Opinion
Hopes Of The African Child
Dr Goodluck Ebele Jonathan’s gripping story of his childhood days in his ancestral area of Bayelsa State on the occasion of his declaration to contest the 2011 presidential election on September 18, 2010 at the Eagle Square, Abuja reminded me of Camara Laye’s classic novel, “in African Child” published in 1953. President Jonathan’s story captures the critical problems the African Child has continued to face since the days of the distinguished writer, Camara Laye, in his village, Kouroussa in Guinea.
In relation to his counterparts in other continents of the world, the African Child is faced with numerous tearful problems including poor healthcare, limited or no education, high mortality rate, low life expectancy, malnutrition, and bleak future. The story of the African Child has remained that of struggle for survival, domestic labour, sertdom, human trafficking, pains, and sorrow. Recounting how his parents raised him with just enough money to meet their daily needs in his declaration of candidacy for the 2011 presidential election speech. Dr Jonathan said: “In my early days in school, I had no shoes, no school bags, I carried my books in my hands but never despaired, no car to take me to school but I never despaired. There were days I had only one meal but I never despaired. I walked miles and crossed rivers to school everyday but I never despaired. Didn’t have power, didn’t have generators, studied lanterns but I never despaired”.
With more than half of the 26 million slaves in the world found in Africa, according to a United Nations estimate, and many children forced into prostitution, early marriage and illegal adoption, and others working as house servants and beggars nothing much has really happened to change.
The plight of the African Child. Even in Nigeria, the situation is still pathetic as according to media reports, “no fewer than 15 million children are still engaged in child labour, with about 40 per cent of them at risk of being trafficked internally and externally for domestic service, prostitution and other forms of exploitative labour, approximately 10 million children of school age are out of school, and the country contributes about 85 per cent of the global burden of wild polio virus at a time when polio is being kicked out of many countries and being eradicated in the world”.
But like President Jonathan, the African Child is unique in so many ways. Apart from being intelligent, happy, carefree, loving, friendly, and curious, the African Child is resilient, hard working, and indomitable. In President Jonathan’s language: “ I was not born rich, and in my youth, I never imagined that I would be where I am today, but not once did I ever give up”.
Evidently, Jonathan’s journey from Otueke to Aso Rock, Nigeria’s pinnacle of Power, is a great teacher to the African Child that if he looks into the future with an inner eye, accepts what he sees, and works for it, even in the face of severe deprivation, in time his dream will come true. The journey raises the hopes of the African Child very high.
Apparently, the African Child has only two challenges: the ability to dream big and the ability to develop big steams. We know what a dream is. It is an aspiration, ambition, ideal, and a goal. Ordinarily, a stream means tunnel, course, flow, and so on, but here, we take it to mean capacity, will and channel of manifesting our dreams. The sages tell us that nothing happens unless first a dream.
When the African Child closes his eyes, what does he see? It goes without saying that he sees poverty, unemployment, explication, oppression, political instability, corruption, greed, violence, maladministration, and hopelessness. This constitutes his state of being, the concept of his nation and the African continent. And as long as the African Child lives by this consciousness he will grow up to be poor, under privileged, denied exploited and humiliated.
The hopes of the African Child lie in his ability to dream big. This involves expecting the rest in his life, and making adequate plans to achieve it. Besides, he has to begin early enough to work towards the achievement of his plan. This old saying by long fellow is very relevant here. The heights great men reached and kept were not attained by sudden flight, but while their counterparts slept were toiling upward in the night”. A plan is a dream.
It requires looking ahead, making choices and where possible arranging that future actions for attaining objectives follow fixed paths, or setting limits to the consequences which may arise form such actions.
What about the challenge of developing the big stream, the capacity or channel through which the dream or plan can be manifested? Again Dr Jonathan in his speech, proffers an answer to this question by promising that as the “president”, any Nigeria Child will be able to realize his God given potentials , unhindered by tribe or religion and unrestricted by improvised political inhibitions.
In the final analysis, the big dream the African Child needs to manifest his dream is education. Yes, the African Child who sets about to face the challenges of becoming a great person must recognize that the seed of his success are within him right now. But it is education that can germinate that seed and release the power of his dream and imagination to create a desirable future for himself, his country, and the African Continent.
The failure of the African Continent to advance technologically is a consequence of its inability to adequately develop and utilize the skills and knowledge of its people especially the younger generation.
Thus, governments at all levels throughout the continent of Africa must show deep concern for the education of the African Child. Without education there is no hope for a meaningful future for the African Child.
Ochanma is a retired Director of RSNC
Opinion
184 Days of the Locust in Rivers State

Opinion
94 Years From A Turning Point

Opinion
Man and Lessons from the Lion
-
Maritime2 days ago
Customs, MAN Consent On 4% FoB Exemptions, Manufacturing Support Measures
-
Rivers2 days ago
IAUE Emerges Winner Of National Campus Debate, 2025
-
News2 days ago
FUBARA: UNDERUTILISED SEAPORTS DENYING RIVERS ECONOMIC PROSPERITY ……..Hosts NPA Board, Mgt On Courtesy Visit
-
Opinion2 days ago
94 Years From A Turning Point
-
Education2 days ago
Don Advocates Equal Opportunity For Citizens
-
Politics2 days ago
Anambra Guber: ADC Candidate Urges INEC To Tackle Vote Buying
-
Business2 days ago
Blue Economy: Minister Seeks Lifeline In Blue Bond Amid Budget Squeeze
-
Maritime2 days ago
Customs Wives Donate Mosquito Nets, Bedsheets To Hospitals In Ogun