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Blog
| GUEST BLOGGER: Adwoa Serwaa Bonsu on aid for Haiti |
| 04 Feb 2010 | 07:11 AM |
On Tuesday, January 12, 2010 at 09:53:10 PM, a 7.3- magnitude earthquake caused massive devastation across Haiti. I only got to hear of it on CNN on Wednesday morning as I was preparing to leave for work. I was amazed and touched by the aid pouring in for the Haitians. The Super Powers of the world, USA, UK, France etc immediately dispatched teams to help rescue the people who were stuck in buildings and areas which were not accessible. They made some miraculous saves.
The Stars in the US also did their best. Bradgelina donated $1million to the Haiti relief effort and so did others. Goerge Clooney also organised a Hope for Haiti Telethon which has raised over $60 million. There is even going to be a ‘We are the World’ remake on February 12 to raise more funds for the relief effort.
I was on my way to work a week after when I heard on one radio station that they were raising funds to help Haiti and that a concert had been organized in Accra to raise funds. On January 21, I read on Ghanaweb that the Ghana Government is donating $3 million to Haiti.
Let me state that what has happened in Haiti is sad and horrible and I hope the country recovers through the help they are getting from the donors.
The question that came to mind as soon as I heard of these fund raising was, 'Seriously'? Why are these Ghanaian 'Stars', radio stations and the Government raising funds for Haiti?
In August and September 2009, high levels of rainfall inundated the Upper East, Northern, and Upper West regions of Ghana. According to the U.N., the floods killed at least 8 people and affected approximately 130,000 others in nearly 660 communities. Government figures indicated that in northern Ghana flooding has affected more people than in all other West African countries combined, yet the disaster has received little international attention compared to floods elsewhere in the region. Benonita Bismarck, head of operations for the Ghana Red Cross, told IRIN, “The magnitude is unbelievable but yet … nobody is talking about it on the international scene. It’s amazing.”
First of all where were these Ghanaian stars when this flood occurred in the three Northern Regions? Was that not a disaster? Was that not high profile enough for them? Was it too local for them? Or were the people killed or displaced too few? Isn't there an adage that says, 'Charity begins at home'? Why are we quick to help people we did not know existed a month ago when we close our eyes and ears to people who are just a few kilometers away from us in our own country.
Couldn't they sing to raise funds for these people in the north? Or do these people not need their help?
The three Northern regions are the poorest regions in Ghana and I am sure some of these Stars are from there. Can't we raise money to help them get on their feet after the devastating floods? According to a UN report, 6,350 houses, 13 schools, and 38,000 acres of agricultural land were destroyed. I can bet you there are people and communities there who have not been able to rebuild their houses after they were brought down by the floods. Can't these Stars do a benefit concert to help our own? Wouldn't it be more prudent to organise a concert to draw attention to the plight of these people?
And why is our Government donating $3million we do not have to Haiti? Phelim McAleer an American environmentalist and producer wrote, “The reason so many people died in Haiti is because its people live in poorly built houses and have not benefited from development which brings with it cities and houses which can withstand earthquakes.”
Sodom and Gomorrah is the largest slum in Ghana. An estimated 40,000 people live in this dense squatter settlement, strung along the banks of the polluted Korle Lagoon in the center of Accra. This slum is characterized by poorly built houses like those of Haiti. In September 2009, AMA boss Alfred Vanderpuije told pressmen that the slum was a national security risk, stressing residents there would not be compensated after eviction. My question is if we can donate $3million to people who are thousands of miles away, why can’t we find a place for our own people to put their heads?
A German Lutheran pastor and theologian Dietrich Boenhoffer wrote, “The test of the morality of a society is what it does for its children.” What are we doing for our children as a society? In this case, what is the Government and our Super Stars doing for our society? I am not saying donating to Haiti is bad, far from that. But let not William Shakespeare’s quote, “Nothing is so common as the wish to be remarkable,” define us in this case.
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Abena Obi |
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Adwoa,
Great piece.
We have far too long ignored what really matters to us in this country,we have for too long sat the very bottom of the pile and admired the meager effort we made to move just within arms length of the next lowest step.
What do we need as a country, what do we require to get to the top, the very top.Why cannt we reason beyond our frog pond? Why do we select and elect the most insane people to lead us? Or are we to believe in what lord Lugard (am looking for that book to read anyone whom has it should pass it along,please) said "we lack the basic elements of management... we are unable to look into the future with any apprehension".
What will it take for our leaders to do what we need? We are all aware the road carnage in this country is getting out of hand and yet we do nothing.I will like to hear the president or roads and transport minister say today...All benz buses without a double tyre at the back-axle be removed of the road!I will like for the minster health/enviroment/science/energy make clear statements and move towards .... Burning the dead,burning our sorted waste to generate energy to run Korle Bu!
I will like the minister of education make clear his intention to act immediately to stop the decay at our JSS where fifty percent of our children will not make the pass mark.. We will feed their minds and hearts,we will nourish their thirst for hunger and we will once again restore the Ghanaian onto the world sage,educated,proud and full of hope of a united Africa.
I will want to hear the minster of transport/road/communications/health/defence launch a programme to train volunteers for nation-wide emergency instead of giving $3mill to haiti.
Where our our leaders? Please stand up! Do more than just token speeches and loose radio phone ins,reach out,be bold and confident that God has called you to lead our people, to shape the future of an uncertain future!
We need a leader and we need a Mao
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Emmanuel ROCKY |
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I think the writer of this piece is one of these who used to play truancy in Sunday School if he/she is a Christaian in the first place, else he/she will appreciate the biblical verse "no prophet is recognised in his own home country" God bless Ghana
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nana-labone |
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what a master piece
charity,they say begins at home
its still not too late to help pur people up north
hope someone is listening !
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Godwin, AGOSEC Kpetoe |
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I really like this piece of writing. It reminds me of days long gone.
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Godwin, AGOSEC Kpetoe |
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Please don't be fooled into believing that this article came from a guest blogger. It is undoubtedly by ATO KWABENA DADZIE writing with that pseudonym. Abena indeed.
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Basakin |
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Ato, my old lady in the village(Upper West Region) was heavily affected by that particular flood yet she never beneffited any way up till date.
Your biological children suferred,nothing was heared and you want others to appreciate your effort towards others children facing similar problem.God watching?
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Kay |
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@Abena Obi - You sounded much like the very ministers( both present and past) you were advising; paying lip services that go beyond action.You talked about burning the dead, what on earth has prevented you from burning any of your family member yet?
And if you honestly did not understand why we continue to elect the dead as leaders, why you Abena, having the believe that you are alive did not offer yourself for any higher leadership position? Is it because you are alive but not capable, but the deads are?
It's good you are looking for Lugard's book. Part of the book which was referring to Africans reads;"Naturally courageous, and naturally courteous and polite, full of personal vanity, with little sense of veracity" That is exactly what you have exibited.
Think of these things, Abena and earnestly look for Lugard's book. Good morning!
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Kay |
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@ Adwoa - Great piece! Charity they say begin at home.
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Ransford |
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Well done Adwoa, a true master piece
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Sylvia |
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I agree with u. Hope u've not 4gotn dat de stars stage a similiar concert to raise funds 4 de north wh saw John Legend coming down to perform.
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Kweku-Tema |
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Well articulated.
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Kweku-Tema |
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HERE IS A QUOTE FROM LORD LUGARD'S BOOK.
"In character and temperament, the typical African of this race-type is a happy, thriftless, excitable person. Lacking in self control, discipline, and foresight. Naturally courageous, and naturally courteous and polite, full of personal vanity, with little sense of veracity, fond of music and loving weapons as an oriental loves jewellery. His thoughts are concentrated on the events and feelings of the moment, and he suffers little from the apprehension for the future, or grief for the past. His mind is far nearer to the animal world than that of the European or Asiatic, and exhibits something of the animals’ placidity and want of desire to rise beyond the State he has reached. Through the ages the African appears to have evolved no organized religious creed, and though some tribes appear to believe in a deity, the religious sense seldom rises above pantheistic animalism and seems more often to take the form of a vague dread of the supernatural"
“He lacks the power of organization, and is conspicuously deficient in the management and control alike of men or business. He loves the display of power, but fails to realize its responsibility ....he will work hard with a less incentive than most races. He has the courage of the fighting animal, an instinct rather than a moral virtue...... In brief, the virtues and defects of this race-type are those of attractive children, whose confidence when it is won is given ungrudgingly as to an older and wiser superior and without envy.......Perhaps the two traits which have impressed me as those most characteristic of the African native are his lack of apprehension and his lack of ability to visualize the future."
---Lord Frederick John Dealty Lugard, The Dual Mandate, pg.70 (1926)"
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abassah |
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there is joy in madness, ask any politician.
great piece, adwoa, but i hope u start doing something in ur own small way to help the destitute in our society. charity begins at home indeed.
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Pastor Mireku |
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The writer makes a good point, but I differ with her on some of her points. I think the government did the right thing by providing some sort of support for Haiti. They are our brothers and sisters. There is no need to look back on the floods and S & G when the government has extended a good hand. On the other hand we have to hold the government accountable and use this gesture as an example of what they have to do when their own people are striken by disaster or hardship. It is only then that the writers complians will be valid.
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somebody |
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IT'S CALLED MISPLACED PRIORITY AND A NONSENSICAL YEARNING TO SHOW OFF!!!!
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Martin,UK |
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Ato, have you ever given money to a begger on the street before? Have you accepted any Gift from someone before? Does that mean that the person has no better use for the Gift? Do you see people with a problem and then get that strong feeling to wish you could help? Does that mean that in your village in the Central Region there is no one with a similar problem? Look into your family, do you want to solve all the problems in your family before you can help someone outside your family with the same problems? The fact that you have a blind man in your house does not imply you cant help another blindman outside. Are you waiting until you become a billionaire before you can give a helping hand to someone? Even, those coutries who give us international aids still have their own domestic problems to solve. But we benefit from their aid anyway.The are still people on the streets of London who don't have food to eat or place to lay their heads. So what prevents us from also helping? That, we are poor and we have similar or even worse cases of our own? Should that be our excuse, Ato?
Ato, you don't have to be too rich before you can help a brother in whatever way.
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Odopower,DC |
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Serwaa, na wa for you oo, this is the Ghana me and you live in. As a people we quickly want others to see that we are also doing something for Haiti. It is always good as Ghanaian to first remove the sparks in our country(3 Northern Regions) before we can see clearly and remove that of other country(Haiti). The musicians are organising a show to raise money for Haiti whiles the flood in the north and rains in kaneshie, they just kept quiet. We as a people should first learn to be our brothers keeper and must care for each other. Ghanaians always like to show off.....it is a nice piece.
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amma pokuaa |
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Adwoa, very well said. To those expressing opinions that it's an ok thing to extend a hand of help to the needy, i couldn't agree more, but are the needy in ghana less so than those in haiti? Aba, we are too quick to look good in the window only. Why cant we remove the beam in our eye before scurring to flick out the speck in someone elses. a man should not give what he doesn't have. unless our president was divinely instructed to sow that amount, it's a bit disconcerting, that we have such a need up our own ally and yet we do little and instead cross the sea to dump that much into their lap.
BTW hasn't Kwamena proven that he isn't intimidated by anyone, why would he assume a pseudo-name on his own blog?
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Conrad |
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Items the name Ato means a lot? Can you tell me the exact meaning of Ato aside being a Saturday born. You have a lot of followers at least ATO KWAMINA DADZIE IS NOT COWARD. HE DOES NOT WRITE UNDER A PEN NAME...HE IS ATO KWAMINA DADZIE! MAY BE HE NOW THINKS HE IS ATO SAM THE NAME GIVEN BY HIS PARENTS WHO HE HAS FAILED TO HONOUR BY USING ARM ROBBERS NAME...
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Conrad |
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wrong post...very sorry
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Ike |
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JOY FM studio doors
Ato: Just played back Newsfile of 6th Feb; and I can't help but feel iritated by the squeaking of the studio doors anytime it is opened. Please do something about it. Get some grease and oil the door.
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ephraim |
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IF we can have an african like abena writing this crap then Lord Lugarg was realy right abt the African ,Always Inward looking.
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| Poll |
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| Government is losing court cases because... |
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| The AG is incompetent |
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31% |
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| The judges are biased |
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21% |
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| You win some and lose some |
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48% |
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| Total Votes: 371 |
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