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AFRICA’S QUEST FOR THE HOLY GRAIL

“We must be willing to get rid of the life we’ve planned, so as to have the life that is waiting for  us’’- Joseph Campbell

When the English scholar and prolific author, Thomas Fuller (1608-1661) argued that “the  Darkest hour is just before Dawn”, he probably had other continents and races in mind, not  Africa or Africans. In Africa, the dawn is never coming. For a period of 500 years down the line,  the dawn is not dawning but has remained immobile, despite prolonged “dark hours”.

Putting Africa’s 500-year history holistically and contextually, one conclusion can be that Africa  belongs to a parallel universe. Or it could be that the terrible experiences Africa considers as  darkest hours in its mutable past, that is, the kidnapping of over 35 million ablest Africans by  the Arabs and Western slave masters, the rapacious looting of its resources by the colonialists,  etc., are just a tip of the iceberg in comparison with the bumpy road that lies ahead of Africa. Or Africans do not feel perturbed by those humiliating experiences due to religious sentiments.  After all, some Africans consider Arab slave masters as “our brothers and benefactors”, while  some believe the colonialists brought civilisation.

Since nothing has shocked Africans yet into a holy rage about its sorry state, it is either (1)  Africans are different; (2) Africans have been shocked far beyond the level of un-shockability or (3) Africa’s darkest hour has not yet come. It is a matter of picking your choice.

Let us go through the pages of history briefly in order to test the veracity of Fuller's thesis. The  Japanese darkest hour was when their two beautiful cities of Hiroshima and Nagasaki were  reduced to rubbles in 1945. The 4,000-year-old Japanese civilisation was shaken to its  foundation with the possibility of total annihilation resulting from nuclear radiation. But with  holy anger, Japanese rebuilt Japan and almost caught up with America in the 1980s, if not for  the few missteps by its leaders leading to a “lost decade”. Holocaust, also referred to as “The  Final Solution”, was the darkest period in the Jewish recent history when the Nazis and their  accomplices murdered six million Jews, reducing the population of European Jews from 9.5  million in 1939 on the eve of the Second World War to 3.8 million in 1945.

The Jews have since built the world’s strongest Airforce, cyber security technologies and  MOSSAD, in addition to having the most innovative economy in the Middle East. Similarly,  events of 1937 to 1945 woke up China from a marathon slumber lasting over a thousand years  when the tiny Japan conquered and appropriated a part of China land, despite the fact that  China is 25 per cent bigger than Japan. Both the Jews and Chinese were sprung into action and

vowed: ‘’Never Again’’. Germany also rose from the ashes of the Second World War to build the  strongest economy in Europe after Hitler’s costly misadventure. A major dark hour in the  American history was during the Great Depression lasting from 1929 to 1939 when the living  became envious of the dead. Americans, like the Phoenix, rose from the ashes of the Great  Depression to build the world’s sole superpower that won and brought the Second World War to a close.

South Korea's darkest hour was during the Korean War (1950-1953) when thousands of South  Koreans were hungry, malnourished, homeless and hopeless. But South Koreans witnessed a  new dawn when it leveraged technology to build a global top ten economy. After the messy  divorce from Malaysia, Singapore too faced its darkest hour riddled with lack of food, shelter,  land, infrastructure, etc., and had to contend with a vicious enemy, Malaysia, next door.  President Lee Kuan Yew converted their frustrations to production. Singapore emerged one of  the world’s richest countries with a per capita income of $64, 000 in 2021 as against $472 in  1962.

Similarly, Europe's 100-year war galvanised the transition of medieval Europe to a modern  Europe after the December 1259 Treaty of Paris that brought an end to the war. The 100-year  war (1337-1453) led to the rise of Greater Europe leveraging novel technologies that created  boundless opportunities to meet its future imperial aspirations. Europe transited from the  Darwinism state of “survival of the fittest” to “arrival of the fittest” on the world stage.

While Europe’s, America’s and Asia’s “darkest hours” begot new dawns, Africa remains  enmeshed in unbreakable back-to-back darkness, despite several bitter and humiliating  experiences. Is there a programme or script written some time, somewhere by competing  races frustrating the dawning? Secondly, what will stimulate Africans into action? Thirdly and most importantly, what is the “Holy Grail”, that is, the number one building block for Africa’s  modernisation? Is it leadership, political power, economic emancipation, democracy, black  bomb or technological breakthrough?

The other four building blocks of transformation, that is, leadership, political power, democracy and economic breakthrough though necessary, can only endure when planted and nurtured on  a foundation of superior technology.

Leadership: As regards leadership, a school of thought says leadership is not just everything  but the ONLY THING. It stresses that the problem of Africa is squarely and purely leadership.  The school believes once Africa fixes the leadership lacuna, a new dawn will follow. If it is so,

why are South Africa and Ghana still searching for the dawn after having been governed by  three of Africa’s greatest leaders: Mandela, Nkrumah and Rawlings? Africa has had other great

leaders such as Patrice Lumumba of DRC, Julius Nyerere of Uganda, John Magufuli of Tanzania,  Anwar Sadat of Egypt and now, Paul Kagame of Rwanda plus a few others.

Besides the fact that none of them was able to galvanise one Africa rebirth, the candles they lit  up in their respective countries did not last the night. Why was it impossible for President  Donald Trump to corrupt or truncate the American political superstructure, whereas Presidents  Jacob Zuma, Paul Biya and Muhammadu Buhari among other African leaders exploit their  citizens with impunity? Africa’s ailments require more than the emergence of great leaders.  Paul Kagame of Rwanda is a good leader (not a great leader) but he understands better how the  world works. He is taking Rwanda on a technology excursion and if Rwanda maintains the  current tempo, it is destined to be at technology’s cutting edge within ten years. In addition,  the technologically-empowered Rwandan youths are better equipped than their counterparts  across Africa to enthrone and perpetuate good leadership devoid of violence.

Political power: When Dr Kwame Nkrumah said in the 1960s to Ghana and Africa: “Seek ye first  the political kingdom and all else shall be added unto you’’, “political kingdom” then signified a  united Africa and “all else” was peace, prosperity and prestige. Sixty years later, Africa is still  awaiting Nkrumah’s “kingdom” not to talk of “all else”! India was colonised by the British for  almost 100 years. Japan colonised Taiwan for 50 years and South Korea for 35 years. Singapore  was also once a British colony. With a combined population of about 80 million for South Korea  (51 million), Taiwan (23 million) and Singapore (5.8 million people), the combined GDP of the  three tiny countries is about $2.8 trillion.

Meanwhile, the entire GDP of Africa having 1.3 billion people stood at $2.6 trillion in 2020 as  compared to India’s $3 trillion. This means the three tiny technologically-driven countries which  make up just six per cent of Africa’s population are economically stronger than the 54 African  countries combined. Samsung, just one Tech Company, alone contributes up to 15 per cent of  South Korea’s GDP. More striking is the fact that Israel, which is just about 0.6 per cent of  Africa’s population, is far more powerful militarily than Africa, courtesy of its superior  technology. Some African intellectuals have argued that Africa needs a nuclear-parity, that is, Black Bomb to achieve total freedom!

Economic emancipation: Another school of thought argues strongly in favour of economic  emancipation as the first building block. It suggests that to achieve this, Africans must own the  factors of production: land, labour, capital and entrepreneurship. For the past 60 years, African  leftist intellectuals have been teaching their students how multinationals underdeveloped  Africa and why Africa must nationalise them. President Robert Mugabe of Zimbabwe was a  strong advocate of this theory. Consequently, he seized the land from the white settlers in  Zimbabwe for redistribution to Africans. He also went on a reckless currency-printing exercise.  The result was a regime of extraordinary and multi-dimensional chaos leading to hyper-inflation

exceeding a staggering 89 sextillion per cent in 2008. Prices of commodities were doubling on  the average every 24 hours. A time came when Zimbabweans needed each basketful of  currency to buy a loaf of bread. While President Mugabe lived long enough to witness the  impracticability of his economic model, Thomas Sankara, the former Burkina Faso President  who had shared a similar ideology before him got his life cut short by the gunshot of his friend  Captain Blaise Compaore on 15th October, 1987.

Democracy: Could this be the missing link? The fact that Nigeria has experimented with the two  leading types of democratic systems of governance: Parliamentary and American Presidential  system, and later came home in 2019 with a trophy as the new World’s Poverty Capital shows  that the system of governance is not Africa’s main pain point. China created its own unique  system of governance and is prospering. Ditto Japanese and the Germans.

Africa: A case for technology and knowhow

Superior technology and technical knowhow separate races that excel in re-inventing  themselves and build modern civilisations from those that do not. Dating back to the ancient  Mesopotamia in the third millennium, when in ca3500, the Sumerians built the first civilisation  which was later conquered by King Sargon of Akkad who established the first world’s empire in  2330 B.C in Mesopotamia, technology has always been the “Holy Grail”.

The strongest 150 civilisations in human history, including the forgotten Irish Empire of Brian Boru, the Maya, the Azetec of Central Mexico, the Inca, the Qin and Han in China, the nomadic  Mongols, Babylonian, Persian, the Egypt Middle Kingdom, Alexandra’s Empire, Roman Empire,  British empire and American civilization, all leveraged technology for military and commercial  conquests. For instance, the Byzantine Empire which occupied the Eastern half of Roman  Empire after the Western half had crumbled into several jejune feudal kingdoms survived for  1,000 years (395 CE- 1453) as a result of its superior technical knowhow. British Empire  leveraged technology to build the world’s strongest Navy and economy at a time. At the height  of its imperial power, the UK built the largest empire in world’s history, controlling 25 per cent  of the world’s population and 35,000,000 km2, representing 24 per cent of the earth’s total  land area. America leveraged technology in 1945 to bring the Second World War to a close and  in building the world’s most powerful nation militarily and economically.

Since the invention of wind vane by the Greek Astronomer, Andronicus in 48 BC to the period  when Roman Empire pushed the Greeks off the world stage till today, Africa has remained an  underdog simply because it has never developed superior indigenous technology of its own or made an attempt to acquire legally or steal like the Japanese and Chinese have done. China is  leveraging technology to put the global supply chain under its armpit, producing everything for

the world under the made-in-China 2025 label. Africa has been losing all its battles against  external forces: invaders, slave masters, colonialists and exploiters because it is technologically

deficient. The Africa’s Science and Technology (AST) consisting of charms, arrows, hunters’ guns, etc., has time and time again proven too impotent compared with the European  technology. AST is not what Africa needs because of its limited application and doubtful  potency. Some African scholars have pointed to the defeat suffered by the French Military led  by Napoleon in the hands of the Haiti Army led by Dessalines in 1803 which gave birth to the  creation of the first Black Republic on 1st January, 1804 as an example of the potency of AST.  But the Haitian benefitted enormously from the British sundry covert military support.

Pathway to technological parity or domination

The Universal Science and Technology (UST) tested and trusted in the past 1,000 years is the  way to roll. This is what China is doing and it is close to achieving parity with the West. China  has only one hurdle left to overcome: semi-conductor. Its pathway to achieving the goal is  indisputable. Having lost $20 billion investment while trying to build an alternative semi conductor factory in Mainland China to compete with America without success, China has its eyes on annexing Taiwan, the host of the world’s largest semi-conductor factory, Taiwan  Semiconductor Manufacturing Company (TSMC). If peaceful and brotherly negotiation fails, the  gunboat diplomacy option is on China’s table and if it succeeds in annexing Taiwan and gaining  control of the semi-conductor technology, it is game-over for the West’s technology  domination.

What technology wants

Technology is the world’s most dynamic living force capable of expanding our individual and  collective horizons, if we listen to what it wants. It is Africa’s most veritable pathway to  transformation. While other building blocks require substantial government or group efforts to  build, technology can be cheaply achieved 100 per cent by private citizens. Interestingly, there  is a technology solution to most obstacles militating against Africa’s transformation. For  instance, unicorn start-ups constitute the solution to chronic poverty and underdevelopment. A  unicorn start-up is a private company with a valuation of over $1 billion, mostly technology driven. There are over 700 unicorns globally: Airbnb, Facebook, Google etc. Intel bought the  then five-year-old Mobile Eye Company for $15 billion while Facebook coughed out a huge  amount of $16 billion to acquire WhatsApp in 2014.

Uber’s recent valuation puts the figure at the staggering $50 billion. These are start-ups whose  founders are sometimes in their teens, using their fathers’ garages or their laptops as the Head  Office! The number of unicorns in China reached 137 in May 2021, representing about 20 per  cent of the world’s unicorns. In the last 12 months, India has produced 15 start-up unicorns.  There are 97 million high-paying job openings between now and 2025 according to the World  Economic Forum (WEF). The beauty of this development is that African youths can work  remotely, right inside their mothers’ bedrooms provided they have robust internet services,  powerful laptops, electricity and food.

The 97 million jobs identified by WEF open a window of unprecedented opportunities for  Africans. About 70 per cent of the jobs are in the following 12 categories: Design Thinking,  Internet of Everything (IoE), Artificial Intelligence, Cloud Architect, Cyber Security, Data Science,  Full Stack Web Development, Blockchain, Software Engineering, Data Analytics, Big Data and Full Stack Developer. The salaries range from $50,000 for beginners to $100,000 for the  intermediate to $150,000 on the average for experts per annum. With $5,000 training  investment, a candidate is permanently cured of poverty. With $5 billion, one million Africans  will be catapulted from poverty to prosperity within 12 months.

Within the next ten years, Africa can produce 150 start-ups unicorns which can help to  quadruple Africa’s GDP from $2.6 trillion to $10 trillion. Unicorns will also reduce  unemployment drastically. Furthermore, with the new African billionaire technopreneurs who  have different mentality from today’s thieving and divisive leaders, they will be able to build  consensus to make politicians accountable, responsible and responsive, since they have access  to limitless resources independent of governments. The same way the Big7 Non-State Actors  are stronger than the American government is the same way the African youths will build  Africa’s Big7 that will decide Africa’s fate.

What does it take to achieve this? One, through a group of Africa-focus individuals of means  coming together to give scholarships to exceptional African youths. Two, parents need to  encourage their children or grandchildren to pursue careers in any of those 12 categories.  Three, people should endeavour to sponsor indigent youths in their communities or places of  worship.

Africa lost out catastrophically in the last three major revolutions: the Agrarian Revolution of  the 17th century, Industrial Revolution of the 18th century and the Information and  Communications Revolution of the 20th century. The end is what the Physicist, Michio Kaku  calls the “post-human age” while Dan Brown, the author calls it “obligate endosymbiosis”, the  age of fusion of human and technology to create hybrid species. Technologies that will change  what it means to be human already exist but they are not yet mainstream. Most of the critical  mineral resources that Africa sees as blessings today will be created in abundance using  Synthetic Intelligence Technology. All the devices that exist outside of our bodies today like  smart phones, reading glasses, computer chips, etc., will reside inside of our bodies going  forward. Every laptop today carries a small label “INTEL INSIDE” on the right-hand side.  Tomorrow, people will carry the same label “INTEL+ INSIDE” on their foreheads. As human  bodies become the “new data centres”, trans-humanism triumphs.

New technologies like CRISPR, a tool for editing the genome to create super-human beings, are here. Others like cybernetics, cryonics and molecular engineering among others that will  completely and permanently change whom we are, are here. Homo sapiens, holding a one-way

ticket, are embarking on an excursion into unchartered waters, perching on a strange cusp of  history. The question is how prepared is Africa for this mega transition? Will Africa still be  holding the shorter end of the new stick as it did 500 years ago? All salvation comes at a price.

In dangerous times, no sin is greater than apathy and the most dangerous people are those  who hold their peace. The past decisions made by Africans who occupied this space centuries  ago sowed the seed of our present fate. How will Africans in the next 500 years describe  Africans of today? Is Africa aware that other races look at its numerous blessings with covetous  eyes? Meanwhile, God has never signed any certificate of occupancy (CofO) in favour of any  race for any geographical location. Think of what befell the Black-Irish. The Afro-Argentinean  population constituted 50 per cent of the original Argentina’s population in 1700, but today, the European ethnicity represents 97 per cent.

What happened to the Australian Aborigines and Native Americans? Besides physical  possession, Africa’s Title Document for the geographical space we currently occupy is the  unwritten, unsigned, undated moral document. Except Africa’s “Moral Title Document” is  backed up with superior technology, nothing is sacrosanct. The world does not operate on  morality but on Agenda and Goals! Those who cannot remember the past mistakes are  condemned to repeat them with considerable pains. Those who remember but fail to take  necessary and timely remedial actions are the “High Table Materials” in Dante's hell. Can  Africans, therefore, choose today to eradicate randomness and take deliberate actions in  moulding today’s reality towards the desired agenda of self-preservation of their race? The  Mathematics of Modernisation is Technology.

Final note

Finally, the “Holy Grail” which Africa has been searching for these past 500 years, a sine-qua non for a wholesale, inexpensive and sustainable transformation model is technology. It is not  true that nothing in your past matters. Has history not taught us that true power stems not  from securing political and material advantages because both are reversible? It was through  gaining and maintaining an overwhelming competitive edge in technology that the 150 Greatest  Empires in history built their respective empires. Interestingly, technology has no nationality,  religion or race. Technology is the most global senior citizen that befriends only the smartest  and most innovative nation or race. There is no shame in stealing or kidnapping technology  when a nation or race has exhausted all other legal methods of acquisition. My thesis is “Africa,  seek ye first the kingdom of technology and all else: Power, Prosperity, Prestige and Peace, shall  be added unto you”.

Tim Akano is the President of One Africa Initiatives (OAI)

Timakano1@gmail.com

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