I state right away that I do not think so. And why do I think kicking
out Christianity and Islam is not the answer to development in Africa?
I understand clearly the sentiments of those who would want
Christianity and Islam kicked out of Africa. Yea, that sounds exciting.
Isn't it? Definitely this is a proposition in good faith, a well meaning
desire to get Africa back on its feet, not kneeling or prostrating
while other regions are standing. Christianity and Islam should be
thrown out, some people argue, so that Africans would have peace,
development, progress name them. But I think those making this proposal
might be be overlooking certain things. They may be under some form of
illusion.
Surely, given what is going on in the world today, it is in order to
dismantle the infrastructure of Christianity and Islam. Of course the
brainwashing that is going on in Africa is massive. The damage which
religious – christian and Islamic- indoctrination is doing to Africans
is colossal. The savage acts of fanatics is mind boggling. The African
youth capital is being depleted by religious extremism and other
mistrusted otherworldly ideologies. Religious fundamentalism is
destroying the continent slowly.
But my concern is this, as impractical as the idea seems, kicking
Christianity and Islam out of Africa is not the only solution and may
not be the panacea for all Africa's ills. This is mainly because there
is more to the damage in the region than what Christianity and Islam
have done and are doing.
Now if we are to kick the christian and mohammedan religions out of
Africa, we still have at least another religion to contend with – the
African Traditional Religion which has some mind-and morality-numbing
superstitions like Christianity and Islam. I said at least another
religion because there are other foreign or homegrown faiths and
spiritual systems out there, apart from these three faiths which are,
competing for space and place in the African religious market.
But let us say, we will have mainly the traditional religion and
deities to deal with, that is enough trouble still and I do not think,
the region and its people will be better of with African deities and
religion taking over the religious space. Why?
Africa will face serious troubles and challenges similar to what it
is confronting now. There will be sectarian and theological disputes. We
have many tradition based-atrocious practices like witch hunting,
ritual killing, albino murders, human sacrifice to deal with. Will
kicking Christianity and Islam out of Africa stop these harmful
traditional practices? I guess it may worsen the situation because
throwing out these Abrahamic religions would create a vacuum which many
might interpret as an opportunity to valorize traditional beliefs. I do
not think African religion would be a unifying factor at all because it
has never been. Actually there is nothing like 'African religion', what
we have is African religions because what constitutes 'African
(Traditional) religion' differs from country to country, from community
to community sometimes from family to family, so also are African gods
or deities. We may actually see Africa descend into religious chaos and
anarchy as many countries did after independence. Africans may likely be
divided more by African religions than has been the case with
Christianity and Islam. The traditional deities which Africans worship
are legion. There are thousands if not tens of thousands of them. And
Africans seem not to have agreed on which ones are true or false. In
fact due to the influence of Christianity and Islam in Africa, many
Africans no longer reckon with these deities. They regards them as false
gods or idols. So kicking Christianity and Islam out of Africa may not
lead to Africans embracing traditional religions and gods. I guess what
could happen if we were to kick Christianity and Islam out of Africa, is
that another fight might ensue among African god believers, that is the
fight to determine which African god is superior, which version of
African religion is 'true' religion'; which African god is more or most
powerful, which African religion is from god; which god is the true god,
which African god is still alive; which African god is the supreme God.
Yes I foresee a situation of “African gods at war”, or better African
religions at war. Think about what happened in aftermath of
independence, many African countries went to war against the other. It
will not be different to what could happen to African deities and
religions if Christianity and Islam are kicked out of the region.
And that is where the division and conflict would start. So, I do not
see how 'African religions” would unite Africans. I do not see how
worshiping African deities will bring peace and harmony to the region.
If there is anything that unites a people it is their relationship with
human beings not with local deities; it is reality not revelation,
science not superstition, thinking not blind faith. It is fact not
fiction, the habit of reason and questioning, not dogma. It is the
virtue of courage, not the fear of imaginary beings. it is openness to
new ideas, not close mindedness.
I think Christianity, Islam and other religions should not be kicked
out because such an endeavor is not consistent with the ideals of a free
and open society. All religions and deities – local and foreign – are
welcome to the African table of free inquiry and critical examination.
Christianity, Islam and other dogmatic faiths would fade away at some
point just like other religions which human beings have created if they
cannot withstand critical scrutiny. That is how they would kick
themselves out. The god of Christianity – Jesus- and the god of Islam –
Allah- would become useless and unappealing at least to most people and
then would slowly disappear like other deities which human beings once
worshiped and later abandoned.
Instead of thinking about how to kick out Christianity or Islam,
Africans should begin to question and critically evaluate all religious
claims. They should focus their energies on tearing away the veil of
dogma that shields Christianity and Islam from critical evaluation and
free inquiry. Africans should be exploring to know if these Abrahamic
'emperors' have any clothes at all.The people of Africa should start
breaking the taboo against apostasy and blasphemy and start tasting the
forbidden fruit of atheism and freethought.
Africans should
embark on the process of ascertaining whether Christianity and Islam are
still relevant and can serve as meaningful guides for 21st century
humans. The problem in Africa is not Christianity or Islam per se but
the dogmatic attitude of Africans towards these cultural myths and
superstitious systems. The problem is in the habit of blind belief and
reverence by Africans – Christians, Muslims or Traditionalists, in their
reluctance to seek evidence for religious claims and the fear to
question supernatural postulations; in the lack of rational and critical
will to express doubts openly and publicly – and in the inability to
freely examine spiritual phenomena. The future of Africa rests not on
kicking Christianity and Islam out of the region but on Africans
rediscovering the values of intellectual awakening and enlightenment.
By Leo Igwe
.............Happy To See You Here to Read the Blogs and Please To Be Here Is Not A Must, But As Long As You Are Here Use Your Brain Properly!!!