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The speed of self interest
E. Ablorh-Odjidja, Ghanadot

I have been spending some time around the area of Atua Hospital, in the Manya Krobo region, and I have witnessed a phenomenon which I think must be told.

About a week ago a gale tore through the area, toppling tress from roots up. In short time, strong trees that once were standing erect were lying on their sides in an open overgrown grass fields surrounding the Atua Hospital.

The gale happened one late evening and it left a messy scene the next day. Returning home from Accra that night, I did find it hard to recognize the place, and harder still in the darkness to find my way home. Fortunately, I made it home, but it was the morning after that I saw the extent of the damage - by nature run amok.

That morning, I saw an enterprising woman with a child on her back out early to chop away at a fallen tree, her cutlass flying above her head in a steady determined rhythm. My immediate thought about her act was to praise her for her volunteering spirit.

Then I wondered why for the weeks that I have been here the same spirit didn't take care of the overgrown weeds and grass around the hospital?

My curiosity was intensified when a few more men joined the woman, although at a different area of the field.  A community of active volunteers, I thought, acting in an altruistic manner to clear the damage done by nature. Well, the altruistic part, I learned later, was my own misunderstanding.  I had confused a true human predilection for a narrower self-interest for altruism.

Still, my curiosity deepened further, while at the same time willing to think the best of my people. Am I seeing something that was a throw back to the days when the Krobos had a sense of community? When a government initiated project, exercised to improve the life of an area gained instant and enthusiastic support because it was seen as help, but not as entitlement. 

But first, a look at the Atua hospital.  Over the years, what used to be a beautiful regional health facility has become a combined community and government neglect - plainly speaking an eye-sore and a poor excuse for a hospital.

The road leading to this hospital is one mess of pot-hole (crater) ridden pathway.  One could always imagine the agony of a broken hip patient riding in an ambulance along this road.

Standing on arrival at the front of the hospital, one could take in the surrounding sweep of tall unkempt grass and wonder what wild game it harbored. 

But for all the unkempt appearance, the Atua Hospital is a regional one that, without doubt, contributes daily to the well-being of the people of the area. Time was when the old Krobos would have volunteered to clean the area for nothing, and do so with appreciation because it was seen as their hospital.

That was the attitude then, but not now. Looking at the folks chopping up the fallen trees that day, I had made the mistake of thinking that the old Krobo spirit was back.

Then in the middle of writing this piece something else happened.  A group from the hospital itself had come out to a patch under some mango trees that had been spared by the gale and was furiously celebrating the 53rd Independence commemoration.

This celebration was very close to the sick wards but that fact didn't deter them from using their amplified speakers at full blast.  That the sick may be disturbed and made uncomfortable had no play on their conscience. And nothing seems to persuade them either that of all things, noise was an anathema for a hospital most.

But back to the theme of the intrepid Krobos. (Same theme could apply to folks from Bonwire and the Bankos of Ashanti and I am not leaving out the Kwawus or the folks from Djelukope.)

Gone were the days when the Krobos were intrepid farmers with a sense of responsibility and respect for proper behavior and had strong back and arms that fed the entire Eastern region with products from their farms.

These same Krobos that years before had community sense - had helped the Basel and German missionaries and the Presbyterian Church build institutions like Bana Hill, Krobo Girls and Krobo Teachers Training College and Presec; all institutions that had nurtured some of the best minds and many of our elites within Ghana - have been reduced today to a state of unawareness of their past.

I began to slowly realize that the Krobos of today were different; not even a shade of their old selves. But, the same can be said about many of the other ethnics in Ghana.

Men, who once worked with a sense of awe and responsibility for the upkeep of their environment; men mbued with hard work ethic and could hold their own among other nationals, even while running around as proud cloth wearing illiterates, have now been reduced to insignia wearing “Obroni Waawu” shoppers (or used cloth zealots who refuse to do menial work because they consider themselves hip.)

They are beyond recognizing the danger of bad roads leading to their community hospitals.  They will, however, be on the alert for a gale to blow down a few trees so as to enable them to harvest free firewood.

By the way, the fallen trees on the hospital grounds were all cleared by noon the next day - roots, branches and all. But the tall grass that made the hospital look unkempt was left untouched.


E. Ablorh-Odjidja, Publisher www.ghanadot.com, Washington, DC, March 6, 2010


Permission to publish:  Please feel free to publish or reproduce, with credits, unedited.  If posted at a website, email a copy of the web page to publisher@ghanadot.com . Or don't publish at all.

 


 

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