The Conception Of A New Nation: Mirror On The Wall
By Emmanuel Dolo, Ph. D.
The Perspective
Atlanta, Georgia
January 4, 2005
In Liberia, loyalty and devotion to the state and
fellow citizens as well as patterns of leadership
are mired by self-absorption and public corruption.
For an overwhelming majority of Liberians, the structures
of social, economic, and political life have been
so decadent that yearnings for security and human
community continue to erode. Hence, how might we nurture
an environment that is conducive for delivering a
more inclusive and democratic nation state? Prior
to the war, family, spiritual life, tradition, and
local community spurred allegiances among various
fabrics of our society, however tenuous, but the war
destroyed such emergent agents of communal life. The
superior traditional social organizations and the
“natural harmony” that rural life offered
were also undermined by the war. Although our need
for jobs, food, old-age security, and other aspects
of cohesive daily family life were inadequately met
before the war, in its aftermath, we live in abject
poverty and in the shells of our bodies and living
spaces with limited or no employment and related opportunities.
Sadly, so many Liberians have committed horrors toward
one another out of the perverse need for power and
wealth and to feel better about themselves at the
expense of others. Even worse, their targets have
often been the most vulnerable citizens: women, children,
the elderly, etc. The cultural stock of the nation
has fallen into disrepair. How might we mount resistance
against such a perverse mindset so that we can launch
collaborative efforts in the birth of a new nation?
Self-indulgence and ethnic bigotry are two major moral
hurdles to attaining peace in Liberia. Woven together,
these two social ills have been prime producers of
hate and violence. They have rendered Liberians captives
to constricted visions that are intolerant of difference,
and if left unattended, the birthing of a new and
functioning state might be a virtual impossibility.
The hallmarks of leadership in Monrovia are greed,
exploitation, and tyranny and these vices continue
to be resistant to change. New people emerge on the
political scene each day bent on squandering the minimum
public resources that the nation owns or siphoning
them to personal use. How might we invite our brothers
and sisters to examine themselves and their ties to
corrupt practices and institutions? How might we abandon
mere guilt bidding and mount a liberating vision to
those Liberians taken over by the curse of selfishness
and naked over-indulgence? The vision that I offer
in this article does not simply provide easy answers,
but it attempts to create a rationale for why self-indulgence
and ethnic bigotry must be “denounced and dismantled”
and replaced by loyalty and devotion to the Liberian
state and its people, if peace is to come. Liberians
all over the world are still drifting in the wastelands
of our past and present (internally displaced or refugees
abroad) and my quest is to help encourage the first
steps on the way to remorse and recovery.
The desire to write this article is born from one
compelling rationale – love for Liberia and
a strong desire to contribute to its rebirth. I have
watched numerous Liberians, public servants in particular;
and their cohorts derive ill-gotten wealth from their
proximity to power. Yet, these persons have gone to
their deaths or being publicly shamed and humiliated
-- not clinging to such wealth, but leaving them behind
for others to enjoy. Worse, they have left legacies
from which their children and grandchildren only wish
to separate themselves, and even more disheartening,
our current core of public officials are living carelessly.
The voices of many Liberians who were attached to
previous dictatorial and inept regimes have receded
via (self-imposed exile) and they have been rendered
powerless, although they could be contributing immensely
to the current discourse on nation building. It is
regrettable that the same features mark our contemporary
political landscape. Political actors in the current
interim government are becoming extremely bold in
stealing the national wealth amidst hopelessness and
tremendous anguish, a problem that many commentators
have also addressed recently.
Given such a visible disregard for the well being
of the Liberian people on the part of the current
pool of “political hustlers and pimps,”
there is a strong demand for new choices on the part
of Liberian citizens. However, readers are prone to
ask: Would writing an article that recommends a vision
and commitment to better political and ethical choices
be an invitation into my personal “moral universe?”
Yes! But I have no credential that makes me eligible
for sainthood. More importantly, I do not wish for
such a lack to prevent me from taking on my citizenship
and historic responsibility. I hope that this will
also not deter you from joining in the charge discussed
in this article. I believe that the need for change
is so great that we all must risk personal scrutiny
for the sake of urging alteration in our political
culture and ethical landscape. Such scrutiny only
makes us personally stronger in holding ourselves
accountable. Nonetheless, in seeking change, I do
not aim to hold ethical hammers over the heads of
my fellow citizens. Instead, I ask each Liberian to
evaluate their own conduct and character as it pertains
to building the architecture of a new nation to determine
how best they can contribute to this effort. I ask
each Liberian to make compliance with the highest
ideals of ethical standards within the public domain
a commitment. I ask each Liberian to put emphasis
on personal accountability and transparency, if we
are to be successful individual and collective midwives
charged with the safe delivery of a new nation. The
emphasis of this article is on what ethicists Anita
L. Allen has come to refer to as the “ethics
of citizenship.” In her newest book: The New
Ethics: A Guided Tour of the Twenty-First Century
Moral Landscape, Allen (2004) urges us not to be tactful,
but rather straightforward in pointing out those among
us who take advantage of the public trust by defrauding
the nation and squandering its resources. The time
has come to take steps to let the cheats among us
know that we will no longer condone their abuse of
our goodwill. We can disassociate ourselves from those
individuals who were imposed on us uncritically by
time and circumstance, especially since their actions
have been rather devastating and not redemptive as
they vowed. A new nation will only flourish where
equity and justice abound. A new nation will also
grow in a fertile soil where tolerance of diversity
is also made normative. We must repel the notion that
Liberia is the junkyard for those among us who find
pleasure in the torment of their fellow Liberians.
Scarred by the agonizing memory of previous stillbirths, our national family is painfully aware that this symbolic pregnancy is our last hope for the survival and continuation of our common patrimony. When the months of waiting come to a close, we the nervously stricken family who has experienced several traumatic miscarriages hope for a safe delivery of the family’s child of hope. This will not be a love child conceived as a result of a romantic attraction between two persons. This is child conceived in the wake of a brutal, bloody, and shameful past. This is a child conceived from a gang rape (between warlords and previous detractors), but it is the only hope of perpetuating our family. Should we lose this child, who will bare our family (Liberia’s) name? Our nation’s faith and our nation’s hope will be secured in this child. We must protect and love this child because we have no other choice. The mother is not capable of conceiving another child following this birth. We must keep this child, despite, and even perhaps because of the gory reminder of the horrors of our past. From the Maternity Center in Monrovia, an emergency call has gone out to every midwife (Liberian citizen) in and out of Liberia urgently summoning him or her to national service. The lady who carries this pregnancy is in critical danger of losing our child -- our national family’s only hope. She has been confined to bed for the remaining of the pregnancy. She will require intensive care to assure safe delivery.
I hope that the New Year will be the beginning of grassroots efforts geared toward holding public servants accountable and on track toward building a more sustainable future during the new nation. No longer can Liberia afford a citizenry that is passive and uninvolved especially when the country stands at the threshold of its fourth miscarriage. The important lesson here is that our leaders must now be people who can follow our lead and not the other way around. This paradigm of leadership will prove difficult for those bent on asserting their selfish interests because this is the core of the current leadership crisis. Building a new nation is not a spectator event, but one that requires the active participation of every Liberian. It requires both a vision and a commitment and the way forward would be to ask the following questions. What political, economic, and social structures have perpetuated self-indulgence and ethnic bigotry? What are the alternative approaches to halting and reversing these phenomena? This is a long-term commitment. The future of our children and that of their children’s children, hinge on the choices that we make today.