Dear Nyaba,
I was there seven yam festivals ago, when the members of the elephant family who were then in the position of opposition in the house of lawmakers, walked out of the house when the then national chief rose to address the people of the chiefdom about the state of the chiefdom. It was on the 22nd day of the 2nd month of the 13th year of the 2nd Millennium.
I was also there when the people of the umbrella, who now find themselves sitting in the position of opposition in the house of lawmakers, walked out just when the current national chief rose to address the chiefdom. It was a few minutes past the 10th hour of the 20th day of the 2nd month of the 20th year of the 2nd millennium.
Seven years ago, whilst the people of the elephant walked out from the chamber of the house, they held in their hands, placards that read “stealers”. That word “stealers” made me cringe. I will explain later.
Thursday, February 20, when the people of the umbrella decided to walk out, they did so in typical secondary school jama style. They sang and almost danced to a refrain in the national anthem “and help us to resist oppressor’s rule”. “oppressor’s rule”? That phrase too made me cringe. I shall explain later.

You see, over the years, the elephants and the umbrellas have been engaged in a certain battle. That battle, contrary to other battles in other chiefdoms and kingdoms, where the weapons are ideas of development and progress, has been one where the two ‘fighters’ stand facing each other. One pokes the other in the eye, and waits to see what happens. The other, having borne the pain for a while, pokes back in equal measure. “You do me, I do you. You poke my eye, I poke your eye”.
This is what the clans we have since 1992 elected to govern our chiefdom, been doing to each other for 2 decades and 7 years. Now it appears that due to too much poking of the eyes, both clans have lost sight and are now guess walking. A guess walker, walks like a drunken man. He takes two steps forward and 4 steps backwards. Just like a drunken man, after several hours of walking, we are farther away from our destination than we were when we started the journey.
Otherwise, how on earth could the umbrella clan, whose members complained, cried, wailed and lost sleep over the walk out staged by the elephants seven years ago, be so hearty and gay over their own walk out staged in a similar fashion? How – just how on earth could the elephant clan who staged that infamous walk out, become so worried and perturbed about a walk out on the national chief?
What was wrong yesterday, can certainly not be right today. Wrong is wrong. In our culture, we never walk out on an elder. An elder, in our culture is not necessarily the oldest person. Our national chief, regardless of who he is, is at any time, our elder. When we disrespect him or her, that disrespect is eaten by the very people whose powers are vested in the national chief.
Those who are absent are always wrong. That is what our elders say. Those who were absent when the national chief addressed the chiefdom, were wrong!
Our people say when a needle falls into a deep well, many people will look into the well, but few will be ready to go down after it. It has been very convenient for politicians to complain when they are in opposition, but it appears the senses that make them see evil, hear evil, feel evil, and talk against evil suddenly, just like the needle in the well, disappear when they sit on the chair of power.
By poking each other in the eye for so long, the elders in our house of lawmakers are beginning to forget that old and new millet seeds end up in the same mill. When the people lose trust in them, the people may not care who is umbrella or elephant. All that the people will see are people who fight for their own parochial interests and not for the masses.
When or maybe, from the way things are going, if our chiefdom succeeds, it is they who will enjoy the most. After all, is the woman who feeds the baby not allowed to lick her fingers? When the chiefdom is seen to be running smoothly, will they not be the ones to whom privileges will first pay a visit? The big animal often appears when the hunter has given up the hunt for the day.
Dissent is good. I dread the thought of a Parliament without opposing voices. That would be disastrous. However, I also dread a chiefdom where wrong and right are dependent on whether one is riding an elephant or sitting under an umbrella. Even as the archer loves the arrow that flies, so too he loves the bow that remains constant in his hands. Our chiefdom, Ghana, is a constant in our hands. Our politicians are just the arrows and we are the archers. Should I repeat this for emphasis? A wise child is spoken to with proverbs. Or?
Ah, one more thing. The elephant does not limp when walking on thorns. But the thorns put on its path by the umbrella when they walked out on the national chief, has made some elephants begin to limp. Some members of the elephant clan have spoken about the walk out using words that I cannot repeat here because my father will not be proud of me, if I did so. Our chiefdom belongs to all of us. It has no fake owners and real owners. Anyone who says otherwise, may have stepped on thorns and needs to apologize and retract. Those who put the thorns there in the first place need to bow their heads.
If you have a bad itch at your back and can’t stretch to scratch it, it will take another person to help you to scratch your back. No man is an island. Our chiefdom is certainly not an Island. We need each other – elephants, umbrellas, Cockrells and coconuts. One foot isn’t enough to walk with.
I pray that this will be the last time our lawmakers will ever show such gross disrespect to our national chief. I pray that henceforth, since the score card now reads 1:1 that none of the sides in the house will, in the future, attempt to be the winner of this needless game of poking each other in the eye. A canoe does not know who the leader is. When it turns over, everyone will drown.
Nyaba, a weaning baby that does not cry aloud will die on its mothers back. As for me, I have cried out. I hope the lawmakers have heard. “You do me, I do you” go fit make God vex.
Related
WALKING OUT ON SONA – THE YOU DO ME, I DO YOU APPROACH IN PARLIAMENT
Dear Nyaba,
I was there seven yam festivals ago, when the members of the elephant family who were then in the position of opposition in the house of lawmakers, walked out of the house when the then national chief rose to address the people of the chiefdom about the state of the chiefdom. It was on the 22nd day of the 2nd month of the 13th year of the 2nd Millennium.
I was also there when the people of the umbrella, who now find themselves sitting in the position of opposition in the house of lawmakers, walked out just when the current national chief rose to address the chiefdom. It was a few minutes past the 10th hour of the 20th day of the 2nd month of the 20th year of the 2nd millennium.
Seven years ago, whilst the people of the elephant walked out from the chamber of the house, they held in their hands, placards that read “stealers”. That word “stealers” made me cringe. I will explain later.
Thursday, February 20, when the people of the umbrella decided to walk out, they did so in typical secondary school jama style. They sang and almost danced to a refrain in the national anthem “and help us to resist oppressor’s rule”. “oppressor’s rule”? That phrase too made me cringe. I shall explain later.
You see, over the years, the elephants and the umbrellas have been engaged in a certain battle. That battle, contrary to other battles in other chiefdoms and kingdoms, where the weapons are ideas of development and progress, has been one where the two ‘fighters’ stand facing each other. One pokes the other in the eye, and waits to see what happens. The other, having borne the pain for a while, pokes back in equal measure. “You do me, I do you. You poke my eye, I poke your eye”.
This is what the clans we have since 1992 elected to govern our chiefdom, been doing to each other for 2 decades and 7 years. Now it appears that due to too much poking of the eyes, both clans have lost sight and are now guess walking. A guess walker, walks like a drunken man. He takes two steps forward and 4 steps backwards. Just like a drunken man, after several hours of walking, we are farther away from our destination than we were when we started the journey.
Otherwise, how on earth could the umbrella clan, whose members complained, cried, wailed and lost sleep over the walk out staged by the elephants seven years ago, be so hearty and gay over their own walk out staged in a similar fashion? How – just how on earth could the elephant clan who staged that infamous walk out, become so worried and perturbed about a walk out on the national chief?
What was wrong yesterday, can certainly not be right today. Wrong is wrong. In our culture, we never walk out on an elder. An elder, in our culture is not necessarily the oldest person. Our national chief, regardless of who he is, is at any time, our elder. When we disrespect him or her, that disrespect is eaten by the very people whose powers are vested in the national chief.
Those who are absent are always wrong. That is what our elders say. Those who were absent when the national chief addressed the chiefdom, were wrong!
Our people say when a needle falls into a deep well, many people will look into the well, but few will be ready to go down after it. It has been very convenient for politicians to complain when they are in opposition, but it appears the senses that make them see evil, hear evil, feel evil, and talk against evil suddenly, just like the needle in the well, disappear when they sit on the chair of power.
By poking each other in the eye for so long, the elders in our house of lawmakers are beginning to forget that old and new millet seeds end up in the same mill. When the people lose trust in them, the people may not care who is umbrella or elephant. All that the people will see are people who fight for their own parochial interests and not for the masses.
When or maybe, from the way things are going, if our chiefdom succeeds, it is they who will enjoy the most. After all, is the woman who feeds the baby not allowed to lick her fingers? When the chiefdom is seen to be running smoothly, will they not be the ones to whom privileges will first pay a visit? The big animal often appears when the hunter has given up the hunt for the day.
Dissent is good. I dread the thought of a Parliament without opposing voices. That would be disastrous. However, I also dread a chiefdom where wrong and right are dependent on whether one is riding an elephant or sitting under an umbrella. Even as the archer loves the arrow that flies, so too he loves the bow that remains constant in his hands. Our chiefdom, Ghana, is a constant in our hands. Our politicians are just the arrows and we are the archers. Should I repeat this for emphasis? A wise child is spoken to with proverbs. Or?
Ah, one more thing. The elephant does not limp when walking on thorns. But the thorns put on its path by the umbrella when they walked out on the national chief, has made some elephants begin to limp. Some members of the elephant clan have spoken about the walk out using words that I cannot repeat here because my father will not be proud of me, if I did so. Our chiefdom belongs to all of us. It has no fake owners and real owners. Anyone who says otherwise, may have stepped on thorns and needs to apologize and retract. Those who put the thorns there in the first place need to bow their heads.
If you have a bad itch at your back and can’t stretch to scratch it, it will take another person to help you to scratch your back. No man is an island. Our chiefdom is certainly not an Island. We need each other – elephants, umbrellas, Cockrells and coconuts. One foot isn’t enough to walk with.
I pray that this will be the last time our lawmakers will ever show such gross disrespect to our national chief. I pray that henceforth, since the score card now reads 1:1 that none of the sides in the house will, in the future, attempt to be the winner of this needless game of poking each other in the eye. A canoe does not know who the leader is. When it turns over, everyone will drown.
Nyaba, a weaning baby that does not cry aloud will die on its mothers back. As for me, I have cried out. I hope the lawmakers have heard. “You do me, I do you” go fit make God vex.
Related
Eminent Africans Demand Release of Guinea-Bissau Election Results
Our united voice has highlighted the urgency of maternal and child health- First Lady
Beware of Christmas Scams: Expert warns of fake deals, deepfake fraud
We have lost policemen in line of duty due to lack of equipment – President Mahama
Kennedy Agyapong is ‘the nation’s industrialist’ – Palgrave Boakye Danquah
Use these vehicles responsibly, they are expensive and hard to procure – Mahama
ADVERTISEMENT
Ghana must move to commercial farming to reduce food imports – Majority Leader
Eminent Africans Demand Release of Guinea-Bissau Election Results
Our united voice has highlighted the urgency of maternal and child health- First Lady
Beware of Christmas Scams: Expert warns of fake deals, deepfake fraud
We have lost policemen in line of duty due to lack of equipment – President Mahama
Kennedy Agyapong is ‘the nation’s industrialist’ – Palgrave Boakye Danquah
Use these vehicles responsibly, they are expensive and hard to procure – Mahama
Ghana will not surrender streets or communities to criminals – President Mahama
Our STEM tools are made by Ghanaians for Ghanaian students – President Mahama
Attacks on police officers must stop – Interior Minister
Recent News
Using your phone on the toilet raises your risk of hemorrhoids
Love vs. Money: GTV Breakfast Show stirs debate on relationships
Gather every advantage: Lessons from life’s harsh realities
Some essential garden tasks to complete before winter
Sitting on germs: Why paper covers do not protect on public toilets
‘Double patriarchy’: Doctor has South Africa talking about financial abuse
Consumer Reports: Synthetic hair braiding may pose cancer risk
Looking good doesn’t mean you are fit
Valentine’s Day: A celebration of love beyond the hype
Mahama enjoys Chinese delicacy at Lantern Festival
Checking your partner’s phone is a “Criminal Act”- Maurice Ampaw
Communication 101: The Fashionably-Conscious Politician – A Wardrobe for the Woman on the Frontline
Rising Star in the Makeup Industry: Deebee’s inspiring journey
Beauty expert Deebee debunks makeup myths
Benin festival seeks to dispel voodoo stereotypes
Unleash the power of African ginger tea in every sip
Coconut oil pulling: A natural way to boost oral health
Ivory Coast’s national dish Attiéké receives UNESCO Cultural Heritage status
Radon Gas: The Silent Killer in Your Home
10 things that drive people to make bad financial decisions
Ghana, A Land Full Of Wonderful Sights And Scenes
Exploring the Health and Economic Benefits of the African Star Apple
Tips on getting money with Rabbi Odame-Ansa
A taste of tradition at Sege junction’s khebab joint
Blend Your Way to Better Health: The Surprising Benefits of Smoothies
Fighting Misinformation: Essential Fact-Checking and Verification Tools
Lifestyle and its diseases
Reading Caravan: Foundation blends literacy with tourism to inspire Ghana’s children
Beatrice ‘Bee’ Arthur calls for innovative upcycling to combat waste
Experience the Charm of Keta Beach: Soft Sands, Clear Waters, and Rich History
Accra Arts and Craft Market: Preserving Ghana’s cultural heritage
Harry and Meghan in Nigeria amidst controversies
The Rise of Barefoot Shoes: Why Ditching Heels and Soles Can Benefit Your Health and Happiness
Signs someone secretly dislikes you, according to psychology
The Negative Impact of Fast Fashion: A Pile of Waste in Ghana
Urgent research needed on Galamsey chemicals’ impact on health and nutrition – Dr. Justina Owusu
Dietician emphasises importance of food supplements for optimal health
Decline of Waist Bead Culture Among Ghana’s Youth
Civil Servants in Uganda keep fit to confront increase in Obesity
Ghanaian Society’s Changing Perceptions on Anklets and Their Cultural Importance
5 Personality Traits of Successful Leaders In 2024
Heritage Month: Ghanaian Smock, an apparel of prestige
Proper hair care is important in harmattan season – hair stylists
Reasons why vintage clothes are still popular
Common style mistakes men make and how to fix them
Growing beards is a symbol of manliness – ‘Beards Gang President’
Why some men in Ghana shop in the women’s section
Share your phone password with your spouse- Relationship Coach
Rings: Wedding bands or just fashionable among Ghanaian Youth?
Symbolic meanings of rings in Ghanaian Culture
Do you know what to look out for in a Men’s suit?
How important are accessories in Men’s Fashion?
Braids, the new trend and lifestyle among young men in Ghana
Bizarre Captivation
Men hair colouring on the rise
Hairstylists in Mallam cash in amid festive season
Are baggy clothes still trendy?
Five things that stand out for a first-time visitor to Rwanda
10 reasons dating today may drive you completely crazy
About 100,000 tourists expected in Ghana for Christmas festivities