I acknowledge the first report in this forum on the public “immolation” of Akua Denteh by her own community, and the many rejoinders to that report that have since appeared here that have illuminated our reflections on a dangerous culture in Ghana, and Africa. I add here a tribute to a woman I never knew, but whose painful death reminds me of a lingering superstitious logic that I know too well as a Ghanaian, and to which I offer some solutions, for what they may be worth.
The lynching of Akua Denteh is, undoubtedly, a grotesque expression of a certain morbidity of mind in the perpetrator society. Any community that is invested in a cultural
logic that leads to the public burning of a 90 year old woman is trapped in a dead culture and in need of a trans-community, counter-cultural redemption.
Condemnation of this dastard deed is deserved. But beyond that, a flight into causation, as warranted as it is, to chart some novel paths to a solution, can sometimes devolve into sophistry. But that is sometimes needed. Belief in witchcraft is terribly endemic
in Ghanaian society. As the report indicates, it is not a cultural affliction of the uneducated. It paralyses the educated too. I did not cure my own mind of that superstitious thought until I began graduate studies in Canada in 1989. In that new Canadian
campus environment, I never heard of any fellow student, or member of the University community, talk “religiously” about malevolent old women prancing in the dark and eating human beings turned into chicken in the canopy of trees as I heard throughout my youth
in my Ghanaian village, and my undergraduate years at Legon. It did not take me long in Canada to realize that these are cultural stupidities that had long shaped my thoughts in my environment in Ghana about old wrinkled women who could potentially boil my
brain for dinner, and make me a failure in life, without taking responsibility for the choices I make in my life. So environment seems to breed harmful mentalities.
Beliefs in witchcraft may have been worsened by the Pentecostal churches, today, as OAA aptly observes, but quack diviners and “witch-doctors” and “fetish-priests” have long dabbled in Ghana’s cultural conversation about malevolent forces. Just take a look
at Ghana’s major roadways and you will see the many frightfully-dressed males and females on billboards festooned with white clay, with raffia palm skirts, and dyed whiskers, asking for consultation on witchcraft, and promising instant painful death of witches
for the bewitched. That is a disturbing national story that bespeaks of a decadent community and national culture.
For many years the physical burdens of old age that scar the appearance of the elderly have often given room to harmful speculations about the supernatural abilities of
the old and wrinkled.
What is disturbing in Akua Denteh’s murder is her community’s involvement in her lynching. There was no expression of gender solidarity as the perpetrators dispatched her. In fact women in her community took part in the lynching. And the male soothsayer instigator
of her death, and the men in the community who made common cause with the maddening lynch-mob to burn her alive, speak of a community that is deeply invested in a belief system that may need a fundamental attack on its foundations to eradicate. Otherwise this
may not be the last public lynching of a vulnerable old woman on the whims of the superstitious.
Educated people, priests, chiefs, politicians, and community leaders appear to be captives of this cultural thoughts about Witchcraft. Would these same people carry their beliefs in witchcraft with them, and the murders they commit to express them, beyond their
communities when they migrate and become a diasporic group in an elsewhere community? If not, then might some carefully-organized inter-faith or inter-community cultural conversation help to make Akua Denteh’s death the last? Can local communities, and human
rights organizations bring in people from other parts of the country, the region, the continent, the world to talk about how they cured themselves of their own witchcraft superstitions and the benefits they secured?
Certainly, no state can legislate sane thoughts. But a community that suffers from the insane beliefs that got Akua Denteh murdered bears the bigger responsibility to rethink its moral values. Given previous outrages, it appears that incarceration of the murderers
by the state may not be the needed response to deter future perpetrators of lynching. Might some form of public shaming in their own communities be the better deterrence? Could community leaders not tainted by their own witchcraft beliefs arrest the murderers,
and that soothsayer, and make them stand at the public square, or community market, every day, for a month or more, with bells and large placards around their necks, with inscriptions in the local language broadcasting their murderous deeds to passers-by?
There is nothing far more shameful in many Ghanaian cultures than such public humiliation.
Can Art and Performance help since Ghanaian music, films and drama (including Nigerian) have also perpetuated beliefs in witchcraft and justified death for the accused? Can the musicians, film-makers, and dramatists who have contributed to this cultural malaise help cleanse it of its lingering and deadly debris? Otherwise, Akua Denteh’s death will not be the last in Ghana.
If I were not a poor college teacher, but had more legal tender to invest in one moral cause, I would establish a television station, as that has become a contemporary cultural artefact in Ghana, with all types of evangelical stations churning the type of cultural poison that killed Akua Denteh. Mine will be a counter-cultural television channel aimed at producing programs and drama attacking the foundations of our community and national beliefs in witchcraft, and comparing our society steeped in witchcraft to others that are not.
That, perhaps, may be the best cultural tribute to the memory of an old woman who perished in the name of a dangerous cultural thought.
Edward Kissi
From: usaafric...@googlegroups.com <usaafric...@googlegroups.com>
On Behalf Of Toyin Falola
Sent: Sunday, August 2, 2020 9:51 AM
To: dialogue <USAAfric...@googlegroups.com>
Subject: USA Africa Dialogue Series - Murder: Akua Denteh of Ghana
Akua Denteh: Last 'witch' to be murdered in Ghana?
https://www.ghanaweb.com/GhanaHomePage/features/Akua-Denteh-Last-witch-to-be-murdered-in-Ghana-1023577
--
Listserv moderated by Toyin Falola, University of Texas at Austin
To post to this group, send an email to
USAAfric...@googlegroups.com
To subscribe to this group, send an email to
USAAfricaDial...@googlegroups.com
Current archives at
http://groups.google.com/group/USAAfricaDialogue
Early archives at
http://www.utexas.edu/conferences/africa/ads/index.html
---
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "USA Africa Dialogue Series" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email to
usaafricadialo...@googlegroups.com.
To view this discussion on the web visit
https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/usaafricadialogue/6595C8E3-5CB0-4824-A342-9BE70BE0B26B%40austin.utexas.edu.
[EXTERNAL EMAIL] DO NOT CLICK links or attachments unless you recognize the sender and know the content is safe.
To view this discussion on the web visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/usaafricadialogue/BN8PR08MB5779370B7D500FFBD0823E6ACE4D0%40BN8PR08MB5779.namprd08.prod.outlook.com.
kenneth harrow
professor emeritus
dept of english
michigan state university
To view this discussion on the web visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/usaafricadialogue/CAAHJfPr%3DriaoRWfwV1gRCPJ0rxL3hfs3S0tvkY8vGgiEBH9X7w%40mail.gmail.com.
Does anyone think it is happenstance that most people accused of malevolent witchcraft in African societies--in both the secular and Pentecostal contexts--are the most vulnerable members of these societies: children, the elderly, and women?” Moses Ebe Ochonu.
Good question, Moses.
Many, many years ago, when I was a student of Catholic theology, I attended a seminar given by the French literary theorist René Girard. It was based on his theory of Scapegoat (Greek-pharmakós). He basically claims that every (primitive) society has the natural desire to deflect any impending danger by sacrificing one of their own. A victim. In every society, people are always at each other’s throats and when that competition reaches a boiling point to the degree that there is a palpable fear of the whole society being consumed in violence, the fever is usually calmed down by a ritual sacrifice, one that dramatizes the collective violence for everyone to see. The Hebrew have numerous examples in the book of Leviticus. In ancient Greece, a certain ugly person was usually chosen and sacrificed at the festival for Apollo. (The idea is that ugly, poor and powerless people are usually guilty!!!) The pharmakós, probably the origin of pharmacy, is a cleanser; he (usually a he, in ancient Greece) cleanses the sins of the community.
For Girard, the need to justify that violence, the pointless sacrifice of otherwise innocent people, is what gives birth to myth. In other words, myths are just human effort to justify violence or weakness, or a given ideology. The truth is that this is not restricted to primitive society. Or rather, humanity has never rid itself of that primitive instinct to blame the weaker ones for its own flaws.
Witchcraft is a universal phenomenon that manifests itself in different formats, depending on the people’s technologies of power. Victims do not have to be burned, lynched, or stoned. It is enough that society finds them guilty of its disorder. Society invents narratives that seek to permanently fix the victims in their condition.
Chielozona
To view this discussion on the web visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/usaafricadialogue/CAAHJfPr%3DriaoRWfwV1gRCPJ0rxL3hfs3S0tvkY8vGgiEBH9X7w%40mail.gmail.com.
kenneth harrow
professor emeritus
dept of english
michigan state university
You are right, Ken.
Girard’s scapegoat theory does not explain the phenomenon of witchcraft per se. It helps us, though, to understand the power dynamics that underwrite it. It is true that Geschiere (1995), echoing Monica Hunter Wilson’s (1951), observed that witchcraft accusations are rife among relatives. Witch beliefs exist in small-scale societies, says Wilson. People usually accuse only those they know. Co-wives, in a (poor) polygamous marriage, are prone to accuse each other of witchcraft because of their obvious condition. None of them ever accuses their common husband who might not have provided enough comfort for their thriving. It’s all about competition and the mythologies it gives birth to. This is where Girard’s theory helps.
Anyway, Cameroonian scholar of religion David T. Ngong has vigorously challenged some of Geschiere’s observations. I wish I had time to also examine more critically Geschiere’s important contributions to witchcraft study in Africa.
To view this discussion on the web visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/usaafricadialogue/DM5PR12MB2456F5A3F2981B6496B462ACDA4A0%40DM5PR12MB2456.namprd12.prod.outlook.com.
To view this discussion on the web visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/usaafricadialogue/CAAHJfPr%3DriaoRWfwV1gRCPJ0rxL3hfs3S0tvkY8vGgiEBH9X7w%40mail.gmail.com.
kenneth harrow
professor emeritus
dept of english
michigan state university
Ken:
Is capitalism not same as witchcraft? To teach people about the dangers of credit cards, I do so via the medium of witchcraft!
Both belief systems, and as ideologies, suck blood!
TF
To view this discussion on the web visit
https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/usaafricadialogue/DM5PR12MB24563E36DDC16288755C7CBBDA4A0%40DM5PR12MB2456.namprd12.prod.outlook.com.
kenneth harrow
professor emeritus
dept of english
michigan state university
To view this discussion on the web visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/usaafricadialogue/CAPq-FWtk473iATCxULOmwMqiFWU6P1n_%2Ba2FE93VkcryrSxj7w%40mail.gmail.com.
An unequal power dynamic, be it ritual, political, or economic, was almost always involved in witch finding and in the murders of innocent victims that many times accompanied it. The following are two examples and explanations of politically motivated use of local belief in witchcraft to eliminate those who threatened a nobility’s political interest in a mid-19th century Niger-Benue confluence community. The victims were both male and female persons of high status.
. . . the power of life and death is not the exclusive prerogative of the Atta; any subordinate chief can exercise it at pleasure, on whom their rage is directed. The cause of any disadvantageous circumstance which might befall Akaia, was sure to be laid on someone, as having bewitched him. Last year, a respectable elderly woman, of very tender feelings and kindly disposition, the sister of the late chief of Gbebe, really a mother-like to Akaia, having nursed him up in his childhood, was accused by this wicked man as having bewitched him, upon which suspicion, Akaia ordered the poison draught, the water of ordeal to be given her to drink to prove her innocence, which proved fatal to her life: every right minded persons shuddered at this cold blooded murder. A few weeks ago, an elderly man of influence, called Okoro Shigiala, met the same fate from Akaia. Attributing the cause of the trouble he got into at Idda to witchcraft, poor Okoro was accused as having bewitched him upon which, Akaia ordered the like poisonous draught to be administered to him; but as that did not put an end to his life Akaia ordered him to be beaten with club, beheaded, and his head to be brought to him, and the body to be burnt; but out of respect for the old man by the elders, the body was not burnt, but Akaia triumphed at the sight of Okoro’s head as if he conquered an emperor.
I was very much shocked at hearing this cruel and barbarous murder on my return from Bida to Lokoja: for these reasons:
Though Okoro was slave to Akaia’s grandfather, the old Abokko of the Landers’, Laird’s and Oldfields’ time, yet he was as father to Akaia from his childhood; Okoro was ever regarded as a member of the family, himself having many grown up children in the house, and prospered well in trade, by which he gained much influence and commanded due respect. . .
[“Bp. Samuel A. Crowther.” Notices of the Atta of Idda in the Igara Country.” [1873] Niger Mission. CA3/O4 Journals & Reports. 1860-79]
In Akan society there is no age limit for witchcraft although older women are presumed to be the majority in the guild.
The Akan of Ghana believe that there are male witches or wizards too. They are presumed to be far more dangerous than their female counterparts. Thus there is a gender component in Akan witchcraft beliefs, and the degree of malevolence ascribed to the male
wizard appears to reflect recent Akan concepts of patriarchy and power. What is ironic is how this emerged in the cultural thought of a matrilineal Akan society. What made a matrilineal society ascribe to male wizards the ultimate in power expression, and
at what point in time?
There are witches of every age too in Akan cultural thought---babies as young as a few weeks old, pre-teens, teenagers, adults, mid-age, and very old. Child witches and wizards, and their male counterparts, are believed to be more diabolical than the women.
So the gender and age spread, as well as the power ascriptions in Akan witchcraft beliefs, deserve their own separate study about the aspects of the group’s social thoughts that these beliefs reflect, and the changes that have occurred through time and contact
with other groups.
What confounds me, as I look back to my years in my village, are the people who claimed to be witches and wizards without any pressure on them from anyone. I remember a young teenage girl who claimed to have pushed a young man, who drowned and died in the village
stream, to his death, in “spirit” weeks before his actual death. Are these types of “unprompted confessions” manifestations of some early stages of mental or psychiatric ailment? But equally confounding are those who claim equal, but “good” supernatural ability
to find witches, kill them in spirit, or cause them to confess voluntarily, or expose them in public.
While I do not have answers to these questions, my own interest in addressing this disturbing belief in Ghana encounters some hydra-headed realities. Who are these soothsayers who claim supernatural ability to know who is a witch and who isn’t, and where did
they get their power? Are they practitioners of a deceitful trade whose aim is to frighten society and extract economic benefits from it? I remember a soothsayer and witch-doctor who had a large poultry farm and who became the major supplier of eggs in the
village as a result of his craft as a finder of witches. He received lots of chicken and eggs for his ‘spiritual services.” But did he take all of us in the village for idiots? Are these types of people doing society enormous good by becoming its protectors
in the dark of night, or are they merchants of some dark art of deceit?
Whatever the realities that witchcraft and witch-finders reflect, in the inner thinking of any society, the two phenomena have existed long enough to merit reflection on their longevity. Even in societies that have eradicated them, there are similar versions
that have replaced them.
Is the witch-finder a society’s medicine or the extension of its lingering disease?
Edward Kissi
From: usaafric...@googlegroups.com <usaafric...@googlegroups.com>
On Behalf Of Moses Ebe Ochonu
Sent: Tuesday, August 4, 2020 6:09 PM
To: USAAfricaDialogue <usaafric...@googlegroups.com>
Subject: Re: USA Africa Dialogue Series - IN MEMORY OF AKUA DENTEH
Farooq,
To view this discussion on the web visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/usaafricadialogue/CAAHJfPpSdiUoqQ%3Df-X8Jn7K%2BmLLSJffBdqWukWjW99z1wHp9aw%40mail.gmail.com.
kenneth harrow
professor emeritus
dept of english
michigan state university
To view this discussion on the web visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/usaafricadialogue/BN8PR08MB5779FB839B3CF871D07FF360CE4B0%40BN8PR08MB5779.namprd08.prod.outlook.com.
kenneth harrow
professor emeritus
dept of english
michigan state university
Ken:
Witchcraft exists in real life! Remember Nwolise, and the provocative arguments I had with Moses.
I think scholars continue to make the mistake they are addicted to: the centralization of rationality! And scholars continue to think that when they disagree with something—ethnicity, religion, witchcraft—those become “irrational.” Not so.
Refer to the careless statement on spirituality by Adepoju that:
“A lot of it is nonsense. Of the part that has value, much is speculative, the rest subjective.”
This is like saying billions of people, over two-thirds of the world, have no brains!
TF
To view this discussion on the web visit
https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/usaafricadialogue/DM5PR12MB24564F2D5EA129E18A5B5179DA4B0%40DM5PR12MB2456.namprd12.prod.outlook.com.
kenneth harrow
professor emeritus
dept of english
michigan state university
To view this discussion on the web visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/usaafricadialogue/D7739DBB-73E0-4D52-9451-1C12DCFF714C%40austin.utexas.edu.
To view this discussion on the web visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/usaafricadialogue/DM5PR12MB245649AC7AF3B290CC58349CDA4B0%40DM5PR12MB2456.namprd12.prod.outlook.com.
kenneth harrow
professor emeritus
dept of english
michigan state university
kenneth harrow
professor emeritus
dept of english
michigan state university
To view this discussion on the web visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/usaafricadialogue/DM5PR12MB2456730D164C624E9512EB23DA480%40DM5PR12MB2456.namprd12.prod.outlook.com.
kenneth harrow
professor emeritus
dept of english
michigan state university
kenneth harrow
professor emeritus
dept of english
michigan state university
To view this discussion on the web visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/usaafricadialogue/DM5PR12MB2456C8F570E3327730E9413EDA480%40DM5PR12MB2456.namprd12.prod.outlook.com.
kenneth harrow
professor emeritus
dept of english
michigan state university
Ken:
Living in Bondage 2, released this year, which is on Netflix, may even be better suited to your argument. Rather than the main character disappearing by magic, he does so in his private jet, and Afrofuturism project that fuses magic with capitalism.
My own interest is actually different: why are the African anecdotes and the ever-present reality of witchcraft and magic not converted into science? Fantastic imaginations are products of fantastic thinking!
Or why do we frame the wrong questions—is lottery not similar to a desire to use rituals for money?
To view this discussion on the web visit
https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/usaafricadialogue/DM5PR12MB24567AABC293ADE3F37E0472DA480%40DM5PR12MB2456.namprd12.prod.outlook.com.
kenneth harrow
professor emeritus
dept of english
michigan state university
Dear Farooq and Edward:
Due to my hectic ongoing Remote (Zoom) university summer teaching at my ripe age (of course, by popular demand), I have overlooked many past-times and hobbies in order to do a good job for the bright group of young honor college students assigned to my class. Therefore, pardon me for a belated intrusion into the witchcraft discourse.
By the way, in our Ghana Akan witchcraft parlance, Edward, what do we call witchcraft? Is it the same as "bayie" or "obayifo"/"bayifo" in our various linguistic expressions? In fact, as I recall the facts, when I lived in Europe,
a middle-aged Ghanaian woman had a mental breakdown, and she was admitted to a local mental hospital (in Europe); when some of us -- as fellow Ghanaians -- visited her, she confessed that she felt "having been caught right-handed" by a god (or "suman") back in Ghana due to her witchcraft activities of the past. She confessed to many past atrocities. She, in fact, insisted on being allowed to sit nude as part of the punishment for her cruel witchcraft past, etc. The hospital, of course, did not allow that; instead, the attending Psychiatrists insisted that their Ghanaian female patient suffered from nothing but psychosis. Therefore, her confessions --including adulterous behavior -- were simply couched in mental health terms and disregarded by the mental health experts; in fact, an underlying factor was that the woman's late father (a staunch Methodist preacher/catechist) also suffered from a similar mental health condition, from which he was classified back in his Ghanaian locality as being crazy (or "obodamfo") before he eventually died.
I also remember that due to my hectic graduate (or postgraduate) studies, for the three years I was earning my M.A. & Ph.D. (in record time at New York University, I never had the time to take a break to visit Ghana to see my aged mother in our village. Sadly, my mother was told that I was staying away from our village's witchcrafts ("abayifo"/"bayifoo" in our village, including my mother). When my mother reached me by phone, she seemed sad and agitated. Therefore, she asked me to "clear my ears" to listen to what she wanted to tell me: that if she had witchcraft {or "bayie" in Akan) to kill and "eat" me, she would have done so when I was much, much younger, maybe in my teenage years, when my bones were much softer ("un-ossified") for her aged teeth!. Indeed, that taught me a lesson because what my mother (currently aged 98 years) said at the time did make sense. I also rationalized: "Why kill me after I had acquired higher academic credentials to be able to get a higher-paying job to support her (my mother)?"
So, my quick query is this, Farooq and Edward: Does witchcraft exist? If so, what do we (Akans) of Ghana correctly call it?
A.B. Assensoh.