Tuesday, August 4, 2020

Re: USA Africa Dialogue Series - IN MEMORY OF AKUA DENTEH

Farooq,

Thanks for this enlightening excursion into the Baatonu conception of witchcraft. I found the stories both perversely entertaining and insightful. This is an outlier in my admittedly limited familiarity with Pentacostal and traditional engagements with witchcraft in several African societies. My sample is quite small, so the Baatonu conception may not actually be an outlier. Clearly, there are many kinds of witchcraft beliefs on the continent. If one is looking for a commonality in the complexity and diversity, it may be the idea of inflicting violence or banishment on the suspected witch/wizard. What seems to connect these disparate stories is the impulse to banish, punish, and force a confession of evil doing that satisfies and corroborates the accusers' externalization of their misfortunes and/or their belief in death being the result of malevolent spiritual acts.

On Tue, Aug 4, 2020 at 3:57 PM Farooq A. Kperogi <farooqkperogi@gmail.com> wrote:
Moses,

It's different among the Baatonu people of Borgu. The equivalent of a witch in my language is "dobo," but I'll use dobo here. A dobo can be male or female, middle-aged or old, powerful or powerless but rarely young. In fact, dobobu (plural of dobo) tend to be mostly middle-aged men. They are reputed to be inescapably malignant men (and occasionally women) with uncanny capacities to cause the deaths of people through supernatural means.

When I was growing up in the 1970s and 1980s, there was a Baatonu medicine man from the Benin Republic side of Borgu by the name of Daabo who used to perform magic tricks that purported to show dobobu in a magical mirror. People would identify them, fish them out from their homes, beat them up, and drive them out of town. They were never killed. This happened up until the late 1980s.

One day in a town not far from where I grew up, we were told, the medicine man (who visited communities only when he was invited at the cost of a lot money) identified a successful farmer as a dobo, shaved him clean (as he usually did), and told the farmer to publicly name the people he'd caused to die. As he was about to reel out the names, his son stopped him and beat the medicine man black and blue for slandering his father whom he said was innocent of the smears against him. 

Spectators wanted to retaliate on the medicine man's behalf, but he told them to leave the young man alone and then bragged that his assailant was a dead man walking. He said the young man would die in a matter of days. He didn't die. (I think he is still alive and should be in his late 50s now). That was what opened people's eyes to the medicine man's fraud.

People later learned that the medicine man often collectected money from the rivals of successful men (and a few women) and tagged them dobobu so that they would be disgraced out of town. The man was so successful at deception and at getting people to believe that he had supernatural powers that he acted as an occasional "spiritual consultant" for President Shehu Shagari in the 1980s--or so we were told.

The emir of my hometown hated the medicine man and the division and distrust he caused, so he forbade him from setting foot in his domain. In retaliation, he said our emir, an educated man who had been a junior minister in Northern Nigeria and a commissioner when Kwara State was created in 1966, was a dobo who feared being exposed! And several of his opponents believed it until he died.

Occasional dobo hunting has returned to my natal community again. But this time, the dobo hunters are self-proclaimed Islamic clerics. They disproportionately target successful middle-aged men. When I visited my hometown in 2016, I wanted to go and challenge one dobo hunter, a self-described Muslim cleric, who had destroyed people's lives by calling them dobobu, but my mother and my siblings begged not to.

Two years later, the dobo hunter's fraud was exposed. Like Daabo before him, people discovered that he collected money from people to declare people dobobu so that their wealth would be destroyed.

In other words, in the Borgu society, we have almost the inverse of what you described. 

Farooq
 


Farooq A. Kperogi, Ph.D.
School of Communication & Media
Social Science Building 
Room 5092 MD 2207
402 Bartow Avenue
Kennesaw State University
Kennesaw, Georgia, USA 30144
Cell: (+1) 404-573-9697
Personal website: www.farooqkperogi.com
Twitter: @farooqkperogi
Nigeria's Digital Diaspora: Citizen Media, Democracy, and Participation

"The nice thing about pessimism is that you are constantly being either proven right or pleasantly surprised." G. F. Will



On Tue, Aug 4, 2020 at 6:46 AM Moses Ebe Ochonu <meochonu@gmail.com> wrote:
I do not have time now to digest and properly reflect on the barbaric lynching of Akua Denteh and the commentaries on it on this forum, but let me drop a question. Does anyone think it is happenstance that most people accused of malevolent witchcraft in African societies--in both the secular and Pentecostal contexts--are the most vulnerable members of these societies: children, the elderly, and women? I have posed this question in Pentecostal circles and have yet to get a satisfactory answer. In my years of attending pentecostal events, I have not seen a man being identified as a carrier of evil spirits or a practitioner of witchcraft and being subjected to what pentecostal clerics call deliverance, which sometimes includes violent assault on the accused. It is almost always young women, children, and old women that are targeted.There is clearly a gender/patriarchy/power dimension here. I truly want answers because I don't believe that it is a coincidence that the anti-witchcraft people, in religious and secular spaces, target the most vulnerable demographics.

On Mon, Aug 3, 2020 at 10:36 AM Kissi, Edward <ekissi@usf.edu> wrote:

 

I acknowledge the first report in this forum on the public "immolation" of Akua Denteh by her own community, and the many rejoinders to that report that have since appeared here that have illuminated our reflections on a dangerous culture in Ghana, and Africa. I add here a tribute to a woman I never knew, but whose painful death reminds me of a lingering superstitious logic that I know too well as a Ghanaian, and to which I offer some solutions, for what they may be worth.

 

The lynching of Akua Denteh is, undoubtedly, a grotesque expression of a certain morbidity of mind in the perpetrator society. Any community that is invested in a cultural logic that leads to the public burning of a 90 year old woman is trapped in a dead culture and in need of a trans-community, counter-cultural redemption.

Condemnation of this dastard deed is deserved. But beyond that, a flight into causation, as warranted as it is, to chart some novel paths to a solution, can sometimes devolve into sophistry. But that is sometimes needed. Belief in witchcraft is terribly endemic in Ghanaian society. As the report indicates, it is not a cultural affliction of the uneducated. It paralyses the educated too. I did not cure my own mind of that superstitious thought until I began graduate studies in Canada in 1989. In that new Canadian campus environment, I never heard of any fellow student, or member of the University community, talk "religiously" about malevolent old women prancing in the dark and eating human beings turned into chicken in the canopy of trees as I heard throughout my youth in my Ghanaian village, and my undergraduate years at Legon. It did not take me long in Canada to realize that these are cultural stupidities that had long shaped my thoughts in my environment in Ghana about old wrinkled women who could potentially boil my brain for dinner, and make me a failure in life, without taking responsibility for the choices I make in my life. So environment seems to breed harmful mentalities.

Beliefs in witchcraft may have been worsened by the Pentecostal churches, today, as OAA aptly observes, but quack diviners and "witch-doctors" and "fetish-priests" have long dabbled in Ghana's cultural conversation about malevolent forces. Just take a look at Ghana's major roadways and you will see the many frightfully-dressed males and females on billboards festooned with white clay, with raffia palm skirts, and dyed whiskers, asking for consultation on witchcraft, and promising instant painful death of witches for the bewitched. That is a disturbing national story that bespeaks of a decadent community and national culture.

 

For many years the physical burdens of old age that scar the appearance of the elderly have often given room to harmful speculations about the supernatural abilities of the old and wrinkled.

What is disturbing in Akua Denteh's murder is her community's involvement in her lynching. There was no expression of gender solidarity as the perpetrators dispatched her. In fact women in her community took part in the lynching. And the male soothsayer instigator of her death, and the men in the community who made common cause with the maddening lynch-mob to burn her alive, speak of a community that is deeply invested in a belief system that may need a fundamental attack on its foundations to eradicate. Otherwise this may not be the last public lynching of a vulnerable old woman on the whims of the superstitious.

Educated people, priests, chiefs, politicians, and community leaders appear to be captives of this cultural thoughts about Witchcraft. Would these same people carry their beliefs in witchcraft with them, and the murders they commit to express them, beyond their communities when they migrate and become a diasporic group in an elsewhere community? If not, then might some carefully-organized inter-faith or inter-community cultural conversation help to make Akua Denteh's death the last? Can local communities, and human rights organizations bring in people from other parts of the country, the region, the continent, the world to talk about how they cured themselves of their own witchcraft  superstitions and the benefits they secured?

Certainly, no state can legislate sane thoughts. But a community that suffers from the insane beliefs that got Akua Denteh murdered bears the bigger responsibility to rethink its moral values. Given previous outrages, it appears that incarceration of the murderers by the state may not be the needed response to deter future perpetrators of lynching. Might some form of public shaming in their own communities be the better deterrence? Could community leaders not tainted by their own witchcraft beliefs arrest the murderers, and that soothsayer, and make them stand at the public square, or community market, every day, for a month or more, with bells and large placards around their necks, with inscriptions in the local language broadcasting their murderous deeds to passers-by? There is nothing far more shameful in many Ghanaian cultures than such public  humiliation.

 

Can Art and Performance help since Ghanaian music, films and drama (including Nigerian) have also perpetuated beliefs in witchcraft and justified death for the accused? Can the musicians, film-makers, and dramatists who have contributed to this cultural malaise help cleanse it of its lingering and deadly debris? Otherwise, Akua Denteh's death will not be the last in Ghana.

 

If I were not a poor college teacher, but had more legal tender to invest in one moral cause, I would establish a television station, as that has become a contemporary cultural artefact in Ghana, with all types of evangelical stations churning the type of cultural poison that killed Akua Denteh. Mine will be a counter-cultural television channel aimed at producing programs and drama attacking the foundations of our community and national beliefs in witchcraft, and comparing our society steeped in witchcraft to others that are not.

 

That, perhaps, may be the best cultural tribute to the memory of an old woman who perished in the name of a dangerous cultural thought.

 

Edward Kissi

 

From: usaafricadialogue@googlegroups.com <usaafricadialogue@googlegroups.com> On Behalf Of Toyin Falola
Sent: Sunday, August 2, 2020 9:51 AM
To: dialogue <USAAfricaDialogue@googlegroups.com>
Subject: USA Africa Dialogue Series - Murder: Akua Denteh of Ghana

 

Akua Denteh: Last 'witch' to be murdered in Ghana?


https://www.ghanaweb.com/GhanaHomePage/features/Akua-Denteh-Last-witch-to-be-murdered-in-Ghana-1023577

 

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