Saturday, 23 March 2013

Halloween Wins Ghana?

                           

                           
If I had her contact I would have been in touch with Ghanaian actress Juliet Ibrahim to clarify a picture post I saw on facebook by a friend who called it ‘Beautiful Halloween’. This was in November last year; apparently the Ace actress Juliet Ibrahim organized a Halloween Fancy dress for Celebrity, better still Fashion of Halloween in Ghana. Fashion of Halloween? This was attended by a large number of Ghanaians at the Aphrodisiac Night Club on November 2 2012.

Halloween, a yearly celebration observed in a number of countries on 31st October with Pagan roots, particularly the Celtic Samhain. Samhain (pronounced Sah-ween) had its beginnings in an ancient, pre-Christian Celtic festival of the dead, which is in line with Origin of jack-o-lanterns etc. The Celtics divided the year by four major holidays of the year. According to their calendar, 1st November began the year and marked the beginning of winter. Became the biggest holidays of the year were the souls of men who died the previous years are invited to mingle with the living. Samhain became Halloween when the Christians Missionaries attempted to change the religious practices of the people.  So I ask, do the people now celebrating Halloween in Africa and Ghana my Motherland know this?  I honestly believed that, most Ghanaians were lay on the Halloween concept…guess I was just wrong, because the Fashion Of Halloween was attended  in Grand style signifying that people even understood it, hence their large presence at the Aphrodisiac night club.

On 31st Oct every year, sidewalks are swarming with excited children masquerading as every imaginable creature and character. There is batman, the Joker, witches, devils, ghosts, skeletons. These kids move from door-to-door shouting “trick or treat” hoping to gather tons of candies before morning sets. I haven’t experienced or seen a Halloween night before, however I know children always get missing.

Moving straight to my analysis, is it our same Ghana who is against witchcraft and witches as it is evident in our Gambaga witches Village up North where accused witches are camped? Isn’t it our same Ghana that we all never wished to be branded a “witch” due to the Social Construct of our Backgrounds?
So why do we now have to adopt Halloween? Is it because it is a Foreign Export into our Continent and Country?

image from last years halloween


Well, imagine Halloween had an African descent, an African background, an African history; let’s just imagine Halloween emanated from an African country like Rwanda, would the remaining African Countries buy into it? I Doubt.  I am sure parents would say….What! Why should I allow my kid to dress like a witch? Why would I have to buy my kids Ghost Garments? Why should I have to allow my kid to some event I know she could possibly get missing? Why should I allow my kids or friends go to a neighbor and request/beg for food/candies as if I cannot provide them with such. I am very sure such questions would have been raised if Halloween had an African descent. So why are we not asking such questions now? Is it because Halloween is from the whites? So we easily have to copy blindly?

These assertions are useless and of no sense if we Africans for that matter, Ghanaians cannot be real and original. So long as we have acted on our thoughts of   wearing ghoulish and some fancy dresses to celebrate Halloween, we should also have to release our witches and have fun with them if we do not see Halloween as an event of entertaining and welcoming Witchcraft.

Many Ghanaians like many Africans genuinely fear witches, old men and women who are said to cause all kinds of  calamities and misfortunes from infertility to impotence, poverty to death, accidents to deformities and so on…of which suspicion fuel the accusation which are often supported by nothing more concrete than just a dream. In the Gambaga witch camp, women who are convicted of witchcraft are banished from their village and sentenced to a life-time of loneliness. 
Why won’t we as Ghanaians and Africans wake up from this eye-blinder canker- culture of believing, accepting and adapting foreign Cultures? When would we stand up against our disbeliefs and speak out our minds and act on it with confidence. It is best we take a critical stance as to the compromisation of our African principles and values. We import too much of infiltrated cultures into our society which makes us a ‘confused people’. 

I can speak with much confidence that if Halloween is to be entertained coming October, it is going to be much bigger and better than last years’…if it really ends up like that, then directly or indirectly Halloween has fully gained  grounds in my Motherland and on our African Continent. It is absurd to realize how we won’t copy things that would make us grow as a nation but with the unnecessary issues and event, people call... “Entertainment and fun”.  I could understand that such events help raise funds for projects; however, we have to take the aftermath into considerations. We have now adopted western marriages, westernized fashion trends (thank God we have been conscientised about our African Prints), and our Educational structure in Ghana is deficient because we have refused to adopt an educational model that fits the nature of our country.
It’s high time we practically frown on some values and concepts imported in our country, in as much as we are trying our very best to close our borders on material and physical goods. I personally do not wish to see Halloween extend its wings and legs in Ghana and in Africa.  
 
     Halloween cannot fall in love with Ghana, Halloween cannot capture Ghana
     Halloween should not win Ghana and Africa!!      

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