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From:
Haruna Darbo <[log in to unmask]>
Reply To:
The Gambia and related-issues mailing list <[log in to unmask]>
Date:
Wed, 24 Oct 2007 19:09:20 EDT
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Thanx for sharing Laye. Bah's experiences demonstrate the quintessential  
greed and competition among ethnicities, tribes and indeed the human race in a  
world of limited supply of everything.
 
I understand Bah pleading for diversity and communion. He also acknowledges  
that as America and Europe are struggling with overcoming their inherent  
sleights, Africa is only beginning to consolidate tribal and ethnic hegemonies.  
This world is funny. Looking at it another way, one could presume that America  
is looking to Africa for inspiration in terms of the values of diversity and  
communion with other. I submit that America or Europe must not be looked to 
for  guidance in this area. They must only be encourages on their journeys by  
Africa's examples. Afterall Africa is claimed to be the cradle of  
civilization.
 
Preciate you. Food for psychological thought and action. Haroun Masoud.  
MQDT. Al Khairawan. Darbo.
 
In a message dated 10/24/2007 11:54:07 A.M. Mountain Daylight Time,  
[log in to unmask] writes:

*African  immigrant urges diversity*

*01:00 AM EDT on Wednesday, October 24,  2007*

*By Paul Edward Parker

Journal Staff Writer*

Omar  Bah speaks yesterday in Providence.

The Providence Journal Ruben W.  Perez

PROVIDENCE — An immigrant who survived torture in his native  Gambia to find
intolerance in nearby Ghana yesterday urged Rhode Islanders  to embrace
cultural diversity in America as a strength.

"Migration  and immigration — who belongs here, how they got here and how we
live  together — they are a critical topic in the United States," Omar Bah
told  an audience of about 70 at the annual meeting of the  International
Institute Rhode Island. "I feel my experience with tribal  diversity in
Africa will serve as a good lesson or perhaps help generate  discussion on
living with diversity — the good and evil."

Bah  described the language-based division he found in Ghana after  fleeing
Gambia. In Ghana, the official language is English, but Ghanaians  identify
themselves by the tribal language they speak. Indeed, Bah was  chased one
night by a machete-wielding mob chanting, "Foreigner!  Foreigner!" because he
did not speak a local tribal language.

The  predominant tribal language in Ghana is Twi, but residents of the  region
around the country's capital speak another language, Gha. Bah once  discussed
with a friend which language he should learn. The friend  suggested his own
language, Gha. But Bah said he preferred Twi because he  would be able to
communicate with more people.

"My friend, an  educated journalist, was outraged by my seeming rejection of
his tribe and  choosing the language of strangers," Bah told the audience.
"He openly  threatened that if I spoke like that among the Gha people, I
could be  harmed."

Bah said "selfish politicians and interest leaders" were to  blame for the
divisions tearing African nations apart. "They usually  capitalize on the
somewhat shallow education of the masses and indoctrinate  them into having
the belief that their tribes have to always prevail over  the others and
anything short of that should be  unacceptable."

Another example he cited of the petty level of the  divisions was when he
watched musicians perform on television and asked a  friend what language
they sang in. "If you don't sing in Twi nobody listens  to your music. People
will not be interested. Everybody has to respect the  majority and sing in
our language or else your business closes."

And  he related his own close call with language-related violence.

"It is  important to know a [tribal] language in Ghana because the
anti-foreigner  sentiments are so strong that one's life can be endangered
once it is known  you are a foreigner," he said.

One day, he ran into a band of  vigilantes, armed with machetes, who were
patrolling for robbers. The  vigilantes ordered him to stop, but he did not
understand the tribal  language they spoke. "Because I didn't stop, they knew
straight away I was  a foreigner. They ran after me, violently shouting,
'Foreigner! Foreigner!'  Luckily, I was able to outrun them and lock myself
in my room. I have no  doubt that I could have been lynched like a common
robber just because I'm  a foreigner."

But Bah said that lessons must be learned from incidents  like these, or, as
a professor who helped him escape from Gambia to Ghana  told him, "Omar,
don't worry. At the end of the day, you will see to it  that good can always
come out of evil."

Bah concluded his  speech:

"These are just a small example of the intolerances of language  diversity in
Africa. And they are only a small example of the many  intolerances that
exist around the world. Sadly, sadly, I see hatred and  prejudices existing
even in this great country, the United States of  America, that was built by
immigrants from many, many different countries,  languages and cultures," Bah
said. "I would like to see the U.S. rise up  and live together with our
diversity as a strength. We are a community of  many tribes, but we are all
together in one greater tribe that is the human  race."

[log in to unmask]

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