I had resolved not to voice out issues
relating to Muslims and Islam in Ghana because most times,I end up making
unnecessary enemies for myself. A whole lot of people, out
of their extreme affinity for certain personalities give “wrong interpretations
mixed up with vain imaginations" to the issues I raise and drag a whole lot of the gullible along to
rain an avalanche of attacks on me. However my resolution can never be because,
“The likeness of the believers in their mutual love, mercy and compassion is
that of the body; when one part of it is in pain, the rest of the body joins it
in restlessness and fever ” as stated succinctly by our noble Prophet Mohammed. Narrated by al-Bukhari (6011) and Muslim
(2586).
It behooves on me therefore to speak. I must speak because this particular day has
left an imprint in mind. I must speak because "there comes a time when
silence is betrayal." I must speak because “the calling to speak is often
a vocation of agony; but we must speak. We must speak with all the humility
that is appropriate to our limited vision." I must speak because it has
really made me feel very sad as a Muslim in Ghana. I must speak because "our
lives begin to end the day we become silent about things that matter."
It was a very hot, sunny Wednesday,
specifically the 29th day of the month of July, 2015 with the scorching sun
blazing on all cylinders. I had
traversed the length and breadth of Accra searching for a book to buy. The book
is 101 Keys to Success and Fulfilment authored by the
inspirational couple in Ghana, Albert and Comfort Ocran. It was the second book
I had wanted us to read at Success Book
Club.
SUCCESS BOOK CLUB is a
community-based, youth-centered organization that seeks to empower the youth to
take on the world and make monumental impact in the world. Among the aims and
objectives of the organization as stated in our constitution are
“To Increase the literacy rate in the
country.
To eradicate illiteracy completely from our
midst.
To empower the youth in the country.
To serve as motivational and inspirational
platform to the youth
To inter alia, equip the youth with skills
that will make them make a dent in the universe."
What we do is basically to suggest a book for
the month, read it and then meet to discuss the book and its contents
comprehensively. We then pick the lessons worth picking to shape ourselves and
better our lives.
The first book we read was Benjamin Carson's Think Big: Unleashing Your Potential for
Excellence. In that life-changing book, we learnt that "if we commit
ourselves to reading thus increasing our knowledge, only God limits how far we
can go in this world."
As the Executive Secretary of the
Organization, I decided to choose the next book and present it to the Executive
Body for subsequent presentation to the membership in its entirety for adoption
or rejection. I decided to choose a book
written by a Ghanaian. So I settled on 101 Keys to Success and Fulfilment authored
by Albert and Comfort Ocran. A book I
first read in 2009.
On the said day, I took a French leave from
job and moved to town to buy the book. I traversed the length and breadth of
the capital searching for it.
I first went to the bookshop directly
opposite Cocobod and the attendant told me the only place I could get it was Calvary bookshop opposite Mr.Biggs. I
had my doubts on getting the book at that place because that is the bookshop I
mostly buy my books. I then moved through the Makola market to the reshaped
Methodist bookshop and my search there proved futile. My further search upfront
at the EPP bookshop yielded no result either.
I then joined a commercial bus enroute to Circle and checked at Calvary
bookshop and my doubts were confirmed there as they also did not have it. However,
the attendant there directed me to the area that generated in me a great deal
of melancholy that day. She directed me to Altar bookshop, the bookshop of the International Central Gospel Church (ICGC).
The atmosphere at the ICGC that day was that
of activism and progression. The fleet
of cars packed alone could tell you the place you found yourself in is a place
of law and orderliness. One could pick that discipline was the keystone of the
church just from the parking lot. It was a working day yet one will baffle at
the fact that the premise was the very cynosure of a very important function in
preparation. My enquiries led me to the realization that it was a programme
dubbed Greater Works with Pastors
Mathew Ashimolowo from London, Tudor Bismarck from Zimbabwe, Mike Okonkwo from
Nigeria and our own Mensah Otabil billed to speak to participants.
"It's a weeklong programme that is held
every year around July with the same speakers coming to deliver a word to
us" as stated by Melvin Achor.
I then
moved to the bookshop for the book. Although I never got the book I wanted, I
bought Pretending to be President by
Ato Kwamena Dadzie, ‘Ghana’s most irreverent journalist’.
One thing that will linger in my mind is the
neat and prim way the bookshop is kept. Everything is cool and collected in
there. I left there feeling strong pangs
of activism in my spirits as I witnessed the lush of the youth and other
elderly folks that were thronging the premises in earnest preparation for the
programme.
Salat is a very cardinal pillar in Islam that a Muslim must attend to five times every day; I decided to enter the National Mosque of Ghana's Muslims which shares the same wall with ICGC to pray. And that is where I felt really sad as Muslim in Ghana.
The sadness stemmed from the fact that the
National Mosque was closed on that day (a thing I was told is normal as the
mosque is opened only on Fridays).There
was nothing to show that it was a mosque save the ablution kettles and few men
praying. Few mats were made available
at the edge of the mosque where people could pray and the numerous mendicants
resting from their day's business. The mosque was dryer and more arid than the
Kalahari desert. There is no bookshop much less to talk about a library. As a matter of fact,
the only established bookshops I know in the Muslim Community are two. Marhaba bookshop and Abu Mujaahid bookshop where I mostly get
my Islamic books. Coming from a lively and activity-filled place like the ICGC
that day to a virtual cemetery as our National Mosque alone shows how we have
wrongly viewed and treated the mosque as Muslims in Ghana. The way we treat our
mosque as prayer centers only is a reflection of how we have reduced Islam to
only Salat in our lives.
The bitter and the hard truth is that we have
succeeded in misrepresenting Islam in Ghana and beyond. We have succeeded in
making view of the absurd as normal; we have succeeded in entrenching the wrong
notion that the best mosque is the one which is well-tiled with a good
lightening system.
The greatest civilization since the dawn of
human life on this planet was demonstrated by our noble Prophet and his
companions. They have shown both in words and action the role of the mosque.
The same mosque that was used for the five daily prayers and other optional
prayers was the same place the companions will sit quietly to receive lessons
from the best of teachers.This
epitomizes the fact that a mosque is supposed to serve as an institution of
learning.The same mosque is where married
couples come to receive guidance as to how they can live a successful marriage.
This shows the mosque as also guidance and counseling unit. It is the same mosque that the companions
will be seen seated, reading and revising what they have gathered from the
prophet.This presupposes that a mosque
should have a mini-library and if possible a bookshop attached to it. It is the
same mosque that conferences are held, this signifies that our mosque must have
an auditorium and a conference room. It is in the same mosque that the
companions and the noble prophet will sit to take initiatives and policies in
order to better the lives of the adherent of the religion.As a matter of fact, the mosque is
supposed to kick-start the development of the community. Our appalling
condition as a people manifests our extreme carelessness towards our mosques.
The Muslim community in Ghana must be up and
doing in its activities.What
troubles me most is not that we are incapacitated to have a similar or something
better than what the International Central Gospel Church (ICGC) has,
but our failure to use our resources and power wisely. We have failed to
prioritize our needs. We have failed in all disciplines that make life
meaningful. The colossal
amount money that goes into the annual
celebration of the birth of the noble prophet which has no basis in Islam could have gotten us libraries, conference rooms, higher institutions of
learning, auditoriums, proper mosques and not the 'dungeons' we pray in.
On the other hand, the exorbitant amount of monies taken from
congregants as charity during the Qur'an exegesis of the Ahlu- Sunna wal jama'a
for the past ten years and beyond could have been used to cushion our status as
Muslims in this country. Unfortunately,
nothing is there to show that certain monies were once upon a time, taken and
still been taken. We as a people must change our attitude before
is too late, we must have clear-cut
policies as to how we can lift ourselves
from this despondent way of living to
the highest standard of living which is in consonance with the teachings and
dictates of the Quran and Hadith. This
must be done if it is not done then we are never going to see ourselves moving forward.
Sayyid Mujtaba Lari asked poignantly in his
book, Western Civilization Through Muslim
Eyes:
“ What has happened to us, the heirs of so brilliant and magnificent a civilisation? What has reduced us to our present living conditions? Why have we ceded the hegemony of our world to others? What has caused the decline in our culture, in our science and our political power? What stopped our progress in its tracks? Why have we yielded our leadership in manufactures and science to Westerners so that we now need them where they once needed us? Why must Muslims, with all their splendid past in East and West, hang their heads in the modern world?”
“ What has happened to us, the heirs of so brilliant and magnificent a civilisation? What has reduced us to our present living conditions? Why have we ceded the hegemony of our world to others? What has caused the decline in our culture, in our science and our political power? What stopped our progress in its tracks? Why have we yielded our leadership in manufactures and science to Westerners so that we now need them where they once needed us? Why must Muslims, with all their splendid past in East and West, hang their heads in the modern world?”
Inusah Mohammed and Alhassan Ahmed
Tembineh
NB: The
writer is a Youth-Activist and a Student of knowledge.
The co-writer is the President of GMSA, Legon Branch.
The co-writer is the President of GMSA, Legon Branch.