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Wednesday, July 6, 2022

Professor Kale's New Book on Cameroon .Here is Reviewer Tala Kashim's Critical Appraisal

The Author Ndiva Kofele Kale 

Alliance-Franco Camerounaise,Buea -Cameroon,on July 1,2022, was the venue for the launch of a new book on Cameroon. The book,"THE PAST AS PROLOGUE: ESSAYS ON CAMEROON, 1980-1995" is authored by Distinguished University Professor Emeritus, Ndiva Kofele kale. 

The launch ,which was chaired by Senior Barrister Henry Ngale Monono, attracted a significant audience. 

At the end of the event ,there was a scramble for  autographed copies, especially as the author is noted in Cameroon for his patriotic  bluntness and outspokenness on socio-political matters of public interest .The  reviewers were free thinkers: Professor of History, Victor Julius Ngoh;emeritus Professor of Literature Kashim Ibrahim Tala and veteran journalist ,Charly Ndi Chia.

 Professor Kashim Ibrahim Tala gave a critical appraisal of the book.

 Below is his review :
Reviewer Kashim Ibrahim Tala

          BOOK REVIEW 

                    TITLE:

THE PAST AS PROLOGUE: ESSAYS ON CAMEROON, 1980-1995

AUTHOR:Emeritus Professor Ndiva Kofele Kale

PUBLISHERS: Nya  Publishers, Yaounde Cameroon

FIRST PUBLISHED: 2022 CHAPTERS: 14, pages 117

                             

THE BOOK

This slim book, THE PAST AS PROLOGUE is a collection of fourteen polemical and thought-provoking articles published in diverse newspapers and magazines between 1980 and 1995 by the iconic Cameroonian scholar, jurist and political scientist, Emeritus Professor  Ndiva Kofele Kale.

The book is about the consequences of the historical and political evolution of Cameroon since the attainment of political independence. As such, it covers a whole range of subjects. It begins by outlining how political independence set off a degenerative process in which freedom became circumscription while democracy collapsed into autocracy. It goes on to discuss power and responsibility as they affect political governance in Cameroon and finally, it dwells on the disfunctionality of the state and the crisis of legitimacy under the First and Second Republics. Generally speaking, the book can be said to be about the lack of restraint in wielding political power added to an unbridled scramble for materialism which in most cases has resulted in the destruction of democratic principles. It is about the tendency of the people in power to forget the people they govern. In short, it is about the failure of political leadership in Cameroon.

The destruction of democratic principles on the African continent is well documented. Scholars and political scientists on both sides of the Atlantic like Frantz Fanon, Bernard Fonlon, Basil Davidson, Adebayo Adedeji, Ali Mazrui, Arjun Appadurai, Benedict Anderson and Gideon Mutiso to name just these, have commented on it.  African politicians like Kwame Nkrumah,Nnamndi Azikiwe, Julius Nyerere, K.A. Busia, Obafemi Awolowo and Sekou Toure have expounded on it.  Creative writers like Wole Soyinka, Chinua Achebe, Sembene Ousmane, Mongo Beti, Ayi Kwei Armah, Nurudin Farah, Dambudzo Marechera and Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie have written copiously on it. But, the fact remains that democracy, especially the way it is evolving in Africa is both tangential and contentious. As a result, the subject cannot be fully exhausted.

Furthermore, since every scholar approaches the study of a subject from the perspective of his or her own discipline and with propositions of one sort or another, it follows, logically, that the choice of a proposition will vary with the aim and context of each study. Thus, although this book, The Past as Prologue is about democracy and the wanton and rapacious use of power, it differs from the other texts on the subject in several respects.  First, it is about Cameroon. Second, it attributes the crisis of democracy in Cameroon to those in positions of power who insist on having their own particular brand of democracy with values so different from those of other nations that there are no meeting points.  Third, it explains why democracy is failing in Cameroon and, it then proceeds to propose the way forward.  Thus, while most of the discussions on the subjects of democracy and political power by other scholars can be said to be based essentially on the adage that a man who does not know where the rain began to beat him cannot know where to begin to dry himself, Professor Kale shows us clearly in this book not only where the rain began to beat us but also where we can effectively begin to dry ourselves.

A key aim of this book is to deconstruct the popular Cameroonian concept of political leadership. That is, to challenge the over-simplified concept of leadership that the majority of Cameroonians see as desirable and offers them the comfort of a “Messiah” who can save them but who actually distorts leadership in unhelpful ways. Another aim is to reconstruct leadership to give an account of a good leader, a servant leader who focuses on identifying and meeting the needs of others  instead of concentrating on  acquiring power, wealth and fame for himself.  In short, one who is interested in serving people instead of using people.

THE TITLE OF THE BOOK

The question that comes to mind here is, why did Professor Kale decide to reissue these fourteen articles in book form long after the impulse and circumstance of their original composition have passed?  To attempt an answer to this question, it may be necessary to make recourse to the title because the key to any book is its title. The book under review is titled THE PAST AS PROLOGUE. This title is accurate, compact and effective. The key words, “Past” and “Prologue” have been carefully and deliberately chosen by the author to conscientize the reader and to contextualize the problem.

Simply put, the word “Past” refers to the period of time before and until but not including the present time. That is, from 1980 to 1995. The implication of the word “Past” is that, we cannot hope to look forward to the future without first looking backward to our past, to our history. Put in slightly different terms, since the past is a prelude to the present and a determinant of the future, it follows logically that the best way to the future is through the past. This interpretation of the past concurs with the African view of history as a continuum consisting of a past, present and future-all inseparably linked together.

This imperative of looking inwards toward our past as a pre-condition for fundamental social, economic and political change is accentuated in the following Igbo proverb which states that, “A man who does not know where the rain began to beat him cannot say where he dried himself”. One gathers from the ramification of this proverb that the mistakes of the past can be valuable if we are ready to learn from them. Nevertheless one cannot deny the fact that some of the articles in this book do bring back unhappy memories of our country’s past. This begs the question how do we as Cameroonians react to these unhappy memories? Experience has shown that we have developed a phobia about our past and a total aversion to criticism whether positive or negative. In other words, we have chosen to turn a blind eye to the agonies of our past, especially the curtailment of the freedom of criticism by blatant intimidations and draconian decrees, and often physical incarcerations. That is, we have decided to play the ostrich, and we have become cynical and apathetic.

It is obvious from a reading of this book that the moral and philosophical stances of the author do not condone these escapist tendencies of Cameroonians to shy away from reality and seek consolation in the amnesia of illusion. The eminent Nigerian writer Chinua Achebe, reflecting on the reactions of his countrymen to the socio-political imbroglio in their country, declared as follows:

I believe that in our situation the greater danger lies not in remembering but in forgetting, in pretending that slogans are the same as truth; that Nigeria always prone to self-deception, stands in great need of reminders… I believe that if we are to survive as a nation we need to grasp the meaning of tragedy. One way to do it is to remind ourselves constantly of the things that happened and how we felt when they were happening (MYCD, 1975: XIII).

What Achebe has to say about Nigeria in in the above excerpt is unfortunately true of the Cameroonian predicament. Professor Kale is also asking us the same question in this book: what are we able to do with what has happened and is still happening to us?

Let me now turn to the other key word in the title to wit: “Prologue”. Simply put, the word refers to an anticipating act or event. It has been used by the author as the catalyst of the socio-economic and political quagmire in which Cameroonians have found themselves. As the author himself explains in the introduction of the book, “the past provides the foundation upon which the present and the future are built. It is, as it were the prologue to any discourse on the present” (p.1).  The author goes further to extrapolate that:

The idea that history sets the context for the present was very much in my mind when I decided to republish these essays in book form. But my appropriation of Shakespeare’s “What’s past is prologue” metaphor in the book’s title is not only intended to mean that the past is predictor of the future. But to suggest also that though the past is already written, the future remains ours to mold, subject to the choices we decide to make. Our past merely sets the stage for the story that is yet to come. In this sense, Cameroon’s future is a blank page on which the real story is yet to be written (Africa Excellence, March-April, 2022:P30)

The implication of Professor Kale’s statement is that this book is addressed to the present generation of Cameroonians. If that is so, then it is an indictment. That is, it acknowledges the fact that our generation, the generation that witnessed the Re-unification of Cameroon has failed and woefully too. We have been unable to react to the notions of exclusion and marginalization otherwise known as the “Anglophone Problem”.  Hence, we have to cede the ground to younger and more vibrant blood. That, you will agree with me, is a painful truth which may not be easy to digest.

Yet, the question still remains: Can this generation rise to the challenge? Or will it behave like the absurd man in the proverb who leaves his burning house to chase a rat feeling from the flames? In short, will this generation make or mar the future of our beloved country? Will we of the cursed generation wake up from our slumber and help them to fulfill their historic destiny, or will we sit back with folded arms and watch them follow in our doomed footsteps? These are some of the poignant questions which Professor Kale is putting to us through this book. No matter on what side of the divide we find ourselves, one thing is clear- there is no middle-of-the-road stance, no fence sitting. The following two passages remind us that there is no equivocation in the matter. The first passage is taken from Act IV scene 3 of Shakespeare’s play Julius Caesar. Hear Brutus admonishing Casius:

 

There is a tide in the affairs of man,

Which, taken at the flood, leads to fortune:

Omitted, all the voyage of their life

Is bound in shallows and in miseries,

On such a full sea are we now afloat;

And we must take the current when it serves

Or loose over ventures.

The second excerpt is taken from Bernard Fonlon’s book “THE IDEA OF LITERATURE”

Once to every man and nation,

Comes the moment to decide,

In the strife of Truth and Falsehood,

For the Good or Evil side,

Then it is, the brave man chooses,

Whist the coward stands aside,

Doubting in his object pity,

Till his Lord is crucified.

Fortunately, the malaise that is plaguing our nascent democracy though infectious is not incurable.  In fact, Professor Kale has made it abundantly clear in this book that the mistakes of the past can be valuable if only we are ready to learn from them.  Here, I think, is where Professor Kale has left his indelible footprints on the sand of time.  By proposing positive alternatives to the present set of leaders who selfishly appropriate scarce resources, Professor Kale is reminding us, his readers that what we actually need in Cameroon is the direct opposite of these inheritors of political power. In effect, he is calling on us to eschew mundaness, encrustedness and sclerosis towards which life inevitably tends in present day Cameroon.  We need servant leaders who will lead us forward to new ideals.

Like the influential and visionary Nigerian writer Wole Soyinka, Professor Kale is  pointing to internal responsibility for the deplorable state of our country..  That is why he is admonishing us to pluck courage and take full responsibility for changing our society for the better.  That is why he is reminding us that a nation that lacks men of courage in times of peace faces the threat of physical and moral decay.  In actual fact, Professor Kale has himself taken the lead by demonstrating through his writing that “in contrast with dangerous political power, there is another kind of power, the power of creation.

 THE AUTHOR

Emeritus Professor Ndiva Kofele Kale’s life is an open book which all of us can read. Hence there is very little that I can tell you about this great personality that all of you in this hall do not know already. Nevertheless, since I have been given the privilege to deliver this review, I will tell you the little that I know about this radical potentate..

Emeritus Professor Ndiva Kofele Kale is an illustrious son of the native soil. Although he spent most of his adult life abroad and contrary to the misdirected comments of his detractors, he knows his country and his people very well. He has a clear insight into the social and political structures of Cameroon and the future direction of its evolution.

He is an internationally acclaimed scholar of broad interests and notable achievement, a legal luminary and an erudite Professor, a prolific writer and a progressive social scientist, an intellectual aristocrat and a controversial politician.

He is a man of ideas known and revered for the brilliance of his mind and his pre-eminence as a political pundit.  He is also famous for his radical engagement with the politics of his country.  Over the years, he has demonstrated an unwavering commitment to the transformation of Cameroon into a land of promise and opportunities, a land where justice and equity would reign supreme. He is a critical conscience and a potent moral force.  In short, he is a Socratean gadfly and a genuine intellectual in the Fonlonian sense of the word.  As a potentate, some people have tried to understand him while others have chosen to misunderstand him.  Some people have sought his company while others hate even his shadow.  His commitment to the cause of ordinary Cameroonians and his courageous acts of conscience  have put him directly in the firing line in his opposition to powerful forces whom he sees as betraying the people in whose names and by whose sacrifices, political independence was won.

Major concerns in this book.

Professor Kale is concerned in this book with issues of genuine democracy, good governance, social justice, and freedom of speech. His point of view is that power is seductive and destructive in its own way.  He also advances the view that it is as a consequence of failures in leadership that Cameroon still lulls and gropes in apathy and inertia over half a century after it started its stultifying march towards an elusive socio-political and economic Eldorado.  He shares Chinua Achebe’s perspective that power; whether political or religious derives from the people and that its possessors should be accountable to the people.  He propounds the view that free and fair elections form the bedrock of genuine democracy. Finally, he believes and strongly too that the solution to the Cameroonian problem lies in a change of leadership.

Let me now take the liberty of putting some of Professor Kale’s ideas into my own words in order to give them my personal touch. Firstly, political leadership in our country personalizes and monopolizes power. That is why political power in our country constrains, contains and crushes. Secondly, the power holders insist on their right to evolve their own form of democracy which best fits their narcissistic interests.  But, their own form of democracy no matter the name by which it goes, is unfortunately based on perceptible principles and values which are not shared by  other democratic countries.  If anything, it is a travesty of genuine democracy.  That explains why the leaders refuse to leave power voluntarily and why the transfer of power through a democratic process is almost always problematic.

The term “power” has appeared repeatedly in this discourse that it has become necessary for me to define it.  Power is an umbrella word that means different things to different persons at different times.  As a result, there are several definitions to it.  But for the purpose of this treatise, I will limit myself to two only.

Kent Sandstrom suggests, for example, that “power is the capacity to get other people to think, feel, or act the way you want them to even if they do not want to think, feel, or act this way”.  Buckley, on the other hand, defines power as the control or influence over the actions of others to promote one’s goals without their consent, against their will or without their knowledge or understanding”. Power, therefore, is characterized by asymmetrical relationship and results from unequal dependency.  Seen from this perspective, power is a dangerous instrument that must be used with great care.  As Lord Acton puts it, “Power tends to corrupt and absolute power corrupts absolutely”. Our elders on their part say that, “the sweetness of power lies in the abuse of it”. That is why the traditional African concept of power in the form of political leadership is seen as a function of society as a whole.  That is, power is conferred upon the few by the many in a socio-political context.  The implication here is that political power derives from the people that is, the subordinates or less powerful and that its  possessors, that is, the super ordinates or power holders, should be accountable to the people.  But, traditional African society also recognized the fact that human nature endows individuals with the capacity to be both good and evil.  This duality is believed to be ever present in everyone.  That explains why the distinguished Nigerian novelist, Chinua Achebe,  wrote in his acclaimed novel, Anthills of the Savannah that:

In the beginning Power rampaged through the world, naked.  So the Almighty… decided to send his daughter Idemili, to bear witness to the moral nature of authority by wrapping around Power’s rude waist a loin cloth of peace and modesty (p.102).

It is therefore this lack of modesty, and the inability of the possessors of power in our contemporary society to recognize the obligatory “moral nature of authority”, coupled with their “unquenchable thirst to sit in authority on their fellows that Idemili holds in contempt” (p.103).  Seen in the light of the above, Democracy can be said to depend, in the final analysis on the character of individual men and women and the moral standards of the community.

 Conclusion of My Exegesis. 

Professor Kale holds the firm view that Democracy has become an international norm and is inextricably linked to globalization.  Thus, there is no opting out of it except, of course that Cameroon wants to remain irrelevant in the world perspective.

Therefore, our take home message today is this Our political leaders have failed us, but they could not  have succeeded in doing so without our collusion.  What I am saying here is that those of us who constitute the Cameroonian intelligentsia are as much to blame as our corrupt leaders for the failure of Democracy in Cameroon.  As the proverb says, “A man who brings ant-ridden faggots into his hut should not grumble when lizards begin to pay him visits”.

The book, Power as Prologue is well organized and clearly written.  The subjects of Democracy and political power are presented in a straightforward and compelling manner.  In my estimation, the author has attained his goal of writing a personally relevant and enjoyable book. He has also made the subjects of Democracy and political power approachable and interesting for readers. In short, this is an important book for readers with an interest in the political evolution of Cameroon.  That is why I am entreating you all to buy and read the book.  That is why I am imploring you to buy several copies and send to your friends and relatives.  Above all, I urge [every] to endeavor to share the vision which Professor Kofele Kale has so carefully enunciated in this book. 


 


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