On a recent tour of his Upper-West home region, the majority
leader in the Ghanaian parliament was reported to have exhorted authorities of
our nation’s universities and colleges to allow students “to engage in healthy
political debates and learning outside [their] classrooms” (Ghana News Agency 11/22/09).
Furthermore, Mr. Alban Bagbin was reported to have added that vigorously
participating in “partisan political activities on [college and varsity]
campuses [was a] fundamental human right” of these students.
Needless to say, the preceding would have come as all-too-laudable
had the speaker been known to have distinguished himself as a model of healthy
and constructive debates in Ghana’s National Assembly. To be certain, for the
two decades, or so, that he has established his imperious presence in our
unicameral House of Representatives, Mr. Bagbin has achieved an unenviable
notoriety as a predictable spearhead of incessant and gratuitous parliamentary
boycotts, especially while his party, the so-called National Democratic
Congress (NDC), sat on the opposition benches in our august architectural icon
of constitutional democracy.
At any rate, about the only fundamental right which Ghanaian
college and university students – I am very uncomfortable with the vacuously
pretentious use of the rather histrionic term of “tertiary,” an utterly
meaningless grab-bag of rhetorical elitism – reserve is the right to be
educated in consonance with qualitatively global pedagogical and technological
standards. For as someone pointed out in one of the chat-rooms on Ghanaweb.com, Ghanaian university
students have yet to match the versatility of their classmates and counterparts
in such East African countries as Kenya and Uganda in the critical sphere of
cyber culture.
His remarks also indicate that Mr. Bagbin is tragically innocent
of the quite disturbing history of student politics on the campuses of our
nation’s institutions of higher learning. And on this score, perhaps a brief
mnemonic prodding would be quite in order. In sum, had he bothered to consult
and confer with the astute and sterling likes of Professors J. H. Nketia and S.
K. B. Asante, as well as Mr. Vincent Asisseh, this writer’s uncle-in-law and
until very recently a luminary in the largely lackluster NDC political
firmament, Mr. Bagbin would have quickly learned to his horror that it was,
indeed, the unsavory politicization of our university and college campuses by
the erstwhile Convention People’s Party (CPP) that massively and dramatically
catalyzed the deterioration of academic and professional standards at Ghana’s
flagship academy, the University of Ghana. The parliamentary majority leader
would also have learned about the infamous controversy between the African Show
Boy (ASB) and then-Legon Vice-Chancellor Conor Cruise O’Brien.
In other words, politicizing our public academic institutions may
well spell the definitive doom of these coveted centers of modern civilization
and culture. For instance, once students are rendered docile and malleable
instruments of campus police culture, which is almost certain to occur in our
Ghanaian milieu, professorial independence and creativity would forthwith cease
to exist, with students being transformed, almost overnight, into Young
Pioneer-like spies for vindictive politicians and their sullen corporate
paymasters.
What is also likely to result, as was embarrassingly and
tragically witnessed at the University of Ghana in the 1960s, would be a weird
and bizarre situation whereby the President of Ghana, now re-morphed as the de
facto Chancellor of our public higher educational institutions, begins to
constitute himself into a one-man University Council self-charged with the
erratic and whimsical hiring and summary firing of university faculty and
staff.
In any case, the Ghanaian academy of the 1950s and ’60s was
dramatically different from what pertains today. In those days, it was mature
adults who largely populated our college and university campuses. What the
foregoing means is that the university students of my father’s generation knew
about something culturally and axiologically meaningful called “parental”
and/or “social” responsibility, which our current students, barely out of
diapers, have yet to learn. In the latter sense, therefore, one may, perhaps,
be apt in surmising that the parliamentary majority leader simply meant to
encourage our college students to assume a central role in our national
political culture. If so, then about the best method by which to induce such,
admittedly salutary, behavior would be to enable the cream of our youth and
future leaders to do what they are best suited for the moment – which is to
avail these talented young men and women of the most up-to-date learning
instruments and facilities. For as the Akan maxim goes: “One has to first learn
to crawl; and then one can begin to walk.”
As for cheap credit-harvesting, as Mr. Bagbin did by proudly,
albeit vacuously, claiming the NDC to have established the least winsome of
Ghana’s public institutions of higher learning, the so-called University of
Development Studies (UDS), we the bona fide scions of Drs. Danquah and Busia
have absolutely no rivals in staking our claim to Ghana’s foremost academy and
the very same one which educated the likes of Mr. Bagbin, the Tsikatas, Ahwois,
Yankahs and their ingrate cohorts!
At this juncture, dear reader, hasn’t it already become obvious
that the Bagbin tack – or approach – to “student politicization” (as clearly
opposed to “civic conscientization,” my unqualified apologies to the African
Show Boy) is likely to generate precisely the kind of regressive and rancorous
discourse which no well-meaning Ghanaian is apt to endorse? Then again, exactly
how meaningful and/or productive is this partisan faux student organization
called Tertiary Educational Institutions Network of the National Democratic
Congress (TEIN-NDC), beyond the quixotically contradictory and technologically
pretentious?
*Kwame
Okoampa-Ahoofe, Jr., Ph.D., is Associate Professor of English, Journalism and
Creative Writing at Nassau Community College of the State University of New
York, Garden City. He is a Governing Board Member of the Accra-based Danquah
Institute (DI), the pro-democracy think tank, and the author of 20 books,
including “Selected Political Writings” (Atumpan Publications/Lulu.com, 2008).
E-mail: okoampaahoofe@aol.com.