Features
Who am I?
This question, seemingly simple to answer, can be a very profound one when viewed through the lens of a social scientist. To a social scientist, this question has to do with self-awareness which forms the bedrock of character formation.
If a person has self-awareness, it enables that individual to relate to his or her cultural setting which then informs the values which are important for his or her development as a person.
The environment that we grow in, goes a long way in influencing our personalities and therefore the values underpinning our characters. Character is very important in an individual’s life and it is that which really defines a person.
The difference between success and failure depends on the character developed over a certain period in a person’s life which gives him confidence and therefore the resilience to confront and overcome challenges.
The difference between an African and an African-American is self-awareness which makes the African-American develop a self-belief that he or she can succeed in whatever he or she plans to do.
A typical African usually lacks self-awareness and has been so steeped in superstition that right from the word go, believes that some witches are working against him or her.
Whereas the African-American sees possibilities for success and works extra hard to realise his dreams, his African brother on the other side of the Atlantic, attributes any minor challenge to some spiritual force out there, working to prevent him from making it in life.
A conversation with a 10-year-old African-American will amaze you about the self-awareness he or she possesses compared to a typical 10-year-old on the continent.
The African-American child can tell you his or her career aspirations easily with timelines but the typical African child will struggle to do same due to a lack of a system that offers assistance to children to identify their career aspirations.
A video I watched of an American child narrating her career aspirations with timelines, was a delight to watch.
She outlined the educational path she has to go through, the work she will apply for and for how long she will work there after completing her University education and finally campaign for the office of the President of the United States of America.
At no point did she consider the influence of a certain evil power working against her dreams. Her self-awareness was at a very high level and this gave her the confidence to boldly narrate her career aspirations.
Answering the question, ‘who am I’ will enable a person to know what to believe, what to reject, what to live and what to hate. If I know I am a Ghanaian, homosexuality is not an issue, I will even have to contemplate because it is against everything Ghanaian.
Self-awareness would resolve a lot of our challenges as a people and therefore challenges confronting our nation, since the nation is the sum total of the actions and inactions of the populace.
The census revealed that the Christian population in this country is about 71 per cent and that of Muslims is about 19 per cent and other religions making the remaining 10 per cent.
This implies that our nation is a religious nation and to a large extent can be said to be a Christian nation.
Christianity abhors practices like corruption, cheating, bribery and all the vices that impedes a nation’s growth and so under normal conditions, corruption, bribery etc. should not be problems that should bedevil this country.
However, a glance at the annual Auditor General’s report tells a different story but none of the religions encourages evil practices like corruption and bribery.
Therefore the prevalence of these evils can only be attributed to lack of self -awareness
By Laud Kissi-Mensah