Witches, Traditional
Exorcists and Progress
Despite
the apparent incursion of Judeo-Christian tradition into Ghanaians spiritual
life since they came into contact with the Europeans some 500 years ago, broadly,
some aspects of traditional Ghanaian cultural cosmology see God as battling major
evil, personified in fearlessly diabolical figures. The diabolical figures can
come in all sorts of imaginations, images and physical attributes. Broadly, most
of these major evil figures are interpreted as either witches or wizards.
In
most traditional Ghana settings, misfortune are interpreted, cosmologically, in
this sense witches or wizards battling good, innocent people to visit all
kinds of troubles on them for varied reasons, some as weird as looking good or
being intelligent. The witches/evil spirits are chronic to progress; a process
where in the larger progress of Ghana, has implications in poverty alleviation
and democratization. Witches, wizards or evil figures have been attributed so
much power of destruction that they are even feared more than God in certain traditional
spiritual circles, making it difficult over the years, for some Ghanaians, no
matter their education level, to extricate themselves from such believes.
It
is such culture of witchcraft/evil forces that has given booming work for Prof
Aridu Sabo Azeez, a Ghanaian-Nigerian traditional exorcist, based at a remote
village in Ghanas Eastern Region. Talking to the Accra-based The Statesman
(11/08/2007), Azeez, milking the lucrative witchcraft-exorcist business, claims
he can contain flying children killing people, a tree filled with human
body parts and a pregnancy lasting for six years. While in some aspects
of traditional Ghanaian cosmology this is believable, such believes is increasingly
clashing with the increasing rationalization of the world - Ghana included. I
know a woman who could not give birth for some time. Some members of her Asante
families thought it was the mechanizations of witches/evil spirits in her family.
For some time, she and some members of her family roamed through traditional Ghana,
visiting the likes of Azeez, not only to know whether witches/evil forces have
blocked her womb but also get traditional healing to cure her infertility. She
was tipped to access modern medicine including the use of ultra-sonic she
got pregnant.
The
conundrum is how to separate the interpretation of witches/evil forces from the
administer of the actual traditional medicine so as to give an enlightened sense
of how the disease occurred. This monumental challenge has affected many a modern
science attempts, as part of the on-going Ghanaian/African progress, to refine
some of the inhibitions in traditional Ghanaian/African medicine darkened by the
battle between witches/evil spirits and diseases. The riddle, as Azeez told The
Statesmans Lauren Taylor, is how to scientifically explain how people allegedly
cursed by a disease or bad luck by witches and those who have acquired the
powers of witchcraft themselves using it for deviancies or crime and how
this implicates on diseases. In a country where traditional medicine practitioners
outnumber modern doctors, and where most Ghanaians access traditional medicine
more than orthodox medicine, for obvious reasons, Ghanaians are yet to see openly
at what length the two can walk together in order not only to get a sense of the
two, but also, if possible, to explain, reconcile and sharpen the two to co-exist
more healthily more especially refine the excessive sway of witchcraft
and other evil spirits in the interpretation of diseases by the Azeezs.
For
the idea, traditionally, of exorcists, like Azeez, with all their incomprehensibly
fearful accoutrements battling the rage of witches, gives witches/evil
spirits fatalistically immense powers to cause diseases and not many a Ghanaians
sanitation and human agencies. The innocent, ignorant Ghanaian, and they are in
majority, caught in the cross-current of witches/evil spirits, growing diseases,
poor sanitation, and traditional exorcists, is under the heavy sway of some aspects
of traditional Ghanaian cosmology that sees God battling major evil spirits, personified
in fearlessly diabolical figures. This is against the backdrop of a Ghana riddled
by witches and other evil spirits in the face of disturbing poverty and other
drawbacks, as President Kufour says. Sometimes, to some degree, the
traditional exorcist wrongly muddles God by telling the ignorant Ghanaian that
his/her disease is a punishment from God thus wrapping God, witches, wizards
and other evil spirits together in the average Ghanaians burden of diseases
and helplessness.
Pretty
much of Ghanas Judeo-Christian tradition, more so the in-your-face,
born-again Spiritual Churches mode that have taking on a good dose of traditional
Ghanaian cosmology with their preaching of witches and evil spirits responsible
for this or that is not helping matters either, a good number playing the
traditional Ghanaian exorcist card by attributing diseases and other misfortunes
to witches and other evil spirits. So from either traditional Ghanaian cosmology
or the Judeo-Christian tradition, the hapless Ghanaian is under the barrage of
evil spirits and witches that stroll the Ghanaian environment, like Milton's
defiant Lucifer, causing diseases and misfortunes and flying children
killing people, a tree filled with human body parts and a pregnancy lasting for
six years. In such ambiance, human agencies and scientific thinking are
thrown into the Gulf of Guinea, and when this happens, Prof. Aridu
Sabo Azeez, the traditional master exorcist, battle the rage of witches
to free Ghana from diseases and misfortunes
Source/Credits:
Kofi Akosah-Sarpong