Showing posts with label Acholi Politics. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Acholi Politics. Show all posts

Tuesday, June 22, 2010

Putting Leaders to Ridicule

In Acoli, just as in many other progressive traditions, leaders were in the real sense servants of the people. And the example of Rwot Awic of the Payira personified that trait.

Leadership came out of demonstrated competence and personal qualities that included a balanced temperament. Respect was earned, not bestowed by birth, neither by skills alone. Woe unto the leader who overreached his power or was incompetent. Soon the poets would fill the air with songs of ridicule that brought the culprit down to earth or put fire under the wayward loser.

Fast forward to present-day Acoli: how does this tradition translate? The traditional leadership, as encouraged by the present government, has little influence, if any, on people’s lives. Now, the leadership that really counts, apart from may be the Church, is the elected officials from local to national offices. While the playing field has changed, and there are temptations to cultish personality adoration, it is a pleasure to see that we can still put aspirants to leadership through the wringer.

Some would say that the ridicules amount to demeaning of our own in a neighborhood in which we, as a people, have been under intense put-downs for years. Effectively, this would amount to a counter-productive exercise of demeaning the community, so the wisdom goes. As the man is fond of saying, this is an exercise in obscurantism. Whatever the challenges of the Acoli, personality cultism is not the answer to the solutions. In fact, as witnessed by history, it is a recipe for disaster.

Practices that can build and uplift the community includes ability to laugh at ourselves—not excluding our leadership. If others join us in the laughter but with ill will, they will be mistaken. The last laugh will be on them when we rally behind the son or daughter who has passed the test of fire.

At issue was a picture of Mr. Otunnu staging a mock fight with a caricature of a traditional shield and a spear. In a chat room, some guys supposedly mocked Otunnu’s holding of the shield and the spear. The political correctness police jumped on their case. All kinds of disjointed and disconnected issues inundated the exchanges which amounted to much ado about nothing.

Otunnu has a stellar resume for himself. It is not uncommon and it is understandable that he has a hold on some people’s emotion and imagination. But what these people should understand is that not all of us share the same fascination—at least, not yet consideration the impacts of his past records to the community. We consider any ridicule of him is not equivalent to a ridicule of Acoli, as a community. While we are proud of his personal accomplishments, he is not the definition of Acoli. So, even any endorsement of him for the IPC top dog by a group of some whimsical old men with over-inflated view of their self-importance is just a fancy which they are free to exercise. But any claim to clout is a figment of their imagination.


Monday, October 20, 2008

What an Insult by Joyce Meyer

No where in the world does a foreigner go and heap insults on the natives on their most recent grave history. This is exactly what happened recently in Acholiland--courtesy of one American witch, called Joyce Meyer. This broad goes to Acholiland and says to their face that they brought the war on themselves because of witchcraft. This Joyce does not bring the name of Museveni, the agent of witchcraft whose evangelical wife probably invited her to come tame the wild natives. We allow her--a testament to how low we have sunk because of want and need. Just as the recent wave of NRM cadre courses, this is another mental humiliation that many should take it with the disdain it deserves.

We should take the cue from what our colonial masters did to our minds. This time around we should sort ourselves on our own terms. One, is that Mato Oput is a recognition that troubles at times befalls a family, and it is imperative to reconcile to move forward. We need no patronizing speeches from without.

Friday, August 15, 2008

Heavy Breathing and Petting Amuru Chiefs


One of the consequences of the fall-out with Buganda will increasingly be shameless courting of the North. On Tuesday lesser chiefs of Amuru in Acoliland trouped to pay homage to the Chief of all Chiefs, the Ssebagabe. Museveni, the Ssebagabe was all effusive with praises for the chiefs for embracing development. Museveni hails Amuru Chiefs. Of course, this “development” is about Madhivani’s need for land for sugar production. This is killing two birds with one stone.

The first bird is, of course, satisfying his major financial backer—the Madhivani Group and associated NRM insiders on the take in the sugar deal.

The second bird is winning some hearts in Acoliland on dubious development that has no long-term benefit to the greater population of Amuru and Acoli at large when the large size of land turned into sugar-cane plantation is considered relative to other alternative usage.

Thursday, July 24, 2008

Acoli Land Saga


Nwoya MP Simon Oyet (right) tours a piece of community land fenced off by unknown people in Latoro parish, Gulu district. He promised to take the issue to the President together with the list of the people affected. He advised people to leave the camps.
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Also a military man is said to have evicted several families.
After the LRA, the next challenge to the Acoli has already begun in earnest--LAND. MP Simon Oyet seems to be one of the few providing leadership for sanity. There is an opportunity for creative solution. Can the strong and the powerful have a community outlook for once even as they persue their self interest? A tall order, but can the Acoli debunk recent history and sort out the land issue without so much trauma and sufferings? Who knows.