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Posts Tagged ‘George Bush’

Hope amid horror

Slave Castle

By Komla Dumor
BBC World Service, Cape Coast

The 17th Century Cape Coast Castle overlooking the Atlantic Ocean in Ghana is a testament to man’s inhumanity to his fellow man.

A few metres below where I am sitting, thousands of black African captives were kept in conditions that make me shudder even to imagine.

They were chained, naked and hungry in hot filthy conditions – waiting for slave ships that would cart millions to a life of degradation and humiliation.

As I went below into the darkness of the cells, those who came through here whispered stories to me in the silence – women clutching crying babies, groans of pain, and tears, yes, so many tears.

I saw the faces of those dragged and whipped, kicking and screaming through the door of no-return into the belly of a slave ship.

Slave Castle

This is a desolate, dark, miserable place.

I have been to the Cape Coast Castle before and it is always traumatic.

But in this place of human shame there is a light.

It is a tiny square in the corner of the high wall that the architects of this place provided to ventilate the thousands they so insensitively crammed into this dungeon – through it a single powerful stream of light shines.

No ordinary visitor

Two centuries after the first major attempt to end the slave trade, another visitor with an African father and a white American mother will stand close to where I am and perhaps battle with the same emotions.

But he is no ordinary visitor – Barack Obama is the 44th president of the United States.

"Coming to Ghana is, for many African Americans, the equivalent of a spiritual journey"

He is the man who is widely seen to embody the hopes a generation of black, white, Hispanic and Asian people around the world.

The people of Ghana are extremely excited about President Obama’s arrival.

His pictures are everywhere. Songs have been written in his honour.

His choice of Ghana is significant on many levels.

Ghana was the first black African country to attain independence from British rule in 1957 – an inspiration to others across the continent.

At the time, many African Americans, burdened by segregation and discrimination, looked to Ghana and its founder Kwame Nkrumah as a beacon of hope.

The story is told of Vice-President Richard Nixon – the US guest of honour at our independence celebrations – who greeted a well-dressed black man with the question: "So how does it feel to be free"

The man replied: "I don’t know… I am from Alabama."

Frustration

The local papers have been running pictures of a young Muhammad Ali and Martin Luther King celebrating Ghana’s independence.

Coming to Ghana is, for many African Americans, the equivalent of a spiritual journey so common to all faiths.

Poster of President Obama

Generations of African American doctors, lawyers teachers and educators still call Ghana home.

At independence, Kwame Nkrumah declared that this was "Our chance to show the world that… the black man can manage his own affairs."

Decades later we are still struggling to prove it.

The frustration runs deep across Africa, from Ghana through Nigeria to Kenya and Zimbabwe.

Contemporary politics does not take notice of something as vague as the word "hope".

The Obama presidency will be measured by how he deals with a global economic crisis, the threat of terrorism and the spiral of environmental degradation.

It would be naive for Africans to assume that the election of Barak Obama means an economic windfall for the continent or that the president does not have a strategic interest in securing this region’s oil.

That ‘thing’

Bill Clinton and George Bush both came to Ghana during their presidencies.

Nonetheless, the emotion involved with the arrival of Barak Obama is immeasurable.

What Barak Obama represents is that "thing" – the thing that Maya Angelou says "Makes the caged bird sing."

I see it in the faces of young girls from northern Ghana who carry back-breaking loads for a few cents in the markets clutching dreams of owning their own business.

I see it in the face of the taxi-driver who works extra hours so his children can go to a better school than the one he attended.

I’ve seen the same look on the face of a young doctor at Korle Bu teaching hospital who is overworked and underpaid and still delivers some of the best medical practice in Africa.

They do not want a handout, they just want a fair chance to achieve their potential.

That look is called "enyidaso" in the Akan language of West Africa.

It is the light that shone hundreds of years ago on the tear-stained faces of the human beings who passed through the Cape Coast dungeons.

Barak Obama calls it "hope."

Komla Dumor presents BBC World Service’s The World Today programme. Born and raised in Ghana, he worked for Accra-based Joy FM, Ghana’s leading commercial radio station before joining the BBC.


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Bush library to display Saddam Hussein’s gun

Deposed Iraqi leader was armed with the pistol when Delta Force troops captured him in 2003

George Bush is not a man who does irony. It’s not in his personal vocabulary. Take the exquisite irony behind the story of Saddam Hussein’s gun.

The weapon, a 9mm Glock 18C, was discovered by Delta Force special troops when they dug Hussein out of his fox hole outside Tikrit on 13 December 2003. The legendary beast of Baghdad emerged from the 8ft-deep hole bewildered and disorientated; with his shaggy beard and unkempt mop of hair he looked closer to a dishevelled elf than one of the world’s great dictators.

The Iraq war at that point was still in its infancy, Bush was feeling buoyant. In his eyes the pistol represented a fundamental triumph of good over evil.

After four Delta Force soldiers presented Bush with the pistol, mounted in a glass case, it became one of his most prized possessions. He would show it off in the Oval Office to visiting military dignitaries, with the boast “The Delta guys pulled it off Saddam”.

Now the New York Times has discovered that he intends to make it a centrepiece of his presidential library that is being built, at a cost of $200m (£123m), on the campus of Southern Methodist University in Dallas, Texas. Though the gun belongs to the US national archives, associates told the Times that he intends prominently to display it there. The library is to be organised thematically around 25 key decisions taken by Bush during his eight years in the White House.

Mark Langdale, the president of the foundation that is being set up in Bush’s name, told the paper that “the gun is an interesting artefact, and it tells you that the United States captured Saddam Huseein and disarmed him literally. How we fit that into the decision to go to war, we haven’t gotten to that point yet.”

One can empathise with Langdale’s difficulty. How indeed does the pistol fit with the decision to go to war?

Which is where irony, or the former president’s lack of it, kicks in. Hussein was found with the pistol as he crouched on all fours in his cave. But he offered no resistance to the Delta Forces and when they came to confiscate his gun they found that it was unloaded. It is safe to assume that the Bush library will not labour that point when it opens in 2013.

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


George Bush Sr skidiving

Skydiving; what a cool way to celebrate one’s 85th birthday.
Well at least that’s what George Bush Sr told himself when he jumped off a plane over Maine.

He did great too! And his son, ex-president George W. Bush was waiting down there to congratulate him.