and the stunted
growth of African philosophy.
3.
Countdown to the Philosophy of Consolation:
Transition from the Foundation of Ethno-philosophy to
the Metaphysical Vision of Senghor
Ethno-philosophy is also called traditional African philosophy
because it gathers worldviews of particular ethnic or tribal groups
(the ideology of the tribe which negatively transforms into
tribalism) into a thought system made coherent by critical
examination, always in the light of Western philosophical thought.
The criticism of ethno-philosophy that it presents raw culture as
philosophy overlooks the fact that the march of African philosophy
must see it progressing from the ideology of the tribe to the
philosophy of the tribe (which positively transforms into
humanity). The criticism also overlooks the fact that ethno
philosophical commitment remained for a long time the only
beacon of originality in the whole of African philosophy. For in
ethno-philosophy alone was any original metaphysics to be found
before the coming of Asouzu.
That there is philosophy in the worldviews of the tribe we have
become convinced. The consolationist thinker, the investigator of
the philosophical current of consolationism, is convinced more
than anyone else. And so he is in solidarity with ethno-philosophy,
seeing in the achievement of ethno-philosophy the promise of
consolation philosophy, formerly the promise of the future but now
the realization of the present. Thus we disagree with the generally
harsh criticism of Hountondji13 and see in ethno-philosophy the
merit not of quantity but of early originality and the merit of being
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the foundation of the philosophical thought of the black people of
the world. Ethno-philosophy as the key to the future points at
limitless intellectual possibilities for Black Africa. In this context
we see the metaphysical vision of Senghor as the first indicator of
progress in African philosophy.
The notion of negritude was an intellectual struggle to transform
the ideology of the tribe into the philosophy of humanity, the
urgency of a movement of thought from the mythology that veils
concepts to the rationalism of the independent thinker. Negritude
was a struggle to broaden the horizon of the tribe, which broadened
space might become fit for humanity to occupy. Senghor saw the
vision of the philosophy of consolation but lacked the
philosophical tools to clarify this vision theoretically. The task
before Senghor was one too great for a poet and a politician.
In Senghor’s statement about African emotionality and European
rationality we see the seed of consolationism. When we sneer at
Senghor’s inspiration we forget that it carries the truth about the
origin and destiny of mood, precisely the universe and everything
in it. We also forget that Europeans have said of themselves what
Senghor said of Africa and Europe. The English are reputed to
think and calculate while the Spanish and Portuguese feel and
intuit.14 What is important here is that we have rediscovered
Senghor’s unity and are ready to complete it. In Senghor we see
the shadow of the doctrine of mood. Senghor made the statement
that emotion predated reason, that the superiority of reason is only
a seeming superiority because reason is merely a refinement of the
emotion. Whatever reason realizes is only a development of the
impulses active or latent in emotion. Reason has no special
existence outside emotion, which is basic. Reason is a term given
to emotion that has become conscious of itself, of its own fatality,
also the fatality of emotion. Hence, we say despair torments the
intellect and inclines it to pessimism. Therefore the world is mood.
As possessing the character of emotion, mood is the mind of the
world.
Filosofia Theoretica: Journal of African Philosophy, Culture and Religion
Hear what Senghor says of negritude, which he conceives as the
totality of African values,
essentially informed by intuitive reason, because
this sentient reason … expresses itself emotionally,
through that self-surrender, that coalescence of
subject and object, through myths, by which I mean
the archetypal images of the collective soul,
synchronized with those of the cosmos … the sense
of communion, the gift of myth-making, the gift of
rhythm … the essential elements of Negritude,
which you will find indelibly stamped on all the
works and activities of the black man.15
To Black Africa he assigns the reasoning-embrace, the
sympathetic reason:
Negro-African speech does not mould the object
into rigid categories and concepts without touching
it; it polishes things and restores their original, with
their texture, sound and perfume; it perforates them
with its luminous rays to reach the essential
surreality in its innate humidity – it would be more
accurate to speak of sub-reality. European reasoning
is analytical, discursive by utilization; Negro
African reasoning is intuitive by participation.16
By assigning analytical genius to the Western mind and intuitive
genius to the African mind, Senghor is not really saying that the
one is intellectual without further qualification and the other
emotional without further qualification. Senghor’s goal is much
more ambitious. His ambition is one on a grand scale, a universal
scale. It is an ambition far beyond the capacity of ethno
philosophy. Senghor continues to think within the sphere of
mythology and so is unequal to the task before him. As an attack
on the dogmatic claims of the intellect, Senghor tells us what
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Hume says in Treatise of Human Nature, Kant in Critique of Pure
Reason, Rousseau in Emile, Bergson in Creative Evolution, de
Chardin in The Phenomenon of Man, and Unamuno in Tragic
Sense of Life. Yet this is not the big news. For us Senghor is truly
great because he tried to tell the world in the infancy of African
philosophy that intellect and emotion have their roots in what we
may call mood or primitive mind, the focus of our serrated
monism. The rationality of man must follow from his emotionality.
The excellence of human reason derives its validity from human
emotion. Without the emotion there is no mind and without mind
there is no life. Discursive reason as the power of critical analysis
is lifeless and useless without the conviction that supports it, the
conviction that, although human life appears pointless, it actually
has a value which reveals itself as consolation.
This conviction is the participatory intuition Senghor held in such
high esteem that he erroneously thought it is exclusive to the black
mind. All peoples – black, white, yellow, mixed – share in this
hope that the world has value independent of human
consciousness. It is not an African peculiarity. By erecting an
artificial barrier between the African mind and the non-African
mind, the humanism of negritude lost the will to transform itself
into a philosophy of human existence. Senghor had the grandiose
aspiration of a philosopher, for he acknowledged that negritude is a
humanism, in the same way that Sartre proclaimed existentialism a
humanism. But need he be ashamed of his inability to give the
world Africa’s first original system of independent philosophical
thought? No. For Senghor was never surpassed by the academic
and professional philosophers who crave analysis where there is no
synthesis, thus operating mills with no grains in them. It is not for
nothing that Sodipo pays tribute to Senghor thus:
Whatever fault one might find with the articulation
and content he gave to the conception it is in my
view to Leopold Senghor’s eternal credit that he
boldly even if poetically asserted the existence of a
Filosofia Theoretica: Journal of African Philosophy, Culture and Religion
distinctively African conception of the universe and
of a mode of existence founded upon that
conception.17
Can we radicalize Senghor by deepening the cause of negritude? Is
there any way we can show that Senghor was a promise of a
universal philosophy now ripe for the 21st century? If we can
radicalize Senghor, then we can show that he saw our day. This
can only mean that African philosophy can be traced from the
foundation of ethno-philosophy to the dawn of consolation
philosophy. In so doing, we must present the philosophy of
consolation as the revelation of the melancholy man, not Senghor’s
emotional ‘negro’. The melancholy man is the universal man, the
man we see in all the continents of the world, who may be black,
white, yellow, or mixed. Man is for us a melancholy being because
he strives under the burden of despair and hope to reconcile his
mind with nature. We must now run away from our root in ethno
philosophy for a while, still looking back all the time, not in fear
but in homage to the works of those who came before us. As we
run, as we march into the 21st century, the ideology of the tribe
will lose its particular identity as a universal doctrine from Africa.
We must be ready, and we are ready, to meet the universal at the
level of the universal. Before we declare consolationism a
metaphysics of terror and a morality of consolation, let us see how
our research has identified a man whose work we have recognized
as a link in the transition of African philosophical thought from the
age of communal inspiration to the age of individual synthesis, the
man Asouzu who we dare anoint the father of modern African
philosophy.
4.
Transition from the Metaphysical Vision of Senghor to
the Rationalism of Asouzu
It is not Asouzu’s rather harsh criticism of ethno-philosophy that
interests us. We are interested in the Catholic priest because he has
taken what he himself calls a “critical personal stand.”18 He saw
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the futility of scholarship in the absence of creativity and made a
case for the rationalist who, though inspired by his roots in the
community, insists on standing on his feet and looking at the world
through his own prism. In replacing the myth with the concept, in
substituting poetry with thought, Asouzu advances the ideology of
negritude. Yet the core of negritude remains in Asouzu’s
complementary reflection. This is the idea of the emotionality of
reason and indeed the emotionality of existence, the emotionality
that validates rationality. Thus while Senghor rhapsodizes about
the African’s gift of myth-making, the gift of rhythm, and the
sense of communion (ever dear to the Black African), Asouzu talks
about missing links of reality and the joy of being. Listen to what
these men are saying. At bottom their inspirations are one in
solidarity. The rhythm of Senghor is not different from the joy of
being of Asouzu. These ideas speak of optimism. But can we make
any sense of optimism if there is nothing like pessimism? If the
answer is no, then rhythm and joy point at the consolatory value of
existence.
Man then is the melancholy man. We therefore succeed in
establishing a link between Senghor and Asouzu and between
these two great men and the emergent philosophy of consolation.
Senghor heralded the age of the independent thinker without
reaching the promise land. Asouzu reached the promise land
through the tortuous road of rationalism but did not arrive with the
great synthesis much awaited. We hope to fulfill the last
requirement and record a victory for African rationalism.
The main idea of Asouzu’s philosophy is the view of the universe
as a totality in solidarity with all its parts, and these parts,
therefore, as missing links in the grand unity. Human
consciousness, according to Asouzu, in its totalizing moments, is
able to grasp the complementary character of the various links of
reality – things, ideas, thoughts, etc. Like Hegel he insists
fragmentation cannot give us a complete or more complete picture
of reality, the whole. Unlike Hegel, Asouzu is not dogmatic about
Filosofia Theoretica: Journal of African Philosophy, Culture and Religion
any absolute, although he insists we can only begin to talk about an
absolute if we realize that links are scattered and diverse. The mind
can comprehend the unity of this diversity as it naturally totalizes.
This comprehension comes to the human mind, the mind of man,
not the isolated black or white or yellow mind. The complementary
reflection of Asouzu endorses the African experience while at the
same time acknowledging the Western experience and indeed the
experience of all races committed to this monumental drama of
life. Every philosophy of every people is a contribution to the
universal pool as a theoretical understanding of consolation or the
joy of being. This theoretical understanding is intimate with
practice.
Dismissing ethno-philosophy, Asouzu writes:
Contrary to the pretensions of ethno-philosophic
inspired method of investigation that the essence of
philosophy lies solely on documentation of
differences, all philosophies resemble themselves in
the point where the philosopher is a bridge between
reality, in its most sublime form, and humanity, as
this becomes evident even in given localities.19
The above accusation hardly touches Senghor who saw a great
vision and was eloquent, even if poetic, in its clarification.
Bringing epistemology and metaphysics closer, Asouzu notes:
Thus complementary reflection explores the
conditions for the validation of our claims and
assertions
which it understands as being
fundamentally rooted in the sense of the acquisition
of a complementary, unified, emancipated and
transcendental mindset. This is the dispositional
precondition for ratiocination as it enables the
philosopher to attain the full consciousness of
himself or herself as a typical instance of being
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seeking full and comprehensive actualization in
history irrespective of local constraints.20
For Asouzu we can talk about hybridity, eclecticism, parallelism
and symbiosis only because everything in existence serves as a
missing link of the whole. A monism is implied here, but pluralism
is not denied. Commonality is at the root of Asouzu’s monism and
shows itself in instances of association and expansion. There is
therefore a revelation of complementarity in moments in which
events, though differentiated, seek their common destiny, their
common origin. He writes:
This structural constitution is characteristic of
universal human experience of reality, as relative
subjects, everywhere and every time. It is along this
line that the mind always seeks to capture reality in
complementary contraries … day and night, male
and female, being and non-being, truth and
falsehood, good and evil, up and down, etc.21
One may ask what exactly Asouzu’s missing links are. They are
finite beings and their different modes of expression
in history in so far [as] they are fragments that
cannot be conceptualized except in complementary
relationship to each other … finite beings in their
diverse modes of expression and the categories of
such beings … the mind can grasp and intuit as
missing links units and units of units, things and
things of things, ideas and ideas of ideas, thoughts
and thoughts of thoughts.22
Missing links, then, will include the animate and the inanimate,
language, and cultures of diverse peoples – man and all that makes
his life what it is. Two vital principles follow from Asouzu’s
thought on universal solidarity. The first is what he calls the
Filosofia Theoretica: Journal of African Philosophy, Culture and Religion
metaphysical principle of integration. It states that anything that
exists serves a missing link of reality within the framework of the
totality. The second principle is the practical principle of
progressive transformation which states that all forms of human
action aim towards the joy of being. With a Kantian love of
architectonics, Asouzu asserts the imperative of complementary
reflection thus: Allow the limitations of being to be the cause of
your joy.
The notion of the joy of being re-echoes Senghor’s inspiration of
rhythm and equilibrium. Yet Asouzu has not given adequate
content to this pivotal concept. It is pivotal not only as the link
with Senghor but (more importantly) also as the pillar of Asouzu’s
optimistic philosophy. Let us return now to our earlier criticism of
Asouzu. His system, radical and original as it is, remains very
much polemical. The little space granted construction by polemics
is taken up by methodological discourse. His emphasis on method
makes his works appear like one long prolegomena to any future
African philosophy. Can it be that the pathfinder has left the work
of constructing a more complete metaphysics to a younger
generation after showing with great care that no philosophy can
exist in isolation from philosophies of other regions? Hear this:
“For African philosophy to progress, more works of more broad
based systematic methodological type need to be done.”23 We
noted earlier that African philosophy is full of dry polemic and
quite barren in terms of content. This barrenness is undoubtedly
due to the scarcity of original thinkers. Many a scholar in a
philosophy department of an African University thinks it is all
right to be simply familiar with Western philosophy. He thinks this
familiarity is all he needs to be respected as an African
philosopher. This is, of course, not true. Being a scholar of
Western philosophy is one thing and being an African philosopher
is another thing. This means that there are just a handful of African
philosophers. Those who qualify automatically as African
philosophers are the ethno-philosophers, for they are in a sense
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original. But their originality cannot earn African philosophy
international acclaim in a thousand years.
We cannot boast about the achievements of Western philosophical
genius and expect the West to be impressed. Everyone knows his
father’s house! Asouzu has now shown us the right way to take.
His inspiration has made us ever more jealous for the place of
African philosophy in world philosophy. We dare say that we are
now on the right path.
5.
Transition from the Rationalism of Asouzu to the
Doctrine of Mood as the Synthesis of the Philosophy of
Consolationism
Our consolationism is the doctrine of mood. By mood we mean
thought shadowed by the primitive emotion of existence and of
human life. Thus we say that African philosophy has progressed
from the rhythm of Senghor to the joy of being of Asouzu and now
to consolationism. Senghor’s myth was the veiled concept held by
ethno-philosophy. In Asouzu the concept became free.
Consolationism is an even more radical break with ethno
philosophy. For while Asouzu repeatedly appeals to his Igbo
collective, consolationism has distilled fully into the concept and
rejects undue interference from the worldviews of the tribe. Having
received its first and greatest inspiration from precolonial Africa
(not Greece), it presses on to reveal not only the African mind but
indeed the mind of the melancholy man who we can recognize as
the 21st century man. The melancholy man is the universal man,
the black man, the white man, the yellow man, the red man.
Consolationism is the radicalization of complementarity.
In consolationism the optimism of Senghor and Asouzu answers to
an ontological pessimism as its foundation. Thus consolationism is
a fatalism. All is not well with the world, but all may still be well
with it. We begin our philosophical endeavor by identifying man
as a creature of mood, as the being whose entire life is
Filosofia Theoretica: Journal of African Philosophy, Culture and Religion
characterized by sadness and joy. These moods are magnified and
diminished by fear and hope. This may appear simplistic; yet it is
true that beyond sadness and joy human life has no meaning. Our
science, religion, philosophy, and all practices are instruments of
our joy. But joy cannot be isolated from sadness. Man’s joy
measures his sadness. Since man is a creature of mood we call him
the melancholy man. So far we have an immanent philosophy. One
notes from the very beginning the similarity of our philosophy to
Western existentialism. This is certainly true. But while Heidegger
and Sartre appealed to Greece for inspiration, we appealed to the
African community, to precolonial Africa, through Asouzu,
Senghor, and the ethno-philosophical thinkers. Thus instead of a
doctrine of being, we talk about the doctrine of mood and instead
of talking about non-being we talk about silence, the silence of
eternity. Whether non-being or silence, one thing we admit: the
eternity of mood.
Silence is that state of mood not yet conscious of itself. It is
sadness at a sub-conscious level. When we talk about the silence of
the vast space through which the heavenly bodies move without
conscious beings to observe all that motion we mean precisely this
sadness. We are not merely projecting human subjectivity into the
vastness of the universe. After all, we have called our system a
monism, a serrated monism. Man’s subjectivity, his mind and the
thoughts harbored there, has its foundation in primordial mood in
which matter too participate. If the inanimate cannot feel joy or
sadness, this is to be attributed to the very low level of
consciousness, not its total absence. For the inanimate, say, the
sun, yearns. This yearning is expressed in the laws that are
supposed to govern the motions of heavenly bodies. The sadness of
the universe is the brooding activity of mood. Fear characterizes
this activity. You ask, why fear? A universe that exists as a fatality,
whose only reason for existing appears a non-reason, cannot but be
a universe of terror. The terror of our fatalistic universe lies in its
mood. It pulsates in everything conscious, reaching its highest
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awareness as pain in man’s mind. The terror lives in man’s reason
and torments his intellect, in his despair. All actions and all
thoughts that work to diminish man’s terror increase his joy. The
actions and thoughts that magnify his terror increase his sadness.
Our celebrated rationality, our intellect or reason, is born in grief,
like the world which exists for a purpose we do not really know
but which we approximate to consolation. Anything that yearns
must exist as a consolation. From the beginning perfection is
denied it, to the end it is denied it. A beginning that is yearning
must have an end that is consolation.
Thus, starting from the grounds of immanence, from the human
sphere, we are compelled to move up to the transcendental. From
the humble task of analyzing the smile of a pretty woman and the
tears of a poverty-stricken old widow we are compelled to carry
the burden of clarifying the relation between the mood of man and
the mood of the world. Our task becomes much more ambitious
and we are tempted to become dogmatic. Yet we cannot be
dogmatic because our philosophy, like every other philosophy, is a
vision of the world, a way of understanding it to meet man’s
consolatory need. If science cannot overleap the bounds of
probability, there is no reason for us to claim that we have arrived
at certainty. We are presenting consolationism as an African
philosophical hypothesis. Since our task has become more
burdensome, it is only reasonable that the analysis of human joy
and sadness should take us into a territory already visited by
Western philosophy,
Let us take a hard look at man. He comes into the world blessed
with a developed consciousness. As the baby grows its physical
and mental powers are enlarged. The baby becomes a man or
woman and realizes there is something called moral evil, a fearful
capacity of thought. But before he thinks more deeply about the
problem of evil he realizes that competition is the rule of earthly
life and that he so easily despairs. He is not yet aware that his
despair merely reflects the terror of the universe. His peace is
Filosofia Theoretica: Journal of African Philosophy, Culture and Religion
completely shattered when it dawns on him that becoming old
enough to marry means he is becoming old enough to die. Later he
is horrified that inanimate nature too shares in his impotence, in his
grief. He is horrified to know that his solar system is also bound
for death. Stricken by grief, he looks out of the window to reassure
himself that the external world has not passed away, leaving him to
confront his eternal solitude. The world is still there all right but no
God is visible. A car pulls into the drive and he sees his wife
getting out of the car. In the meantime the woman replaces God
and the man rejoices as he hurries out of the house. This is love,
the love of the intellect. It is not the presence of the car, a product
of mood according to the specification of science, that has
diminished this man’s terror and increased his joy but the
proximity of mood itself.
The foregoing captures the kernel of consolationism in very simple
words. The following questions naturally arise:
1. Is human life worthwhile?
2. What is the relation between emotion and reason?
3. How does man stand in relation to the world?
4. If we agree that man creates value, can we not also insist there is
value in the world?
5. How can we show that the universe is not pointless?
6. Can we find a place for God in a universe of terror?
7. What is the meaning of evil?
8. Why must life always be the hope and burden of advanced
consciousness?
Consolationism discovered as mere immanence, man’s practice in
his joy and sadness, leads us to a much more ambitious
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rationalism, so that we see most clearly the need to root the
doctrine of mood in a comprehensive metaphysics of terror. This
metaphysics of terror will see us tackling such existentialist themes
as despair, anxiety, freedom and determinism, futility, human
agony, responsibility, terror, etc. The metaphysics of terror will
terminate in the ethics of consolation after we may have shown
that morality is not man-made but is part of the resources of the
universe which mood dominates. In the process of clarifying our
philosophy we will give the problems of the reality of evil and the
existence of God a distinctly African formulation. Our method is
existential, analytical, and rationalistic. With this method we hope
to at once kill and resurrect idealism. Our deep-rooted pessimism
destroys idealism while the optimism that rises from this
pessimism restores idealism. Our serrated monism is not a denial
of diversity nor its destruction but the unification of diversity in its
origin in the primordial mood. We speak here of a serrated monism
because we do not go with an absolute monism. We do not assert
that mind and matter are one and the same thing. Rather we think
that mind and matter have their foundation in primordial mood.
We do not know what exactly the nature of this primordial mood
is, but we hypothesize that it is an emotional essence at the bottom
of mind and matter.
If anyone objects that there seems to be a little bit of mysticism in
our philosophy our response will be that as the logic of existence
mysticism of one kind or the other is the pillar of the logic of the
intellect. This much development in quantum physics, with its
seeming irrationality, has shown. A universe which is the
manifestation of the mythopoeic must remain an enigma, in the
same way that God the majesty of the mythopoeic must remain a
mystery to the prying intellect.
It is not our intention to pour out the content of consolationism in
this paper. Not only is consolationism still a work in progress, but,
also, our main aim in this paper is to trace the small progress so far
recorded by African philosophy. The present author’s research has
Filosofia Theoretica: Journal of African Philosophy, Culture and Religion
shown clearly the debt he owes Asouzu and Senghor in particular
and the school of ethno-philosophy in general. The results recorded
by Asouzu and Senghor are of course different from my own
result. The consolationist sketch I have just presented does not
promise an optimistic philosophy. Neither is it the outline of a full
blown pessimistic philosophy in the tradition of a Schopenhauer.
Joy and sadness as primal elements of the mood of man have their
epistemic correlates in optimism and pessimism. The malaise of
man if adequately understood throws light on the tragedy of
existence and the necessity of consolation. The malaise is deeper
still. Man caught it from the unconscious world. This is our
monism, the convergence of essences. Can man conquer his
despair and realize his joy so completely that he may become
happy and overcome his existential malaise? Here the question of
God and our developing theodicy comes in. God is almighty not
because he is absolute perfection but because he is the being who
has conquered fear in Himself and overcome the malaise of
existence. Thus God cannot be the originator of evil. Man cannot
overcome his despair. His destiny is the destiny of consolation, not
happiness. Therefore man can never be free. The notions of
freedom and determinism are wishes that dissolve in the notion of
fatalism. Our fatalism is not the belief that human beings can do
nothing about their situation on account of some eternal decree.
Our fatalism is rather the prior knowledge of the inevitability of
events, whichever way they go, the necessity of their positive or
negative occurrence. Fatalism does not preclude struggle. The
resignation of consolationism is the resignation of ethical struggle.
Fatalism is extended to that mode of existence defined as yearning.
It is a doctrine inspired by the existence which seems to have no
reason for existing, outside the fact that it is yearning. Our
universe is a fatalistic existence, hence its imperfection and the
reality of evil. It is not a value-neutral universe. It is value-laden
and indestructible. It is a fatality. Here we have found the key to
the solution of the problem of evil in the world. If pessimism
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comes to human consciousness as the knowledge, however hazy,
of the tragedy of an existence whose eternal silence is sadness,
then all is not well with universal existence. But if a being has
emerged who has overcome cosmic fear (and we think such a
being has emerged), then all may still be well. Man has aspired to
be precisely this being that conquers despair and pessimism and
becomes qualified to be honored as the glorious and powerful
rather than the omniscient and omnipotent (the latter categories are
applicable only in a perfect universe). It is indisputable that man
has failed woefully to be transformed into God. Thus he comforts
himself with a science that cannot create living forms, a religion
that has not uncovered God, a philosophy that cannot refute the
claims of mysticism because it is itself a consolation, an art that
seeks to imitate philosophy – in other words, a practice that cannot
succeed. What is this success? It is the realization of happiness.
With the doctrine of mood we intend to trace the existential cycle
of the melancholy man of the 21st century. The melancholy man is
the transformation of Senghor’s emotional black man to the
universal man who measures the value of his life in terms of
human joy and sadness. We are of course not going to be satisfied
with a purely immanent philosophy. Our metaphysics of terror will
seek to capture a God of consolation, a God closer to Unamuno’s
personal deity than Aristotle’s impersonal principle. It is
monstrous for the human intellect born in the emotion of sadness
to seek to imagine a God who is a mere principle of the world, an
empty name. The doctrine of mood is in support of religion and in
solidarity with science.
6.
The Philosophy of Consolation in Relation to Science
What the theory of evolution, the intensely metaphysical, and,
perhaps mystical, claims of quantum physics, and the findings of
astronomical physics show without doubt is the interconnectedness
of the universe, of animate and inanimate phenomena. The holism
of modern science finds no opposition in our serrated monism.
Filosofia Theoretica: Journal of African Philosophy, Culture and Religion
This undeniable holism challenges established notions of
mechanicism. Need we frown too deeply that consolationism is a
fatalistic philosophy? No. Our fatalism is the reconciliation of
freedom and necessity in the notion of yearning. We preserve
ethics by preserving liberty while discarding freedom.
Consolationist fatalism is the peace of pessimism with optimism.
Science itself has revealed to us a deeply pessimistic picture of the
last moments of the last men on earth, when life will die with the
sun. Dolmage raises the following very touching elegy for man and
the earth in the name of science:
The mere idea of the decay and death of the solar
system almost brings to one a cold shudder. All that
sun’s light and heat, which means so much to us,
entirely a thing of the past. A dark, cold ball rushing
along in space, accompanied by several dark, cold
balls circling ceaselessly around it. One of these a
mere cemetery, in which there would be no longer
any recollection of the mighty empires, the loves
and hates, and all that teeming play of life which we
call History. Tombstones of men and of deeds,
whirling along forgotten in the darkness and silence.
Sic transit gloria mundi.24
However, consolationism is neither a scientific philosophy nor a
scientifically oriented philosophy. A system that calls itself “the
consolation” must be a philosophy of human existence.
7.
The Philosophy of Consolation in Relation to Religion
Consolationism as a serrated monistic conception of the universe
favors theism. This position agrees with the idea of God in
monotheistic religions. Here we are particularly concerned with the
Christian religion which conceives God as omniscient and
omnipotent. But we are suspicious of the categories of omniscience
and omnipotence which bring into question the goodness of God in
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relation to the undeniable evil in the world. Ours is not a perfect
universe but a yearning universe. The outline of our new African
synthesis shows clearly the basis of rationality in emotionality. A
universe such as ours is characterized in terms of consolation, not
perfection. The doctrine of mood as the dialectic of pessimism and
optimism prefers to speak of God in terms of a being of power and
glory. This will set the stage for our passionate engagement with
the problem of evil in the world which has cast a slur on the purity
of the conception of God.
8.
The Philosophy of Consolation in Relation to Western
Philosophy
Our inspiration has its foundation in the African worldview. Yet
we have seen the points of convergence of some of our ideas with
Western philosophy. Ancient Greek philosophy endorses the idea
of the eternity of matter. We prefer the idea of the eternity of
mood. We are at a loss about how matter can precede mind.
Therefore we prefer to ground both mind and matter in mood, a
primitive mind, the silence which is the foundation of being and
which Western philosophy identifies with non-being.
Is it possible for any philosopher in the 21st century to attempt the
clarification of a metaphysical system without first digesting the
Critique of Pure Reason and the Prolegomena of Kant? It is
foolhardy ignoring that giant of thought. Kant writes:
Metaphysics is properly concerned with synthetic
propositions a priori, and that these alone
constitutes its purpose, but that, in addition to this,
it requires frequent dissections of its conceptions, or
analytic judgments, the procedure in this respect
being only the same as in other departments of
knowledge, where conceptions are sought to be
made plain by analysis.25
Filosofia Theoretica: Journal of African Philosophy, Culture and Religion
Kant’s philosophy rests on the distinction between phenomenon
and noumenon. He thus distinguishes between transcendental logic
which is adequate to his project and general logic.26 The project of
Critical Philosophy, the transcendental deduction of the pure
concepts of the understanding and their application, however,
“does not by any means exclude such things (noumena), but rather
limits the principles of aesthetics, in so far that these should not be
extended to all things, whereby everything would be changed into
mere appearance but that they would only be valid of objects of a
possible experience”.27
Kant’s demand for a body of metaphysical knowledge resting on
absolutely certain grounds is too great a demand. His firm
confidence in the transcendental deduction is unwarranted. Kant’s
dualistic philosophy seems to grant little to ‘nature’ by way of
nature possessing value in itself. Once we have defined the
universe and everything in it as yearning it becomes obvious that
nature has a value in its own right independent of human reason,
with which human reason should be in solidarity. Little wonder,
then, that coming shortly after Kant, Hegel asserted that reality in
its parts is contradictory.28 Hence his choice of the dialectical
method to reconcile the parts with the perfect whole.29 While we
agree with the kernel of Hegel’s dialectic we do not think the total
equates perfection.
Let us pass on to existentialism. The existentialist thinkers from
Kierkegaard to Unamuno and from Heidegger to Sartre and Marcel
all saw that the so-called rationality of the universe can only be
true if this rationality is founded on emotionality. Thus they paid
much attention to the notion of anxiety which according to
Heidegger reveals nothingness,30 the veil of being – the same
concept which according to Sartre inspires nausea by reason of the
realization that freedom means nothingness, that it reveals the
complete impotence of the in-itself and the absence of any
transcendental support for the for-itself.31 The concept of anxiety is
close to us too, but we conceive it somewhat differently from the
Western existentialists. For us anxiety leads man away from the
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despair pessimism animates towards the love of the intellect
(solidarity with all things as they make for our consolation) and
optimism (joy). This joy celebrated by Senghor and Asouzu is
never far from sadness. For the consolationist, anxiety is a sign of
man’s impossible apotheosis and the foundation of his peace in the
concept of God.
9.
Conclusion
It is clear by now that we have a very ambitious project in hand.
We have discovered the philosophical unity that eluded Senghor
and are now ready to continue from where Asouzu stopped. We
have seen how our philosophy stands in relation to science,
religion, and, most importantly, the Western philosophical
tradition, though more work remains to be done to see how our
system stands in relation to Oriental philosophies. But since
philosophies of all peoples and regions are outpourings of the
human mind seeking consolation, we are confident consolationism
will not clash with the fundamental ideas of Buddhism, Hinduism,
Confucianism, and the rest. Borrowing from Asouzu, we say
consolationism is African philosophy beyond African philosophy.
It is a doctrine of man and for man in the 21st century of techno
emotivism, the century of terrorism and bigotry, of religious and
political fundamentalism side by side with the loss of faith in God,
of continuing scientific progress and persistent despair. Emotion
seems to have drowned intellect in our techno-emotive century.
This is a disaster. We have an explanation for this upsurge of
primitive emotion. In understanding the emotional root of reason,
we will better appreciate rationality in all its dimensions. Our life
being what it is – consolatory existence – we cannot pretend to
make a philosophy of cold logic, for logic springs into life as the
balance of emotion.
Since it is the burden of philosophy to find a balance between the
all-conquering emotional demand of human life and the striving of
logic for balance and coherence and in agreeing with Plato’s
Filosofia Theoretica: Journal of African Philosophy, Culture and Religion
Socrates who says in the Phaedo that philosophy is the highest
music, we present consolationism as the intellectual music of
melancholy.
African thinkers in the field of philosophy should no longer be
proud of their knowledge of Western philosophy. They should be
ashamed of themselves each time they enter lecture halls to teach
their students the ideas of those mighty men that made Western
philosophy mankind’s greatest intellectual achievement. They
should lower their voices and hang their heads because they are
living off the heritage of a people who believe in hard work and
merit. Can our Nigerian universities burdened by an inexplicable
anti-intellectualism and the philosophy departments filled with
mediocre thinkers kick-start Africa’s intellectual revolution?
Surely a pragmatic rationalism in philosophy will positively affect
all fields of knowledge in Africa and beyond. Western philosophy
is as great as it is today because Western thinkers worked hard to
create their mighty tradition. Africa must wake up from the
intellectual slumber of decades. Plato’s ideas may be universal, but
Plato himself is a Western man. No Western man can think for his
African counterpart.
The time has come for individual initiative to dignify the African
intellect. The road is now open to creativity and rationalism. We
can now shift emphasis from tribal worldviews to individual
formulations that will engage both the tribe and humanity.32 It may
be true that analysis has replaced systematic philosophizing in
Western philosophy. But then Western thinkers have thought
systems created by their past philosophers which they can analyze
for ever. We in Africa are not in the same position. We must build
our thought systems first before settling down to mere analysis.
The last original Western thinker died, perhaps, with Jean-Paul
Sartre. The world will hardly see a Plato, an Aristotle, and a Kant
again; and the West may not again be able to produce original
thinkers like Plotinus, Spinoza, Descartes, Hume, Berkeley,
Spencer, Mill, Husserl, Unamuno, Bergson, James, Heidegger,
Whitehead, Russell, Marcel, Sartre, etc, but Africa can because we
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January – June, 2013
have not exhausted our creative energies. We have not even begun
to exploit the resources locked up in our minds. But we can start
now.
Notes
1 See M.A. Makinde, “Teaching Philosophy in Africa,” Teaching
Philosophy, Vol. 10, No. 3 (September 1987): 235 36; D.A.
Masolo, African Philosophy in Search of an Identity (Indianapolis:
Indiana University Press, 1994); Innocent Asouzu, Ibuanyidanda:
New Complementary Ontology Beyond World-Immanentism,
Ethnocentric Reduction and Impositions (M ünster: Lit-Verlag,
2007), 176f.
2 J. Obi, Oguejiofor, “Historiography of African Philosophy: The
Journey so Far” (paper presented at the 2008 Biennial Conference
and Meeting of the Nigerian Philosophical Association held
at the University of Calabar, Calabar, Nigeria, from October 8 –
11,
2008).
3 See Olusegun Oladipo, Philosophy and the African Experience:
The Contributions of Kwasi Wiredu (Ibadan: Hope Publications,
1996), 19.
4 Consolation philosophy is still very much the unknown system of
a young Nigerian thinker. It is a system of constructive philosophy
priding itself as a serrated monism in solidarity with the
existentialist, rationalist, and analytical traditions of the West in
which all African philosophers are educated. Consolation
philosophy is a highly original and individual system. Intense work
is ongoing in the systematization and thorough elucidation of this
philosophy in my book Existence and Consolation. So far my
research has been undertaken independent of institutional support.
For raw information about consolationism, see my article
“Towards the 21st Century Globalization of African Philosophy,”
Journal of Arts and Humanities, Vol. 7, No 2 (2010): 99 – 106.
Filosofia Theoretica: Journal of African Philosophy, Culture and Religion
.
Another helpful paper “The Consolationist Manifesto and the New
Testament from Africa” is available at http://evans
experientialism.freewebspace.com/agada_consolationist_manifesto
.htm
5 See Innocent Onyewuenyi, The African Origin of Greek
Philosophy: An Exercise in Afrocentrism. (Nsukka: University of
Nigeria Press, 1993). Onyewuenyi presents an interesting but
polemical investigation of the link between Egyptian thought and
such Greek thinkers as Pythagoras, Parmenides, Plato, and
Aristotle.
6 J. C. A. Agbakoba, “On the African Origin of Philosophy,” Uche,
Vol. 10 (2004): 61 – 67. For Agbakoba, cultures borrow from one
another, the later from the earlier, until the picture becomes
unclear. He also thinks the Greeks contributed originally and
immensely to philosophy. Paying homage to Greek analytical
genius, he pleads for the triumph of scholarship over polemics.
Agbakoba is in fact indicting African philosophy for its barrenness
and rejecting any attempt to escape into a fool’s paradise in the
guise of looking back to a past glory whose trace we cannot find
today.
7 Innocent Asouzu, Ibuaru: The Heavy Burden of Philosophy
Beyond African Philosophy (Münster: Lit-Verlag, 2007), 53.
8 Egbeke Aja, “African Philosophy: Conceptions and Problems,”
Nsukka Journal of the Humanities, No 10 (1999): 105.
9 Jacques Derrida, “Of the Humanities and Philosophical
Discipline: The Right to
Philosophy from the Cosmopolitan
Point of View (the Example of an International
Institution),”
Surfaces,
Vol.
IV,
310,
Folio
1
(1994)
http://pum12.pum.umontreal.ca/revues/surfaces/vol4/deridaa.html
(accessed June 23,
2004).
269
Vol. 2 No. 1
January – June, 2013
10 J. S Mbiti, African Religions and Philosophy (London:
Heinemann, 1969), 1ff.
11 See, for instance, the Yoruba myth of creation. This myth tells us
that God sent Obatala with a calabash full of earth and a chicken to
create the world. Alas Obatala got drunk on his way from heaven
and Oduduwa took the creation tools from him and continued the
journey alone. The earth was formless, being mere water.
Oduduwa sprinkled earth on the water and the chicken scattered
the earth in all directions with its feet. Thus the earth came to be.
This story of the creation of the world and its infancy is not in
conflict with the creation stories of monotheistic religions (e.g.,
Christianity) and science. It is also not in conflict with the idea of
the eternity of the world. For more comments on this myth and
other African creation myths, see Bolaji Idowu, Olodumare: God
in Yoruba Belief (London: Macmillan, 1963); J. S. Mbiti, Concepts
of God in Africa (London: SPCK, 1975). The ethno-philosopher
analyzes these myths and digs out hidden notions of the eternity of
matter, creation out of nothing, evil, necessity, etc, in the light of
Western philosophy. The task before the consolationist thinker and
all other original African thinkers is the universalization of
particulars in a manner so original that this universalization at once
disengages from, and yet engages, Western philosophy.
12 Many African scholars tend to agree that the mind is conceived
both dualistically and in a quasi-materialistic sense and rarely
materialistically in African traditional thought. The mind interacts
with the body though distinct from it. To escape the Cartesian
problem of interaction the notion of quasi-materialism or quasi
physicalism is postulated by scholars like Wiredu. See Kwasi
Wiredu, “The Concept of Mind with Particular Reference to the
Language and Thought of the Akans,” in Contemporary
Philosophy: A New Survey, ed. Guttorm Floistad
(Dordrecht:
Martinus Nijhoff Publishers, 1987), 160 – 63; Kwame Gyekye,
“The Concept of a Person,” in Philosophy and Choice, ed. Kit R.
Filosofia Theoretica: Journal of African Philosophy, Culture and Religion
Christenson (Mountain View, California: Mayfield Publishing
Company, 1999), 215 – 25; M. P. Edeh, Towards an Igbo
Metaphysics (Chicago, Illinois: Loyola University Press, 1999),
83; B. Hallen and O. Sodipo, Knowledge, Beliefs and Witchcraft:
Analytical Experiments in African Philosophy (London:
Ethnographica, 1986), 105; M. W. Anshi, “The Concept of the
Person in Tiv Philosophy” (paper presented at the Biennial
Conference and Meeting of the Nigerian Philosophical Association
held at the University of Calabar, Calabar, Nigeria, from October 8 – 11, 2008).
13 See Paulin Hountondji, African Philosophy: Myth and Reality
(Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1983).
14 Miguel de. Unamuno, Tragic Sense of Life, trans. J. E. Crawford
Flitch (New York: Dover Publications, Inc., 1954), Conclusion,
http://manybooks.net/categories/phi
(accessed September 6, 2011).
15 See F. O. C. Njoku, Essays in African Philosophy, Thought &
Theology (Nekede, Owerri: Claretian Institute of Philosophy,
2002), 49.
16 Njoku, Essays, 49 – 50.
17 J.O. Sodipo, “Philosophy in Africa Today,” Thought and
Practice, Vol. 2, No. 2 (1975): 117.
18 Innocent Asouzu, Ibuaru: The Heavy Burden of Philosophy
Beyond African Philosophy (Münster: Lit-Verlag, 2007), 48.
19Innocent Asouzu, “The Complementary Comprehensive Noetic
Alternative,”http://frasouzu.com/Issues and Papers/Asouzu - The
complementary comprehensive noetic alternative.htm (accessed
September 22, 2011).
20
Asouzu, “The Complementary Comprehensive Noetic
Alternative.”
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21
Asouzu, “The Complementary Comprehensive Noetic
Alternative.”
22Innocent Asouzu, “The Complementary Comprehensive Noetic
Alternative,” http://frasouzu.com/Issues and Papers/Asouzu - The
complementary comprehensive noetic alternative.htm (accessed
September 22, 2011).
23 Innocent Asouzu, Ibuaru: The Heavy Burden of Philosophy
Beyond African Philosophy (Münster: Lit-Verlag, 2007), 59.
24 Cecil G. Dolmage, Astronomy of Today, 3rd edition (London:
Seeley and Co. Ltd, 1910) http://manybooks.net/categories/phi
(accessed September 22, 2011).
25
Immanuel Kant, Prolegomena, in Prolegomena and
Metaphysical Foundations of Natural Sciences, 3rd edition, trans.
Ernest Belfort Bax (London: George Bell and Sons,1891), Sect 4,
http://oll.libertyfund.org/title/361.html
(accessed August 13, 2011).
26 Immanuel Kant, Critique of Pure Reason, 2nd ed., trans. F. Max
Müller (New York: Macmillan, 1922), Division 1, Bk II,
http://oll.libertyfund.org/title/1442.html
(accessed August 13,
2011). Bk II of the first division is concerned with the “Analytics
of Principles.” See chapter two of the second book of the second
division for “The Antinomy of Pure Reason.” These books throw
light on Kant’s idea of the valid and invalid use of reason.
27
Immanuel Kant, Prolegomena, in Prolegomena and
Metaphysical Foundations of Natural Sciences, 3rd edition, trans.
Ernest Belfort Bax (London: George Bell and Sons,1891), Sect 32,
http://oll.libertyfund.org/title/361.html
(accessed August 13, 2011).
28 F. G. W. Hegel, The Phenomenology of Spirit, trans. J. B. Baillie
and C. J. Freviser, in The Philosophy of Hegel, ed. C. J. Friedrich
(New York: Random House, 1953), 399 – 439.
Filosofia Theoretica: Journal of African Philosophy, Culture and Religion
29 Charles Taylor, Hegel (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press,
1975), 214 – 49.
30 Martin Heidegger, Being and Time, trans. John Macquarrie and
Edward Robinson (New York: Harper and Row, 1962), Part 1,
Division 1, VI, 225 – 42.
31 J-P Sartre, Being and Nothingness, trans. Hazel E. Barnes (New
York: Pocket Books, 1966), Part 4, Ch 1, III, 707 – 711.
32 See Kwasi Wiredu, “Toward Decolonizing African Philosophy
and Religion,” African Studies Quarterly, Vol 1, Issue 4 (1998)
http://www.africa.ufl.edu/asq/v1/4/3.htm
(accessed November 23,
2011).
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Filosofia Theoretica: Journal of African Philosophy, Culture and Religion
TRENDS IN AFRICAN PHILOSOPHY: A CASE FOR
ECLECTISM
Kanu, Ikechukwu Anthony (OSA)
Department of Philosophy
University of Nigeria, Nsukka
ikee_mario@yahoo.com
1.
Introduction
In the contention of Oladipo (2006), the debate on the idea of
African philosophy which has been divided into trends or schools,
dates back to the 1960’s and 70’s, which constitute the modern
epoch of African philosophy, when some African thinkers began to
question the perspective that traditional African beliefs and
worldviews, as embedded in pre-colonial African cultures,
constituted African philosophy. This question bordering on the
parameters of African philosophy sprang from and was weaved
around the idea, promoted by both western and African thinkers that
Africans do not have a philosophy. And if they do have, who are
they? And if there are, what ideas from within their community of
thought constitute African philosophy? As significant as this enquiry
might have been in the historical evolution of African philosophy,
with the work of Makinde (2010) on African Philosophy: The
Demise of a Controversy, African Philosophy has moved beyond the
question of whether there is an African philosophy or not. When
Onyewuenyi (1994) wrote on The African origin of Greek
Philosophy: An Exercise in Afrocentricism he gives African
philosophy an age, such that to question the existence of African
philosophy is to negate the being of western philosophy. This piece
goes beyond the question of whether there is an African philosophy
or not, to study the development of the different trends that have
emerged from the study of the history of African philosophy. It
moves beyond the conventional limits of the study of the trends or
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schools of African philosophy tied to the 1960’s and 70s to the
contemporary developments in the study of African philosophy.
2.
The Schools of African Philosophy
In this study, the concepts: trends and schools are used
interchangeably. As such, when trends is used, it signifies schools
and vice versa. The schools or trends to be discussed in this piece
have been grouped into the Universalist, Particularist, Eclectic,
National-Ideological, Sage philosophy, Literal/Artistic philosophy
and the Hermeneutic school.
a.
Universalist/Professional Trend of African Philosophy
The universalist or professional school of African philosophy was
promoted by scholars such as Peter O. Bodunrin, Kwasi Wiredu,
Odera Oruka and Paulin Hountondji. Their thought is grouped into a
school because they share fundamental positions and assumptions.
As a school, what is their argument? They argue that philosophy is
the same everywhere and uses the same methodology, and thus
African philosophy should be critical and not a descriptive record of
Africa beliefs. Bodunrin (cited by Uduigwomen, 1995), a leading
figure in the universalist trend brought out the basic features of this
school. These include:
i.
They agree with Jenny (1999), that philosophy deals with
problems which are ultimate, abstract and very general.
These problems cut across geographical and cultural
divides. Bodunrin (cited by Uduigwomen, 1995) wrote,
“Philosophical systems are built up by systematic
examination of specific features of the world out of the
relationships that are perceived to obtain between them”
(p. 3). It is therefore not surprising that when Sodipo
(cited by Uduigwomen, 1995) describes the idea of cause
and chance in Yoruba ontology, Bodunrin (cited by
Uduigwomen, 1995) would reject it as philosophy on the
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Filosofia Theoretica: Journal of African Philosophy, Culture and Religion
grounds that it only allows scholars to see how the
Yoruba concept of cause and chance fits into the Yoruba
traditional system of thought and not in the general or
universal corpus of literature called philosophy.
ii. If any literature must be categorized as philosophical, it must
contain within itself the energies of criticism and
argument. In this case, to put out traditional ideas that
have not been criticised or cannot be argued, or ideas that
are not logical in its presentation and scientific in nature,
cannot be regarded as philosophy. Thus, when logic,
science, criticism and argumentation are not the hallmark
of a body of thought, they cannot be regarded as
philosophical.
iii. For a body of thought to be philosophy, this school also
argues that it must follow the analytic or dialectical
pedagogy of enquiry. In this process of presentation,
one’s ideas must be well and clearly articulated, so that
your audience would know what they are invited to
believe. In this process, the thinker must show how his
theory addresses the problem at stake more than other
theories. Like the dialectics of Hegel, ideas to constitute
philosophy become an antithesis to an already existing
thesis, to give birth to a new thesis.
While it is true that philosophy needs to have universal relevance as
the professional approach insists, Uduigwomen, (1995) criticizes it
on the grounds that philosophical problems will remain plain and in
the abstract except it is made to have local and concrete relevance.
For instance, the problem of reincarnation will not have any
relevance to the African until it is discussed with a focus on the
categories that underlie his worldview. From the perspective of
Uduigwomen, one can argue that contextualization is what makes
African philosophy to have a cultural dimension, arising from the
special problem and unique experience of the African people. Any
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attempt to detach philosophy from particular contexts would make
philosophy a rarefied thing.
b.
Ethno-philosophy or Particularist Trend of African
Philosophy
The proponents of this trend include Tempels (1959), Mbiti (1970)
and Senghor (1964; 1973). They argue that the different African
worldviews properly constitute what could be regarded as African
philosophy. They would define African Philosophy as the
philosophical thought of Africans as could be sifted from their
various worldviews, myths, proverbs, etc. In this sense, it is the
philosophy indigenous to Africans, untainted by foreign ideas. It
places little or no emphasis on scientificity, logic, criticism and
argumentation and makes more emphases on local relevance or
context. This does not in any way mean that this trend undermines
the significance of scientificity, logic, criticism and argumentation.
This perspective was expressed in Placid Tempels’ work, La
Philosophie Bantou and John Mbiti’s piece, African Religions and
Philosophy. Segun (1991), criticised this perspective when he argued
that Tempels’ primary motivation was not to define African
philosophy, but to help European missionaries understand the
thought pattern or worldview of the Bantu people. This he believed
would make the work of evangelization easier for the European
missionaries. Segun’s criticism does not suffice here, because that a
man has not set out to do something but still does, does not mean
that what he has done is not worth it. If we move beyond Tempels to
Mbiti, his purpose is clear. Mbiti (1970) wrote that the primary
motivation for documenting his work was to put down the:
Philosophical understanding of African peoples
concerning different issues of life. Philosophy of
one kind or another is behind the thinking and
acting of every people, and a study of traditional
religions brings us into those areas of African life
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Filosofia Theoretica: Journal of African Philosophy, Culture and Religion
where, through word and action, we may be able to
discern the philosophy behind. (p. 1).
On these grounds, Hounntondji (cited by Segun, 1995) would insist
that ethno-philosophy is no philosophy because it is a communal and
collective thought and it is not written down. Even here, the criticism
of Hountondji that is based on the idea of oral tradition cannot be
sustained. Philosophy is not philosophy because it has been written
down; it is philosophy because it is first an idea. This would question
the philosophiness of the ideas of Socrates who never wrote down
his thought, but were later put down by his disciple Plato. Writing is
not the only way of transmitting information, oral tradition is
another. As has already been done by Tempels and Mbiti,
professionals can collect the African wealth of ideas and critically
analyse them, especially for the enlightenment of many traditional
Africans who are yet to be persuaded on the distinction between
philosophy, religion, mysticism and telepathy.
Segun (1995) had also criticized this view on the basis of its
definition of African philosophy in terms that are traditional. He
argues that it would follow that contemporary African philosophy is
not philosophy. African philosophy evolves and cannot be traditional
all the time. If philosophy addresses issues at all times, it then should
be creative, dynamic and not static. He further criticises this view on
the grounds that it takes a position that assumes that once we have
identified these authentic traditional ideas, we need only report them
without criticism. Even here again Segun’s arguments cannot be
sustained. There is no piece in which the particularist school have
said that philosophy is traditional thoughts reported without
criticism. Segun takes on the emphasis of the particularist school as
though it were all they have said. Worthy of note is that the idea of
traditional often used by the particularist school is not limited to
myths, proverbs, legend, lore, folklores, etc., of the African people; it
also implies a philosophical style passed from one generation to
another. In this case, Segun’s argument that modern African
philosophy cannot be regarded as African philosophy because of the
Vol. 2 No. 1
January – June, 2013
new context it address, is not true; for even though they were not
reflecting on African myths, proverbs, legend, folklores, they carried
with them the Igwebuike underlining principle of African
philosophy, which emphasizes the significance of the one among the
many.
c.
National-Ideological Trend of African Philosophy
During the 20th century, a fulsome energy swept across the African
continent bringing about the political emancipation of many African
states. And so in 1957, Ghana became independent, in 1960 Nigeria
became independent, in 1989 Namibia became independent and in
the early 1990’s South Africa got her independence from the
apartheid regime. This energy was ignited by some Africans through
their manifestos, pamphlets, political works, etc. These nationalists
include, Azikiwe, Awolowo, Nkrumah, Nyerere and Senghor.
Azikiwe (1937; 1965; 1964; 1978; 1981) developed his ideology
later described as Zikism by some commentators, which was a
philosophy for the political regeneration of Africa, economically,
politically, culturally and otherwise. Leopold (1964; 1973)
developed the African philosophy of negritude which affirmed the
beauty of the black race. Nkrumah (1962; 1963; 1964) developed a
philosophical Consciencism so as to help sustain the African
identity. Nyerere (1968; 1985) developed the Ujamaa Socialism. The
discourse of these African political thinkers was the theoretical
offshoot of the African anti-colonial struggle, and the grounding
point of departure of African philosophical engagement.
d.
Sage Philosophy
Sage Philosophy was Henry Odera Oruka (1944–1995), the Kenyan
philosopher’s contribution to the development of African
Philosophy. Through interviews with sages from traditional groups,
he identified philosophical sages in different cultures who were more
of the repositories of cultural wisdom. He divided them into two
groups; the first he called Folk Sages, who embodied community
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Filosofia Theoretica: Journal of African Philosophy, Culture and Religion
wisdom; the second he called Philosophical Sages, who held a
critical stand towards that wisdom. From his findings, especially as
to philosophical sages, he concluded that the West and Hountondji
were wrong in saying that Africa has no philosophy, for his research
showed that philosophy existed in traditional Africa. Oruka (1991)
engaged in this investigation so as to counter three claims that
undermined the philosophiness of African philosophy. These claims
include:
i.
that while the Greek sages use reason, African sages do not
engage in philosophic thought.
ii. African sages are part of an oral tradition, whereas
philosophic thought requires literacy. This was also
targeted
at
unphilosophical.
undermining
African
thought
as
iii. African traditions encourage unanimity regarding beliefs and
values and discourage individual critical thought.
Oruka’s responses to these views shaped what is today called Sage
Philosophy. What then is Sage Philosophy? Oruka (1991), defines
Sage Philosophy thus:
...the expressed thoughts of wise men and women in
any given community and is a way of thinking and
explaining the world that fluctuates between
popular wisdom (well known communal maxims,
aphorisms and general common sense truths) and
didactic wisdom, an expounded wisdom and a
rational thought of some given individuals within a
community. (p. 28)
According to Masolo (2006), Oruka had very definite ideas about
who qualifies as a philosophic sage and how such persons are to be
distinguished from other sages. These qualifications are as follows:
Vol. 2 No. 1
i.
January – June, 2013
The tendency to express dissatisfaction with the
status quo belief system of their communities is an
important critical component and a criterion
Oruka used to identify sages as philosophical.
Dissatisfaction
sometimes
motivates
the
philosophic sage to advance the knowledge that
everyone has by subjecting it to scrutiny in order
to determine its validity and worth.
ii. While philosophic sages may still share with
others some customary practices and beliefs, or
aspects of them, unlike other members of their
community, they emphasize rational explanations
and justifications of courses of action. They owe
greater loyalty to reason than to custom for its
own sake. As a result, not only are sages often a
source of new knowledge, but they are also a
catalyst to change within their communities.
e.
Literary/Artistic Philosophy
The literary or artistic school of African philosophy focuses on
African thinkers who through their literary or artistic works made
reflections that are philosophical. These artists include: Chinua
Achebe, Wole Soyinka, Ngugi Wa Thiongo, Okot p’Bitek, Taban lo
Liyong, etc. For instance, in the Things Fall Apart by Chinua
Achebe, he reflected on the Igbo-African philosophy of life, kinship,
death, the afterlife, ancestors, etc. For instance, in Achebe’s work on
the Things Fall Apart, the essence of the Igbo-African philosophy of
belongingness comes to light:
We do not ask for wealth because he that has health
and children will also have wealth. We do not pray
to have more money but to have more kinsmen. We
are better than animals because we have kinsmen.
An animal rubs its itching flank against a tree, a
man asks his kinsman to scratch him. (p. 132)
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Filosofia Theoretica: Journal of African Philosophy, Culture and Religion
After the feast, when one of the eldest men of the umunna rose to
thank Okonkwo, the foundation of the Igbo-African philosophy of
belongingness is unveiled:
A man who calls his kinsmen to a feast does not do
so to save them from starving. They all have food in
their own homes. When we gather together in the
moonlit village ground it is not because of the
moon. Everyman can see it in his own compound.
We come together because it is good for kinsmen to
do so. (p. 133)
Excerpts like these contain germs of Igbo thoughts on ethics,
epistemology and metaphysics.
f.
Hermeneutic Philosophy
From the name, this school understands African philosophy as
interpretation. And here, the works of philosophers like Okere,
Barry Hallen, J. O. Sodipo find their relevance. In this school,
African philosophy is understood within the context of analysing
African languages, texts, proverbs, sayings, etc., with the hope of
extracting from them the philosophy of the African people through
interpretation. For instance, the interpretation of the Igbo proverb
Ngwere ghara ukwu osisi, aka akpara ya (If a lizard stays off from
the tree, it would be caught by man), helps you to understand the
Igbo-African social philosophy.
3.
A Case for Eclectic Trend in African Philosophy
The Eclectic school of African philosophy would define African
Philosophy as the combination of the universalist and particularist
approaches to African philosophy. This would involve sifting the
philosophical thought of Africans as could be gotten from their
various world views, myths, proverbs, etc., and reflecting on them
by professionally trained African philosophers. They believe that
at the point of this romance between the professional and
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unprofessional, authentic African philosophy is realized. It argues
that schools are already doing African philosophy, but that they
will do better if they join heads together. Uduigwomen, (1995)
describes the eclectic interplay between the two schools as follows:
The universalist approach will provide the necessary analytic
and conceptual framework for the particularist school. Since
this framework cannot thrive in a vacuum, the particularist
approach will supply the raw material or data needed by the
universalist approach. Thus, it will deliver the universalist
approach from mere logic-chopping and abstractness. There
will be a fruitful exchange of categories and concepts. (p. 6).
The eclectic school prefers to take a central position. It holds the
promise of transforming the conception and practise of
contemporary African philosophy. In the African world view every
position has a stake. A thousand flowers are allowed to bloom.
Obele azu kpata obele nku, nnukwu azu kpata nnukwu nku which
translates to let the small fish fetch small bunch of fire wood and
let the big fish fetch a big bunch. Two emerging and prominent
eclectic theories in African philosophy include: Ibuanyidanda and
Njikoka ontologies credited to I. I. Asouzu and G. O. Ozumba
respectively. Theories of this kind are able to capture the
originality and viability of African thought system.
4.
Conclusion
From the foregoing, this piece has studied the schools of African
philosophy in such a way that it goes beyond the conventional
limits of the study of these trends traditionally tied to the 1960’s
and 70s, to the contemporary developments in the study of African
philosophy. This study moves further to include the literary and
hermeneutic schools as trends in the historical development of
African philosophy. The researcher adopts the eclectic school of
African philosophy as the most credible and productive school of
African philosophy and considers any form of particularization as
284
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a philosophical pride, which must be avoided in every sincere
philosophical enquiry. The eclectic trend spoken of here by the
researcher moves beyond the conventional eclectic trend which
harbours only the universalist and particularist schools, to include
all the schools of African philosophy as relevant ends in every
African philosophical reflection.
Vol. 2 No. 1
January – June, 2013
References
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Azikiwe, N. (1978). Renascent Africa. New York: Negro
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Oruka, H. O. (1991). Sage Philosophy: Indigenous Thinkers and
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Filosofia Theoretica: Journal of African Philosophy, Culture and Religion
THE THEORY OF FORCES AS CONCEIVED
BY IGBO-AFRICANS
Obiajulu Mulumba Ibeabuchi Ph.D
Department of Philosophy
Nnamdi Azikiwe University Awka
Anambra State
1.
Introduction
In addition to the Bantu conception of vital force as it influences
human behavior; there are also other aspects of African life where
the further conception of forces can be detected. This work will
concentrate on force (ike) as conceived by Igbo Africans. Some of
them, any way, are already contained in the Bantu notion of forces.
They are:
(i)
(ii)
(iii)
(iv)
Force as given by ancestors
Force from charms and magic
Force obtainable from sacrifices
Force in prayer, sacred objects and places
There is a conception of the Supreme Being as he who gives life,
or he who gives force to other beings that are subordinate. Not
only in Africa, all over the world, people have the belief that gods
have power, force or energy (ike) over things that men cannot
control or understand. These beliefs teach that gods are responsible
for the creation of the world and the continuation of life in it, and
that they control important events such as birth, death, disease and
success. Gods, unlike men, do not die; they live forever and restore
force to created things that lost theirs.
Man as force itself manipulates these forces; good or bad. C. B.
Nze says: “ravaged by constant fears of insecurity in the face of
forces of which man is one, the African (Igbo) resort to the making
and creation of yet other forces in the form of charms for the
purpose of controlling, checking and preventing the excesses of
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January – June, 2013
malignant forces1”. On the whole, Africans believe in the existence
of spirits in general, good and evil ones.
The good spirits are prominent and known and worshipped by a
clan or community. It is usually localized and enshrined in a
particular place where sacrifices are made for safety, blessing and
good luck etc. These spirits are believed to have the force to
receive from the Almighty what the community under its
protection requests. The good spirits are merciful and will never
allow any of the members of the community to get lost.
The second are the spirits whose names are not known. Often they
are the wicked spirits or bad spirits of kindred. Sacrifices to them
are often placed on the road sides, often on the forked road because
they are believed to be wandering spirits, having the force, (energy
or capacity) of coming through many roads – and when they do,
they would eventually meet the sacrifice2.
2.
Deities and spirit forces
The power (the force) of the deities and spirits as spiritual beings
are found evident in Igbo proverbs. Their power far exceeds man.
Men cannot afford to quarrel with them, nor can man undo what
they have done. They can see even the most hidden things. This is
why the Igbo say … “Okenye ji abali eri oke, mmadụ ahụghị ya
mmụọ hụrụ ya”. Both deities and spirits can strengthen, by way of
giving long life, good health, prosperity and enhance social status3.
Both spirits can also bring death, understood as the denial of one or
1Nze, C. I., “Logic in African Charm Medicine in the Nigeria Journal of Social
Studies” Vol. 4 No. 1, P. 23. Further discussions on the constitution of forces in
African thought could be seen in J. O. Chimakonam Introducing African
Science: Systematic and Philosophical Approach, Bloomington Indiana:
Authorhouse, 2012, 96-97
2Onwubiko, O. A. Wisdan Lecturers on African Thought and Culture. (Nigeria:
Toten Publishers Ltd, 1988) P. 55
3Metuh, I., African Religion in Western Conceptual Schemes The Problems of
Interpretation (Ibadan: Claverianum Press, 1985), p. 30
Filosofia Theoretica: Journal of African Philosophy, Culture and Religion
all these aspects of life. Sacrifices are offered to spirits to give life.
The spirit that received man’s offering is bound to pay him back
with life. This is why the Igbo people say: Mmụọ riri ife onye, ji
ndụ akwụ ya ụgwọ4.
The spirits can also punish, they can kill, whereas the deities are
believed to punish or kill for correction or as a retribution for
misconducts. The spirit forces are hedged around for a number of
taboos, once any of these is infringed, even inadvertently, their
reaction is automatic5. The Arụsị… are spiritual forces in nature
which until when they are discovered by man, remains inactive.
They become active once man discovers and begins to worship
them. It is an instrumentality through which evil forces are
controlled, their forces enfeebled. The real meaning of Arụsị is Arụ
kwụsị (evil must stop) which is abbreviated as Arụ-sị. Thus the
deities essentially are activated to help man guard against evil in
the society.
The more offering these deities receive the more powerful they
become and the more powers they have to bring fortunes or
misfortunes. So too the less offerings they receive the weaker their
powers become. Hence, if a community decides to stop all offering
made to an Arụsị, its power would be gone, and it would become
inactive. Hence the proverb that if an Arụsị becomes destructive it
would be shown the tree from which it was made6.
Making an Arụsị to be less potent is dangerous as it portends
calamity befalling the community responsible. Yes, Arụsị can be
destructive if all sacrifices due to it are withdrawn. Actually, the
destruction is not caused by Arụsị itself, but the absence of it
which automatically brings to zero, its functional relation with the
people it is meant to protect. The above suggests that Igbo regard
4
5
Ibid
Ibid
6Ibid
291
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January – June, 2013
sacrifice as a process of restituting vital force7. Also, C. B. Nze
comments “Constant efforts to maintain existing balance in the
community and in the individual necessitate the offering of
sacrifices8.” This means that the vital force which has also being
likened to ikenga is responsible for maintaining this necessary
balance by ordering the composite life forces (ijele)9.
Man, ‘mmadụ’ is best seen as a composite of life-forces interacting
with other life-forces in the universe. He is endowed with different
principles or selves which link and allow him to interact with other
beings in the world. For example, Chi links him with the entire
universe of forces10.
Obi, as a life force, is capable of growth, diminution and death. By
maintaining a harmonious relationship through rituals, man
contributes to the strengthening or bonding of his life-forces. Man
can further strengthen himself with charms and medicines11. In this
way, it should be understood that the disintegration of man’s
composite forces means death so also with other beings; injuries
and diseases are also signs of partial disintegration. Scholarly
attempts have been made to explain this using the instrumentality
of African logic12. Therefore, the strength of man’s life forces is
made manifest in his general well being, good health, large family,
prosperity and good status in society13.
A person’s life force may be the object of attack by witches,
sorcerers, unappeased deities, or evil spirits.14 Man is a microcosm
7Note of course, J. O. Chimakonam’s explanations on the difference between
force (ike) power; vital force (ikenga) power to cause…often animated or
embodied as in Arụsị; and life force (ijele) tiny life giving molecules. Op Cit
8Nze, C. B., Aspects of African Communal 2 sm p. 63
9J. O. Chimakonam Op Cit P.
10 Metuh. I. Op cit 98
11 Ibid
12 J. O. Chimakonam Op Cit P. 2
13 Ibid
14 Ibid
Filosofia Theoretica: Journal of African Philosophy, Culture and Religion
of forces. Above all beings or forces is Chukwu (Great God), spirit
or creator. He gives existence, power of survival and increase to all
other forces. After him come the deities, and the founding
ancestors (father) of different clans. These, though are one time
human beings, dispose of great powers and influence because they
were the first to whom God communicated his vital force, with the
power of exercising influence on posterity. They constitute the
most important chain binding men to God.15 After them come the
Ancestors and the other living dead of the family and tribe. Then
come the living in order of primogeniture. Then under man and
subordinate to him are the physical forces in the universe such as
animals, plants and minerals. 16
3.
The Interaction of Forces
The universe is like a spider’s web in which all beings are linked
together by a network of relationship and interact upon one
another17. Harmonious relationships or interaction lead to the
strengthening of forces of beings, while pernicious influences lead
to diminution of being or disintegration of composite forces.
Illustration
This belief is illustrated by an incident which happened at
Ozubulu, a town at the central part of Igbo land some years ago.
The catechist of a Christian group, who had cut and sawed up an
‘Iroko’ tree to get some money to marry a wife for his son
suddenly died one morning while working in his barn. While his
church members prayed for the repose of his soul in the church, his
relatives in the village consulted oracle which attributed his death
to his failure to placate the spirit in the tree (vital force). (This
incident occurred in 1979; his wife was later said to have died in a
similar mysterious way). If he had acted fast by performing rituals
15 Tempels P., Bantu Philosophy (Paris: Presence Africaine, 1969) p. 61
16 Ibid
17 Ibid
293
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January – June, 2013
and sacrifice on recommendation, as Igbo metaphysical opinion
would have it, his life would have been saved and equilibrium of
forces restored.
The oracles ordered a series of rituals to restore the harmony to
avoid more of such deaths, thus, all life forces and vital forces can
influence one another for good or for evil. Harmonious
relationships ensure stronger bonding of the life-forces of man.
Greater part of Igbo religion consists of rituals and sacrifices to
maintain or restore this harmony.
4.
Sacrifice as Restitution of Vital Force among the Igbo
Sacrifices are offered to the invisible spirits, deities and ancestors
to obtain favors or to avert dangers. This activity is appreciated by
the Igbo on the predicate that man, not only an Igbo man, is not the
master of the universe even though he is central in the world.
According to Arinze Francis (a Roman Catholic Cardinal) the Igbo
man offers sacrifices for four reasons: “the various ends of Ibo
sacrifices can be grouped under four headings; (a) expiation (b)
sacrifice to ward off molestation from unknown spirits (c) petition
(d) thanksgiving18”. In his own view C. B. Nze sees sacrifice as a
means of maintaining existing balances in a given community19.
The idea behind the maintenance of balance is predicated on the
understanding that imbalance or disharmony could have a spiritual
cause, straining the relation between the living and the dead.
The Igbo conceive man as a force as he is dynamic. The vital
force- – power is identical with man. So the idea of vital force is
ontologically inseparable from man, hence the Igbo say, “mmadụ
bụ mmụọ”- man is a deity or (spirit in this context). There can be
increase or decrease in vital force. There can also be a loss in vital
18 Arinze, F., Sacrifice in Igbo Religion (Ibadan, University Press, 1970). Pp 2 -
21
19 C. B. Nze. Op Cit p. 63
Filosofia Theoretica: Journal of African Philosophy, Culture and Religion
force and this loss can also be restored by certain happenings
around us.
Man is a being capable of growth and diminution, he is a force that
can exercise a direct influence on some other forces; and other
forces can also have their influences on man. By positive or
negative deeds he can increase, decrease and restore the vital force
of other beings. By harmonious relationship he increases his vital
force as well as that of others; and by pernicious relation he
diminishes either his or the other’s vital force.
For the continued existence of the Igbo man, for instance,
restoration or restitution of force is very vital. The only way certain
of coding this is by sacrifice. Sacrifice therefore, becomes an
inevitable tool for this revitalization. It also forms one of the
commonest but most important demonstrations of religious
worship and belief system among the Igbo people. Sacrifices are
made for the protection of life and safety of property. For the
guarantee of this protection, the Igbo people offer the sacrifices to
the beings with potency of offering protection. This position is
supported by Amaury when he said;
Only a clever ‘Dibia’ can make strong ‘Ọgwụ’ when
he gives it to a man he tells him to make a certain
sacrifices, example: a fowl to it weekly, otherwise the
‘Ọgwụ’ will die …20
The Igbo believe certain ingredients are specifically potent for
specific actions. Also, there is a belief that time, place, day, week
are specific for certain kinds of sacrifice. This belief is hinged on
force and their gradation. This belief made explicit in the proverb:
“Obu sị na ike dị n’ awaja n’ awaja” or “Ovu sị na ike dị n’ọsụa”
very much depends on the dialect one is expressing the reality. To
corroborate the above, Onwubiko Oliver succinctly puts it, “For
20 Amaury, P. The People of Southern Nigeria, Vol. 11 (Frank Cass & Co. Ltd.
1969), P. 168
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January – June, 2013
sacrifices to be efficacious and to achieve their purpose, the
African believe that they must be offered at particular place, at a
particular time of the day, week or year as the case may21.”
Sacrifice therefore, is a sign that man is not a necessary being. He
acknowledges the being of other vital forces; hence his need to
seek external help.
The Igbo belief in sacrifices and their efficacy in the restitution of
vital force cement their unmistaken belief in and acceptance of the
reality of occult (hidden or latent) power, operation and
engineering in Igbo Cosmo-ontology. C. B. Nze makes it clear
thus: “Indeed, the Igbo man becomes a technician using sacrifices
for the strengthening, maintenance and protection of man. If he is
of this sort, he is in perpetual readiness to achieve a refill or else
the engine would stall.22”
The operation or manipulation of occult powers lies heavily upon
the fact that the Igbo generally, as for some other Africans, believe
that the universe is like spider’s web in which all things are linked
together by a network of relationship and they interact upon one
another23”
Pernicious relationship leads to the diminution of forces while the
harmonious relation leads to the strengthening of forces. Where
forces are diminished or annihilated and there is a great need for
their restitution, sacrifices are resorted to achieving this.
Sacrifices, depending on its very nature and the intention for which
it is carried out, can also diminish or annihilate a vital force. The
21 Onwubiko, O. A., African Thought Religion and Culture (Enugu Snapp Press
Ltd. 1991) p. 62.
22 Nze, C. B. Op. Cit, P. 71
23 Tempels, P.Op Cit.
p. 61
Filosofia Theoretica: Journal of African Philosophy, Culture and Religion
use of sacrifice is Plausible following the oration of the
‘metaphysical principles’24.
Following the metaphysico-ontological principles in which beings
operate, it is worthwhile that we go to explain the different levels
or degrees of beings there are. In African cosmo-ontology “there is
a belief that a cobweb-like relationship exists between men and the
spirits and in the events of strains in the relationships, sacrifices
must be offered to re-establish and stabilize balances as “constant
efforts to maintain existence in the individuals necessitate the
offering of sacrifices.25
There are different degrees of beings. We have terrestrials,
vegetative, minerals, in addition to spiritual, otherwise referred to
as noumenal entities in Kant’s terminology. These noumenals are
super, supra or praetor natural and precisely so their activities
resemble their nature and degree of existence. Still among the
supernatural or the terrestrial there is hierarchy but this is outside
our purview.
Among these degrees of beings, none is more privileged and pre
eminent following the third metaphysico-ontological principles –
the principle of proportionality which says “The ontological
perfections are common to all beings, to each according to each
degree”26. If the above holds true the forces generated by all beings
must never be equal “Ike dị na dabam dabam”, “Nke onye ji eke
abụghị ya ka ibe ya ji eke” there is hierarchy of forces and
relativity in strength.
24 Donceal, J. F. Philosophical Anthropology (USA, Sheed and World Inc 1967)
pp. 14 – 15.
25 Nze, C. B. Op. Cit, P. 63
26 Shine, D. J., An Interior Metaphysics (Western Mass, Weston, College Press),
p. 51
297
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January – June, 2013
Seeing that each being is ontologically perfect (Nke onye dịrị ya),
the perfection of each is native to each. Owing to this nativity
therefore, the forces generated by all beings must never be equal.
But because man is the only being that makes this enquiry about
other beings, this ontological privilege makes him have an edge
over every other being. This ontological ‘gratia’ is thoroughly
appreciated by an Igbo-African and so he becomes well equipped
to delve into any discussion of beings in Igbo or African cosmo
ontology. In this way, Igbo man’s world view or being-in-the
world becomes homocentric or anthropocentric.
It is the man who makes the sacrifices. It is the man who prescribes
the type of sacrifices to be made following the principle “like
causes produce like effects”. It is the man who knows the materials
or objects or ingredients suitable for a particular sacrifice that can
appease the spirit or deity that has been injured.
With sacrifice man controls the forces or activities of the spirit.
Man even directs the spirit as a driver does a car. Man compels
spirit to comply.
It is the belief of the Igbo that spirits are responsible for some of
the events that happen in man’s life, but some men are specially
endowed with the understanding of this operation and can
manipulate. Either prevent or suspend the powers of these spirits as
soon as such reports are made to them.
The man is endowed with different principles of selves capable of
strengthening his vital energy. These different selves in one are
different forces in one (multi in parvu). With these principles of
selves, the Bantu Africans for example hold that:
The Living Muntu (man) is in a relation of being to being with
God, with his clan brethren, with his family and with his
descendants. He is in a similar ontological relationship with his
patrimony (his land with all that it contains or produces, with all
that grows or lives in it). All acquisition brings an increase in vital
Filosofia Theoretica: Journal of African Philosophy, Culture and Religion
force in Bantu eyes: Everything which breaks into this patrimony
causes it to deteriorate, or destroys it.27
The traditional Igbo man retrieves the power of the spirit, hidden
powers as a scientist retrieves data from the computer. The Igbo
belief in sacrifices, rituals and their efficacy are evidence of their
unmistaken belief in occult realities.
When sacrifices of food items are given to the spirits, we do not
expect that the spirits eat them as men do. They consume by
appreciation and acknowledgement and finally abstract their
essences. Thus to eat on the cosmos of spirits is in fact to
appreciate. This understanding extends to our churches. When an
item is offered to God, we know actually that God does not eat nor
use money. But we believe God accepts our offering, tangible or
intangible. It is therefore, stupefying to say that the dogs consumed
an offertory meant for God; therefore the offertory was not
appreciated.
In support, Kristensen mentioned types of sacrifices and the
purposes. He puts them into two broad categories:
Those of positive aim of actualizing in nature and
among men abiding and self subsistent divine life,
and those with negative aim like atoning sacrifices
or peace offering to ward off dangerous spirits and
thus cause the illness to cease28.
The above classification was made along the lines of aims or goals.
Similarly Evans Prichard refers to broad categories of sacrifices,
namely (a) Piacular (b) Confirmatory. The former is designed to
ward off any danger hanging over the people for any misfortune or
grave danger as a sign of spiritual activity. No wonder he said
27 Tempels, P., Op. Cit., P. 100
28 Kristensen, W. B., The Meaning of Religion, Translate by Carman, J. Martinus
Nighoff (The Hague, 1960) p. 445
299
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January – June, 2013
ideas of propitiation of the spirit of expiation of faults (to placate
the spirits against impending danger).29 The latter are sacrifices
which accompany social activities. Other authors like Hubert and
Mauss say confirmatory sacrifices can be called sacrifices of
sacralization which make the profane sacred; whereas piacular
sacrifices of desacrilization make the sacred profane.30
Onwubiko A. O. outlines three kinds of sacrifices namely:
expiatory, petitive and thanksgiving31 according to their aims: to
ward off evil spirits or placate enraged deity, to ask for a favor or
blessing, and for blessings and favors received32. In his “Aspects of
African Communalism” C. B. Nze named four types of sacrifices,
expiation or atonement, thanksgiving, to ward off molestation, to
harm others, or sacrifice made to kill somebody, that is, mortuary
sacrifice.33 With the above, it is clear that our belief in the efficacy
of sacrifice and its utilitarian, pragmatic purpose are anchored on
the reality of force as understood by Igbo-Africans.
However, whether these sacrifices themselves create any effect to
the point that is empirically verifiable is outside the scope of this
work. We have every excuse to defend the phenomenon as it
touches all human religion, values and thoughts and none has been
defended empirically. It is a belief system and precisely so, we
have no option than to subscribe to the force of that belief which
universally hold men together, the Igbo cannot be exempted in this.
29 Pritchard, E., Nuer Religion, Oxford Clarendon Press, 1956) p. 198.
30 Ibid
31 Onwubiko, A. O. African Thought and Culture (Owerri Totan Pub. Ltd. 1988)
p. 56
32 Ibid
33 Nze, C. B. Op. Cit., P. 67 – 68
Filosofia Theoretica: Journal of African Philosophy, Culture and Religion
5.
Charms: Externalization of Igbo African Belief in Force
The Africans, especially the Igbo-Africans, believe in the potency
of charms and amulets. This belief also facilitates their belief in
Christian sacramentals as both have trajectory functions of
affecting an object not in close contact with them. The ability of
the Igbo to employ charms to cause manifestations without
physical contact has been explained scientifically. This was
articulated in Chimakonam’s discussions on the laws of African
science typical of which is the one he branded the law of egwueji
or law of the means34. Thus, it is feasible that through charms and
amulets somebody’s vital force may be enfeebled according to the
intent of the user with regards to influence other people.
Chukwuemeka Ikeh in his The Naked Gods says:
Charms are believed to bring to realization, the power of the spirit
ancestors. Yet it is believed that through the use of charm,
obnoxious and implacable spirits and ancestors are controlled,
driven away, or blind folded, such that their evil machination and
punishment of the living are minimized and controlled35.
The Webster’s Universal English Dictionary gives a workable
definition of Charm as that which has “an alluring quality, a magic
verse or formula: something thought to possess occult power. An
object bringing luck; a trinket on a bracelet”36. For C. B. Nze on
another hand, “Charms have magical powers or effects … produce
effects or control events or supposed as spells to govern certain
natural or supernatural force”37. Since like causes produce like
34 J. O. Chimakonam. Op Cit. P.82-84
35 Ikeh, C., The Naked Gods
36 Geddes & Grosset. Webster’s Universal English Dictionary (Canada, 2005)
p. 53
37 Nze, C. B. “Logic in African Charm Medicine” The Nigeria Journal of Social
Studies, Vol. 4 No. 1, p. 23
301
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effects the metaphysical operation of charms function in
accordance with this law. Scientifically, this has been branded iwu
nyiri-onwe or the law of uniformity and states thus: given any two
things, if they are sufficiently similar then, they share some
common properties. The reason according to Chimakonam is that
by nature’s pre-arrangement a good number of things fall into
uniformity38. A better exposition of this idea is done at the chapter
on the methods of African science39. Here, the author discusses
among others, methods known as akọ-nyiri-onwe (sem-science)
and akọ-nso-n’azụ (causal science). These two methods variously
describe how the idea that likes follow from likes dominate
enquiries in Igbo African world-view.
Sometimes, preparation of charm follows the ontological principle
of cause and effect, conaturality (agree sequitur esse). Charms are
prepared with the materials which are inherently capable of
producing effects that resembled them very much. Once the effect
is produced there must be resemblance or similitude. The logic of
“like effects follow like causes” is seen in the behavior of the
materials used and the result achieved. The forces of the materials
are inherent on their behavior. It is the natural behavior that
manifests to the practitioner the actual effect which is capable of
being achieved by it. In C. B. Nze’s “Logic in African Charm
Medicine”, we can see that the logic that the principles as above
mentioned follow is explicit in the ingredients concocted.
Protective charm, for instance, is prepared by those things in nature
whose actions are protective such as strong bulwarks, nails of a
strong man, body parts of lion, leopards, tigers or other strong
animals40.
Protective charms are used to invigorate, restore, and fortify one’s
vital force. On the other hand, love charm preparation demands the
use of attractive objects and good natured ingredients. For instance
38J. O. Chimakonam Op Cit., p. 85
39 Ibid., 52-63
40 Ibid
Filosofia Theoretica: Journal of African Philosophy, Culture and Religion
it may be necessary to use hearts of chickens pounded to smooth
paste, beautiful and attractive leaves. This is because love attracts
and so the ingredients are bound to be of ontological similitude.
That objects of nature speak language to the hearing of medicine
man implies that the importance of any object is ontologically
inseparable from the nature of the object. It is not by chance that
we have sweet roots and herbs as well as bitter leaf and herbs. The
sweetness or bitterness of leaf or root portends its importance and
its usefulness, its effect when applied in a way nature requires.
Igbo Africans believe that the world is a forest symbols.
Everything has a purpose there is sufficient reason for the
existence of everything in everything. There are many indices in
the natural objects when studied and observed closely. A Botanist
or Zoologist will be better equipped to prescribe root, herbs, plants
or animals that can be used to achieve certain effects. Some who
are endowed by the ability to relate these functions look like
“Onatara ndi mmụọ n’aka” or those who received these directly
from the gods: For wrestling charm, forces can be tapped from cat
or frog. Cat, for its agility and frog, for its flexibility, so that the
Wrestler will be agile and flexibility before his opponent.
Also, prestigious charm would make the holder appear
intimidating and powerful to his colleagues. C. B. Nze quoted
Ezeabasili Nwankwo as suggesting:
The skull of a buffalo, the paw of leopard, one ram,
the red feather of a parrot, the feather of an eagle, three
quills of hedge hog, three whiskers of leopard and two
cocks.41
These are objects which emit force inducing fear and respect. They
are awe-inspiring by nature and so will behave accordingly
41 Ezeabasili, No. African Science – Myth or Reality, (Vantage Press, 1977) p.
10. Quoted in Nze C. B., Loc, Cit. p. 26
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following the principle “actions follow its being” or “everything
acts according to its nature” “agere sequitur esse”. The behavior of
objects of charm, the manifestation of their forces (ike) or being
(ihe/ike) , here being is identical with force, is facilitated by
adequate words proclaimed over them at least to reactivate the
dormant forces. It is commonly observed that no African medicine
man ever prepares any charm medicine without pronouncing the
appropriate words over it. Solemnly calling each item used by its
name42. The author quoted above argues that the word has itself the
force of freeing the forces inherent in object of charm and makes
them effective. The objects need to be conjured in order to release
their energy.
No ‘medicine’ talisman, magic, horns. No, not even
poisons are effective without the word. If they are not
conjured, they are of no use in themselves. They have
no activity at all. Only the intelligence of the word
frees these forces and makes them effective. All
substances, animals, juices are only vessels of the word
of the Nommo43.
Other forms of charm too many to mention in this paper follows
the same pattern of preparation. Francis Arinze holds that a charm
is an object which by some mysterious, immanent and unconscious
power, is believed to preserve from evil, disease, bullets or motor
accidents or to make one succeed in trade, in love affair, in fishing,
in catching thieves, in passing examinations44. This shows there
are as many forms of charms as there are activities of men. Arinze
only pointed out the most prominent and common among them that
receive patronage.
42 Nze. C. B. Loc., Cit, p. 27
43 Munty, J. J., An Outline of the New African Culture (N. M. Grove Press Inc.
1961). P. 133 quoted by Nze, C. B., Loc Cit, p. 27
44 Arinze, F., Sacrifice in Igbo Religion (Ibadan, University Press, 1970) pp. 20 -
21
Filosofia Theoretica: Journal of African Philosophy, Culture and Religion
Belief in the potency and force of charms and amulets is one of the
practical aspects of African traditional religion and philosophy. An
amulet is an object generally inscribed with mysterious formulae
and used by pagans as a protection against various maladies, as
well as witchcraft. Charms seem to be synonymous with amulets
and do not have a consensus definition.
Oxford dictionary defines amulet as: “Anything worn about the
person as a charm or preventive against evil, mischief, disease,
witchcraft, etc …, it applies to all medicines whether internal or
external, whose virtue or manner or operation is occult, it is a
preservative, protective or charm.45
Charms and amulets have functional relation and similitude. Both
are believed to have trajectory power hence their action without
physical contact is prominent. Charms are also believed to bring to
realization, the power of the spirits and ancestors. Charms and
amulets are sought by some African Igbo as means of warding off
obnoxious and implacable spirits and ancestors such that their evil
machinations and punishment of the living are minimized or
averted.46 This belief in charms and amulets is informed by their
subscription to supernatural forces.
In the words of Ogbalu:
A number of popular beliefs are that man can cause
sunshine or draught, harmattan, dryness, rainfall,
thunder and lightning. Killing of opponents or
enemies from far distance without contact or
material weapons, that some families have special
talent of turning into animals like leopard, hawk,
45 James, A. A. M. and Bradley, H., The Oxford English Dictionary. Vol. 1.
(Lond: OUP, 1933)
46 Onwubiko, O. A., Loc. Cit.
305
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kite etc. That witches exist, that children suffer
because of the misdeeds of their parents.47
From the above arises such question as to what extent can charms
work? What is the rational for believing in them?
6.
Philosophy of Charms and Amulets
The Igbo African metaphysician is struck with awe at the vital
forces in nature. He discovered there are various inherent forces
and power in different realities. There are gradations of power and
varieties which explain the Igbo adage attributed to a bird called
Obu. ‘Obu si na Ike di n’awaja n’aweja, Obu ji egbu agwọ, ma
agwọ na-atụ mmadụ.’ “Ka ima nkea, ima nke ọzọ”.
These varieties of forces they discover in mountains and hills,
caves, rivers, plants, birds and animals. Such birds like owl and
parrot exhibit acts that are only possible or even hard for man. The
strangeness of these birds expresses already strangeness of forces
ontologized in them. From initial observation man could analyze
the possibility of using or tapping some parts of plants and animals
for healing and preventive purposes. These vital and mysterious
forces can be observed in many realities that we may not be able to
exhaust. For the purpose of this paper we mention a few.
Anụnụ-Ebe
This is a special tree that is not very common but often found in
the thick forests of Western and Eastern Nigeria, this tree has such
ontological mysterious power that living objectives are not found
within some specified radius near it. All its part radiate enormous
radioactive power that sends shocks to or scotches whatever comes
around it. It has repulsive tendency it is a natural charm, natural
amulet wherever it is located.
47 Ogbalu, F. C., Igbo Institutions and Customs, (Onitsha, 1973) pp. 55 – 57.
Filosofia Theoretica: Journal of African Philosophy, Culture and Religion
Akwụ Ojukwu
This is a unique species of palm-tree or palm nuts. It has potency
for treating various ailments. It is believed to have a neutralizing
ingredient with which to destroy bad charms (ajọ ọgwụ) and ward
off evil spirits. It is a natural sacramental, a ‘holy water’ of the
Igbo people.
Orodo
Our people say “Ọkọchị egbu Orodo”. Orodo is a kind of Lily
flower that survives more in dry season. There is a force in it that
makes it survive the scotching effect of sunshine. ‘Orodo’ can be
used as an antidote against poison, physical or spiritual. Wherever
it is planted around the house, it repels impending poison and
renders impotent anyone brought within a particular radius of the
house. It has psychogenetic effect on evil signals. Raymon Arazu
confirmed seriously the potency of some natural objects charged
with power. He referred to “the leaves, barks and roots of … trees
and plants … known in Igbo esotericism as particularly potent
against evil of all sorts.48 “Arazu further commented: We have
used the “Sacred” plants or parts thereof-to produce what we have
named; (a) magic drug (b) Anti Witchcraft powder (AWP) and (c)
Ojukwu oil.49
There is nothing wrong in self defence. God gave man the instinct
of self defence, the instinct of specie preservation. Man defending
himself against witchcraft, wicked forces in nature by amicable
forces is not in any way wrong. There is nothing good in the world
except good will. Good intention is the watch word. African
traditional medicine is never complete without the knowledge and
practice of esoteric self defence which has come to us as mantras
48 Arazu, R. C., The Witchcraft Scourge: Ourself Defence (Awka: C. Martins
Publishers, 2003), p. 6
49 Ibid
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(Nommo), objects charged with power, drugs, potions and even
rituals.50
7.
Evaluation and Conclusion
Igbo-Africans believe that from visible to invisible one can infer
Igbo people look at external features and characteristics of an
object because they are revealing. The attractiveness of a tree is
seen in and through its reality, which is value-oriented.
When the African discovers the value of a being,
perceives the forces inherent in it, sees its relation to
other beings, then he employs his own power and
the power of his words to harness the forces of these
beings and sets them to work for his own goods51.
In order to vindicate the above facts C. B. Nze said that:
The Igbo of Africa have a sense and practice of
observation. They observe things that are that is,
realities that exist, their natures or essences. They
form concepts and have ideas of what is52.
Elizabeth Isichei lamented the devastating blow, an inferiority
complex introduced by missionary propagandists with their
condemnation of our cultural practices as ‘joo joo’ that is, toy,
when referring to our charms and amulets.
Our contact with missionaries has done a world of
damage to our religious practices with which our
physical security was inseparably associated: it has
rubbed us of spiritual science without giving us an
equally effective substitute we seem to go
sheepishly in the ocean of vicissitudes in the world
50 Arazu, R. c. Op. Cit p. 5
51 Nze C. B., “Logic in African Charm Medicine” In The Clan Medicine in The
Nigerian Journal of Social Studies, Vol. 4. No. 1 P. 30
52 Nze, C. B., “Uncovering Logic in Igbo Language and Thought” West African
Journal of Philosophical Studies. Vol. I. No. 1. Sept. (1998). P. 126.
Filosofia Theoretica: Journal of African Philosophy, Culture and Religion
without something concrete on which to rely our
safeguard53.
The Igbo of Africa believe in the functional utility of charms and
amulets and their empirical immediacy of their effect underlies the
feeling that Christianity, with its accent on the ‘patiently waiting
for God’s time’, does not seem to have all the answers. It becomes
feasible for these Igbo to believe that Christian faith needs to be
reinforced with charms and amulets. In traditional Igbo religion
charms and amulets are revered because they represent symbolic
presence of supernatural protection against misfortunes or evil
spirits. They are also signs of assurance of security, blessing and
progress. The salient point in charms and amulets consist in the
fact that the mystical power accredited to them is contained
therein. Their efficacy is manipulated according to strict guiding
rules and principles. The sacraments which are recommended as
substitutes to the new converts are seen as symbols, visual aids that
induce confidence in the blessing, protection, power and presence
of God. The efficacy of sacramentals depends solely on the will of
God, the Church’s intercession and the faith of the individual who
make use of them.
The Igbo of Africa have tendency to practical results in life. Their
beliefs in vital force accentuate this fact. Sacramentals do not seem
to be result oriented as its effect is not recorded within empirical
immediacy. So they use charms, amulets in conjunction with
sacramental or use sacramentals as if they are charms. This attitude
is anchored on the belief that “Nwoke adịghị agbaba onwe ya aka” – man does not stay without certain protection. Nature for him
abhors a vacuum.
The force as conceived by Africans, Igbo in particular is not an
exclusive experience. The forces of the ancestors are also integral
53 Isichei, E., “Seven Varieties of Ambiguity Some Patterns of Igbo Response to
Christian Mission”. Journal of Religion in Africa. Vol. III, (London E. J., Brill,
1970) p. 220
309
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observances of the church. The Christians believe in the
communion of the saints just as the Igbo Africans believe in the
communion of ancestors. The ancestors like the Christian saints
have the force of bringing blessings to the living. The venerated
ancestors and the Christian saints are believed to be powerful
intercessors. Both obtain favour, blessing, protection from evil
spirits, healing for sickness, graces for prosperity and ultimate
victory over the vicissitudes of life. This is confirmed in Roman
Missal:
… in communion with them (saints) you give us
their friendship. In their prayer for the Church you
give us strength and protection. This great company
of witnesses spurs us on to victory, to share their
prize of everlasting glory.54
Goodness is like a perfume whose aroma cannot be restricted, but
rather spreads in all directions … so it is with the ancestors.
There are inherent Christian practices in Igbo African belief. The
Igbo Africans are respecters of nature and so use nature to their
advantage. During the blessing of water during Eastertide the priest
says:
… you made water an instrument of your mercy, for
through it you freed your people from slavery and
relieved their thirst in the desert. It was through
water you announced … the new covenant which
you were to offer man…55.
The water is a natural object; the efficacy of it is reactivated by
proclamation of adequate words. Natural things behave when
words are appropriately used over them. In the same vein, among
Igbo Africans, this realization was commonly known before the
54 The Week Day Catholic Missal (London: Collins, 1975), See the 1st preface of
the holy men and women, p. 67
55 St. Mathews Daily Missal, Goddlife Neale, Accester and (Dublin, 1974), P.
1690
Filosofia Theoretica: Journal of African Philosophy, Culture and Religion
advent of colonialists, missionaries. The theory of vital force
among Igbo Africans was as old as the Igbo nation. The
documentation of this theory can be credited to the colonialist
enterprise and the good things that came along side.
Through Prophet Elisha God commanded salt to be cast into water
to make the foul water wholesome. God himself acknowledge the
force in natural things otherwise being Almighty he could bring
about the wholesomeness of water without using salt. In these way
natural things, physical realities are indices, symbols for the really
real. No wonder life is full of symbols. The world is a forest of
symbols. Everything is a pointer to something unless undiscovered.
If Igbo African used salt to prepare ‘holy water’ to ward off attack
of the devils, it would be called charm, but when the same matter
and form is used by the priest, it is now called sacramental.
There is, therefore, as we can see from the foregoing, no functional
difference between charm and sacramentals. The difference is only
seen in the officiating minister. This realization is brought to bear
on the fact that many priest and pastors today continue the use of
amulet, charm and sacramentals based on their understanding of
forces to minister to people.
Father Raymond Arazu is already Ojenamụọ – Ojenamadụ in this
practice, Late Father Gilbert Hilary Ohai, the Pentecostal Pastors
in their miracle handkerchief to mention but few. Human nature is
the same. Psychometric, psychokinetic experience, are native to
human nature. What many lack is the force of the energy to
translate their basic experiences in life so as to penetrate the core
of reality.
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BIBLIOGRAPHY
Amaury, F., The People of Southern Nigeria. Francass & Co, 1969.
Arazu, R. C. The Witchcraft Scourge, Our Self Defence, Awka, O.
C. Martins, 2003.
Arinze, F., Sacrifice in Igbo Religion. Ibadan: University Press,
1970.
Chimakonam. O. Jonathan. Introducing African Science:
Systematic and Philosophical Approach, Bloomington
Indiana: Authorhouse, 2012
Donceal, J. F., Philosophical Anthropology. U.S.A.: Sheed and
Ward Inc., 1967.
Kristensen, W. B., The Meaning of Religion, Transl. by Carman, J.
Martinus Nighoff The Rague 1960.
Nze, C. B., Aspects of African Communication.
Metuh, I., African Religion in Western Conceptual Schemes; The
Problem of Interpretation. Ibadan: Cleverianum Press,
1985.
Onwubiko, O. A. African Thought, Religion and Culture. Enugu:
Snapp Press Limited, 1991.
Onwubiko, O. A. Wisdom Lectures on African Though and
Culture: Nigeria Totan Publishers Limited.
Ogbalu, F. C. Igbo Institutions and Customs. Onisha, 1973.
Pritchard, E., Nuer Religion. London: Oxford Clarendon Press,
1956.
Filosofia Theoretica: Journal of African Philosophy, Culture and Religion
Shine, D. K., An Interior Metaphysics. Western Mass, Weston
College Pres, 1965.
Tempels, P., Bantu Philosophy: Paris: Presence Africaine, 1969.
JOURNALS
Nigeria Journal of Social Studies Vol. 4
West African, Journals of Philosophical Studies, Vol. 1, No. 1.
September, 1998.
Journal of Religion in Africa, Vol. III, London: E. J. Brill, 1970.
The “Week Day Catholic Missal. London: Collins, 1975.
St. Mathew Daily Missal, Goodlife Neale, Aluster and Dublin,
1974.
DICTIONARIES
Geddles and Grosset., Webster’s Universal English Dictionary.
Canada, 2005.
James, A. A. M. and Bradley, The Oxford English Dictionary,
Vol. London Oxford University Press, 1983.
313
Filosofia Theoretica: Journal of African Philosophy, Culture and Religion
THE ADMINISTRATION OF JUSTICE IN PRE-COLONIAL
EFIK LAND
Inameti, Etim Edet
Department of Philosophy
University of Calabar
Inametietim@gmail.com
1.
Introduction
The major task of this paper is to do an overview of Administration
of Justice in the Pre-colonial Efik as well as the Efik judicial
system in particular. Its intention is to show how the emergence
of the British Colonial Administration on the Efik land alongside
its justice delivery system with passion for litigation (Ukot Ikpe Ke
Esop) as a modus for attaining justice help to stratify negatively
the society it came to build and/or develop. To drive home our
point, the processes of obtaining justice in the Efik world-view
would be exposed. In doing this we shall trace the pre-colonial
administration of justice in Efik land from dynasty to dynasty. We
shall also show how developed the Efik Judicial system was long
before colonialism. This strong traditional system would be shown
to have been greatly undermined by the colonial system. After
which a proposal for a “judi-cultural renaissance” as a pivot for a
new social orientation and justice delivery would be put forward.
2.
Administration of Justice in Pre-Colonial Efik
Justice among the Efiks is the moral resolution of issues which
involves punishment, reward and restitution. In considering the
concept of justice among the Efiks, the need to appropriately react
to some of the questions that often characterized a study of this
nature need not be overstressed, such as – Is there an African
jurisprudence nay the Efik Jurisprudence? If there is, what are its
components? What are its modes of operations? And so on. It is
our hope that the attempt to respond appropriately to either of these
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questions will assist in establishing whether or not there is “An
African jurisprudence nay Efik jurisprudence?
On this note, one of the ways to an adequate articulation of an
African Jurisprudence is to conduct enquiry into certain traditional
African values, which may include certain states of affairs, types of
behaviour, attitudes and patterns which the traditional African
considers as ideal or good and worth pursuing. As a follow up, we
also need to consider the mode of application of laws in the
settlement of disputes in the African setting. However, for the
purpose of this study we shall be concerned with just some of the
highly cherished values of the traditional African life, to include:
The value of religion and the sacred; the value of truth and justice;
the value of responsibility; and the value of high moral standards
and good character.
(i)
The value of religion and the sacred
Several authors have highlighted the importance and influence of
religion in traditional African society nay the Efik kingdom. J. S.
Mbiti in his phenomenal work on African Religions and
Philosophy posits that “Africans are notoriously religious. Religion
permeates all the departments of their life so fully that it is not easy
or possible always to isolate it” (Mbiti, 1). Innocent Asouzu’s,
Method and Principles of Complementary Reflection in and
beyond African Philosophy affirms that. African religion was not a
pass time affair neither was it a part-time preoccupation but a till
time personal encounter with the Divine” (Asouzu, 253). The
above statement though was made with specific reference to the
Igbo people of Nigeria, but the statement is true of most traditional
African societies.
Each African people have its own cultural values with some
common bonds with others. Religion is a part of this cultural value
in addition to being the far richest aspect of the African heritage.
Religion permeates every parts of the traditional African life nay,
the Efik people who clearly identify with this popular maxim
Filosofia Theoretica: Journal of African Philosophy, Culture and Religion
“Abasi do” meaning “There is God.” It dominates the thinking of
the African people to such an extent that its shapes their culture,
their social life, their political organization, the economic activities
and of course, their traditional legal system and jurisprudence.
(ii)
The value of truth and Justice
Following from the value of religion and the sacred is the value of
truth and justice. The place of truth in the traditional African
setting was primarily moral and not cognitive or epistemological as
with the Western Philosophy. In the African culture, God who is
the creator of all things, who also knows all things, and who is the
one who decrees morality, is the one who knows the truth of
things. Many African societies, the Efik Nation inclusive have
names for God that describe God as truth, or Doer of truth “Abasi
anam akpaniko” or knower of truth “Abasi ofiok akpaniko.”
Hence the saying in the African setting that things that are true are
effects from the creative being God. In other words, the value of
truth derives from the African value of religion, which involves the
fear of God for the African.
Majority if not all of traditional African societies believe that God
metes out justice. Justice also stems from the social nature of the
human personality and governs his interactions, obliging him to
give others their due and ensuring that he receives his due. Francis
Arinze rightly observed, concerning the Igbo that it is justice that
rules the relation between man and man, and further more that
justice concerns giving each man his due, and also consider the
varied relations men have with one another, then the different
facets of justice becomes clear. These include: Justice of piety or
respect and obedience, retributive justice or justice for inflicting of
punishments, invocation of curses, justice for oath-taking or the
establishment of truth and so on.
In conclusion, the point made from the foregoing is that the value
of truth and justice, in the traditional African setting flows from the
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value of religion and the sacred. In other words, truth and justice
are valued because they derived from the nature of God Himself
who is concerned about the moral order and harmony of the
society.
(iii)
The Value of responsibility
The African world is a world shared with other individuals and
beings to include: the Supreme being, local deities, divinities,
ancestors, spirits as well as numerous abstract forces in an ordered
manner. There is the belief in the existence of order and
interaction among all beings, to the existent that disorder is seen as
the result of some improper conduct on the part of any of the
beings, most especially, the human being. To safeguard and
ensure this cosmic and social order in traditional African societies
rights, duties and obligation on one hand and prohibitions, taboos,
and sanctions on the other hand were devised and enforced through
various means such as, flogging, fines, suspension, withdrawal of
chieftaincy title and so on. Thus the system places the
responsibility to maintain law and order on every person in the
community.
Consequently, responsibility was considered as an esteemed, virtue
and held as core value in traditional African experience of values.
For instance, when people break moral laws, they suffer shame in
the sight of the society and so on.
(iv)
The value of high moral standards and good character
The African traditional ethics placed very emphatic value on the
maintenance of high moral standards which must be reflected in
the goodness of character of men and women. According to
Joseph Omoregbe in his assertion on the understanding of God and
His relationship with men, explains why
In African traditional ethics it is futile for anybody
to think that he can commit a crime in secret and go
Filosofia Theoretica: Journal of African Philosophy, Culture and Religion
scot-free, for God who sees whatever is done in
secret will always ensure justice by punishing such
an evil doer, sooner or later, in this life or in his
next (reincarnated) life (Iroegbu and Echekwube,
39).
Following from the above assertion, it can be deduced why
Africans traditionally placed emphatic value on the
maintenance of high moral standards and the promotion of
good character.
In summary, from the foregoing, is the fact that in
traditional African philosophical jurisprudence nay the Efik
jurisprudence, the thinking was that matters of truth,
justice, reward, vengeance, decisions about right and
wrong, good and evil are matters that in many instances,
transcend the control of mere mortals such that any
transgressions or meritorious acts that escapes the attention
of mortals are still capable of being punished or rewarded
as a result of the natural mutual complimentarily of the
interacting forces which bind all missing links of reality.
Following from this summation, we can proceed on our
next line of study the Efik concept of justice in its entirety.
According to, E.U. Aye, the story of the Efik people has been
created by historical accidents that expressed itself on the
people in various facets– occasionally unpleasant, undesirable,
damaging and sometimes destructive note. (Aye, iii). He went
on to further asserts that these various facets of misfortune,
which were the lots of the people to bear, created their own
situations including the dispensation of justice. More so was
the fact that each of these situations came along with its diverse
scenes, though each of these scenes was pregnant with its own
vicissitudes which occasionally changed from good to bad and
bad to good in the life of the people. However, these diverse
scenes and experiences added richness to the tales of their
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adventures of migrations and sojourns among their host
nations. Worthy of note is their strong belief in the true
dispensation of justice, in addition to their fanatic attachment to
their indigenous culture, their native names, and what they felt
they stood for, that proved to be their saving grace as a people
throughout those years of trials.
In exposing the concept of justice amongst the Efiks, attention was
given to the following sub-themes-Who are the Efiks? On who
are the Efiks according to late Etubom Ukorebi Asuquo, a
renowned Ethno-Historian of Efik descent “the question of Efik
Origin and who they are have been very sophisticated nowadays.
The augments are no longer traditional history; they are now
sophisticated theories and hypotheses, and very sophisticated
discussion and analysis.” (Inameti, 26). From this assertion,
Ukorebi is of the thought that there are many schools with regards
to tracing who the Efiks are, such as the Etymological and
Ethnographical school; The Oriental school; the Palestinian school.
Precisely, Etubom Ukorebi Asuquo, represents the Etymological
and Ethnographical school, late Dr. Eyo Okon Akak represents the
Palestinian or Hebrew school; while Elder Effiong Ukpon Aye,
represents the oriental school.
However, irrespective of the
schools of thought and their respective claims, for the purpose or
intent of our investigation, we shall conclude thus, that the Efiks
are a people who occupy parts of Eastern Nigeria and are mainly
traders, merchants, fishermen and farmers. Worthy of note, is that
the Efiks had a prolonged interaction in terms of tradition with the
Portuguese, Dutch, French as well as the British Merchants which
helped to put them in the world map as a “ treaty nation” with a
treaty king as the “Obong of Calabar” as far back as the fifteen
century. What constitutes their thought system which includes law
of cause and effect; law of retribution, reward system; the idea of
Supreme God is the focus of this work. Others includes the
potency of curses; Efik names or naming pattern among the Efiks,
marriage; life After Death; language; The Efik house system; land
Filosofia Theoretica: Journal of African Philosophy, Culture and Religion
ownership/tenureship and Drama have been well attended to in this
study.
The concept of justice among the Efiks was given deserved
attention as well. The concept of justice amongst the Efiks is
often intermingled with the concept of right. Put differently, both
concepts are used interchangeable with one or the other. The
concept of justice amongst the Efiks is tied to the universal
assertion of giving one his due “interpreted in Efik as “edino owo
si dide unen esie.” In other words, the notion of justice and rights
amongst the Efiks mean the same thing. Even though the end of
every justice pursuits or delivery is to enable one attain or benefit
from the enjoyment of some fundamental rights; whereas they both
mean different things in the western jurisprudence. This is in
addition to delineating its (justice) elements to include – Shrines
and native courts; administration of Oath; marriage and payment of
dowry;
invocation
of
Ekpe
Decrees/injunctions;
uspension/banishment of erring citizens; pronouncement of curses
in culprits.
However, as we have done with Western School of Thought on
their Notions of Justice. We shall attempt an outline of some Efik
Kings and Chiefs on how the notion of Justice was viewed and
dispensed in their time.
The Great Duke Ephraim IV (1814 – 1834), he ascended the throne
during the period of transition from slave trade to palm oil trade.
He was rated to be in the category of those rulers that believed that
“Might is Right” as posited by Thrasymachus, and that “Injustice
Pays.” It was recorded that in spite of his influence in both men
and material, Great Duke’s ambition for sovereignty in all things
seemed insatiable. Even though there was really no serious threat
to his ambition except for the rivalry of his elderly friend Eyo Nsa.
To dispose of this “nuisance” Duke was reported to have used his
position as Inyamba Ekpe Efik to bring up a false charge against
his friend, Eyo. For the Great Duke, it was his hour of triumph for
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Eyo was found guilty and fined to such a degree that he was totally
ruined.
King Eyamba V (1834-1847), he is another influential Efik King,
popularly known to his Liverpool friends as Johnny Young, and to
the Efiks as Edem Ekpenyong Offiong Okoho. He conceived
justice in the sense of “International Military Diplomacy” or
relation. On this note, it is a common occurrence to see bigger and
influential nations coming to the aid of the smaller ones whom
they have some things in common with. It is on record in one such
occasion that King Eyamba V, devised a strategy to ensure that the
way was clear for his people to trade with the Cross River Region
in 1846. When news reached him (King Eyamba) that the people
of Umon, under their King Abiakari I, had treacherously attacked
and plundered the Agwagunes who were allies of the Efiks he was
distraught. As at the time of hearing the news, about one hundred
and seventy people were said to have been killed by the Umons,
and Eyamba felt obliged to avenge the attack. Similar cases in his
time on the throne earned him the reputation as a king that believes
in justice as retributive and punitive. On this note, King Eyamba V,
could be said to have also conceived justice as one fighting against
“Domination and Servitude” as enunciated in Hegel’s Dialectics of
Master-slave relationship. Though, Hegel never treated same under
the notion of justice, but under the Phenomenology of self
consciousness.
King Archibong I (1849 – 1852), was the founder of the Archibong
dynasty. He also conceived justice as a means for fighting against
all manner of oppression in the land including the insurgences
from much revered Ekpe Confraternity. He (King Archibong I)
achieved this by joining the company of other free men in Duke
Town and the Blood men for their own ends. The “Blood Men”
(NKA IYIP) are the conglomerates of fugitives and runaway slaves
who in a bid to escape from the atrocities of the Ekpe
Confraternity, band themselves together by a covenant blood for
mutual protection. Hence, according to Hope Waddell, this was
Filosofia Theoretica: Journal of African Philosophy, Culture and Religion
the origin of the Blood Society which attained much strength as to
rival the Egbo association (Waddell, 476).
King Archibong II (1859 – 1872), belonged to the same generation
as Archibong I. His concept of justice was prominent in his fight
against “Economic Domination and Subjugation” by the European
traders on Efik Shores. This he did by successfully countering the
pressure of the European traders by opposing all their
machinations. It is on record in April 1862 when the European
traders attempted to reduce the price of oil in Calabar on the
grounds that English oil market was falling, Archibong, along with
Eyo IV of Creek Town disagreed, using traditional methods
possibly Ekpe or Mbiam, that is, juju concoction, to suspended
trade in the river and permitted no oil to be sold to any ship at the
reduced price offered by the European traders. However, this
matter and ensuing controversies were later resolved amicably.
King Archibong III (1872 – 1879), conceives justice in terms of
loyalty to the state. This was clearly expressed via his resentment
and the immediate problem of containing the excesses of “Sierra
Leonians” and “Accra Men” who styled themselves “British
Africans” and holding “free immigration papers” issued to them by
the consul. Armed with these papers they (British Africans) began
a movement to rid themselves of the King’s control. Their
continued defiance of authority by these people resulted in a build
up of resentment against them as well as the moves to eject them
from Calabar. By 1876 many of them had left Calabar because the
Efik threatened to Massacre them. This led King Archibong to
make the following proclamations –
In no wise have any African Born British subjects
in my country who will not abide by the law of my
country with the exception of the Hulk and Cask
house dwellers.
I therefore implore the court to
inform the said British subjects dwelling in Old
Calabar Towns under my control that those who
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will not abide by my country law must leave my
country entirely or abide in one of the Hulk in my
river if they choose. (Archibong III).
Loyalty to the king and the laws of the land were imperative for
justice to reign. His position is similar to Plato’s conception of
Justice where justice ensues from the proper dispositions of duties
of individuals to the state.
King Eyo Honesty II (1835 – 1858), exploits in the dispensation of
justice could be seen, this time by playing a direct mediating role.
Sometime, in the course of his reign, the Ikoneto community was
placed under the Ekpe ban. And when they could not bear it, they
appealed to King Eyo Honesty II for mediation. It was said that an
Ikot Offiong man had sent an Ekpe official to collect a debt from
another man in Ikoneto. When the debt was not forthcoming, the
man’s children were seized in the name of Ekpe by the tying of the
sacred yellow band on their arms as hostages. The Ikoneto people
appealed to Duke Town which took up their cause and together
they proceded to plunder Ikot Offiong which resisted the combined
force and prevented them from landing. Following the resistance
by the Ikot Offiong people, Duke Town returned home to prepare
seriously for war while the Ikot Offiong people appealed to King
Eyo for peaceful intervention. The King prevented the war by
calling a Grand Ekpe meeting to settle the misunderstanding. This
singular act by King Eyo enabled him to gain the confidence of
virtually the whole of Calabar. Many more of such marked him as
a king whose idea of justice includes freedom from oppression and
tyranny.
Chief Magnus Adam Duke (1842-1899), was one of the influential
chiefs in Efik land. As a Prince of the Efik land, who studied law
in England, on returned home, he became deeply involved in local
political affairs. To this end, he had serious confrontations with
King Duke IX in whose court he served as “Scriba Municipii” or
Filosofia Theoretica: Journal of African Philosophy, Culture and Religion
Secretary. He felt that the King was trying to subdue many old
Calabar Houses under his control, especially, the King wanted to
exert what he (Magnus) termed “Domino Tyrannus” or tyrannical
rule over his own Adam Duke House. His resentment was
manifested in a petition which he sent to then consul Annesley, to
intervene on his behalf. This petition narrated how the King had
tried to force him to take “Mbiam Oath” or “juju concoction” that
he was not his slave, an entreaty Magnus Duke refused to submit
to because according to him taking mbiam oath whether of one’s
free will or not, was a sign of making one a slave. However, the
controversy between the two men (King Duke IX and Chief
Magnus Duke) was resolved by Consul Annesley my admonishing
them on the need to ensure equity, justice, good government and
peace in the administration of Efik House System.
The exposition of both the Western and Efik concepts of justice
gives us the impetus to undertake a comparative analysis of the
two schools of thoughts.
3.
Justice in Efik Legal Statutes
We shall focus on the administration of justice itself from
established legal tradition.
In as much as the ends of
administration of justice is justice itself. We shall as well give
attention to the structures set up, manned and operated for the
settlement of disputes or enforcing the law of the land such that
good conscience, fairness, equity and the rule of law permeate
every aspects of the society. In addition, the structures for the
administration of justice presuppose an inherent ability and power
to dispose justice in a cause or matter that is justifiable in a court of
law. Even though, it is understandable that not all causes and
matters are justifiable in the court of law, hence the need to seek
for an alternative means or ways of resolving disputes such as
arbitration.
In considering the court system/ judicial structure both executive
and judicial functions are exercised by the Obong-in-Council at the
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apex of the authority with a trickling down of the same authority to
subjects under him to include – the Etuboms or Clan Heads,
Village Heads and family Heads or subsidiary chiefs at the foot of
the pyramid.
In an attempt to juxtapose between the practice of judicial
precedent in the Efik judicial system though there is a provision for
hierarchical court system in her native laws and custom, the notion
of judicial precedent is not strictly adhered to. In other words,
there is provision for the notion of judicial precedent in the Efik
judicial system drawing from one of the popular maxim among the
people “Owo isihekede adana eset” meaning “don’t shift the
ancient landmark.” But the only difference is that, it lacks strict
adherence to the extent that, room is given to emotions,
circumstances and sentiments, especially when the accused is rich
and well connected in the land. A typical example is in the process
of choosing the Obong of Calabar. It is mandatory, according to
the Efik native laws and customs, that the successor to the throne
of Obong of Calabar must attain the highest Ekpe grade “The
Eyamba,” in addition to other qualifications. But in 2000, there
was a shift from this established norms in the sense that the choice
of Obongship, which was originally zoned to western Calabar was
re-assigned to the central Calabar from which the deceased Obong
of Calabar, His eminence, Edidem (Prof.) Nta Elijah Henshaw III
came. This action generated a lot of heat among the two Efik
zones, as it was seen as a breach of the 1970 accord between the
two zones in selecting the next Obong in the event of death.
On the exercise of discretionary power in the Efik land, during the
process of adjudication, especially when faced with the problem of
indecision over any matter, the Obong-in-Council can use the
discretionary power given him to dispense justice. A case in view
was in 1447 decision by King Eyo Honesty II, when he ordered the
banishment of all masters of divination (Abia-Idiong) from his
kingdom, following the exposure of the futility of the sect by
personally hiding a “magic lantern” and asking the most powerful
Filosofia Theoretica: Journal of African Philosophy, Culture and Religion
one amongst them (the Abia Idiong) to find out who the thief was.
In this case, the spell of the Abia Idiong fell on an innocent person,
after which the King ordered that the magic lantern be brought
from where it was hidden. The next step of action was for King
Eyo Honesty II to banish all the Abia idiong from his kingdom to
safeguard further damage and injustice in the land.
The Efik judicial system also has the process of adjournment and
makes provision and application for such with the following
reasons for its justification:
(i)
(ii)
To enable relevant witnesses appear in the case as
well as give testimony;
To enable the sitting judge(s) to verify the facts of
claims in the case in question, for example, land
disputes.
The term “adjournment” could best be described with the
following usages amongst the Efiks – “edi sio nim” or “editre
kana.” It is commonly employed when there is a serious dispute,
or when there are no witnesses (ntie-nse) to testify to the fact on
ground. The judge depending on who is at the helm of affairs such
as the village Head, Clan Head or the Obong-in-Council could call
for adjournment of the matter to a later date.
In the case of offences that could lead to meting out punishments
the Efik have provisions for them in their moral code. These
punishments are either retributive or deterrent depending on the
nature of the offence. For instance, in Efik land, if the punishment
is retributive, it is referred to as “Isop” or “fine,” but when it is
deterrent; it is referred to as “Ntuno’ or “rough handling.”
Punishment or ufen in Efik land serves as a veritable weapon for
the preservation of the societal moral values from flagrant
disregard and decay. Moreover, in the Efik traditional society,
“mme ewuho obio” (custom or moral code of the land) provides
sanctions against those who violated it and those considered to be
dangerous to the entire community. Though the standard of
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conduct amongst the Efiks was expressed in unwritten form, but
the forbidden acts were recognized and punished as transgression
according to native laws and customs of the people.
Thus for punishment in the Efik judicial system, the standard of
conduct was expressed in unwritten form but the forbidden acts
were recognized and punished as transgression according to the
native law and customs of people (Aye 17).
Just as it was with the concept of punishment the Efiks juridical
system contains the application of bails/injunctions. For bail, the
purpose is either of the following: - -
To secure the freedom of the accused or;
In case the accused fail to appear for trial by court.
Whereas, injunction is a remedy in form of court order addressed
to a particular person that either prohibits him from doing or
continuing to do a certain act, (i.e. a prohibitory injunction) or
orders him to carry out a certain act, that is, (a mandatory
injunction). It is necessary to note that this remedy is discretionary
and will be granted only if the court considers it just and
convenient to do so; it will not be granted if damages would be a
sufficient remedy. Also, injunctions are often needed urgently by
plaintiffs urgently as a remedy (Martin and Law 274).
In the Efik judicial system, bail is commonly referred to as
“Ubion.” Hence the following usages in Efik communities such as
“edibo ke ubion”, meaning “to take on bail”, “tie ubion no,”
meaning “stand in for bail,” “fak enye sio ke ubion,” meaning
“rescue by bail.’ Consequently, in the community when the need
for one to be bailed becomes necessary especially in the Obong
royal court, any of the following questions may be asked – “ndi
enyene owo eke edibo de enye ke ubion?” meaning “Is there
anyone to take him on bail?”, or “ndi ameyene nkpo ndi nim nte
nkpo ubion?” meaning “Do you have anything to present as
collateral for bail?” This may include landed property, money or
Filosofia Theoretica: Journal of African Philosophy, Culture and Religion
some physical items. Injunction in Efik land is identified by the
following terms. “Ukpan” meaning “command” while “ewuho.”
Meaning “order.”
In Efikland, almost all the injunctions effected in the land are
instituted by the Ekpe conclave via its unequivocal proclamations.
Though with the advent of the British colonial administration in
Efikland, the Ekpe fraternity has progressively lost it bearing,
rather what obtains now are mere sophistries.
Concerning the implementation of appeal processes the Efik
judicial systems has legal provisions. The appeal process (unim
ebene) starts from the family structure (Ekpuk ufok) up to the
Obong of Calabar royal court (Esa Obon). In other words, the
pursuit of redress could go beyond the internal husband and wife
disagreement up to the larger family (Ekpuk Ufok) presided over
by the family head (Ibuot Ufok) and so on.
In respect of policing and prison authority, the institutions were not
properly defined in the Efikland as they were in the West. For
instance, in Efikland her policing system includes: “Nka” or “age
group” and “Nka –Ukpotio” or “able bodied men”, whose
functions were as follows: arresting of any violator of the native
law; ensuring that the proclamations or decrees (mbet) of the
paramount chiefs are judiciously obeyed. The known prisons or
confinement in the then Efik land were “Nkobi ntem”, which was a
temporary cell where stubborn persons were kept until he or she is
bailed out. The other one is, “Ebuka,” that is the prison proper.
This was primarily made for stubborn slaves (Ifin) or fugitives.
One such prison was built in the palace of King Archibong III in
1875.
4.
Evaluation and Conclusion
The fact that morality is a product of social context makes any
serious violation of the moral order to have a social aspect, leading
to serious social consequences. Moreover, prior to the emergence
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of the British colonial masters on her shore (Efik) “arbitration” was
much preferred alternative to “litigation” in settling disputes. Why
arbitration? It was because the approach engendered mutual trust
and confidence in the society where social solidarity,
communalism, mutual dependence and complementarity were
highly cherished traditional values. Arbitration, otherwise known
as “Alternative Disputes Resolution” (ADR) as the term implies, is
one of the wide range of processes that encouraged dispute
resolution primarily by agreement of the parties as against a
binding decision in litigation. This method of adjudication (ADR)
offers a number of advantages and benefits to its adherents
including – privacy, speedy resolution of disputes, less costs,
improved future relationship among the parties, mutual satisfaction
of parties’ interests and so on. However, the choice of arbitration
by the Efik judicial system does not in any way place arbitration at
a vantage position over litigation, because in resolution spectrum,
no one process, be it litigation or arbitration is in all respect
superior to the other. Rather, the effectiveness of any process is
usually determined by the facts and circumstances of the particular
case. But the fact remains that ADR plays an integral part in the
Efik judicial system. Hence the common usage – “Yak nke tot nno
Ibuot Ufok,” meaning “Let me go and report to the family Head,”
this is contrary to the language of litigation (Ukot Ikpe ke esop)
meaning “sue him to the court.” But when an aggrieved Efik man
seeks to report his brethren to either the family head or the
community leader, it is done with a view to ensuring peaceful
future co-existence. When the dispute is insolvable the presiding
officer through the agreement of the parties in disputes may resort
to spiritual dimensions or consulting deities, which usually takes
the form of swearing on some juju otherwise known as “Uta
unwono” or “uta mbiam” meaning “oath taking” (Elias et al 188).
Corroborating the Efik jurisprudential choice of arbitration over
litigation, innocent Asouzu sees the traditional African preference
of arbitration over litigation as a consequence of her realization of
Filosofia Theoretica: Journal of African Philosophy, Culture and Religion
the “transcendent complementary unity of consciousness.” This,
according to Asouzu is the “highest form of actualization of
communal experience as shared experience (Asouzu 106). In
relation to judicial procedure, Asouzu submits that:
The traditional African society was deeply
committed to the idea of efficacy of retribution
arising from non-commitment of the demands of the
experience of transcendent complementary unity of
consciousness.
This mutual experience makes
arbitration a viable alternative towards checking
excesses and tension in society. (Asouzu 188)
Beyond the assertion made via Asouzu’s “transcendent
complementary unity of consciousness” is also the need for
African and indeed the Efik nation to embark on “cultural
renaissance” that would help project her much cherished values
and virtues of life. A situation that drew support from T.O. Elias
thus, “They had administered their brand of justice in their own
way, but this new system came in with something different
something that tended to encourage, rather than check evil”(Elias
et al, 189). This points to the failure of Western styled judicial
system introduced in much of Africa since colonial times.
The need for a “judi-cultural renaissance” of the Nigerian
experience need not be overemphasized at this point. This is
because a lost culture leads to a lost society in addition to loss of
invaluable knowledge. And being conscious of the fact that the
greatest fault with our administration of justice today is the lack of
the will power to articulate laws that reflects our native
jurisprudence which will invariably help to stem the dangers of
judi-cultural atrophy which has since eroded the possibility of
attaining such feat.
Finally, the following have been suggested as means of boosting
the growth and development of “Judi-cultural renaissance” of the
native Efik jurisprudence:
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a.
b.
c.
d.
e.
That the on-going legal reforms in the country should
extend to the native jurisprudence, even though, there are
customary courts already in existence as provided for by
the Nigerian constitution. But the courts (customary
courts) are not as effective as they were, when local or
native arbitration process was directly in the hands of
chiefs, Etuboms and Obong-in-Council. In some occasion,
when matters brought before the village assembly or court
are beyond human comprehension, there is room to follow
spiritual dimension via the ordeal of “Uta-Mbiam” or Uduk
Afia” as means of ascertaining the truth of the matter in
addition to saving time and costs;
That our judicial and law officers, legal practitioners and
law teachers should henceforth adjust their minds to the
evolvement of original legal thought particularly suited to
the needs and ends of the Nigerians as well as the native
Efik society;
That regular workshops and training on native
jurisprudential principles and practice should be conducted
for our local chiefs and traditional rulers. However, this
workshop must be conducted in such a way as not to be
seen as trying to impose the Western judicial system on the
native or local jurists rather it should help to boost their
capacity in the administration of justice.
That the mode of the application of law in the settlement of
disputes in the African setting should be re-visited. A good
example is the case of one caught in the act of committing
adultery with somebody else’s wife or husband in Efikland.
Instead of the parties concerned resorting to litigation in the
English court of law, it would be advisable for them to seek
vindication of the culprit via the ordeal of “Ekpo Nka
Owo”, which takes little or no time in exposing the truth of
the matter (Udo 165).
That a thorough observation of the principle of judicial
precedent among the practitioners of legal justice in the
Filosofia Theoretica: Journal of African Philosophy, Culture and Religion
native African jurisprudence should be highly encouraged.
This is because flexibility in adhering to the principle of
judicial precedent if not properly checked may lead to
uncertainty and adverse consequences. For instance, due to
the flexibility in adhering to the principle, an accused who
is rich and properly connected can get justice though
pervasion of justice. For example, the current Obongship
tussle in Efik Land between the incumbent Obong of
Calabar, Edidem Ekpo Okon Abasi Otu V and Chief
Anthony Ani. That the use of discretionary power in an
African setting like the Native Efik jurisprudence must be
applied with caution to safeguard abuse, since there is no
statutory provision for that in the customary or traditional
norm as it is inherent in the Western jurisprudence. This is
because unlike the English judge, personal interest, polities
and other cultural considerations may colour the process of
transparent judgment via the use of discretionary power.
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WORKS CITED
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Sons, 1982.
_______ The Palestine Origin of the Efiks. Calabar: Akak and
Sons, 1986.
Asouzu, Innocent I. The Method and Principles of Complementary
Reflection and Beyond African Philosophy. Calabar:
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Aye, E. U. Efik Origin A Refutation. Calabar: Glad Tidings Press
Ltd, 2006.
_______ Old Calabar Through the Centuries. Calabar: Hope
Waddel Press, 1967.
_______ The Efik People Calabar: Glad Tidings Press ltd, 2000.
_______ King Eyo Honesty II. Calabar: Glad Tidings Press ltd,
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Bassey, B. E. Ekpe Efik: A Theosophical Perspective. Canada:
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Elias, T. O. et al. African Indigenous Laws.
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Eme, F. E. O. The Courts and Administration of Law in Nigeria.
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Ekwuru, G. The Pangs of an African in Travails. Owerri: Totan
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Inameti. E. E. Monism in African Philosophy. B. A Project
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Calabar. Unpublished, 1999
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Iroegbu Panteleon and Anthony Echekwube (Ed.) Kpim of
Morality: Ethics-
General, Special and Professional. Ibadan: Heinemann
Educational Books, 2005
Latham, A. J. H. Old Calabar. Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1973.
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Martin, E.A. and Law, J. Oxford Dictionary of Law. (6th Edition).
London: Oxford University Press, 2006.
Prince Magnus Adam Duke, Petition to Consul Annesley
20/4/1890. Courtesy of Chief Eyo Otu Eyo of Creek
Town, Western Calabar.
Omoregbe, J. O. “Ethics in Traditional African Societies”. Kpim
of Morality: Ethics- General, Special and Professional. P.
Iroegbu and Anthony Echekwube (Ed.). Ibadan:
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Ozumba, G. O. Philosophy and Method of Integrative Humanism.
Calabar: Jochrissam Publishers, 2010.
Udo, E. A. Who Are The IBIBIO? Onitsha: Africana-Feb
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Uduigwomen, A. F. Studies in Jurisprudence. (3rd edition).
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335
Filosofia Theoretica: Journal of African Philosophy, Culture and Religion
ON THE SOURCES OF AFRICAN PHILOSOPHY
Kanu, Ikechukwu Anthony (OSA)
Department of Philosophy
University of Nigeria, Nsukka
ikee_mario@yahoo.com
1.
Introduction
Gbadegesin (1991) observed that there are four lines of thought as
regards what African Philosophy constitutes: the universalist,
particularist, eclectic and national-ideological perspectives.
However, for the sake of this piece on the sources of African
philosophy, the perspectives of the universalist and particularist
schools would be entertained:
i.
ii.
The particularist school understands African Philosophy as
the philosophical thought of Africans as could be sifted from
their various world views, myths, proverbs, etc. In this sense,
it is the philosophy indigenous to Africans, and untainted by
foreign ideas.
The second group understands African philosophy as the
philosophical reflection on, and analysis of, African
conceptual systems and social realities as undertaken by
contemporary professional philosophers. This reduces
African Philosophy to reflections by professionally trained
philosophers who operate in collaboration with traditional
thinkers.
The basic question looming at the horizon of this piece is: “what
are the sources of the ideas categorized as African Philosophy?”
This speaks of the raw materials from which African philosophy is
realized. A cursory glance at the two definitions of African
philosophy sets the pace for this investigation. Drawing from the
above definitions, the sources of African philosophy would include
African proverbs, African folk tales, African myths, African
languages, African symbols, African historical experience or social
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realities and African artistic expressions. This piece would be
concerned with investigating the contributions of these sources to
African philosophy.
2.
African Proverbs
There is no clear and exact definition of a proverb. However,
according to the Igbo of Eastern Nigeria, proverbs are vegetables
for eating speech. They further define proverbs as the palm oil with
which words are eaten. Because of the centrality of proverbs to the
Igbo people, they say that a child who knows how to use proverbs
have justified the dowry paid on his mother’s head. According to
the Zulus, without proverbs, language would be but a skeleton
without flesh, a body without a soul. According to the Yoruba of
Western Nigeria, proverbs are horses for chasing missing words.
These notwithstanding, generally, proverbs from the African
context are the wisdom and experience of the African people,
usually of several ages gathered and summed up in one expression.
They spring from the people and represent the voice of the people
and express the interpretation of their belief, principles of life and
conduct. It expresses the moral attitudes of a given culture, and it
reflects the hopes, achievements and failings of a people (Kanu,
2013a).
Proverb is an integral element of the African culture and
undoubtedly a strong base in African traditional system, and as
such it can be a living stream where the philosophy and religion of
the African people is preserved. The centrality of proverbs in
African oral tradition is manifested in the frequency of its use by
Africans in conversations, speeches, instructions, judgment, drama,
arguments, storytelling, in fun making and name them; and this is
based on the fact that the African regards proverbs as an essential
vehicle through which a message can be adequately transmitted.
Kofi (1978) further avers that:
Filosofia Theoretica: Journal of African Philosophy, Culture and Religion
Proverbs may serve as prescriptions for action or act
as judgment in times of moral lapses. Often a
proverb, cited at an appropriate time during an
argument can settle the dispute instantly, for the
proverbs are believed to have been handed down by
the ancestors and predecessors to whom we own our
communal experience and wisdom. (p. 158)
In the contention of Ambrose (1986),
A proverb can be used as a language of diplomacy
to avoid giving direct answers to direct questions.
With a proverb, one can reveal a secret without
being committed. A proverb is also a very simple
shorthand of sending message. It is therefore a time
saving devise, and helps to avoid unnecessary
repetitions. (p. 41)
In African traditional society, a proverb on God is a serious talk. It
embodies a profound reflection on God, such that when unravelled
in theological terms would file into volumes of books. Below is a
list of African proverbs on God from the Igbo-African cultural
background, which expresses the Igbo native wisdom and
philosophy of God.
• The same God created the rich man and the poor man.
• God drives away flies for a tailless cow.
• God has both the knife and the yam; only to those whom he
gives may eat.
• God always gives each person a hook to draw things with.
• May God who gave the coconut its milk give us life and
where withal to sustain life.
• Whoever wants to do an evil against another person does
not remember God.
• When man is thinking, God is also thinking.
• If God is not in the plot death cannot kill a man.
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• God knows whom he will give but he whom he will give to
does not know.
These proverbs give us a great deal of information about how the
African conceive God, and from here, the philosophy of African
religion begins to emerge.
3.
African Folk Tales
According to Brosnan (1976), the African form of education was
never by definition or the use of abstract terminology as in the
West. Apart from the African system of education which are tied to
role such as farming, hunting, firewood gathering or adult roles, the
African got much more instruction also, and this was in the main
moral instruction. This was usually given at night after the evening
meal. Those to be instructed sat on logs within the compound and
instruction was given by the elders or the head of the household. If
the head of the household is not well or is absent, it is normal for
the next senior to take his place. There are times when the boy sat
with the father differently and the daughters with the mother, while
the father told stories about war, the mother told stories that would
help the girls fulfil their roles as mothers. Shorter (1973) further
observes that instructions during this period were usually given in
the form of stories. Elders also use stories when judging cases in
village courts. They tell them in such a way that people are able to
pick up their meanings without any explanation. According to Zani
(1972), Africans are parable and story telling people. From their
childhood they are used to listening to different kinds of stories:
true or made-up fables, just like those of Jesus.
African stories are mainly of two types: one about animals, others
about people, and sometimes involving spirits or the gods, and
always with a moral lesson.
i.
The Thieving Grass cutter
Gwahaka had a field of groundnuts. He had a friend- Mr. Grass
cutter. His good friend Mr. Grass cutter usually went to the
Filosofia Theoretica: Journal of African Philosophy, Culture and Religion
groundnut field by night and removed some without the knowledge
of Gwahaka. And as the Grass cutter goes to his friend’s house,
Gwahaka tells him about the removal of his groundnuts. The hare
tells him that it is the eagle because eagles eat so much of
groundnuts. So one day, Gwahaka moulded a mud statue and made
it very gummy and placed it in the farm with delicious variety of
food around it. One day, the Grass cutter went as usual to steal his
friend’s groundnuts. As he reached the farm, he saw the beautiful
lady in the farm. He decided to go and speak to the lady. He said to
her “Lady how are you?” There was no response. So the hare was
angry and used one hand to slap the lay, and the hand gummed to
her. He used a second hand and the other hand stuck there. He
decided to use his two feet and the two stuck there as well. He used
his forehead to hit her and it remained there. There was no remedy
until the friend caught him, and said, “So you are the thief?”
Lesson
Stealing does not pay. The thief may escape for some time, but
eventually, he will be caught.
ii. The Brave Man
In a certain village called Kpanke near the forest of Olumedia, a
lion tormented the life of the people: it killed many, injured many
and left the living in fear of attack. This continued until a brave
man rose up from among the people. His braveness was signed in
the peculiar nature of his birth and straight forward kind of life. He
was believed to have been sent by the gods to redeem the people.
When he grew into a man, he fought the lion and killed it. But in
the battle, he was fatally injured. This marked the redemption and
freedom of the people of Kpanke.
Lesson
God will always redeem his people.
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These stories unveil the beliefs and worldview of the African
people.
4.
African Myths
Investigating the nature and origin of the universe: the origin of the
national god, origin of the world, the origin of humanity, its place
in creation, the deity that governs the land, the temple, the cult,
etc., have been the objects of human reflection right from the
ancient times. The outcome of this investigation is usually
preserved in myths. They are thus, the outcome of the human
attempts to explain historical institutions and developments by
appeal to non-historical factors and forces. The African myth thus
exposes the pattern of behaviour of the African people. It is a
veritable mine of materials on African philosophy (Kanu, 2013b).
According Marshall (1988):
The word ‘myth’ is used to refer to stories that are
fictional, and hence, it has come to have a
pejorative sense. Traditionally, it refers to invented
stories about the gods in which they behave like
human beings with superhuman powers. Closely
associated with this sense of the word is its usage to
refer to the stories which may accompany and
allegedly form the basis of religious rituals. (p. 449)
Gunkel (1901), corroborating Marshall, define myth as “Stories of
the gods in contradistinction with legends (better, sages) in which
the actors are men” (p. 14). Esposito, Easching and Lewis (2006),
explain that the word “myth” comes from the Greek “mythos”,
which means “story”. Myths are symbolic stories about the origins
and destiny of human beings and their world. They relate human
beings to whatever powers they believe ultimately govern their
destiny, and explain to them what those powers expect of them.
Unlike the contemporary English use of myth to indicate an untrue
Filosofia Theoretica: Journal of African Philosophy, Culture and Religion
story or a misunderstanding based on ignorance, in every religious
tradition, myth conveys the eventual truths of life.
i.
The Nri Myth
The Nri hegemony and its influence on Igbo history cannot be over
emphasized. It is in this regard that Madubuko (1994) observes
that the story of the Igbo people, no matter how briefly considered,
would be incomplete if one omits the Eri-Nri contribution. Afigbo
(1981) shows Eri clan as originating from the regions of Anambra
River, at Aguleri; from there they fanned eastward and established
various communities. According to Uzukwu (1988), Eri is the
father of all Nri; and tradition says that he came from Chukwu. It is
reported that the earth was not firm when he came to the world. To
solve the problem of flood, he employed blacksmiths from Awka
to use their bellows to dry the flooded land. There was no food as
well for the people. To provide food, he prayed to God and He
demanded that he should sacrifice his first son and daughter to
him. After the sacrifice and burial of his son and daughter, as
though all were lost, yam and palm tree began to grow out of the
place where he buried his first son while vegetables and cocoyam
grew out of the place where he buried his daughter. If yam
germinated from where Eri’s first son was buried, it means that
yam is the resurrected son of Eri, and since it was given to man to
sustain life, it is regarded as life itself. This myth reveals so much
about Igbo life and value system, which is equally relevant in our
Christological considerations.
Madu (2004) observes a cosmological drama in the whole myth. It
reveals the dynamics of the cosmic drama between god, man, land
and crops. Eri, the civilization hero enjoys a special relationship
with Chukwu, and through Eri’s sacrifice, humanity now enjoy a
special relationship with the land which offers food for his
sustenance. The ritual act performed by Eri established a covenant
between Eri, his descendants and Chukwu. From the sacrifice of
Eri, we come to discover why yam is very prominent in Igbo
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sacrifice and life, a situation which warrants its annual elaborate
festival throughout Igbo land. The growing of yam from the spot
where Eri’s first son was buried accounts for the respect given to
ọkpara (first son) in Igbo life, he is in fact considered to be closer
to the ancestors.
ii. Lugbara Myth
The Lugbara are a Sudanic-speaking people and are members of
the Moru-Madi sub-group of the Eastern Sudanic group (Tucker,
1940). They believe that Adronga, the Supreme Being created the
world. He created Gborogboro (male being) and Meme (female
being). Adronga is conceived in two ways: as God in the sky,
remote from mankind and good (Onyiru); and as God in the
streams, close to mankind and bad (Onzi). He is the ultimate
fountain head of all power and authority, of all sanctions and order
relations among human beings. His power may be manifested in
lightening. Although the Supreme Being is the head of all power
and authority, according to Middleton (1960), the ancestors
composed customs, rules, rights and duties operative in the society.
They are the words of the ancestors. Mountains are also the abode
of God and the two hero ancestors: Gborogboro and Meme, who
are common to all Lugbara people; they lived before the formation
of the Lugbara society and were close to God (Kayode, 1984).
5.
African Names of God and Persons
The names of God and persons are significant sources of African
philosophy. For instance, among the Igbos, he is called: Chineke
(the God who creates), Chukwu (the great God), Osebuluwa (the
sustainer of the universe), Ekekereuwa (he who created the world),
Chi-oke (God that apportions lots), Nna-di-Ebube (the awe
inspiring father), Odogwu-nagha (victorious warrior), Ome
Mgbeogharike (actor in times of difficulty). These names reveal
that God is the absolute controller of the universe. The names
Filosofia Theoretica: Journal of African Philosophy, Culture and Religion
given to people could also be a source of African philosophy.
Names such as:
Chi-nyere ndụ: God gave life
Nke-chi-yere: the one God has given
Chi-n’eye ndụ: God gives life
Chi-dị-ọgọ: God is generous
Chi-nwe- ndụ: God owns life
Chi-ekwe: God has agreed
Chi-ji-ndụ: God owns life
Chi-nyere ndụ: God gave life
Nke-chi-yere: the one God has given
Chi-n’eye ndụ: God gives life
Chi-dị-ọgọ: God is generous
Chi-nwe- ndụ: God owns life
Chi-ekwe: God has agreed
Chi-ji- ndụ: God owns life
These names speak of the various things God can do, especially as
it relates to his relationship with human beings.
6.
African Artistic Expressions
Another source of African philosophy is African artistic
expressions or artefacts. Africans have a lot of Artefacts that speak
of the divine and the relationship of the human with the divine.
They express the African’s belief in God, divinities and the
ancestors. For instance, during worship, the Priest uses the Ọfọ,
which is an insignia of authority among the Igbo. It is obtained
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from a specific sacred tree. It is also used by every man who has a
family and indeed kindred (Umunna). It is usually portable so that
it can be carried in a goat skin bag by elders. It symbolizes justice
and a clear mind. Thus, in the Igbo world, nothing important can be
done without the invocation of the Ọfọ. Through it, the righteous
dead, good spirits are invoked to uphold justice, decisions and
settle disputes. During covenants, the Ọfọ is knocked on the ground
so as to seal the event. It is carried around by priests, elders and
heads of the umunna. It grants them the authority to offer prayers
for people. It gives them the authority to decide cases and settle
disputes. As such, Africa artistic expressions of this kind speak
volumes of African philosophy.
7.
African Languages
Language is any one of the thousands of various tongues that have
developed historically among populations of human beings, and
have been used for everyday purposes. It could be Hausa, Igbo,
Yoruba, English, Latin, French, just to mention a few. While these
might be grouped as natural languages, there are artificial
languages, as invented by mathematicians, logicians, computer
scientists
or even criminals (William, 1999).
This
notwithstanding, whether artificial or natural, language is an
instrument of communication.
As regards African philosophy, language is a fundamental source.
Its interpretation could lead to a stream of materials. According to
Abanuka (2011), an analysis of words and their meanings will lead
to a better grasp of the reality which they seek to express. The
analysis of Chi by Ezewugo (1987), as having three connotations
in Igbo ontology have led philosophers like Okere (1983),
Abanuka (2003) and Njoku (2010) to develop an African concept
of being as Chi: in its narrow and primary sense, it applies to the
Supreme Being and carries here the force of a proper name.
Second, it denotes any being, human or divine that is acting solely
in the name and authority of the Supreme Being: onye kwado ije
Filosofia Theoretica: Journal of African Philosophy, Culture and Religion
chi ya akwadobe (if a person gets ready to go on a journey, his Chi
gets ready too); chi ya edulugoya naba (His Chi has taken him
home with him). Human agents could also be called Chi if he or
she has acted as an agent of providence to a fellow human being,
like saving the life of a person who wants to commit suicide: chi
nwayi bụ diya (a woman’s chi is her husband); ọgọ bụ chi onye
(one’s father in-law is one’s chi). Chi also has an abstract and
impersonal reference to providence. In this case, it refers to a
divine decree or fate. The Igbo believe that before a child is born,
his life course has been charted by his Chi: onye ajọ chi kpatalụ
nkụ ewa ta ya. An interpretation and understanding of African
languages leads to a better understanding and appreciation of
African Traditional Religion.
8.
African Symbols
The Dictionary of Sociology and Related Science (1965), describes
a symbol thus:
That which stands for something else particularly a
relatively concrete explicit representation of a more
generalized, diffuse, intangible object or group of
objects. A very large part of social processes is
caused on by use of symbols such as words, money,
certificates and pictures. A true symbol excites
reactions similar to, though perhaps not quite as
intense as those created by the original object. (p.
314)
It is from the above perspective that Madu (2011) avers that
symbolism implies the practice of using acts, sounds, objects or
other means which are not of importance in themselves for
directing attention to something that is considered important; it is
the substitution of a symbol with the thing symbolized. For
instance, Kola nut: It is a symbol of life, and that is why during the
formal introduction of the Kola nut ritual, it is said: onye wetara
ọjị wetara ndụ (he that brings the kola brings life). The kola is also
a symbol of peace and good will. This is why the first thing an
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Igbo man offers a guest is the Kola to indicate that the guest is
welcome. It is sometimes an indispensable element when sacrifices
are offered to the gods. It is also a sign of communion, not just
among the living, but also between the living and the dead. It could
be referred to, in a traditional sense as the Igbo sacramental
communion, specially presented, broken, shared and partaken of.
During the breaking of the kola, heaven and earth comes together.
And this is seen in the invocation of God (Chukwu Abiama bia taa
ọjị), the heavens and the earth (elu na ala bịa ta ọjị), the deities
(amadiọha bịa ta ọjị), and the dead ancestors (nnam… bịa taa ọjị).
It speaks so much about the Igbo-African philosophy.
9.
African Songs
According to Quarcoopome (1987), among Africans:
Singing generates the avenue for expressing certain
sentiments or truths, and in the context of rituals
they demonstrate the faith of the worshipper from
the heart- faith in God, belief in and about
divinities, assurance and hope about the present and
with reference to the hereafter. (p. 37)
There are times when these songs, even outside liturgical
celebrations mirror the power of God and the African philosophy
of causality. For instance,
Onye Kụgbulu nwankelu?: who killed nwankelu?
Kerere Nwankelu (reframe)
ụkwa kugbulu nwankelu: the bread fruit killed nwankelu
Kerere Nwankelu
Gịnị mere ụkwa ahụ?: What happened to the bread fruit?
Kerere Nwankelu
Obi mara ụkwa ahụ: a digger pierced the breadfruit
Kerere Nwankelu
Gini mere obi ahụ?: What happened to the digger?
Filosofia Theoretica: Journal of African Philosophy, Culture and Religion
Kerere Nwankelu
Akịka kp ọrọ obi ahụ.: The digger was infested by a termite.
Kerere Nwankelu
Gịnị mere akịka ahụ?: What happened to the termite?
Kerere Nwankelu
ọkụkọ t ụga akịka ahụ: A cock was eating the termite.
Kerere Nwankelu
Gịnị mere ọkụkọ ahụ?: What happened to the cock?
Kerere Nwankelu
ụfu chụga ọkụkọ ahụ: a hyena was pursuing the cock
Kerere Nwankelu
Gịnị mere ụfụ ahụ?: what happened to the hyena?
Kerere Nwankelu
Mmadu chuga ufu ahụ: a man was pursuing the hyena.
Kerere Nwankelu
Gịnị mere mmadụ ahụ?: what happened to the man?
Kerere Nwankelu
Chukwu kere mmadụ ahụ: God created the man.
Kerere Nwankelu
Gịnị kere Chukwu ahụ?: what made God?
Kerere Nwankelu
Anyị amaghị ihe kpụrụ Chukwu, Chukwu kpụrụ mmadụ, mmadụ
chụga ụfụ, ụfụ chụga ọkụkọ, ọkụkọ chụga akịka, akịka tụrụ obi,
obi mara ụkwa, ụkwa kụgbulu nwankelu- Kerere Nwankelu.: (we
do not know what made God, who made man, man was in pursuit
of the hyena, the hyena that was going after a cock, the cock that
was eating termite, the termite that infested the digger, the digger
that pierced the bread fruit, the bread fruit that eventually fell and
killed nwankelu- Kerere Nwankelu). This song speaks of the
African philosophy that traces every cause to God.
10.
African Historical Experience
The historical experience of the African people is also one of the
basic sources of African Philosophy; it provides materials for this
African philosophy and further shapes it. It is like the rallying
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ground of other sources of African philosophy, for it is only within
a context that they find great meaning. Thus African philosophy is
concerned with a lived experience (Kanu, 2012). The daily
experience of the African continues to shape his philosophical
reflections, and in fact the content of that reflection. And the
different seasons in the historical evolution of Africa philosophy
testifies to this. For instance, during the modern period of African
philosophy, Nationalistic tendencies dominated in response to the
spirit of the time. Thus, as a philosophy, African philosophy is
creative, dynamic and not static. This is very much expressed in
the works of Azikiwe (1937; 1965; 1964; 1978; 1981), Leopold
(1964; 1973), Nkrumah (1962; 1963; 1964), Nyerere (1968; 1985)
etc.
11.
African Traditional Prayers
African traditional prayers also reveal so much about the African
traditional philosophy of religion, especially about the relationship
between the human and the divine. In many African prayers, God
is approached as a Dependable Being, Friend and as Benevolent.
The general format is usually the giving of praise to God, then the
needs of the worshipper is put forward, and such needs include
protection, procreation and prosperity. From these prayers, we
come to learn about the names of God and the divinities that serve
as the dean of the Supreme Being. For instance, in a prayer offered
during sacrifice for marriage traditional rites:
Chineke kere mmadụ: God created man
Nee ọkụkọ nkea: behold this fowl
Chineke kere mmadụ: God created man
Nee ugwuakụ nwam: behold ugwuakụ my child
Chekwabara m ya: protect her for me
Ihe kasị ihe n’ ụwa bụ nwa: offspring is the main thing in the
world
Filosofia Theoretica: Journal of African Philosophy, Culture and Religion
Chukwu, gin a-eme ka osiri masị gị: God you act as you have
designed
Nye ya ụmụaka: give her children
Debe nwa okorobịa nkea: preserve this young man
Ga-abụ diya: her husband to be
Nye ya akụ n’ ụba: give him the means
Ka owe nye m ihe m ga-eri: of giving me wealth to eat
Ọbụrụ na ọmụa nwa nwayi: if she gives birth to a female child
Ọ ga-dị: it will live
Ọbụrụ nwa nwoke, ọ ga-adị: if a male, it will live
Ka ọ ghara inwe nsogbu ọbụla n’imụ nwa: may she not have
difficulty at childbirth
Ka o nwee aru ike: may her health be good
Ka diya nwee arụ ike: may the health of her husband be good
Ekpere dire na be mụọ: prayer obtains among the spirits
Na be mmadụ: and among men
Chukwu mete m mma: God treat me well
Ihe ọma ka m nayọ: I am asking for goodness
Ka ọgọm n’enye m: my son in-law shall give me
Ihe m ga-eri: things and I will eat
Ihụnaya ga-adi n’etiti anyi: love will exist between us
Chineke, nkea bụ ihe m na-ayọ: God this is what I ask for
Ala, mụọ nine nke iha, Eze Chitoke: Spirit of Ihe, God the creator
Ekene m unu: I thank you.
Ekwusigo m: I have finished.
This prayer reveals the holistic and totalitarian character of African
traditional prayers. It covers not just the human world, but also the
spirit world, which interacts with the human world. As the prayer
is said, it also reflects the corporate personality in African
traditional prayer: the subject who prays embodies the sentiments,
the hope, faith and expected values of all and not just himself. It is
a prayer for the community and not the individual.
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12.
Conclusion
This piece, from the foregoing has studied the sources of African
philosophy. On the one hand, as sources, they relate to philosophy
in two ways. First, they provide raw materials for philosophical
reflection. Second, they are embodiments of African philosophy.
The philosophical dimension of these sources of African
philosophy is usually observed when reflection goes beyond the
literal and textual meanings of these sources to the meaning behind
the text or words used; a kind of a move from the literal to the
allegorical. Furthermore, on the other hand, philosophy relates
with these sources at the level of investigating their
reasonableness, not whether it really happened, but whether it does
reasonably answer the questions looming at the horizon of the
human heart. This is because myths, folklores, proverbs, etc., are
not so much concerned about truth or falsity, but appeal to the
accent of the mind by giving hints.
Filosofia Theoretica: Journal of African Philosophy, Culture and Religion
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Thought. London: Heinemann.
Filosofia Theoretica: Journal of African Philosophy, Culture and Religion
ETHNICISM AND RELIGIOUS CRISIS IN NIGERIA: A
STUMBLING BLOCK TO NATIONAL DEVELOPMENT
Nwabuiro Ideyi
Department of Philosophy and Religion
Ebonyi State University, Abakaliki
nwabuiroideyi@yahoo.com
1.
Introduction
Man arrived in the world without pre-notice by his creator who
knows him and where he is in the world and his purpose in it. As
man became conscious of himself, the world and his place in it, he
has been ever curious to understand the purpose of his being in the
world and how to make a success story of that purpose. In his
efforts toward that end, he has arrived at the conclusion that an
invisible hand that rules his affairs anytime and anywhere in the
world is his well-being. A desire for the realization of his well
being is the mother of all his desires in the world- the first and last
rung on the ladder of his existence.
What is man’s well- being? The concept man’s well being is a
nebulous concept which calls for down- to- earth explanation in
order to leave no one in doubt. Man’s well-being is a network of
his existential needs. What he seeks to acquire- to have at his beck
and call in order to live well and die happy in the world. These
needs are legion and among them are: adequate food, shelter,
clothing, functional education and health systems; effective
communication system; an atmosphere of peace, harmony and
progress, security of lives and property; freedoms of thought,
speech, assembly, association, rights to privacy, recreation and
rest; opportunities to work, save and invest, rule of law and justice,
self and collective fulfillment, etc. Man’s activities, policies,
organizations, institutions, etc, are judged good if they facilitate the
attainment of these needs, and bad if they hinder their attainment.
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As it is, positive or desirable changes taking place in these needs
are regarded as development. That is to say the purpose of
development is man’s well-being. Through developmental
strategies, man strives to harness all resources at his disposal with
which to enhance, improve, promote, advance and preserve his
well-being. Attainment of this, flowers in the chief goal of life
universally acknowledged as happiness, courtesy of Socrates, Plato
and Aristotle – the world legendary philosophers (Omoregbe,
2003:93-116). Thus, man’s pre-occupation is development because
he wants to make a success story of his being in the world. All
generations of humanity desire and work to live well and die happy
in the world and as well to leave it better than they found it.
Nigerians at the down of their country’s independence on October
I, 1960 were faced with challenges of development arising from
their dreams about the kind of nation they wanted to nurse and
nurture to maturity. These dreams served as materials with which
to draw national goals for Nigerian citizens to pursue. These
national goals or objectives (section 1, sub-section 3) are for
building: “a free and democratic society; a just and egalitarian
society; a united, strong and self-reliant nation; a great and
dynamic economy; a land full of bright opportunities for all
citizens”, (Ocho, 2005: 412-413).
Nigerians’ poor performance in their efforts to actualize these
national goals has attracted several descriptions to Nigeria from the
views of concerned Nigerian citizens who are not happy the way
the only country they can legitimately call theirs is wobbling in the
realm of development. For this reason some people see Nigeria as
a giant in size but a Lilliputian in worth; a country abundant wealth
of resources cannot develop; a country that is a mere geographical
expression; a country that is a marriage of inconvenience; a
country with both citizens and supplicants as Nigerians; country its
unity begins and ends in paper; a country holding a gold medal in
corruption. While others see Nigeria as a country where wealth and
poverty are sharing the same premises; where justice is for sale;
Filosofia Theoretica: Journal of African Philosophy, Culture and Religion
where democracy is seating in a wheelchair; where law is a
respecter of persons; where money and power are pursued at all
costs; where corruption is almost a norm; where a rogue in one part
of the country is celebrated as a hero in another part; where ethnic
loyalty has overshadowed national loyalty, etc. These soul –
sapping descriptions of Nigeria are what confront any person
interested in the plights of the nation and who insists that a spade
must have no other name.
Many factors have contributed to this sorry situation of Nigeria but
the paper is only concerned with how ethnicism and religious crisis
have contributed to it. Leaning on the creative guidance of
common sense, knowledge and wisdom and as well standing on
the shoulder of history, the paper seeks to discover the causes and
effects of these obstacles to Nigeria’s efforts at development and
suggests a way out.
2.
Explanation of Terms
Ethnicism: The term ethnicism is derived from another term
ethnicity. The adjectival form of ethnicity is ethnic. The term
ethnic as an adjective is used to describe a national, racial or tribal
group of people that live in a particular territory under one
government. It also refers to characteristics or traits of behaviour
or mannerism peculiar to a group or groups of people which could
be a nation, race or tribe. Ethnic group usually has common
history, language, origin, culture, aspirations, and so on.
From this explanation of ethnicity, the term ethnicism is therefore
seen as a network of ideas, dreams, notions, beliefs, opinions,
attitudes and behaviours peculiar to a given ethnic group which
determine actions and reactions of its members in their interactions
with members of other ethnic groups within a polity whether
national or international. When the members of an ethnic group are
so much attached to their views and activities constituting this
network, very much proud of them and strive to set them as
standards for themselves and for other ethnic groups to imitate as
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well as when the members see themselves as competitors with
members of other ethnic groups over the available resources in
their political society, ethnicity or ethnicism degenerates to
ethnocentrism. When it is so, members of the ethnic group become
ethnic fans, extremists and malignants who see the world events
from their ethnic lenses and in their interactions with members of
other ethnic groups always see their actions as right and actions of
others in conflict with theirs as wrong. For them anything done by
a member of their ethnic group against a member or members of
different ethnic groups, no matter how immoral, wicked and
reprehensible it is, he or she is right and must be defended against
and protected from outside complaints and attacks. The heartbeat
of ethnocentrism is segregation and the attitude of its supporters in
relation to the members of other ethnic groups is always malignant.
3.
Religion
What is religion? In order to proffer a genuine answer to this
question, it is very proper to trace the root of the term religion.
Religion is derived from three Latin words: Ligare’ meaning to
bind, ‘Relegere’ meaning to unite or to link, and ‘Religio’ meaning
relationship. Thus, the meaning of religion from its root shows that
it is a link or an established relationship between two beings
human being and a divine being believed to exist. In their
relationship the former sees his existence and survival in the world
as the handwork of the latter. For that the human being must
believe in the divine being (the Supreme Being), worship him and
live his life in the world according to the will of his creator.
Some scholars have tried to explain the meaning of religion.
Charles M. Ezekwugo in his own explanation says:
Man originally started to seek for aid in spiritual
forces because of problems. Such problems were
the ones that defied human solutions. Thus man
remained helpless in the hands of evil forces. The
evil forces were considered inferior to or not
Filosofia Theoretica: Journal of African Philosophy, Culture and Religion
sufficiently powerful to hold man to ransom. Man
thus conceived the idea that a higher force existed.
This higher force could, if appeased, atoned or
propitiate, nullify whatever maledictions, taboos or
malicious intention of man’s malignant enemy, the
devil and his cohorts. And so was born a body of
knowledge and a way of life known as religion.
Religion simply defined, means “a way to God”.
(1992:77)
In order words, religion is recognition of and belief in a higher
force or being called God by man which has supreme power over
everything including problems or evil forces man is facing. For
that if man leads his life according to God’s will, God is ever ready
to use his power to assist him to get rid of his problems or evil
forces in whatever form they appear.
For Haralembos, paraphrased by Kingsley N. Okoro, “Religion is a
global socio-spiritual phenomenon, which binds human beings to
their god or ultimate reality and their fellow human beings.
Religion is also considered as a system of belief and practices by
which a group of people struggle with the ultimate problems of
life” (Uka, Okoro and Kanu, 2010:324).
For William James religion is “the feelings, acts and experiences
of individual men in their solitude, so far as they comprehend
themselves to stand in relation to whatever they may consider the
divine”, cited by S.A. Ekanem and A.E. Asira in (Uduigwomen).
For Max Muller “Religion is a mental facility of disposition which
is independent of sense or reason, which enables man to apprehend
the infinite under different names and varying guides” and for A.C.
Bocquet religion is “… a fixed relationship between the human self
and some non-human entity, the sacred, the supernatural, the self
existent, the absolute or simply, God” – all cited by S.A. Ekanem
and A E. Asia in (Uduigwomen, 2006: 57).
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These views from these scholars are attempts to explain or define
religion. But whatever angle one looks at religion, the truth is that
religion is recognition of the existence of a Supreme Being or
Higher Being and an acknowledgement that this Supreme Being
created him and has power over him and hence man is dependent
upon Him for his survival in the world. For man to worship this
Higher Being and do His will at all times and in all places is the
first and last teaching of religion to man.
4.
God
The Supreme Being who created both heaven and earth and
everything in them is called different names by different tongues
among which are God, Allah, Chineke, Jehovah, etc. But in this
paper the term God is used. A part from being the Supreme Creator
of all things animate and inanimate what other attributes does God
possess as perceived by man? According to Jim Unah,
Aristotle and Aquinas have both furnished a static
conception of God. Aristotle calls God the
Unmoved Mover, the Uncaused cause or the pure
act without potency. According to him, God is a
self-thinking thought who is eternally the same and
endlessly contemplating himself. The only object of
God’s concern is his own person. He has created the
world and has since forgotten it. Following
Aristotle, Aquinas has said that God is all-powerful,
all knowing, immutable and eternal. The substance
of Aristotle’s and Aquinas’ thinking is that God is a
fossilized Being who is unaffected by what we do,
(1995:58).
According to Joseph I. Omoregbe some later metaphysicians have
stated some other attributes of God in addition to the ones pointed
out by Aristotle. Deduction from those attributes shows that:
Filosofia Theoretica: Journal of African Philosophy, Culture and Religion
He is eternal (i.e. he has no beginning), omniscient,
omnipotent, incorporeal, spiritual, simple, infinite,
etc. He is not wise, but wisdom itself, not only
good, but goodness itself, life itself, etc. To say that
God possesses these qualities would imply that he
derived them from another source, but he is himself
the source of all these qualities and they are
identical with his being. (2003:148)
For Jim Unah all believers in God are agreed that he is “…
eminently good, perfectly just … who listens to prayers, who
grants requests, who can reward or punish, who gets angry, who,
however, is merciful, kind and living. He is the maker and
sustainer of the universe. He is providence par excellence”, (Unah,
1995: 42-43).
In summary God is the Self-created Being, the uncaused cause, the
Unmoved Mover and the source of every other being in existence;
He is omnipresent because he is everywhere and every time;
omnipotent because he has supreme power over everything
animate and inanimate and omniscient because he is all-knowing
and knows every being right from conception. From the moral
perspective, God is love, goodness, truth, kindness, justice, mercy,
forgiveness, patience, honesty, freedom, reward, punishment and
all other positive values. For example, it is because of his love and
mercy for man that God continues to endure man’s transgressions
right from the Garden of Eden-man the only being that made God
regret to have created him. Also it is because God is punishment
that any being that breaks any of the laws controlling the entire
universe is punished accordingly.
As it has been seen, the world together with everything in it is not
a product of an accident but of purpose. For that it behooves upon
man to discover the purpose of his being in the world and live his
life in accordance with that purpose. To do that is to comply with
the will of God. And the beacon light that will help man to attain
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this end is to observe these moral maxims: (a) Treat others as you
would like them to treat you; (b) Love your neighbour as you love
yourself; (c) Leave the world better than you found it.
Unless one strictly observes these moral maxims, one’s dream to
discover and attain the purpose of one’s existence in the world and
one’s wish to do God’s will, without mincing words, will begin
and terminate as dream and wish. When that is the case, one
becomes a disappointment to God, a malice to humanity, a misery
to oneself, a virus to one’s friends, a laughing stock to one’s
enemies, a relic to history, a problem to philosophy, a demon to
religion, a social misfit to sociology, a crippled mind to
psychology, a reject to science and a proverb to future generations.
Adolf Hitler was a good example of this disaster. But when the
opposite is the case, one becomes a crown to God, a lord of
creation, a light to humanity, happiness to oneself, a miracle to
one’s enemies and a reference point to all intellectual disciplines in
matters of development anyway and anytime in the world.
Thomas Jefferson one time American president was a good
example of this boost to humanity.
5.
Development
The term development is very popular among human beings to the
extent that everything they do be it setting up a family, nursing and
nurturing a child, setting up schools, governing states, establishing
markets, enacting peace treaties, preparing for wars, searching for
knowledge, building houses, cultivating friendships, creating
religions and religious sects, establishing industries, etc, they have
that thought at the back of their minds. Why is it so? This is
because: first, that the thought for development is innate in man.
For ever since man became aware of his presence in the world, to
improve and continue to improve his conditions of living has been
his first and last project. Second, because the purpose of
development is peoples’ well- being. Third, because man’s claim
of rationality as his natural endowment which gives him an edge
Filosofia Theoretica: Journal of African Philosophy, Culture and Religion
over other animals is considered true if he continues to make the
purpose of development a success story in the world.
As experience – the best teacher- has shown, the popularity of
development among human beings has equally resulted in
distortion and misunderstanding of its meaning and purpose. Since
nobody knowingly and willingly does wrong which means that
every wrong done is as a result of ignorance, according to Socrates
the great philosopher of all time, it means that distortion and
misunderstanding of meaning and purpose of development is due
to peoples’ ignorance of what development means and connotes in
all its ramifications. For that reason, leaning on human nature,
experience, philosophy and history the paper seeks to explain the
origin, meaning, purpose and nature of development.
Concerning the origin of development, man arrived in the world
without pre-notice and also unaware of his presence in the world.
As he became aware of his presence and as well conscious of his
environment, he became curious about his being in the world. His
curiosity led him to asking series of questions such as: who is
responsible for his being in the world? Where was he before his
journey into the world? What is his mission in the world? How
does he relate with his fellow human beings and other beings?
Why the phenomenon of dearth? Where does he go after life? His
attempts to resolve these questions gave birth to development.
In his attempts to resolve the first question he discovered that he
was brought into existence by the Supreme Being called God; the
second that he was with God; the third, that his mission is to do
God’s will and also attain the ultimate goal of life-happiness; the
fourth that he is to play the role of light for his fellow humans to
find their way to the ultimate goal and as well to leave the world
better than they found it; the fifth so that man will comply with law
of nature which says every living thing must grow and die; and the
sixth that where he leaves to after here is a matter to be decided by
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his Creator based on what he has made of his existence in the
world.
From these efforts by man to resolve these fundamental questions
about his being in the world, it is obvious that development as far
as man is concerned means recognition and acknowledgement of
God as his creator and sustainer in the world. It also means all
positive ideas, dreams, thoughts and activities entrained and
embarked upon by man with a view to doing God’s will and as
well enhancing, improving, promoting, protecting and advancing
the well-being of mankind as a whole which flowers in happiness-
the ultimate goal of life. Fortunately for man all the resources he
needs to make a success story of his life journey in the world by
actualizing his ultimate goal are at his disposal.
As already hinted the purpose of development is peoples’ well
being. The people’s well-being is a network of their needs. These
needs include among other things adequate food, shelter, clothing,
access to education, functional health system, sound economic
system, opportunities for employment, savings and investment,
security of lives and properties, rule of law, freedoms of speech,
association, assembly, thought; atmosphere of peace, harmony and
progress, good governance, observance of moral values, etc.
Actualization of these needs has been what people all over the
world have been dreaming of and as well the goal they have been
pursuing with religious zeal since their life journey in the world.
Persons, institutions, ideas, theories and practices that contribute to
their attainment are considered good and those that do not are
considered bad. If it is persons that are faltering, they are advised
to change their minds and thus turn a new leaf. If it is institutions,
ideas, theories, etc, they are improved upon so as to be relevant
and supportive to peoples’ efforts to attain their needs.
Some scholars have contributed to the clarification of meaning and
purpose of development. Since development is as large as life-
Filosofia Theoretica: Journal of African Philosophy, Culture and Religion
meaning it has different dimensions which correspond with
different spheres of human existence. Scholars more often than
not, conceive the meaning of development from the sphere or
aspect of human existence they are interested in. For instance,
scholars like W. Arthur Lewis, Fei John and Constur, paraphrased
by Monday L. Igbafen, conceive development from economic
perspective. For them,
… a developed human society is one which the
Gross National (sic) Product (GDP) or per capita
income experiences sustained growth. What this
implies is that development is an increase in the
GDP of nation states. This is, however, the classical
economist perception of development which until
recently
has dominated the discourse of
development. (2003:1)
Joseph I. Omoregbe, acknowledges the importance of other
dimensions of development in human society, but emphasises the
importance of moral dimension of development as the bedrock
upon which other dimensions can stand and make meaningful and
positive impacts on the people’s well-being. In his words:
Moral development and maturity on the part of the
citizens of a country are pre-requisites for the
development of that country. Indeed, moral
development is the most important aspect of
national development, for there can be no
development of a country if its citizens are morally
undeveloped and immature. Moral development on
the part of the citizens is therefore a condition-sine
qua-non for development of any nation. It must
precede the economic development through modern
technology. Neither science nor technology can
develop a country if its citizens are not morally
developed. How can there be development in which
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public funds are embezzled by those who control
them and who are supposed to use them for
developmental projects? How can there be
development in a country in which self-interest is
the dominant rule? Nor can the economy of any
country develop if its citizens lack a moral sense of
duty, the right attitude to work and a sense of moral
responsibility to the society (2003:197).
Sure, man is the measure of all things, courtesy of Protagoras, and
for that reason human or moral development should be at the
centre of all development. For it is only morally developed citizens
of any country will see, understand and appreciate with their eyes
and hearts the fact presented by Habu Dawaki that: “The world is
getting smaller everyday. We need each other to survive. We must
learn to live together and win the race of life together (2005: 125
shake Hands…).
While Adebayo Adedeji, cited by S.K.B. Asante, supports the
views of Omoregbe and Dawaki about development. In his words:
… we need to set in motion a development process
that put individual at the very centre of the
development effort; a development process that is
both human and humane without necessarily
softening the discipline that goes with development
but which enhances man’s personality; a
development process that does not alienate man
from his society and culture but rather develops his
self-confidence in himself and identifies .his interest
with those of his society and thereby develop his
ability and willingness for self-reliance. (Omimode
and Synge, 1995:6)
In other words any development process that is worthy of its name
should focus on human persons; should help them to see and
Filosofia Theoretica: Journal of African Philosophy, Culture and Religion
harness what they have and show them how to use what they have
to achieve their individual and collective goals in the atmosphere
of peace, harmony, love, justice and co-operation in the interest of
all.
Lawrence office Ocho in his own contribution holds the view that
development should be about people- their moral upbringing; and
for that reason education which is an effective tool to actualize the
purpose of development is a necessity. Thus in his words
“Education is the process through which individuals are made
participating members of their society… it is a process through
which man realizes his potentialities and used them for self
fulfillment in the services of himself and others (2005:66).
Concerning the goal of development, the world development
Report (1972:34) says: “Development is about improving the well
being of people. Raising living standard and improving education,
health and equality of opportunity… Ensuring political and civic
rights is a broader development goals”. In support of this view
Christopher Uroh holds that the common item on the agenda of all
human deliberations as regards development “…is the fact that the
human person is taken, not us a means to an end but as an end
itself. The central concern of any development project, therefore, is
how to make human beings lead a better life (1998:3)
6.
National development
The word ‘national’ is an adjective derived from the word ‘nation’.
A nation according to the Advanced Learner’s Dictionary is “large
community of people usually sharing a common history, language,
etc, and living in a particular territory under one government”.
Some scholars see a nation as the same thing as a tribe. The only
difference is that while a nation is a large community of people, a
tribe is a smaller community of people but they all, according to
Bodern Heimer cited by Jim Unah, refer to (a) people with
common language, custom and mores; (b) with common historical,
socio-psychological and political background; (c) a sense of
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belonging; and may or may not occupy a definite territory. For
instance, before the creation of a state of Israel in 1948, the Jews
had no territory (1993:3).
An obvious impression from these explanations about a nation or a
tribe .is that there is a sense of unity among the constituting people
and they pursue their .individual and collective goals of life with
due respect to that sense. If quarrel occurs as it is bound to happen
among people in their daily interactions, their sense of unity
enables them to settle the quarrel quickly at the table dialogue and
this allows peace, harmony and progress to reign.
In this work a nation is understood and used as a country. Nigeria
is country and it is composed of 36 states and the federal capital
territory Abuja. Sometimes Nigeria is discussed from the angles of
its spheres of activities engaged in by its citizens such as politics,
education,
health,
religion,
economy, social relations,
communication, etc. Development, that is, positive or desirable
changes are expected to be taking place in these spheres in all the
36 states including federal capital territory. When that is the case
national development is said to be occurring. Thus, national
development can be defined as an aggregate of development
indices going on in every part of Nigeria. If for any reason any
state is lagging behind in the development indices, the national
development is compromised and Nigeria as a whole suffers
setbacks.
Throwing more light on national development, B.O. Elugbe,
paraphrased by Godspower N. Omorodion says that “… national
development relates to the growth of the nation in terms of unity,
education, economic wellbeing, mass participation government,
patriotism and so an” (Udosen, 2006:26). While Joseph I.
Omoregbe in his own contribution says that:
A nation is a living organization with many parts
each with a distinct function and a distinct
Filosofia Theoretica: Journal of African Philosophy, Culture and Religion
contribution to make toward the well being of the
whole. Each part needs to be developed; hence
national development is the development of all the
parts of the living organism which a nation is.
(2003:194)
In other words, each part is as important as any other part and the
end results are positive thoughts, actions and activities taking
places in each of them which constitute what is called national
development. Therefore, national development is a network of
desirable activities in all spheres of a nation geared towards
improvement of the well-being of its entire citizens
7.
Causes of Ethnicism and Religious Crisis in Nigeria
As already stated, ethnicism and religious crisis are, among the
problems which have messed up Nigerians’ efforts in development
at all levels especially at national level. To the extent that Nigeria
is now a history, a proverb, a byword as a country abundant wealth
of resources- human and material – at its disposal cannot develop.
Concerning ethnicism and religious crisis certain factors have been
identified as responsible among them are:
First is abuse of these natural endowments in man: self-interest and
social (group) interest. On the authority of the best teacher in the
world, experience, no man is ready to dedicate himself to, remain
active on his duty post and play out his best on any project his
personal interest is not included. His self-interest is held in a high
esteem to the extent that he regards its recognition,
acknowledgement, promotion and preservation as the first law. He
as well acknowledges the importance of his social interest as he is
a social being who needs attention, concern and support of his
fellow humans to attain his goals in the world.
A positive use of self- interest and social interest as a great
enhancement of human relations, results in making every man to
see himself as his brothers’ keeper, a social bridge builder, a peace
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maker, a problem solver, an agent of progress, an advocate of
justice and unity and as well his brothers’ promotion or demotion,
joys or pains, etc, as his own. While negative use of self-interest
makes it to degenerate to selfishness which is a moral disease,
falsehood, stealing, violence, wickedness, etc, which have inflicted
upon mankind all kinds of suffering. Also negative use of social or
group interest makes it fall from grace to grass of ethnicism- a
social concern which has given birth to group pride, arrogance,
vanity, conceit, complacency, malignancy, etc, which have served
as bricks used by victims to build social walls between them and
opponent groups in their social interactions in a polity.
Nigerians are a byword of abuse of both self and social interests.
The result is a continuous emphasis on personal or group interests
at the expense of others’ interest. Thus ethnic groups that make up
Nigeria have been struggling over the resources of the country.
The more one corners the nations’ resource for oneself or one’s
group, the more one is noticed, heralded, esteemed and celebrated
as a hero by the members of his ethnic group. Thus ‘might is
right’; “end justifies the means”, etc, become the language of the
strong; and ‘live and let live’, “love your neighbour as you love
yourself”, “treat others as you will like them treat you”, etc,
become the language of the weak.
Second is the advent of colonialism in Nigeria. Colonialism is a
foreign rule exercised by one country over another country without
the consent of the latter. This kind of rule was imposed on Nigeria
by Britain who doubled as a slave master as well as a colonial
master to some African countries in which Nigeria was among for
so many years.
During the Colonial administration British representatives in
Nigeria never hid the fact that the economic interest of their home
country was the overruling hand that initiated, prescribed and
determined all their thoughts, actions and activities in Nigeria. For
that reason a view that supported their economic interest no matter
Filosofia Theoretica: Journal of African Philosophy, Culture and Religion
how destructive it was to the natives was welcomed; and one
opposed to it no matter how good it was to the natives was
rejected.
For this reason conglomeration of empires, kingdoms and states
with their teeming tribes or ethnic groups exhibiting different
cultures now called Nigeria, courtesy of Miss Flora Shaw who
later became the wife of Sir Lord Frederick Lugard the first
Governor General of Nigeria, found themselves in the marriage of
inconvenience with their hands joined together in the
amalgamation of Nigeria in 1914.
For the fear of solidarity among these ethnic groups against them,
the colonialists on the surface operated through the Indirect Rule
System which involved the use of traditional rulers accountable to
them in running the public affairs of different regions in which the
country was divided. While beyond the surface, was the Divide –
and- Rule System which emphasized the differences among the
ethnic groups and thus making it impossible for them to see
themselves as one and thus unite and fight their cause on the
platform of solidarity. Even though the constituting ethnic groups
of Nigeria later ignored their differences and united to fight against
colonial rule which resulted in their country’s independence on
October 1 1960, these perceptions of their differences re-surfaced
in the post independence and their burning flames have been alive
up till today, courtesy of ethnic fans and religious fanatics.
Third is ethnic politics. Politics is an art of governance which
involves a contest for positions of power. As an art it has rules
which govern the contest and all other activities taking place in it
which all actors in political realm must observe. Its end is to
harness, enhance, promote, advance and distribute available
resources in a nation in such a way that all interests- individual,
group and national- are recognized and conciliated in a manner that
promote the well – being of the entire citizenry. Those occupying
positions of power are under obligation to see to it that politics
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attends its sole aim. Olusegun Oladipo in his own contribution
says:
Politics, ordinarily and in the best traditions is a
noble art, primarily concerned with the conciliation
of interests in a society in a rule-governed manner.
It is not an end in itself. Rather, it is a means to the
achievement in any human community of a
condition of freedom in which the people are able to
perform their duties to their society and pursue their
internets in a manner that promote the growth and
development of the society. (1999:29)
This is the aim of politics about which all human societies strive
day in day out to achieve. But in Nigeria the efforts of Nigerians
towards that end have always been thwarted, wrecked and aborted
due to ethnic politics. Ethnic politics is a struggle among the
constituting ethnic groups in Nigeria over the available national
resources. Each group strives to corner the lion share of the
resources for its members. In the process politics has become a do – or- die affair, erecting walls between ethnic groups and
individuals, letting loose thought- provoking contumelies among
the people and regarding national unity as a relic of history which
has no place in the present scheme of things.
Abubakar Dangiwa Umar, the conscience of the nation, highly
disturbed by the widening gap which the annulment of the June 12,
1993 general election had caused among the ethnic groups in the
country, writes to the head of state Sani Abacha to do something
about the matter so as to save the nation from disintegration. In his
view, paraphrased by John Okwoeze Odey, “The divisions that had
arisen among the various ethnic groups in the country had become
so deep and so devastating that they have become a simmering
volcanic discontent waiting for the slightest opportunity to
explode,” (2004:30). Odey equally observes that: “In Nigeria
people generally try to protect the interests of those who come
Filosofia Theoretica: Journal of African Philosophy, Culture and Religion
from the same ethnic divide with them whether those whose
interests they defend are right or wrong” (2004:42).
Ethnic politics among the ethnic groups in Nigeria has resulted in
many explosive crises which one of them saw Nigerians engaged
in civil war which lasted thirty months starting from 1966 when
the military took over power. This ethnic politics has let loose
among Nigerians especially the rich and powerful corruption,
greed, robbery and violence which have made Nigeria’s abundant
resources scarce in the interest of a few individuals and some
ethnic groups at the expense of teeming number of individuals and
ethnic groups, and nation’s co-operate existence. As far back as
sixties when Nigerians won their country’s independence, ethnic
politics has been bulldozing political terrain of Nigeria to the
detriment of the country’s dreams of a great nation where one lives
for all and all live for one in atmosphere of peace, harmony, love,
justice, progress, co-operation and development. This ugly
situation made Alhaji Tafawa Balewa who later became the first
prime Minister of Nigeria according to J. Osutokun to lament in
1947 that “Since the amalgamation of Southern and Northern
provinces in 1914, Nigeria has existed as one country only on
paper …. It is still far from being united” (Akinyemi, et al,
1980:99).
Fourth is slave trade. Before the advent of colonialists in Nigeria
there was already a phenomenon of slavery and its victims were
called slaves. These were usually people captured during a war
between one tribe or ethnic group and another. The captives
(slaves) were distributed among the elders of the victorious tribe
and the former lived with the latter serving them. The obedient and
hardworking slaves often regained their freedom and thus enjoyed
the rights of free people.
This was the kind of slavery practised in Nigeria before the advent
of the foreigners who came and changed slavery into a business
venture. Slaves became goods to be sold to those who needed them
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at a high price. Slave traders from foreign lands met with some
Nigerian chiefs and provided to them valuable goods in exchange
of slaves which they carried to their home countries for sale. These
chiefs never sold their own people, their tribal people but rather
sent warriors to go to neighbouring tribes and captured people to
be sold as slaves. This action brought serious and deep quarrels
among the tribes which made them not to see eye to eye on any
issue. Each saw nothing good in the other except potential slaves
and for that they were always at daggers drawn at each other
peeping through the windows in the thick walls of sentiments
separating them.
Nothing is permanent in the world except change says a Greek
philosopher Heraclitus. Therefore, with time both slavery and slave
trade were stopped and the tribal groups found themselves united
as one country called Nigeria through amalgamation of 1914 under
the directive of Lord Frederick Lugard, the British chief
representative then in Nigeria. While the constituting ethnic groups
were trying to see good in each other and outlive the injuries of the
past occasioned by slavery and slave trade, their foreign rulers,
conscious of their economic interests felt that solidarity among
these natives was likely to raise political questions against their
rule over them.
For that reason they introduced “the divide- and- rule system”
though unofficial but was a platform upon which they continued
their administration. The motive of this system was to prevent the
ethnic groups from uniting their forces against them. So, it sowed
the seed of segregation in their midst, nursed and nurtured it to
maturity by emphasising their differences and undermining their
similarities. They at first succeeded partially and later failed
completely as Nigerians regained their freedom and secured the
independence of their country in 1960. That notwithstanding the
divide- and- rule was revived by neocolonial Nigerian leaders who
perpetuated it then and still doing it through ethnic politics to the
present time.
Filosofia Theoretica: Journal of African Philosophy, Culture and Religion
Fifth is religious bigotry. Religion is among the greatest virtues
ever happened to man in the world. Good deeds it has done to man
are so many. Among them are: it has helped man to understand,
acknowledge and appreciate the fact that he and the rest of the
universe are creation of another being – the Supreme Being. It has
also helped man to understand who, whom, what, why and where
he is in the realm of existence and how he can use knowledge and
skills arising from this exposure to make a success story of his
journey in the world. Also it has as well left man with no iota of
doubt that he is in the world to do the will of his creator. The will
of his creator is expressed in these three universal moral maxims:
Love-love your neighbour as you love yourself; the Golden Rule
treat others as you will like them treat you; development- strive to
be positive change you wish to see in the world and as well leave
the world better than you found it.
If man observes these moral maxims, God, Jehovah, Allah,
Chineke, Oludumare or what ever name the Supreme Being is
called, will be happy with him and man himself will be surprised
to notice that earth is a version of God’s kingdom. But if abused
due to ignorance, pride, arrogance, selfishness, haughtiness, greed,
malignancy, etc., man will discover he has made a hellhole of
earth, and thus becomes a disappointment to God. Man is guilty of
the latter; hence God regretted to have created him, to have
adorned his head with a cap of creative thinking.
In Nigeria this abuse of moral maxims has let loose all manners of
moral vices in religious realm. Religion which is supposed to be
what it is a universal canopy providing hope, security, peace,
harmony, positive attitude and development has been privatized,
ill-directed and segregated to the extent that the adherents of one
religion will see adherents of other religions as malignant
competitors, opponents and enemies. For instance in Nigeria the
three major religions are: Traditional Religion, Christianity and
Islam. Adherents of Traditional Religion are tolerant of
Christianity and Islam while Christians and Muslims do not
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tolerant each other and the both dismiss adherents of traditional
religion as pagans and non-issues often directed by Satan, believed
to be the chief cause of problems in the world.
For this reason, hatred, malice, disagreement, quarrel and war have
become common features in relationships between Christians and
Muslims who are fated to live together in one country, to share
dreams of their country and to join minds and hands together to
actualize the dreams of their country among which are: “a free and
democratic society; (b) a just and egalitarian society…” (Ocho,
2005; 4 12). In other words, every Nigerian is free to choose any
religion he or she likes to worship the same creator. But Christians
and Muslims observe this in paper and not in practice. That is why
each group are making efforts to force the other to accept their own
faith as new converts or quit existence being a misnomer in the
world. They see nothing wrong in these their thoughts and actions.
No wonder Blaise Pascal, commenting on the tragedy of
intolerance among the different religious adherents, says: “Men
never do evil so completely and cheerfully as when they do it from
religious conviction” (Dawaki, 2005: 37 Shake Hands…)
Religious bigots from both faiths consider it a big and
unpardonable sin to tolerate and deal with each other for whatever
reason.
Sixth is discrepancy in development. Discrepancy in development
among the constituent ethnic groups is one of the thought
provoking issues in Nigeria. For due to ethnic politics which gives
birth to ethnic leaders occupying national positions, the country’s
amenities are not evenly distributed among the constituent units of
the country. The ethnic leaders in positions of power at national
level usually use the opportunity to provide a lot of amenities such
as good roads, functional health system, well-equipped schools,
employment opportunities, appointments, etc, to their areas at the
expense of other areas whose sons and daughters are not among
those in the positions of power. The creator and distributor of
country’s amenities is political power and this power has remained
Filosofia Theoretica: Journal of African Philosophy, Culture and Religion
for too long in one part of the country – the Northern part as if
other parts are just appendages to Nigeria.
This lack of power shift was recognized by Abubakar Dangiwa
Umar as a serious threat to the unity of our country Nigeria as he
felt it has made Nigeria seem to belong to the people of the North
alone. He pointed out that when Nigeria was 38 years old as an
independent country the North had ruled Nigeria for 35 years. So
when Sani Abacha told the people that he had come to pull the
nation out of the precipice, Umar says the “people thought there
was going to be power-shift and there was that opportunity to have
power shift to the south, so that at least we can reassure people that
the country belongs to everybody” (Odey, 2004:41). So at the time
Nigeria celebrated the golden jubilee of its independence
anniversary- 50 years old, power shifted to South but once which
lasted 8 years under the former President Olusegun Obasanjo. So
out of 50 years Nigeria has lasted the North has ruled the country
for 39 year and the South 11 years. The power has again shifted to
South – South under President Goodluck E. A. Jonathan.
Thus, the concentration of power in one part of the country has
caused uneven distribution of country’s amenities among the
Nigerian people. And this has made the affected people to feel
marginalized and sad over their unjust treatment. This heightens
ethnic loyalty at the expense of national unity. The Niger Delta in
the South is a good example where the lion share of the resources
that sustain the entire nation come from and yet the area is a sorry
sight to behold when compared to some other areas like kano,
Kaduna, Plateau, Lagos, etc, in the country in terms of
development. This has given rise to the Nigeria Delta crisis which
has advertised Nigeria the world over as a place where justice is
seating in a wheelchair, the hands that feed the nation are bitten
and wealth and poverty are sharing the same space.
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8.
The Effects of Ethnicsim and Religious Crisis on the
National Development.
The preceding discourses have shown that ethnicism and religious
crisis in the country have been a serious setback to Nigerians in
their dreams, efforts and aspirations to develop the only country
they have like other developed countries in the world. Their
dreams, sad to say, have remained mere dreams, their efforts
unproductive and their aspirations barren due to the negative
activities of ethnic fans and religious bigots which have disfigured
the face of the nation from beauty to ugliness, wealth to poverty,
the pride of Africa to the shame of Africa, from unity to disunity,
etc. The adverse effects of these roadblocks on the national
development are legion but only a few will be discoursed here.
First is a threat to the country’s unity. Ethnic and religious
conflicts promote ethnic loyalty among the ethnic or tribal groups
in the country and undermine national loyalty. The undermining of
national loyalty has reduced the unity of the country to paper unity
which begins and ends in the constitution of our dear country as it
is never observed in reality. For this reason some leaders, if not all,
at national level are national leaders in name but personal and ethic
leaders in reality as they are more concerned with their personal
and ethnic group interests and ready to do anything to enhance
both at the expense of national interest.
No event that demonstrates this more clearly than a reaction of one
of the so- called national leaders in the person of Olusegun
Obasanjo when he was the president of Nigeria to some Muslim
fanatics’ protests in kano on October 12, 2000 against America’s
reprisal mission on Afghanistan believed to be harbouring Osama
bin Laden the main target of their attack which caused a lot of
damages in the country resulting in death of not less than 200
Nigerians and destruction of a lot of properties. It happened that
the president was in Parish, France attending a UNESCO
conference. When he came back and saw losses inflicted on
Nigerians by the protesters, his reaction was less than what was
expected of a national leader as nothing was done to the wreckers
Filosofia Theoretica: Journal of African Philosophy, Culture and Religion
of the havocs. John Okwoeze Odey commenting on his reaction
says:
When he came back, he visited the city of Kano and
after seeing the extent of the damage done there, he
declared as usual: “we won’t tolerate the destruction
of lives and property. Just using an excuse whatever
to start breaking into shops, destroying buildings
and causing disaffection is not the best”. Once
more, and as usual, the president promised that he
would dig to the root of the matter. Having made
that empty and deceitful promise, he directed his
attention then to work by hook, by crook and by
intrigue to ensure his second term in office. He
achieved that goal through the madness called
election 2003. Till today, almost three years after,
he is yet to keep his promise of digging into the root
of Kano’s religious intolerance and consequent
bloodshed. (2004:22)
His unfulfilled promise was a delay tactics to calm the nerves of
the concerned Nigerians, the relations of those killed and those
whose properties were destroyed in the disastrous event who
wanted to pay these wreckers of lives and properties in their own
coins. What was uppermost in his mind was his second term in
office. For that he did not want to mar his chance by bringing the
protesters cum destroyers to book nor did he want to create the
impression in the minds of those Nigerians who were disturbed by
what happened that he was not going to do something about it for
the safety and security of lives and properties in Nigeria. He
pursued his selfish interest and succeeded and thus allowed his
promise to remain a mere promise until he left the office. The
events like this are as many as the number of Nigerian leaders.
Hence the main problem of Nigeria is selfish leaders who are
primarily concerned with their personal or ethnic interests to the
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detriment of the nation’s growth, stability, development,
democracy, unity, peace, security and survival.
Second, is abuse of human values among Nigerians. Human values
are those values which have made man’s existence in the world
meaningful. Among them are fear of God, respect for human life,
love, peace, tolerance, forbearance, forgiveness, kindness,
patience, faithfulness, devotion to duty, meekness, self-control,
humility, knowledge, truth, honesty and so on. But the value of all
values is fear of God (since man is in the world solely to do God’s
will), followed by respect for human life (since human life is
wearing the image and likeness of God). These values are ends
themselves while other values serve as means to attain them.
But these highly esteemed human values have been so much
abused in the hands of ethnic fans and warriors, and religious
fanatics. In any event of disagreements between them and their
fellow Nigerians, they usually ignore these life sustaining values
and quickly initiate and execute mayhem meant to bring about
bloodshed of some innocent Nigerians and destruction of their hard
earned properties. For example kano in December 1980 was
bloodbath when Maitatsine and his group of fanatics struck and
killed 4177 people at one fell swoop” Newswatch, 1987: 6 (cited in
Odey, 2004: 76). All other states in the Northern part of the
country especially Boronu, kaduna, Bauchi and Plateau have
witnessed several losses of lives and properties due to religious
crises. If fear of God can be so ignored and human life so wasted
despite the fact that they are the value of all values, then what
become of other values such as love, truth, justice, honesty, etc; are
better imagined than described. It is for this reason an embezzler of
public funds at national level is treated as a rogue by other
Nigerians while members of his ethnic group and his religious faith
treat him as a hero.
Third is lack of trust and fellow-feeling among the ethnic groups
and adherents of different religious faiths in Nigeria. Trust is belief
Filosofia Theoretica: Journal of African Philosophy, Culture and Religion
by a person in the goodness, strength and ability of others. It is
confidence he or she has in others because he or she considers
them as reliable, trustworthy, honesty, etc, in their attitudes to life.
A person’s interaction with others is based on this trust and
continues as long as the trust is intact with its flame of confidence.
The interaction stops when doubt comes up in the mind of an
interacting person and takes the place of his trust. While fellow
feeling is a positive attitude of concern a person has for others. He
is happy with them and celebrates with them over their joys and
successes and as well sympathies with them over their pains and
failures. Thus without trust and fellow-feeling human interactions
and co-operation in the adventure of life will be unproductive and
life itself will be destitute of sustaining ingredients.
But it is sad to observe that trust and fellow-feeling are among the
first casualties in the hands of ethnic fans and religious fanatics
who have developed a mindset which positions them to see people
outside their narrow ethnic groups and religious faiths as unhealthy
competitors, evil-agents and as a mirage and dismissed them with a
wave of hand. People are agents of development and no
development can take place among these people living in the same
country but who do not trust one another; who do not interact in
atmosphere of mutual support; who do not share goals of the
nation and exchange views concerning how to realize them using
strategies collectively adopted as good.
Fourth, is bad leadership. A leader of any group be it a family, a
peer group, a community, an organization, an association, a
religion, a state or a country is held by his followers as a role
model and they look up to him for direction in every sphere of life.
His ideas, thoughts, actions and mannerisms are highly respected
and imitated by his followers. A good leader inspires his followers
to a great height and thus enables them to focus their attention,
energy, time and other resources on things and ways of living that
will enhance, promote, improve and advance their well-being. If
the leader happens to be a bad one his bad ideas, thoughts, actions
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and mannerisms are equally imitated especially by the unwary
people among his followers who regard him as God’s or Allah’s
representative on earth.
This way of looking up to a leader has caused a lot of setbacks to
Nigerians’ efforts at development. Some leaders- spiritual and
secular- drunk with their positions become careless with their
thoughts, utterances and activities which have many times ignited
the fire of ethnic and religious flames with its devastating
consequences on co-existence, peace, unity and development of
Nigeria. For instance, Sheikh Abubakar Mohammed Gumi, in
1987, was quoted as saying:
If we want Nigeria to be a good country, to join
hands, we have to follow one faith (Islam). If we
follow one faith we will be a good country …..
Nigerian unity, if I am to do my best, is to try to
convert Christians and non- Moslems as much as
possible. Until the other religious become minority
and they will not affect our society. (Odey, 2003: 29 – 30)
So, for him Nigeria is not a good country and cannot become one
unless all Christians and non – Moslems in Nigeria become
Moslems by discarding their own faiths and embracing Islamic
faith. He should not stop there but go further to say that before
Nigeria will become a good country every Nigerian whether male
or female should discard his or her name and adopt his name being
the only name recognized by Allah.
If a leader of Sheikh Gumi’s position could intentionally make
such a statement it becomes so obvious that religion in the hands of
shortsighted leaders is a dangerous weapon, in fact, more
dangerous than any deadly poison. And if gold can rust what
becomes of iron is anybody’s guess. In another occasion, Sheikh
Gumi was quoted as saying: “Christianity is nothing” (Soyinka,
Filosofia Theoretica: Journal of African Philosophy, Culture and Religion
19991: 6). The former president of Nigeria Olusegun Obasanjo “a
Christian” by religious faith was also quoted to have said: “CAN
my foot” (Odey, 2004: 42) in his reaction to question put to him by
the Chairman of Christian Association of Nigeria, Rev. Yakubu
Pam concerning ethnic, religious and political crises in Plateau
State which had resulted in declaration of state of emergency in the
state.
These types of antagonistic statements which cause segregation
among Nigerians, which destroy instead of build the nation and
which have made Nigeria to remain a Gant in size but a Lilliputian
in moral worth are common among most of our leaders. The first
rug on the ladder of nation building is cooperation among the
people. This all important rug is missing due to the activities of our
leaders. As neo-colonial leaders they may forget any other thing
they leant from our former colonial masters but not “the divide-
and – rule” Nigeria applied during the colonial era and inherited by
our present leaders who are always alert to ensure that any hint of
solidarity among the people are destroyed at the incubate stage.
For there is nothing tyrannical leaders fear so more than people’s
solidarity as history has shown no tyrant the world over has ever
faced its devastating flames without being consumed. This lack of
solidarity among the people has been a big stumbling block to
Nigerians’ efforts at national development.
9.
The way out
Nigerians, sad to observe, are at the sea of problems, concerning
their existence on this portion of God’s province called Nigeria,
sailing without a landing point in view. All their efforts as regards
solving their numerous problems such as bad leadership, apathy of
the masses, ethnicism, religious crises, political manipulation,
poverty, corruption, ignorance, etc, have been one step forward
and two steps backward. The reason for their predicaments among
others is because they are a part of their problems to be solved.
This is a fact they must accept and ready themselves to accept truth
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about which history is owing to mankind as a whole and them in
particular.
First, is that all the ethnic groups that constitute a sovereign state
known as Nigeria should accept the fact that Nigeria belongs to all
of them. For that they should join hands together to work for the
realization of their country’s dreams: (a) a free and democratic
society; (b) a just and egalitarian society; (c) a united, strong and
self-reliant nation; (d) a great and dynamic economy; (e) a land full
of bright opportunities for all citizens (Ocho, 2005: 413), which
they have all accepted as worthy to be pursued and sustained with
all the resources at their disposal.
Nigeria’s population is large, about 140 million. But this number is
far less than the population of the countries like India which is
about 700 million and China which is about 2 billion and all the
ethnic or tribal groups that constitute each of the countries still live
together in peace and work together for the enhancement,
promotion and advancement of their individual and collective well
being. Both China and India like Nigeria had experiences of
colonialism, but unlike Nigeria, they have outlived the negative
aspects of it and improved and expanded the positive aspects of it
and continue to improve on them using their creative resources.
Hence as today the both countries are industrialized and the
resulting positive impacts on their citizens and the humanity as a
whole have earned them a place in the comity of developed nations
of the world. Therefore Nigerians should outlive their illusive
differences and unite as one body which they are and pursue the
actualization of the dreams of their country which is only possible
in the atmosphere of peace, unity and cooperation.
Second is good leadership. No nation can find its way and
experience positive development in all spheres of its endeavour
without the light of good leadership. A good leader comes from the
people, lives his entire life for the people and dies for the people. A
good leader is the chief servant of the nation and his dreams, ideas,
Filosofia Theoretica: Journal of African Philosophy, Culture and Religion
thoughts and activities always zero in on how to enhance, improve,
promote, protect and advance the well-being of citizens as a whole
irrespective of their ethnic groups and religious faiths. A good
leader is a role model and an inspirer and people look up to him as
a holder of light for them to find their ways to their individual and
collective destinations. A good leader in Nigerian political terrain,
smeared by citizens’ fears of insecurity, pains of inflicted injuries,
worries about the next target of suicide bombers- courtesy of Boko
Haram, weaknesses of the moral life of their leaders, sorrows about
the killing of innocent Nigerians, devastating poverty , etc, caused
by frequent political, ethnic, social and religious crises in the
country, should know that Nigerians as a whole need love, care,
trust, justice, understanding , recognition, encouragement, feeling
of belonging and atmosphere of peace, freedom and creative
thinking to play out their best in the areas of their callings in the
field of development.
Thus, given this situation, Nigeria needs a leader or leaders who
“… should be custodians of truth. They should be men and women
who build trust, inspire commitment, and generate confidence in
others by a positively influencing them through their life”:
(Dawaki 2005: 95- Shake hands-). So exemplary leaders are what
the country needs to run its affairs. Leaders who know that
…”nation building can never be wished into existence, it has to be
worked for by men and women who are not only God’s conscious ,
but those whose honesty and truthfulness is the core of their being,
the essence of their thought life and the integral part of their
lifestyle” (Dawaki, 200595-Shake Hand-). These types of leaders
must be the change they wish to see in their country, work for the
change and seen by their followers to be working for the change.
That is to say, they should use their own life to demonstrate the
change they wish to bring about in their country. What they preach
must be what they do both in their public and private life. They are
never shortsighted leaders. Unlike politicians who are so much
worried about what is going to be their fate in the next election,
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they are highly esteemed statesmen whose concern and focus is
what is going to be the character of the next generation. Nigerians
need these kinds of leaders having suffered so much under the
activities of their opposites.
Third is enlightenment of Nigerian masses. The Nigerian messes
are those Nigerians who are everywhere in the country except
where decisions that affect their lives either for good or for bad are
been taken and executed without thinking about them let alone
seeking their consent. The thought provoking sorry conditions of
these Nigerians made one of the gadflies of the country, Olusegun
Oladipo to divide Nigeria into two: the Nigeria of the rich whose
members are called citizens, who have at their disposal everything
that makes life comfortable and worth living such as money,
wealth, health, privilege, etc. The Nigeria of the poor whose
members are called supplicants who daily wish they had died a
stillbirth than to live and experience everything that dehumanizes
life such as hunger, poverty, slavery, disease, deprivation,
ignorance and so on. In his words:
It is no longer a revelation. It is a reality we
confront everyday that we have two Nigeria- one
for the rich and the other for the poor. In the Nigeria
for the rich, everything is in place; money, comfort,
health, privilege, power, access to opportunities,
patronage… name it. In the other Nigeria, however,
the story is different even though they are many
things too. In this Nigeria, you have want hunger,
deprivation, lack of access to opportunities,
ignorance and what else? Of course, you have
disease, poverty, lack of personality, in fact. All
things that go with human degradation. (1999:39)
What an ugly, sad-provoking, soul-sapping but true picture of
Nigeria is this? The only country both the citizens and supplicants
can call theirs in the world is now a proverb. A country wealth
Filosofia Theoretica: Journal of African Philosophy, Culture and Religion
cannot develop due to evil machinations of some men and women.
Nigeria has been made a heaven for the former and a hell for the
latter.
But all hope is not lost. Since “where there is will, there is way” is
a saying whose truth has been confirmed by common sense,
supported by knowledge and approved by wisdom. There is hope
for the Nigerian messes and for the entire citizens to build a
country of their dream- a great nation. But Nigerians as whole and
Nigerian masses in particular have to think, strive and work to
realize their hope by becoming positive changes they wish to see in
this God’s providence called Nigeria. They have to rise as one
body and say NO to injustice and its perpetrators in whatever
language they will understand and obey.
The tool and only tool Nigerian messes need to actualize their hope
is enlightenment, otherwise, called knowledge. This great virtue, in
fact, virtue of all virtues, according to Socrates, if they embrace it
and submit themselves to its guidance, they will realize who they
are, where they are, what they are and why they are in the world.
After helping them to know all these phases of their existence, it
will equally help them to discover to their utter surprise that all
they need to actualize the purpose of their mission in the world and
the dreams of their nation are at their disposal and among them is
creative and positive thought. This is in-built in every human being
and every good edifice in the world is a handiwork of this kind of
thought. Through it they will understand their birth in Nigeria was
not by accident but by intention of the Supreme Being who assigns
them goals and wants them to discover their individual and
collective goals and attain them and as well leave the world stage
better than they found it. That they are not appendages to Nigeria
for that their human rights must be respected and seen by all to be
respected.
Through it they will understand that democracy is the only hope
for Nigeria to develop politically, economically, socially,
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educationally, morally, culturally, etc, and become a country where
peoples’ votes count, human rights respected, constitution obeyed,
jobs opportunities created and accessible to all and moral rules
observed by all. Where one lives for all and all live for one. This is
because democracy is government of the people, by the people and
for the people, courtesy of Abraham Lincoln a great friend of
humanity and a man of all ages. Through it they will understand
that the fertile soil in which a seed of dictatorship gets planted,
germinates and grows to maturity and begins to lord it over the
helpless masses is apathy of the masses. This truth is conveyed to
mankind by Frederick Douglas as follows:
If there is no struggle there is no progress. Those
who profess to favour freedom and yet deprecate
agitation, are men who want crop without ploughing
up the ground, they want rain without thunder and
lightning. They want the ocean without the awful
roar of its many waters. This struggle may be a
moral one, or it may be a struggle. Power concedes
nothing without a demand. It never did and it never
will. Men may not get all they pay for in the world,
but they must certainly pay for all they get. The
limits of tyrants are determined by the endurances
of those whom they oppress. (Bennethe, 1984:160
161)
In other words, nothing good in the world be it human right,
freedom, development, good governance, democracy, access to
opportunities or equal treatment – name it, can be had on the
platter of gold, that is, without struggle. So, Nigerians have to
demand from themselves and from their leaders through consistent
purpose-oriented efforts what they want in their country. Through
it among other things not stated here, the Nigerian masses will
understand that what tyrants or dictators in the name of leaders fear
so much and do not risk confrontation with it is the solidarity of
the masses. Hence they are ever ready to do anything to make sure
Filosofia Theoretica: Journal of African Philosophy, Culture and Religion
that people do not unite among themselves. This is the reason why
a divide – and – rule system was introduced by our erstwhile
colonial masters and inherited by our neocolonial leaders who have
been using it to ignite the inflames of ethnic and religious crises
which have kept the people divided, many lives and properties
destroyed in the interest of the beneficiaries (the leaders and their
sycophants) and at the expense of the Nigerian masses.
Fourth is strict observance of the three universal moral maxims-
Love; the Golden Rule and Development. These moral maxims,
courtesy of enlightenment, are tools needed by mankind to
understand and appreciate the world and its teeming resources and
use them to improve their conditions of living in the world. With
strict observance of these moral maxims the world as a whole and
Nigeria in particular will be transformed into heaven we have been
longing for; and abuse of them will change Nigeria into hell which
we dread.
What is this priceless concept called love? Love is heaven on
earth; kindness in action; truth in settlement of disputes;
enlightenment in a situation of ignorance; patience in difficult
times; forgiveness in the face of insult; sympathy in the scene of
injuries; justice in distribution of resources; protest in the scene of
injustice; mercy in the scene of guilt caused by sincere ignorance;
respect for and recognition of dignity and sacredness of human
life. Love is also living in fear of God by doing his will. It is being
your brothers’ or sisters’ keeper. It is celebrating with them over
their successes or weeping with them over their failures. It is
foresight which sees a man in a boy, a woman in a girl, a king in a
servant, a possibility of peace in a crisis-redden state, knowledge in
ignorance, beauty in ugliness, development in backwardness; a
professor in a student, etc. It is because of all these things made
possible by love that it is highly esteemed as a builder of good
human relations in the world and hope for the establishment of the
Universal Brotherhood.
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No wonder Habu Dawaki and Norman Vincent Peale describe love
as follows: For Dawaki:
Where there is love, insecurity vanishes, envy is
crippled, jealousy suffocates, hatred is drowned,
malice and the wanton destruction of life and
property become extinct. For love thinks always in
terms of other persons’ good. It seeks to unite and
knit souls together. Love speaks out on behalf of the
voiceless. It sees potential and worth in every
human being. It sees beyond the weaknesses,
shortcomings, limitations and failures of others. It is
neither prejudiced or color blind. It does not see
people as statistics or numbers but as persons. (2005:
125-126- Shake Hands)
For Peale,
Love is well termed the greatest of all virtues,
because of its remarkably curative properties. Love
is always a symptom of self-forgetfulness and when
you love people enough to forget your own miseries
and take their troubles to heart, then you lose your
misery and your depression is dissipated. This is
why the Bible is constantly urging us to love one
another. (1980: 215)
So love is the key that can open the door of gold mines of human
and material resources in Nigeria and a ticket every Nigerian must
have in order to make a success story of his or her life journey in
Nigeria irrespective of ethnic group and religion he or she belongs.
Another one is the Golden rule. The golden rule as a moral maxim
says that everybody must treat others as he or she would like them
treat him or her. It says what belongs to all must be shared by all.
Nigeria as a country belongs to all Nigerians no matter the tribe of
Filosofia Theoretica: Journal of African Philosophy, Culture and Religion
a person’s birth or a person’s peculiar culture and his religious
faith. For that it is wrong to treat some Nigerians as citizens and
others as supplicants as we all have the same legitimate right of
citizenship of Nigeria. We all are carrying the same burdens on our
heads- the burdens of actualizing the dreams of our country. These
dreams have remained as dreams since 1960 when the founding
fathers of our country won the independence of our country
Nigeria.
They are not happy where they are when they see the seeds of a
great country they sowed in the early sixties are still in the nursery
stage. They are equally enveloped in tears when they see that the
fault is put to the doors of those who received the baton of
leadership from them. To wipe out their tears Nigerians both the
leaders and the led must tread on the right path which leads to the
promised land of greatness which is observance of the stated
universal moral maxims. It has been tested by common sense,
verified by knowledge, confirmed by wisdom and approved by the
teacher of all teachers experience as attitudes Nigerians need to
cultivate in order to secure a place in the sun and a place for their
country in the comity of developed nations live well and die happy
in the world.
Another one is development. Development is an innate desire in
man that makes him improve his conditions of living in the world.
For this reason man is always striving to leave his present better
than it was in the past and as well his future better than his present.
In his own contribution to explain what development is all about
S.A Ekanem holds the view that “… development involves a
systematic and conscious process of change, progress which is
innovation and advancement. It indicates an improvement, on what
was to what is…”(Uduigwomen, 2006:28). While Chinua Achebe
and Ade Ajayi in their merit award lectures, as paraphrased by
Olusegun Oladipo, argue that: “Development is not a linear
activity in which the old is replaced by the new in a mechanical
manner. Nor is it simply an economic activity in which only the
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experts can participate. Rather, it is a comprehensive activity
whose goal is human well-being” (1999:121-12). So, development,
given the views of the cited scholars, is not a product of chance,
not a thing to be had on a platter of gold, not a manna expected to
fall from heaven or an outcome of a miracle. But rather it is an
outcome of conscious efforts directed towards attaining a certain
goal usually the people’s well-being.
Nigerians are in a dire need of development in all sectors of their
endeavour- education, economy, religion, health, social relations,
morality, etc. Fortunately, they are well blessed with resources-
human and material-needed to bring about their development.
Where the problem lies is management of the available resources
in the interest of all Nigerians. Solution to the problem is just this:
Nigerians to be the change they desire to see in Nigeria- to be the
agents of development in all facets of their living. God provided
food for birds but He did not put it in their nest. Authors provided
knowledge in their books but they did not put it in the heads of
their readers. So Nigerians have to creatively and positively use the
resources God has provided for them to achieve their goals.
Fifth is right use of religion. Religion is a universal phenomenon- a
fact of human life. Its influences on mankind ever since they
discovered where and why they are in the world are tremendous.
Through it we understand that we are beings of another being
called the Supreme Being. Through it we understand that our first
and last task in the world lies in doing His will and his will is
expressed in the three universal moral maxims: (1) Love you
neighbour as you love your self.;(2) Treat others as you will like
them treat you; and (3) Be the change you wish to see in the world.
As it is seen, it is doing God’s will that mankind as a whole and
Nigerians in particular can fulfill themselves in the world. Religion
should be an acknowledgement of God’s good deeds to humanity
which should begin with gratitude and end with gratitude. It should
be a bridge between human beings and their Creator, and between
individuals and their fellows.
Filosofia Theoretica: Journal of African Philosophy, Culture and Religion
So the role of religion, whether Christianity, Islam, Africa
traditional religion, Hinduism, Buddhism, Judaism or the like is to
help its adherents to do and continue to do God’s will. But as
experience has shown, religion has lost its essence in the hands of
the adherents of the preceding forms of religion in that regard.
Hence religious realms have witnessed a lot of crises and wars
among the adherents. It is for this reason religion is now being
described as a mixed blessing. It is for the same reason that Karl
Marx describes it as the opium (the sleeping tablet) of the people.
Religion, having fallen from grace to grace, whatever good it has
done to humanity it has equally rendered to them its opposite. It is
now a canopy of virtues and vices. The adherents love as well hate;
build as well destroy, initiate peace move and as well ignite
machine of wars, worship God and as well listen to Satan ( Satan
correctly described as man’s selfishness ), etc.
Objective observers of religious activities in the world irrespective
of robes they are wearing-theism, atheism, animism, deism,
pantheism, etc- all agree that this is a true picture of religious
activities in the contemporary world. Lives and properties lost in
Nigeria, for example, as a result of religious crises are better
imagined than described. Yet all these lives and properties were
destroyed by people who claim to be worshiping God or Allah.
And no earthly father let alone a spiritual father the Supreme Being
would like his children and their hard and justly earned properties
be so destroyed. It is written in the Bible: “Love your enemies,
bless them that curse you, do good to them that hate you. And pray
for them which despitefully use you and persecute you” (Matthew,
5: 44).Yet they ignore it and do these havocs with conviction that
God is with them.
So, for Nigerians to experience national development through the
perspective of religion, they have to embrace the virtues of religion – love, truth, justice, peace, fellow feeling, kindness, patience,
hope, etc. and shun fanaticism, malignancy, bigotry, hatred,
segregation, lying, violence, war, etc. These vices are anti-religion
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and anybody who indulges in them is far from the canopy of God
let alone doing His will.
10.
Conclusion
In the preceding discourse, attempts have been made to identify
factors responsible for ethnic and religious crises in Nigeria and
their adverse effects on Nigerians’ efforts at national development.
Some of these factors include selfishness, neocolonialism and
ethnic politics with their do-or-die activities, religious bigotry,
slavery, discrimination and segregation. These stumbling blocks to
nation building found in every part of the country have been
perpetuated by ethnic fans and religious fanatics with common
malignant intention to commit any crime in deference to their
ethnic loyalty and in the name of “God” or “Allah” or the likes.
The adverse effects of these crises in all the spheres of the country
are such that even a person with a stone heart cannot avoid
weeping for Nigeria. The unity of the country has been reduced to
nothing as people are more interested in ethnic unity than national
unity. Life which is the value of all values, treated as an end in a
civilized society, is treated as an object by ethnic and religious
warriors provided it is a life of an opponent. Trust and fellow
feeling are dead in Nigeria as ethnic fans and religious fanatics see
people from other ethnic groups and religious faith as enemies and
for that not ready to have any dealings with them let alone having
trust in them or sharing fellow – feelings with them. Also bad
leadership has equally inflicted a lot of havocs on the nation to the
extent that it is now a common knowledge that, according to
Chinua Achebe, “The trouble with Nigeria is simply and squarely a
failure of leadership …. The Nigerian problem is the unwillingness
or inability of its leaders to rise to the responsibility, to the
challenge of personal example which are the hallmarks of true
leadership” (1983: 1).
Filosofia Theoretica: Journal of African Philosophy, Culture and Religion
Since every problem has a solution so it is with Nigeria’s
problems. Once there is will, there is way. Ethnic fans and
religious fanatics should hear what Martin Luther King (Jr) says
about the contemporary world. In his words: “The world is
changing, and anyone who thinks he can live alone is sleeping
through a revolution …we must learn to live together as brothers
or we will perish together as fools” (Dawaki, 2005:123). Nigerian
leaders have to lead by example, observe the stated universal moral
maxims, insist on the rule of law, believe in one Nigeria one
nation, in the adage: united we stand and divided we fall, carry
every Nigerian along by giving him or her a sense of belonging
and leaves no one in doubt that one’s life, humanity and citizenship
are recognized and respected.
The Nigerian masses knowing quite well that power corrupts and
absolute power corrupts absolutely, according to Lord Acton,
should be interested in public affairs and always alert to use their
power of solidarity which corrupt leaders fear so much to check
any abuse of power by them. Democracy depends on the masses to
thrive; for that they have to be alert and wary on their duty post so
as to stop in time any attempt by erring leaders to abuse peoples’
rule which is what democracy is both in theory and practice. So
Nigerians use your lives to demonstrate changes you wish to see in
Nigeria. The only people that can stop you from achieving the
goals of your well-being are the people enveloped in your apathy,
thinking your negative thoughts, doubting the power of your
solidarity, seeing yourselves as puppets in the hands of the leaders,
leaving to God what is within your power to accomplish and
leaving till tomorrow what can be attained today. Nigerians should
be grateful to God that all the resources they need-human and
material- to enhance, promote, advance and preserve their well
being in Nigeria are at their disposal, although at potential state,
but theirs for the creative asking.
In case they fail to play the agents of positive changes they wish to
see in their own part of the world, they should not blame God or
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Satan or leadership of the country. But rather should blame
themselves who have preferred to sleep through a revolution; to
remain dumb in the scene of injustice; to sing praises of corrupt
leaders for the sake of picking crumbs falling from their table; to
complain about the wrongs going on in the country in the safety of
their different houses; to fan the flames of both ethnic and religious
crises in the country initiated and sustained by the leaders by
influencing them through the use of money to support the divide
and- rule system meant to destroy peoples’ solidarity. Nigerians it
is left for us to make our country a paradise or a hell. The ball is
now in our court- the court is our awareness of the goings-on in the
country and our application of non-violent resistance to stop those
events and practices that are against our nation’ s dreams. History
is watching us on the stage.
Filosofia Theoretica: Journal of African Philosophy, Culture and Religion
References
Achebe, Chinua (1983), The Trouble with Nigeria, Enugu: Fourth
Dimension Publishing Co. Ltd.
Asante, S.K.B. “Adebayo Adedeji’s Ideas and Approaches to
African Development” in Nimode, Bade and Richard
Synge (1995). Editors, Issues in African Development,
Ibadan: INTEC Printers Ltd.
Bennetter, Lerone (1984), Before the Mayflower: A History of
Black Americans, New York: Penguin Books.
Dawaki, Habu (2005), Shake Hands with DESTINEY, Nigeria: A
Publication of Destiny Foundation
Ekanem, S. A. and Asia A. E. “Religion and Medicine in the 21st
Century Nigeria” In (Uduigwomen, Andrew F. (2006) ed.,
SOPHIA- An African Journal of Philosophy, Vol. 9, No. 1,
September.
Ekanem, S. Asuguo “African Philosophy and Development: A
Contemporary Prospective” in Udwgwomen, A.F (2006),
SOPHIA- An African Journal of Philosophy, Vol. 9, No.1,
September
Ezekwugo, Charles M. (1992), Philosophical Concepts, Enugu:
Agatha Series Publishers Ltd.
Igbafen, Monday L. (2003), Basic Issues and Theories in
Philosophy of Development, Ekpoma: A. Inno Printing
Press.
Ocho, Lawrence Offie (2005), Issues and Concerns in Education &
Life, Enugu: Institute for Development Studies.
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Odey John Okwoeze (2004) C.A.N. My Foot, Enugu: Snaap Press
Limited
____ (2004), The Limits of Political Perversity, Enugu: Snaap
Press Limited
____ (2003), Demofascism and the Flames of Religion, Enugu:
Snaap Press Ltd.
Okoro, Kingsley N. “Religion: Vital Instrument for Global Peace:
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and Religious Discourse (Second Edition Nigeria:
Optimum Publishers).
Oladipo, Olusegun (1999), Beyond Survival – Essays on the
Nigerian Condition, Ibadan: Hope Publications.
Omoregbe, Joseph I. (2003), Knowing Philosophy, Lagos: Joja
Educational Research and Publishers Ltd.
Omorodio, Godspower N., “Language, A Means of Nations
Development in Nigeria: A Case for English Language” In
Udosen E. E. (2006) ed., Journal of Arts and Humanities,
Vol. 3, No. 4.
Osutoun, J. “The Historical Background of Nigeria Federalism” in
Akinyemi et al (1980), Readings on Federalism, Lagos:
Nigeria Institute of International Affairs.
Peale, Norman Vincent (1980), Stay Alive All your Life, New
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Soyinka, Wole (1991), The Credo of Being and Nothingness,
Ibadan: Spectrum Books Limited
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Unah, Jim (1993) , Fundamental Issues in Government and
Philosophy of Law, Lagos: Joja Educational Research and
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Development, Ibadan: Hope Publications.
401
Filosofia Theoretica: Journal of African Philosophy, Culture and Religion
IGBO COMMUNALISM: AN APPRAISAL OF ASOUZU’S
IBUANYIDANDA PHILOSOPHY
Innocent Chukwudolue Egwutuorah
Doctoral Candidate
Department of Philosophy, Imo State University,
Owerri, Nigeria.
1.
Introduction
The individual is not self sufficient but has many needs which he
cannot supply to himself. Hence, human beings agreed to submit
voluntarily to a system and were bound to live in unison and
solidarity. Through deep experiences as creatures, human beings
realized their insufficiency and dependency. They discovered that
they need each other to live a contented life. These experiences of
life gave recourse to the idea of complementarity as a measure to
survive the challenges posed by other vicissitudes of life. Inter
dependency, inter-relationship, collectivism and mutual co
existence form the basis for Igbo life pattern as expressed in
Ibuanyidanda; an aspect of Igbo- communalism.
Igbo communalism is expressed in living together and sharing
responsibilities. The traditional Igbo society has a great asset in its
practice of a mode of life called communalism. This used to be the
bedrock and the result of the wonderful relationship prevalent in
the Igbo- African community as well as the purpose of the
existence of the Igbo community in particular and of the Africans
in general. In the light of the above and in recognition of the
ontological and trajectory relationship of living together and
sharing responsibilities, Asouzu developed the Ibuanyidanda
philosophy as an authentic traditional Igbo life pattern which has
survived till today. “The concept Ibuanyidanda is drawn from the
Igbo language and has as its nearest English equivalent the idea
complementarity in the sense of njikọka (togetherness is greatest)
Igwe bụ ike (strength in togetherness).”1 J. O. Chimakonam in his
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etymological grand-standing has argued that the Igbo concept
nmekọka better interprets complementarity than njikọka. Njikọka
he went on, better interprets a closely related theory integrativity or
integrative humanism associated with G. O. Ozumba2.
The central issue here is the ontological explanation for the
acceptance and practice of communalism as Ibuanyidanda by Igbo
communities. The purpose of this paper is, therefore, to highlight
aspects of Igbo communitarian outlook. In other words, an attempt
will be made to evaluate the purport of communalism within the
context of Ibuanyidanda, its sense and meanings as well as its
influence on different aspects of Igbo life. The idea of
Ibuanyidanda as an aspect of Igbo communalism developed as a
result of the fact that man is a social being who necessarily lives in
the company of other human beings. “The Igbo sees this social
collaboration as a natural legacy which ought to be lived,
recognized at all times and therefore developed and preserved as a
treasure”3 developing and preserving communalism as a treasure
within the context of Ibuanyidanda which implies that authentic
Igbo communalism is not racial or tribal rather, it is realized within
the umunna (kindred) and (Ogbe) village levels. Communalism
implies group spirit. The concept “Ibuanyidanda” was expounded
by I. I. Asouzu to clear a ground and draw a demarcation in the
misconception of communalism. Thus he says;
In most contemporary African countries, what is
understood as communalism, when carefully
considered are diverse brands of tribal social
arrangements designed to protect private and group
interest against all forms of outside intrusion.4
The proper understanding of original practice of communalism in
the pre-colonial African world is what we intent to buttress using
the theory of ibuanyidanda.
Filosofia Theoretica: Journal of African Philosophy, Culture and Religion
2.
Explication of Concepts
The terms to be explicated include; Igbo, communalism and
Ibuanyidanda. Some Igbo scholars bend to two traditions for the
explanation of the origin of the Igbo. The places associated with
these origins are viewed as Igbo culture centres. These places are
connected with the cultural traditions of non migration and
migration. Nwala observes that;
The Igbo form one of the largest ethnic groups in
Nigeria. Like their neighbours, they belong to the
Negro race in Africa, and speak a language that
belongs to the Kwa group of languages found in
west and central Africa. Their language is Igbo with
many local dialects5
The Igbo developed independently like other indigenous African
peoples. The Igbo language is not spoken by any other peoples in
the world. The Igbo is situated in South-Eastern Nigeria. The
concentration of Igbo homeland is the whole table land east of the
River Niger and West of the cross River. The whole area of Igbo
homeland is bounded in the South by the delta and shares
boundary in that area with the Ijaw and the Ogoni. The Igbo has
boundary with the Idoma, Igala and Ogoja people in the North.
The Western neighbours are the Bini and Warri people.
The River Niger divides Igbo land into two unequal parts, the
western part and the eastern part. The people dwelling in these two
areas are conveniently and respectively referred to as the western
Igbo and the eastern Igbo. The western Igbo live in Delta State and
constitute only about one –tenth of Igbo population. The eastern
Igbo live in Abia, Anambra, Ebonyi, Enugu and Imo States and
they constitute eight-tenths of the population. The rest of the Igbo
are in diasporas found in Ahoada and Ikwere in Rivers State and at
Igbanke in Edo State. The most distinguishing characteristic of the
Igbo is its social fragmentation and decentralization of authority.
Green observes this fact thus;
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This great people are broken up into hundreds of
small, more or less independent social units, the
largest being, in many cases what we may call the
village group. This is a collection of villages bound
together by certain ties, but each one at any rate in
the district with which we are concerned largely
managing its own affairs6
The view of Green above, explains the popular Igbo saying- Igbo
Enweghi-Eze. The Igbo have no king. This is a very important fact
about the Igbo which does not have to be disregarded in the study
of social and political organization of the Igbo. Decentralization of
authority and social fragmentation not withstanding, the Igbo
achieves a high degree of peace and order, unity and solidarity in
their traditional society. The reason must be sought in their
philosophy and thought pattern, namely; communalism and
complementarity (Ibuanyidanda).
Communalism: as a Concept
Communalism is a mode of social relationship which is marked by
the intimate feeling of belongingness which all members share
with each other and which they reciprocate. Communalism
expresses egalitarianism and being brothers’ keeper. The writings
of some African scholars such as Nkrumah’s Consciencism and
Nyerere’s Ujamaa socialism as well as Azikiwe’s Neo-welfarism
Point to communalism. It is a political and an economic
arrangement that emphasizes collectivity. Communalism allows
the community to co-operate and come together to harness their
resources together for the good of every body. In a communal
society, oneness and the love for one another exist among the
community. Communalism is simply, the return to traditional
political and economic practices and the rejection of the unsuitable
aspects of alien culture. In this system, every body was part of
government and no need for political parties which create divisions
in the lives of the people. In traditional Igbo societies says Asouzu;
Filosofia Theoretica: Journal of African Philosophy, Culture and Religion
The community constitutes the point of orientation
for almost all human activities and determines
human life even if these societies were committed
to the insight of mutual complementary relationship
between units within any given framework, we see
them tending towards extreme measures in view of
undermining this commitment7
From the above, it is seen that what actually energizes
communalism are the concepts of extended family (Ime-nne)
kindred (Umunna) village (Ogbe) and clan, because at these levels,
people live together and share responsibilities. Communalism is
not tribal, it is not racial, rather there is the spirit of collectivism,
egalitarianism and being brothers’ keeper. It is not primarily for
the individual, but rather for the community of which the
individual is an infinitesimal part. Writing on communalism, Mbiti
sees the existence of the individual as subsumed in the
collectiveness of the community, thus, he said; “I am, because we
are, and since we are, therefore, I am”8 this expresses clearly the
Igbo belief that a tree cannot make a forest - Otu Osisi anaghị
emebe ọhịa! Commenting on communalism, Steve Biko writes;
We regard our living together not as an unfortunate
mishap warranting endless competition among us
but as a deliberate act of God to make us a
community of brothers and sisters jointly involved
in the varied problems of life… Hence, all our
action is usually joint community oriented action
rather than the individualism9
Communalism is opposed to individualism, for example, for
individualism, the individual is paramount and the community is a
consequent. According to Nze, “the relationship existing between
the society and the individual in a communalistic society is
analogous to that existing between a mother and her embryo, each
is connected with the other through the Umbilical cord”10 what this
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means is that the individual cannot separate himself from the
community. Thus, as he tries and strives to satisfy his personal
needs and develop his abilities, he sees all his efforts and
aspirations as aimed at maintaining and sustaining his relationship
with other members of the community of which he is a part.
Communalism is fraternal in the sense that it symbolizes a form of
life of a people whose different members are held together by
some parental link. Nobody can detach himself from his
community because the community is the vehicle through which
all activities are accomplished. Hence, solitary individual is an
absurdity in Igbo communalism.
Ibuanyidanda as a Concept
The concept Ibuanyidanda is a theory formulated to overcome the
shortcomings inherent in communalism. Prior to Asouzu’s
conceptualization of Ibuanyidanda as the philosophy of
collectivism, the concept had existed as part and parcel of Igbo
vocabulary without any logico- philosophic interpretation.
Ibuanyidanda is analogous and literally means that no load is
insurmountable for danda. (a specie of ant) according to Asouzu;
The concept Ibuanyidanda draws its inspiration
from the teachings of traditional Igbo philosophers
of the complementary system of thought. For these
Igbo philosophers, the idea of complementarity is
inferred from observing a species of ants called
danda. These ants (danda) have the capacity to
carry loads that appear bigger and heavier than
themselves. What this implies is that they can
surmount very difficult tasks when they are
mutually dependent on each other in the
complementation of their efforts11
This simply shows the mutual dependence and inter-dependence in
carrying out projects among the Igbo. Ibuanyidanda as an Igbo
concept is an aspect of Igbo communalism, and can properly be
Filosofia Theoretica: Journal of African Philosophy, Culture and Religion
understood by pointing out some credible sources that tell
something about its nature. Many African scholars of the modern
and contemporary thought have said something concerning this
concept either directly or indirectly. For many, Ibuanyidanda is the
principle of (Aka nri kwoo aka ekpe, aka ekpe akwoo aka nri)
reciprocity and collectivism. Iwe, for instance, used the term
“collective egoism to express the inseparable relationship that
exists between the individual and the community”12 writing on the
nature of Igbo social life, Nwala, implicitly expressed this concept
when he maintains that
Igbo world view implies two basic beliefs (1) the
unity of all things and (2) an ordered relationship
among all beings in the universe. Consequently,
there is a belief in the existence of order and
interaction among all beings… Man’s nature is such
that he acts first and foremost in accordance with
those things which agree with or are in harmony
with his feelings and desires, his comfort and well
being… and are only meaningful in a situation of
social relationship13
The view of Nwala expresses mutual reciprocal relationship which
is the hallmark of Ibuanyidanda as a concept in particular and of
Igbo communalism in general. Ibuanyidanda as an Igbo work song
expressing unity and strength is echoed in this phrase;
Our husbandsmen were singing and as they sang,
they reaped, they were singing in chorus and
reaping in unison. Their voices and their gestures
were all harmonious; and in harmony, they were
one, united by the same task, united by the same
song. They were bound to one another. United by
the same soul; each and everyone was tasting the
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January – June, 2013
delight. Savouring the common pleasure of
accomplishing a common task14
Ibuanyidanda is a living principle of which the basic ideology is
community identity. It produces and presents the individual as
community centred. In his book, African thought and culture,
Onwubiko unconsciously expressed Ibuanyidanda as;
The intra-community relationship based on
interpersonal relationship realized in a definite
community, among its members, to express the
practical traditional … concept of human living15
In the above sense, individuals recognize their worth as human
beings and what they can do for each other. Helping one another
collectively without demanding for immediate remuneration since
everyone is mindful of the fact that each person has something to
contribute to the welfare of the community at one time or another.
3.
Communalism: A Reflection on Traditional Igbo Social
Life – Ibuanyidanda
The permanent feature or behaviour pattern of Igbo social life is
based on a logical system of thought and a complete positive
philosophy – (Ibuanyidanda). The fact that the world is incomplete
(Uwa ezu-oke) and nobody is perfect (Onweghi onye ozuru)
necessitates collectivism in action. Asouzu describes Igbo social
life as complementarity which is a concretely lived experience of
every day life. According to him;
This idea derives from the general and fundamental
human feeling of insufficiency and experience of
relativity and fragmentation of historical process.
From here arise the human fundamental inclination
to solidarity, togetherness and community. In the
same way arises all tendencies guiding such ideas as
Filosofia Theoretica: Journal of African Philosophy, Culture and Religion
mutual
co-existence,
responsibility … etc16
co-dependability,
co
The essential nature of traditional Igbo social life is conveniently
expressed in the above quote. It emerged as a result of the
realization that the community is better able to wrest on
themselves, the means of developing, sustaining and re-producing
themselves. Ibuanyidanda in this context is fundamentally a social
relation of production. It is the act of doing things together; the
spirit of corporate existence, mutual assistance in work by all and
the spirit of collective effort found among traditional Igbo people.
The life of the Igbo is group participation in which each individual
participates according to his natural ability. This explains the
complementarity. There are some Igbo metaphors that express this
complementarity. Such as: gradual picking fills the basket (ntụtụ
ntụtụ ntụtụ juo ụkpa) Bigger fish to supply bigger firewood and
smaller fish to supply smaller firewood (Nnukwu azụ kpata
nnukwu nkụ, obere azụ kpata obere nkụ). For the traditional Igbo,
says Asouzu:
Without complementarity, human life would be
unbearable isolated struggles that easily lead to self
abandonment. We can now understand why the
traditional Igbo never cease to sound the clarion call
to complementarity and solidarity in times of
crisis17
There are factors which tie or bound the people in
complementarity, such as blood relation. In fact, a community in
Igbo land means “people of one blood” kinsmen, or brethren
Umunna. Other factors that favour complementarity include
territorial location (habitation) and physical proximity of members
of the community which bring them into personal face-to-face
relation. These factors that favour complementarity illustrate
vividly the Igbo belief that (Agbata-obi onye bụ nwanne ya) one’s
neighbor is his relation.
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January – June, 2013
4.
Limitations to Ibuanyidanda Vis-à-vis Modernity
The present individualistic life style of the Igbo is a deviant life. It
is a perverted life brought about by the relegation to the
background of the Igbo belief system. Today, the Igbo are no
longer united by the same work. Neither is harmony still a part of
their work atmosphere. In trying to bring back this traditional Igbo
spirit, Asouzu has proposed the Ibuanyidanda philosophy; which in
the literal sense means: no load is insurmountable for danda which
implies complementarity or community spirit.
The advancement in education, science and technology has made
many of our people to ostracize themselves from their
communities and there by kill the community spirit. The entire
Igbo world has relapsed into chaos and disorder arising from
individualism. The sense of unity, oneness, dependency,
interdependency, and mutual co-existence has been eroded.
Commenting on the depreciation of the authentic Igbo values as
contained in the Ibuanyidanda concept, Ekwuru writes:
As the situation stands now, one does not need the
expert analysis of a social scientist nor the rigorous
sample survey of an ethnoscientist or cultural
anthropologist to size up the situation of Igbo
societal malaise. For one who wants to be
downright traditional in his analysis of the situation,
the present period is seething with such kinds of
events that evoke the proverbial sense of
abnormality. Most of the present occurrences defy
any reasonable explanation as they go contrary to
every traditional canon of sense and sensibility18
The complementary community spirit that characterized the
traditional Igbo society is today questionable due to the break
through in world civilization as contributed by science and
technology. The intimate face-to-face personal and humane
relationship, interdependency, dependency, co-existence and co
responsibility that marked the community spirit is today opposed
Filosofia Theoretica: Journal of African Philosophy, Culture and Religion
by the technocratic society in which members of the modern Igbo
community work out of tempo with nature and tries to meet up
with the tempo of the science (machine). Consequently,
depersonalizing, and individualizing the people and introducing
Ibu-nyiri-danda. (Load unable to be surmounted by danda). The oil
bean tree (Ukpaka) and the Egu (a species of centipede) is
analogous to the Modern Igbo community. The oil bean seed
before maturity is bonded and united but after maturity they scatter
and disperse across the bush. The Egu on the other hand holds
strongly on a tree branch while young and becomes weak at
maturity.
Prior to colonialism, Ibuanyidanda as an authentic existential
philosophy was practicable among the Igbo. In the post colonial
era, the attendant proliferation of churches, materialism,
modernization and other sources have put great questions to
Ibuanyidanda as a complementary philosophy of existence.
5.
Conclusion
Notwithstanding the effects of civilization on the modern society,
one notices that Asouzu’s attempt to identify Ibuanyidanda with
Igbo communalism is a fruitful effort, apt and interesting. He
contends that Ibuanyidanda is inevitable and will be very useful in
understanding Igbo communalism. Ibuanyidanda as a concept
accepts traditional socialism and recalls the humanitarianism and
egalitarianism of the traditional Igbo society. It accepts
libertarianism ingrained in some of the ideologies of the western
societies.
Furthermore, its success as a uniting ideology of not only the Igbo,
but also of all Africans, suggest the possibility of its success as a
salvaging social philosophy. Ibuanyidanda as a philosophical
concept must be embraced and lived by all Igbo communities
because, in it lies the future of Igbo development and through it,
authentic existence is realized.
413
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References
1Asouzu, I I, Ibuanyidanda: New complementary Ontology,
Beyond world- Immanentism, Ethnocentric Reduction
and Imposition. Transaction Publishers, Brusswick
(U.S.A) 2007, P.11
2 Chimakonam, J. O. “Integrative Humanism: Extensions and
Clarifications”. Integrative
Humanism Journal. Vol. 3. No. 1. 2013
3Nze C,B; Aspects of African Communalism; veritas publishers,
Onitsha, 1989, P.2
4Asouzu, I I, Ibuanyidanda P.364
5Nwala, T.U, Igbo Philosophy; Literamed Publications (Nig)
Limited, Ikeja-Lagos, 1985, P.15
6Green, M.M, Igbo Village Affairs; Frank Cass & Co-limited;
London; 1964, P,3
7Asouzu, I I, Ibuanyidanda P.350
8Mbiti, J.S, African Religions and Philosophy; Heinamann
Publishers; London; 1980, P 108
9Steve Biko; I write what I like Prince Hall Inc, New York; 1978,
P.42
10Nze C B, Aspects of African communalism, P.4
11Asouzu 1, 1; Ibuanyidanda P.11
12Iwe, N S S, Christianity, Culture and Colonialism in Africa;
Department of Religious studies, college of Education;
port-Harcourt 1985 P.69
13Nwala, T.U, Igbo Philosophy P.54,55
14Laye Camera; The African Child; Collins Publishers; London,
1981,P.51
15Onwubiko, A, O. African Thought and Culture; Totan Publishers
Limited Owerri, 1988, P.26
16Asouzu, I I, The Method and Principles of Complementary
Reflection in and beyond African Philosophy; University of
Calabar Press Calabar, 2004, P.105
Filosofia Theoretica: Journal of African Philosophy, Culture and Religion
17Asouzu: I I, Method and Principles P.108
18Ekwuru, G.E, Pangs of an African culture in Travail: Uwa ndi
Igbo yaghara Ayagha; Totan Publishers limited; Owerri,
1999,P.6
415
Filosofia Theoretica: Journal of African Philosophy, Culture and Religion
BOOK REVIEW
Title: INTRODUCING AFRICAN SCIENCE: SYSTEMATIC
AND PHILOSOPHICAL APPROACHi
Author: Jonathan O. Chimakonam Ph.D
Discipline: Philosophy/ African Studies/ Science
Category: Philosophy of Science
Publisher: Author House Bloomington Indiana, 2012
ISBN: 978 – 1 – 4772 – 4944 – 4 (sc)
ISBN: 978 – 1 – 4772 – 4943 – 7 (hc)
ISBN: 978 – 1 – 4772 – 4942 – 0 (e)
Library of Congress Control Number: 2012913091
Price: $ 20
Pages: i – xxvi, 1 – 141
Reviewer: Prof. C.B. Nze
Department of Philosophy
Madonna University, Okija,
Nigeria.
This book Introducing African Science: Systematic and
Philosophical Approach Authored by Dr. Jonathan O.
Chimakonam and published by AuthorHouse, Bloomington
Indiana USA in 2012 is, without doubt, unique, valuable and
captivating. To introduce African Science is an audacious venture:
it is a pre-supposition of the existence of a science that can be said
to be African. To indicate that it can be systematically and
philosophically approached is another audacious statement. Asi
Okuko na nke obu n’onu ebuka owerekwa ukwu n’abota ozo. But
Dr. Chimakonam is not an idiot: he knows the difference between
Confucius and confusion. Go through the book and observe a
display of originality, dexterity, skill, learning and knowledge
therein contained.
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Vol. 2 No. 1
January – June, 2013
In this one hundred and sixty seven (167) page book, a truly
Multus in parvo, Dr. Chimakonam sets out tactfully and
thoughtfully to establish that “Africa has a peculiar thought
system” which undergirds a peculiar logic and science. The author
maps out the African logic as three-valued different from the three
valued logical creation in the West. This, I think forms the
foundation of the entire work. For without this logical difference, it
would have been vain to talk about African science. People are apt
to ask: why African science? What would be the focus and utility
of African science? Understanding the need and direction of the
logic of this work provides immediate answers to these questions.
To me the chief value of this work and of course, its greatest
intellectual value lies in the formulation of this unique logic.
Thinking of this magnitude has been lacking among African
intellectuals. Logic lies at the foundation of everything, once it is
established, every other form of theorizing takes shape. Aristotle
was the man to do it in the Western tradition, creating the
foundation upon which theorists of different inclination can build
their thought. Logic therefore is the foundation of thought. We
cannot correctly do African philosophy, mathematics, science, etc.,
without first laying a logical foundation for such. The practice
which has grown uncontrolled since the colonial times in which
African intellectuals seek to construct native African theories upon
the logical foundation of the West are simply misguided. Western
intellectuals read such works and toss it aside because they see
nothing different in it from what they have since accomplished.
What this author has done therefore, is like unveiling an Africa the
world never knew existed. By first mapping out African thought
system and systematizing its unique logic, he sets the stage for
others to follow and build other theories of African nativity. In this
work, he systematizes and strengthens Africa’s age long scientific
practices; a magnificent rebirth of old knowledge and a torrential
gift of fresh discovery. Only history and posterity would probably
come to understand what invaluable impact this noble project
Filosofia Theoretica: Journal of African Philosophy, Culture and Religion
would make to the life and story of the black man wherever he is in
the world. Indeed, this is a book right on time but ahead of its time!
In writing this ground breaking book, Dr. Chimakonam in his own
words, “gave a historical and metaphysical background to the
theory of African science and offered a justification for the
project”, this consists in the question: why African science? His
justifications can be summarized in three points: (i) the need for
Africa to re-enter history and contribute to world civilization (ii)
the need for an alternative science to augment Western science and
cushion some of its defects such as ecological concerns and threats
of all kinds (iii) the need for a science that can offer safe and
adequate energy to the world. Everyone who is in tune with the
developments in Western science and our world today would agree
with Chimakonam that an alternative science is long overdue.
In the page thirteen, he began describing and mapping out the logic
of “our science”. It consists of two opposite values of truth and
falsehood and a go-between value (third) called ezumezu or the
complemented. Further, he stresses that the two conventional
values are contraries in African logic rather than contradictories of
Western orientation. This enables the two to hold at the same time.
In his words:
T represents truth, F represents falsehood, the C
represents complemented, and so instead of seeing
C as neither true nor false, African logicians see it
as both true and false. This is because African logic
does not recognize the law of non-contradiction but
that
of complementarity. By this law of
complementarity two different realities are seen as
contraries and can cohabit. What happens however
is that at their point of complementation, both
realities
lose
their
identities
within
the
complementary mode. And they are treated as a full
being, complete and not fragmented. So one cannot
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January – June, 2013
say of the “complemented” it is true or it is false or
even it is neither true nor false but that it is both true
and false. (22)
One clearly notices the genius in this man’s formulation and of
course, its reality in our day to day reasoning as Africans. As
Africans, we do not strictly hold to views. There is always a mid
point where two seemingly opposed variables can be reconciled.
And in my view, this logic would usher in a better science. This
was what Aristotle did in the 3rd century B.C when he studies the
thought system of the Western people and came up with a logic
that models it. Now, it is called universal almost in opposition to
any other possible logic. Every logic naturally, if it holds merit at
all, should be capable of universal applicability but this does not
negate its nativity. Like Aristotle’s logic, Chimakonian logic has a
universal applicability or as it is said, the character of topic
neutrality (29).
It is based upon this logical framework that Chimakonam
constructed the theory of African science. He produces the
hermeneutical understanding of some fundamental scientific terms
like space, matter, anti-matter and energy all of which gives ribs to
African science. In one word, this attempt is the first of its kind in
the known history of African studies. The author progresses to
discuss nature, time, motion, thought and extension hoping to use
explanations extracted to crust the work. To further fortify the
sinews of African science, special methodology of African science,
its laws, theories, criteria and other principles including African
logic and the principle of deniability are treated. Halfway through
the book, there is an outpouring of intellectuality, a milling out of
Igbo African scientific terms and terminologies and a
practicalization of African science.
The criteria for African science consisted in nine principles he
discussed that must be in place before one can be said to be doing
African science. These are: (i) Usoro (process) (ii) Njiko Ala
Filosofia Theoretica: Journal of African Philosophy, Culture and Religion
mmụọ na Ala-mmadu (confluence of the natural and the sub
natural worlds) (iii) Mmeputa isiokwu (articulation of research
problem) (iv) Mmeputa achọba (formulation of hypothesis) (v)
Icho-ụzọ (experiment) (vi) Omenala (theory) (vii) Icha-ụzọ (setting
aside) (viii) Iwu (law) (ix) Inabata na iju Achọba (asserting and
denying of hypothesis). These criteria helps in his systematization
to draw a line between what qualifies as African science from the
residue of unscientific practices. But from the items on this list,
one readily sees the presence of African logic and the uniqueness
of African science. The criterion numbered (ii) above shows the
effect of the complementarity of the two contrary values in African
logic. Also implied is the necessity of the metaphysical in African
science. African scientists see metaphysics as a necessary part of
scientific discourse. “Its position is entrenched and as such it
cannot be wished away. They see the sub-particles as
metaphysical realities and know that they have crossed into
mainstream metaphysics when they conduct experiments with
these sub-particles. Hence, metaphysics is not a bad sign for the
African scientists” (97). In page (94) he observes, “However, even
after this systematization, metaphysics looks quite hard to wish
away from the main stream practice of African science”. And in
(66) he notes “African science recognizes that an adequate
scientific exercise must connect elements from the two worlds.
Nka-mmuta (scientific knowledge) is never produced in Ala
mmadu outside Ije (motion) and the source of Ije is Ala-mmụọ. In
fact there can be no science without the two being pulled together”.
The worlds referred to are the empirical and the metaphysical. He
has also employed the terms natural and sub-natural as their
synonyms (40-44).
The author also discussed the methods of African science to
include: (i) Akọ-nwalee (Trial and error) (ii) Akọ-iju-ase
(Interscience) (iii) Akọ-ime-obi (Introscience) (iv) Akọ-nyiri-onwe
(Semscience) (v) Akọ-nso-n’azụ (causal science). One could see
the delicate systematization of procedures of old African scientific
practices here which sets it apart from those of the West. In his
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January – June, 2013
words:
Unlike Western science which captures nature and
employs different means to force scientific
knowledge out of her, African science approaches
nature with equanimity, like a man approaching a
maiden he wishes to marry, curious but gentle. This
is because the scientist is not different from nature
neither are his instruments. A man stitching own
wound is likely to be gentle. This gentility in
conducting scientific enquiries crystallizes in the
observance of Iwu-nnyiri-onwe (the law of
uniformity). This law ensures that as far as
experiments could be taken that there is a thin
membrane which must not be crossed. This thin line
is called in African science udo-ntupo (UDN) or the
dotted single helix. (52-53)
These accentuate some of the justifications the author offers at the
beginning of the work that an alternative science which can
engender safe science is needed.
Further, the author discusses some of the theories in African
science. They are (i) Uwa-ezu-oke (ii) Ọdịbendi (iii) Amasị-amasị
(iv) Ifeomimi. These give wide ideas and confirmation of the
existence of scientific practices in Ancient Africa. Without any
need for greater proof, a typical African reading this section sees
those normal, regular practices in his everyday life as the author
has ably re-articulated them in scientific terms.
His discussions on some laws of African science are equally
stellar. They are as follows: (i) Egwueji (The Law of the Means)
(ii) Iwuibe (Law of magnetism) (iii) iwundiiche (Law of
discordance) (iv) Iwu- nyiri-onwe (Law of Uniformity). You could
see the application of some of these which Chimakonam has
elevated to the status of laws in the everyday activities of the
Filosofia Theoretica: Journal of African Philosophy, Culture and Religion
African. It is so stunning that what was seamlessly done by
Africans have scientific undertone.
The author’s discussion of the Schools of African Science is most
captivating. There are two rival schools in African Science namely,
the transcendentalists and the mechanists. The transcendentalists
hold that the goal of science is to provide a true description of a
certain part of the world namely, the material and the anti-material
worlds. They hold that the non-material world, the source of
motion and scientific inspiration cannot be adequately described by
science since to do so, scientific knowledge must not only precede
but also be independent of the non-material world. Since this is
not the case, the transcendentalists prefer to treat claims about the
non-material world as Ifeomimi (mystery). On their side, the
mechanists hold that the goal of science is to provide a true
description of the world as a whole (92). And this includes the
natural and the sub-natural.
In the section on explanation in African science, the author pulled
resources from the theories of I. I. Asouzu, G. O. Ozumba and C.
O. Ijiomah to offer a veritable explanation to Africa’s scientific
practices. Some of such models of explanation he developed
include: (i) Ozumba’s Integrative Humanism Model (IHM) (ii)
Ijiomah’s Model of Harmony of Contraries (IMHC) (iii) Asouzu’s
Ibuanyidanda Model (AIM) (iv) Model of Causal Explanation
(MCE). The value of this section hinges on the models which the
author developed to explain the non-empirical aspect of African
science. In his words: “It is Western science’s own bogus claim
that all there is (reality) can be explained using the principle of
empirical, testable, demonstrable protocol. The implication is that
anything which cannot be explained by science does not form part
of the gamut of reality”(98). The author clearly shows how the
non-empirical can be explained within the ambit of African
science.
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January – June, 2013
On the whole, this work by Dr. Chimakonam is not without some
lapses. There is no academic work without lapses. It behooves an
objective reader to see the true lapses and point them out for
correction. For me, I think the greatest challenge this work has is
that it is set ahead of its time. For this, this work spells of some
great controversies. My modest advice to the intending reader is to
first set aside his convictions about science. I promise you this
work would brazenly decimate them if you don’t. And in this,
Western scholars would be tempted to discredit it. African scholars
too, who are not conscious of the strangle-hold of Western thought
system and logic in their lives would be tempted to discredit it as
well. But this would be highly unfair and intellectually myopic.
One great thing about this work is that it laid its logical foundation
strongly, that if one should endaevour as little as to grasp that,
every other seemingly controversial claim would come up clear
and dissolved. Any further issue that would be left at all would be
a matter of possibility of practice and not merit. The merit of this
work for me is not in doubt. Its originality is praiseworthy. Its
significance for the African intellectual and for Africa is
tremendous. I have no greater problem with this work besides
normal academic disagreement and an insistence for improvement.
This however, is a common responsibility of all African scholars to
seek ways of improving this proposal of African science. Indeed, if
most African scholars should begin to write in this form rather than
the annoying commentaries we produce, issues like racism which
has its fundamental roots in the doubt of the African’s intellectual
ability would die sooner rather than later.
I reproduce here three golden paragraphs from the postscript of the
work which I believe is a food for thought for all African
intellectuals:
Alright, let us assume that in these sketchy paragraphs we have
systematized a section of African experience and it could now be
called science at least by our modest African standards; but what
then would be the challenges of this new discipline? Are schools
Filosofia Theoretica: Journal of African Philosophy, Culture and Religion
and universities likely to introduce courses in it? Is there a need
for a unique African science? What difference would it make?
Would the laboratories of this science be different from those of
the Western science? How do we raise technologies for this
science? How do we create awareness and promotion for this
science? Who are the African scientists?
I shall attempt to answer these questions although am not sure I
can fully answer the whys, the whats, the hows, and the wheres but
I know that I believe in the uniqueness and viability of this science.
“Believe”, because I do not have greater proof beyond what I have
written here. In these particularly difficult times where African
scholars do not see any need for this exercise, they ask: what can
African brand of science offer that the Western science could not
offer better? Can any section of African experience be properly
called scientific? Is it not a waste of time, energy and resources to
raise a new science where we already have a viable one? Indeed, it
does not make any sense for a typical African intellectual to moot
the idea of a unique African science and by an even greater
conviction, there is no need!
However, a tricky question looms large? Why have Western
trained African scientists not been able to invent at least in the
same ratio with their Western counterparts? A litany of excuses
could be produced in a flash of light – a terrible window dressing!
They would blame lack of funding, lack of enabling environment;
lack of public and corporate motivation, lack of governmental
support etc., but what of lack of talent? In the days of soviet
socialism many hopeless men blamed governmental restrictions for
their inability to utilize their talents. When however the Soviet
Union collapsed and they secured their freedom, it came to light
that they did not have talents. A Western trained African scientist
who lost his natural African thought system has lost the use of his
talent. Talent is something that springs naturally when one thinks
within his native thought system. Losing one’s thought system is
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January – June, 2013
tantamount to losing one’s talent. A great legion of Western
trained African scientists have successfully emigrated to the
Western worlds where they met the diner set on the bed for them,
and in working in the same environment with their Western
counterparts have still not excelled. They become programmers,
lab assistants, research assistants but never inventors. If we
exclude a handful like Philip Emeagwali the rest are but men who
adopted the Western thought system but who found out they could
not think within it. Like the Igbo would say, they become like a
man separated from his chi, walking around a mere living dead. A
Western trained African scientist who also gave up his African
thought system (as most do) and adopted a Western thought system
is like a Jew in Babylonish captivity, how can he sing his native
song in a strange land? God who made us Africans and gave us
unique cultures and system of thought obviously intended those
frameworks to be our working tools. How can the African fare
better than the European in his native dance? Nor can the
European outdo the Asian in his native ways? How else can the
African contribute to the world civilization if he did not do so from
his native ways, like the European and the Asian do from theirs.
Western trained African scientists are like strangers in their land
and so cannot sing their native songs in a strange land. Highly
educated but lost and essentially useless to the world except of
course we choose to call them technicians rather than scientists!
We have the foreign legion and then the home legion but in all,
there are but an insignificant number who knew this fact and
retained their native thought system. Philip Emeagwali the man
who invented the internet is one such African. Recall that Bill
Clinton a onetime American president remarked that if Nigeria had
as few as four scientists who think like Philip Emeagwali, that
Nigeria would be on course to becoming a technological super
power. This probably summarizes our point here. In a country of
over 150 million people with millions of scientists yet not up to
four of them, possibly no one of them could think like Philip
Emeagwali! Not that the millions of scientists in Nigeria cannot or
Filosofia Theoretica: Journal of African Philosophy, Culture and Religion
do not think, they can and they do but only within Western thought
system. And as this is not naturally genial to them, they simply
cannot produce within it. With this I hope I have made my point
that there is a need for a unique African science fit with African
thought system where the African scientist looks at nature from his
own native ways (117-119).
Dr. Jonathan O. Chimakonam not only explores in detail and
successfully, the theories of Igbo African science but goes on to
give critics who question Africa’s intellectual ability, a big lie. He
shapes the way we shall begin to see and do not only African
science but every intellectual project by getting a handle on Igbo
African logical thought and science. No wonder he has been hailed
as the father of African science and as one of the continent’s
brightest minds. This book would remain a great reference on
African science/studies for all time to come as it is a reference for
all of us today!
iAn abridged version of this review was published in South East Star. March
20th 2013 vol. 01. No. 09. P. 14