All

I'm not in the habit of forwarding material by Mathew K Jallow, but I proudly make an exception on this occasion. Even with his stark omissions, this is a brilliant piece, and please feel free to insert the names that are shouting for inclusion in this Professor Jammeh luminaries list including "... Sarjo Jallow, Nene Macdolle, Fatoumata Tambajang, Nana Grey-Johnson, Bala Garba-Jahumpa and Mbemba Tambedou ..."

Will our good brother now do the honorable thing and apologize to M O Mboge, Joe Sambou, and myself for saying the very same thing only months ago, and in the process needlessly incurring his substantial wrath. Mathew has come of age, and I am now willing to consider him for President of the Third Republic.


LJDarbo

 



The Gambia: The new mind of a
people and the color of betrayal
 
By Mathew
K Jallow
 
To digress from the nastiness of
politics for a moment, this focus, instead, on human nature in Gambia, is a
fundamental component of the changes in our cultural landscape. This plunge
into the complexity of human nature attempts to contextualize the enormous
lapses in judgment to which many Gambians have become willing victims. And,
this is not in reference to theoretical psychology, but on the facts of our
lives that respond to our moral groundings. It is our lived experience, groomed
by society’s norms, and distinguish our capacity to rationalize from the other
forces in nature; animals. At one critical level, our countrymen and womens’
fickle minds lend themselves to fall into the dreadful entrapment of the
promises of power and prestige, but perhaps the most significant motivating
factor is the power of economics; the bottom-line. In short, it is purely an
issue of self-preservation dictated by a need for political power and economic
self-protection, and over the past eighteen years, it has devalued our concepts
of society, but even more importantly, our perception of our fellow countrymen
and women is hopelessly entangled between the clearly opposing contradictions
of moral obligation and our Darwinian primordial instincts for survival. The
most recent intense public castigation campaign and moral marginalization of
Nana Grey-Johnson, typify the stark division among Gambians; a division
explainable primarily by simple environmental factors. I was tongue-tied, of
course, during Nana’s ordeal, not because of an innate desire to protect a
friend, but rather because of the awareness of how economic conditions at home
provide a powerful force for malleability and utter indifference to moral
rationality.
 
Clearly,
Nana Grey-Johnson deserved the loud criticisms too, for failing the moral test,
but, with that story now behind us, Nana Grey is not unmindful that he is
wedged between the dangerous company of Imperial King, Yahya Jammeh and the
unforgiving indignation of the vocal Gambian minority. Today, Gambia is in the
grip of an intellectual degradation unlike anything Africa has experienced
since the seventies, and the customariness with which many Gambians have fallen
victims to Imperial King, Yahya Jammeh’s power and the lure of political status
is an object of ongoing debate among Gambians. The long list of Gambians
deserving case studies to provide empirical evidence in understanding the
cruelty of Gambian politics under Imperial King, Yahya Jammeh, include, but is
not limited only to; Sarjo Jallow, Nene Macdolle, Fatoumata Tambajang, Nana
Grey-Johnson, Bala Garba-Jahumpa and Mbemba Tambedou, all relatives and close
friends, among the other eighty cabinet appointments under Yahya Jammeh. But,
this failure of moral obligation to Gambians has a religious dimension, further
complicating the enormous challenges of moral uprightness. The fact that so
many Gambians choose to disregard the failure of leadership under Imperial
King, Yahya Jammeh, is itself stunning, but that so many of them can endure the
indignities of arrests, tortures and recycleing back into the system, is
mind-blowing and absurd. But, what obsesses the Gambian mind most is the
calculations of accepting temporary appointment in any position under Yahya
Jammeh even while Gambians continue to be murdered, to disappear and to be
reduced in their aspirations and limited in their freedoms.
 
Intellectual
uprightness dictates the assumption of moral superiority in our patriotic
obligations to our fellow citizens, but the utter failure to live up to that
ideal, will compel my friend Nana Grey-Johnson and all the others to endure the
cloud of bitterness and indignant distaste likely to hang over their heads in
the coming years. That said, the complete collapse of the moral moorings of
fellow citizens back home; from the senior cabinet positions, to civil servants
and to other levels of society, more than being tantalizing, is slowly
reconfiguring the psyche of our people and changing the values inherited for
our noble past. And for now, Gambians still disappear; the murders still
escalate; prison once an anathema, is now almost a rite of passage; executions
still concealed by the darkness of night, and the terror of a people speaks
loudly in its silent eloquence. Still, Gambians, from cabinet appointees to senior
civil servants and political activists, remain unbothered by the tremendous
criminality of the regime, but most specifically, of Imperial King, Yahya
Jammeh. The unflattering nature of the regime typify a loss of credibility that
borders on illegitimacy and the reduction of an entire society into a permanent
underclass signals the saturation our endurance and the inevitable need for
political change. But, whether Imperial King, Yahya Jammeh will move out by his
own freewill or by the devastating force of cold lead through his brain, is
another matter altogether. The suffering people of the Gambia have time on
their side. For, even the longest nightmare has its day of freedom, and the
Gambia is no different. As it is, the new Gambian mindset lacks the basic
tenets of morality, and Nana Grey-Johnson, like other who serve Yahya Jammeh,
speaks to that moral deficit and that color of betrayal.

¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤
To unsubscribe/subscribe or view archives of postings, go to the Gambia-L Web interface
at: http://listserv.icors.org/archives/gambia-l.html

To Search in the Gambia-L archives, go to: http://listserv.icors.org/SCRIPTS/WA-ICORS.EXE?S1=gambia-l
To contact the List Management, please send an e-mail to:
[log in to unmask]
¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤