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Africa! Arise and move : A philosophical awakening for Africa in a changing world

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There comes a moment in the life of a people when history pauses, not to rest, but to watch. To observe whether those who inherit the earth will rise to its demands or sink beneath its weight. Africa stands at such a moment.

This is not merely another decade. It is a defining threshold. A civilizational intersection. The question is no longer what has been done to Africa, but what Africa will now do with what it knows.

For knowledge has increased. Exposure has expanded. Illusions have thinned. And yet, paradoxically, the chains remain, not of iron, but of mindset, dependency, and misplaced allegiance.

As the African proverb reminds us, “Until the lion learns to write, every story will glorify the hunter.”
Africa, you have learned to read. You have learned to speak. But have you learned to write your own destiny?

The Illusion of Aid and the Economics of Control
“He who pays the piper calls the tune.” Or in modern parlance: he who invites the DJ dictates the songs on the playlist for the dance. For decades, Africa has lamented an unfair global order. But one must ask, with honesty and courage:

Who will make it fair for us, if not ourselves?

We export raw wealth and import refined dependency. We surrender resources cheaply and repurchase them dearly. We accept loans wrapped in development language but tied with invisible strings.
These are not acts of partnership.

They are instruments of control. What is called “aid” often arrives with conditions that shape policy, weaken sovereignty, and dictate priorities. And so, a continent rich in gold, oil, land, and intellect paradoxically kneels for financial relief.

Is this poverty, or is it misalignment of power and purpose?

Another proverb warns us, “The hand that gives is always above the hand that receives.”
Africa must rise, not by rejecting cooperation, but by redefining its terms.

The Psychological War: Already Won?
The deepest conquest is not of land but of mind. For years, a subtle narrative has been cultivated:
1. That Africa must be guided.
2. That Africa must depend.
3. That Africa must wait.

And tragically, many have believed it. This is the true victory of neo-colonialism: not economic extraction, but psychological submission. Yet, the irony is profound.

The so-called “rich” nations. Many of whom built their wealth on colonial extraction are now grappling with aging populations, economic strain, and social fragmentation. Meanwhile, Africa is youthful, energetic, resource-rich, and increasingly informed.

The future is not behind Africa. It is waiting within it.

But as another wise saying cautions, “A sleeping lion does not realise its own strength.”

Leadership, Betrayal, and the Burden of History
Africa has not lacked visionaries. From the bold declarations of Kwame Nkrumah to countless unsung patriots, the call for unity and self-determination has echoed across generations. Yet, history reveals a painful truth: Africa has often been betrayed, not only from outside, but from within. Like Judas for silver, some traded collective destiny for personal gain. Today, the stakes are higher. The next generation is watching. They are informed, connected, and less forgiving.

The era of silent complicity is ending

Leadership in Africa must evolve from occupancy of office to guardianship of
destiny. To govern Africa today is not to administer; it is to defend, to negotiate, to innovate, and above all, to think.

The Urgency of Strategic Thinking
If time does not permit leaders to think deeply, then systems must be created that do. Africa must institutionalise continental think tanks, independent, intelligent, unapologetically African in perspective. For without strategy, even abundance becomes a curse.

Trend analysis is no longer optional. It is survival.

  • Global supply chains are shifting.
  • Energy politics are evolving.
  • Technology is redefining power.
  • Food security is becoming a tool of geopolitical leverage.

And yet, Africa often reacts instead of anticipates.

Why must Africa always wait for the terms of engagement to be written elsewhere?

Why not present agreements on a “take it or leave it” basis, anchored in sovereign interest?

A Blueprint for Continental Synergy

Imagine, not as fantasy, but as policy:
• A continental petroleum ecosystem, where Nigeria, Angola, Ghana, Libya, and Algeria refine and distribute for Africa.
• A food sovereignty bloc, led by South Africa, Ethiopia, Tanzania, and Nigeria, is feeding the continent with modernised agriculture.
• A technology corridor, powered by African youth, driving innovation for global markets.
•A mineral value chain, where gold, lithium, and rare earths are processed within Africa, not exported raw.
• A unified educational framework, designed to build confidence, identity, and problem-solving capacity, not dependency.

This is not beyond reach. It is beyond hesitation.

The Courage to Prioritise Africa

There is no shame in putting Africa first.

The United States prioritises America.
Europe prioritises Europe.
Asia prioritises Asia.

Why then must Africa apologise for doing the same?

Self-interest, when aligned with collective good, is not selfishness; it is sovereignty.

Recent developments, such as Ghana’s assertive stance on gold royalties, signal a shift. A recognition that negotiation must be strategic, not submissive.

Africa must extend this posture across:
1. Loan agreements
2. Resource contracts
3. Trade partnerships

No more passive acceptance.
No more inherited templates.
No more “business as usual.”

OPEN YOUR EYES

New powers are rising. Old powers are adapting. And many will come offering partnership, investment, and opportunity.

But Africa must ask:

Are these new hands different, or are they wearing new gloves?

China, India, and others bring opportunity, but also risk, if approached without
a strategy. Colonialism no longer arrives with flags. It arrives with contracts.

The Final Awakening

Africa, the hour is not tomorrow. It is now.
Our ancestors were deceived.
Our fathers were constrained.
But this generation is informed.

What then is our excuse?

Let this be the turning point.
Let leaders arise, not in rhetoric, but in resolve.
Let citizens awaken, not in complaint, but in consciousness.
Let Africa stand, not in fragments, but in unity.

For as the elders say:
If you want to go fast, go alone. If you want to go far, go together.” And Africa must go far.

SUMMING UP: Writing Our Own Story

The world is not waiting for Africa. It is moving. The only question is whether Africa will move with intention or be moved by others.

The time has come to write not petitions but policies.
Not complaints, but contracts.
Not dependency, but destiny.


Africa must arise.
Africa must think.
Africa must act.

And above all, Africa must believe.

DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.

DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.


Source: www.myjoyonline.com
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