THE LIFE-CHANGING PRISONERS AND THE TIME-WASTING YOUTH
The place I pray in my life never to be in is a prison. If for nothing
at all, the pangs and throes of incarceration that I went through for
about twenty-four hours from the 17th to the 18th of May 2007 inside the
Adabraka police cells have given me an inkling of what is to be
expected in a prison. At least, Atubiga and the “Prisoner of
Conscience”, Ken Kurankyie are the most recent living testimonies to the
ordeal one goes through in prison.
Perhaps a more vivid picture will do. Antonio Gramsci, the Marxist who
got imprisoned by the Italian Fascist regime for nearly a decade saw
the traumatizing effect of prison life and drew this picture for us
”prison life can shatter the soul and will of anyone who experiences it.
It destroys thought utterly. It operates like the master craftsman who
was given a fine trunk of seasoned olive wood with which to carve a
statue of Saint Peter; he carved away, a piece here, a piece there,
shaped the wood, roughly modified it, corrected it and ended up with a
handle for the cobbler’s awl.” What a clearer description of the
vagaries and asperities of imprisonment? It is miraculous then to see
mere mortals make positive strides that will boggle the mind of the
world whilst in prison. In the 18th Century, William Addis overcame the
pangs of imprisonment and came out with one invention the world cannot
live without and perhaps the most popular hygienic tool ever, the
toothbrush.
In 1807, Jesse Hawley also got imprisoned in a debtor’s prison due to
“his problems in acquiring reasonably priced transportation” (simply
put, he was not able to acquire a horse at his time). He spent his
prison time writing 14 exhaustive essays detailing what opened up trade
between eastern and western America at a crucial time in the westward
expansion, the Erie Canal. According to one writer, “without Hawley’s
work, pioneers would certainly have had a harder time forging the
pathway west, and could all very well have broken an axle, died of
cholera or tipped over while fording the river and would have to restart
from the beginning.”
The single most influential work in the Spanish Golden Age was written
by a man who decided not to masturbate and curse his stars in prison but
rather launch his writing career. Miguel des Cervantes wrote one of the
books that revolutionized literature in the world, Don Quixote, at a
time when writing was left for the aristocrats and middle class in the
society. The African man of the millennium, Osagyefo Dr. Kwame Nkrumah,
wrote in his autobiography, “My experience of fourteen months in prison
convinced me, moreover, that in a very short time prisoners lose all
their individualism and personality; they become a set type in an
unhappy world of their own. They lose confidence in themselves and are
so un-equipped to meet the outside world that it is little wonder that
they hanker for the misery and boredom of their prison cell, a
protective shelter for their lost and shattered souls” yet he ran for
the 1951 elections and won ultra-convincingly by receiving the largest
individual poll so far recorded in the history of the Gold Coast, 22,780
votes out of a possible 23,122 when he was in prison. The win was so
profound that it was the straw that broke the opposition’s back.
I definitely cannot talk about these special breed of persons without
mentioning the man the world celebrated on the 18th of July. Nelson
Rolihlahla Mandela. A man who was loathed for his belligerence and
bellicose nature, entered prison and came out, in his own words “I came
out matured” been loved and revered by all to the point of the world
honoring a day after him. According to the Times Editor, Richard Stengel
in his book Mandela’s Way, “The Nelson Mandela who emerged from Prison
at seventy-one was a different man from the Nelson Mandela who went in
at forty-four……. Prison steeled him but it broke many others.
Understanding that made him more empathetic not less. He never lorded it
over those who could not take it. He never blamed anyone for giving in.
Over the years, he developed radar and a deep sympathy for human
frailty.” He wrote his Long Walk to Freedom in Prison and other
humanistic essays and much more significantly was how he raised the
whole question of talks between the African National Congress and the
apartheid government by writing a confidential letter to Kobie Coetsee,
the then minister of justice. This single act in Prison necessitated the
chain-reaction that saw South Africa in its present state. A vivid
picture was painted about Ibn Taymiyya, the scholar who wrote his
Letters from Prison that relieved the men of his time off the Apron
strings of ignorance. “When he entered prison, he saw the prisoners busy
with all kinds of time-wasting games for entertainment, such as chess
and dice games……. The Sheikh rebuked them strongly and commanded them to
do good deeds. He entreated them to bolster their faith and thereby
rendered the prison a haven for the seekers of knowledge………… “
The wanton dissipation of time by the youth is perhaps what these great
men sought to challenge hence their profitable use of time. The youth
today have lost their sense of time. Go through our communities and
various stamping grounds (popularly known as bases) with different names
have become the current fad in town. ‘Kosovo, Michigan, Since Morning,
Public enemy, U too can fly’ are some of the names of the places the
youth sit to ‘while away’ and ‘kill time’ in unproductive activities.
Unnecessary arguments, idle discussions and sterile debates have eaten
into the fiber and fabric of our communities. In the community I find
myself, most of these arguments end up in violent altercations and in
worst cases, fisticuffs. “Losing a sense of time is an easy way to lose
one’s grip and even one’s sanity” as stated by Mandela to show his
strict adherence to time. The youth have forgotten that time is the
most priceless possession of man because it flies away quickly and never
returns and has no substitute. It is therefore very precious. The
preciousness of time derives from the fact that it is the receptacle and
medium of every exertion and activity, every achievement and
productivity. For this reason, Time is, in reality, the genuine capital
of man, individually and collectively. If men have been able to overcome
the struggles of confinement and make overwhelming strides in their
lives that impacted the world, then how much more free men walking
about?
Hassan al-Basri the poet, stated more poignantly, “O man! You are but a
bundle of days and as each day passes away a portion of you vanishes
away.” Perhaps, the youth must realize that the life on earth here is
transient and must therefore work diligently to make a dent in the
universe. They must realize that youth is the most opportune time for
work when all the strength, the zeal, the gusto and the enthusiasm is on
the high. They should work hard to push the existing frontiers of
knowledge and achievement; they should work hard before they become
senile.
Malcolm X, another man who turned from being a dead-man walking to a man
who continues to ultra-inspire people posthumously, had a volte face
when he found himself in the Norfolk County Prison. He was described as
“a clock” for his strict adherence to time. No wonder he lambasted
time-wasters in his “I have less patience for someone who doesn’t wear a
watch than with anyone else, for this type is not time-conscious”
statement.
The world is moving at a break-neck speed and procrastination, mere
intention is becoming the bane of human existence. Though I am not
entreating anyone to go to prison, I am stating that we should be
time-conscious because irrespective of where you stand, time is
precious.
The materialists say “Time is money” but the realists and pragmatists say “Time is life”.
INUSAH MOHAMMED (MAAZI OKORO).
NB: The writer is a student at the University of Professional Studies, Accra.
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