The Best Mother In The Whole Wide World

By James Golobah

A single day dedicated to say thank you is not enough to cover all your hard work. A single sheet of paper is not enough to write down all the great things mother does neither a single day is ever enough to say thank you to the best mother in the whole wide world. When no one ever believes, mother always keeps her hopes and confidence high. When a child is up and down, mother is also up and down. Mother is the most caring person in the whole wide world. The best mother in the whole wide world has always put herself last and her kids first. When mother goes hungry she makes sure her child goes to bed full. The most important title in the world is a mother. When mother is tired after hard days of work, she still makes it her business to complete her homely duties taking care of her family. Mother carries her child for nine months and takes care of her children for so many years. Mother buys food and clothing for her children. Mother makes sacrifices to forgo self and focus on others. Mother always makes sure that her child is fed and at night tucked her child in bed. The peace of mind a child gets from good night rest is a magic created by mother.

When no one is clapping, mother is always there cheering on. When everyone else is discouraging you, mother is always the one in your corner. When you think you have grown and all in over your head, it is mother that reminds you to be humble and respectful and that you are still a child regardless of your age. She reminds you of your diapers’ days and your growing up and how far you have come. Mother is always the help you can count on when no one is there or willing to help. Mother is the one that loves you without condition. Her unconditional love for you over shadows everyone else’s love for you. Mother loves you just as the way you are. Mother is the one and only person that invested in you expecting no return on her investment. Mother gives you everything and does not expect you to pay her back. Mother is the only person that always carries you in her heart when everyone else forgets about you. Mother is your first coach and will always be your silent hero that refuses to take credit for victories she have won over the years but rather attribute that victory to you, when in fact you have done nothing. Mother will do anything to put you first by keeping you happy and healthy. Mother will sacrifice her time for your well being and save you time for your personal use. Mother will give up anything just make sure you are taking care of. Mother, you are the greatest ever and will always be the best ever in the world. These words belong to you and you deserve to be called:

Nice-Mother has always been nice and carrying for her children and her household.

Intelligent-Mother is the most intelligent in the household and will always be.

Natural-A mother is always a mother. No one else can take the place of a mother because she is natural.

Education-Mother is a great leader, she is open minded and knows the core to her children hearts and nurtures everyone by teaching her children about responsibility.

 

Mother is the pillar of the home and binds everyone together.

Opportunity is one thing that everyone yarns for and mother knows how to give it to everyone

Teaching is a field that mother has made part of her life long journey and a mother is a great teacher.

Health is the core of survival and mother has made this her priority to keep her family healthy.

Embrace-A mother’s hug is the best hug a child will ever get. Mother is selfless and always caring.

Responsibility is one thing that a mother has not shied away from regardless of the circumstance.

 

 Happy Mother’s Day to all the mothers in the whole wide world and you are the best mother in the whole wide world.

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The Land of My Father’s Birth

A Personal Viewpoint on

The Land of My Father’s Birth: A Memoir of the Liberian Civil War 

By: Theodore Hodge

 

I have been called upon this afternoon to give a literary perspective on Nvasekie Konneh’s book, “The Land of My Father’s Birth: A Memoir of the Liberian Civil War.”

I will like to stress an important distinction here for our discussion. It is my understanding that in the case of a work of fiction, a literary perspective encompasses delving into such technical matters as mode of narration, plot development, character development, general style, etc. We are, therefore, not required here to give an analysis of the techniques of fiction writing.

This book (under discussion) is a memoir and thereby falls under the genre of non-fiction. In that regard, the perspective that forms the crux of the book is strictly the domain of the author’s. Upon reading the work, a critic, or any reader for that matter, can express an opinion as to whether he likes or dislikes the work. I am on record of stating that I like the work and highly commend the author for his great effort of telling his personal story which has wider dimensions for our society.

The perspective herein expressed is straight-forward and unique; it belongs to the author. The author writes from a first-person perspective and tells a personal story. He uses a clear style to deliver his message. He goes from the specific to the general by first telling us the story of his grandfather’s migration to Nimba County and his subsequent relationship with the local tribes. He marries outside his own tribe and thereby blends the mixture from which later springs the author’s father and subsequently the author himself. Later on, the Liberian civil war brings to focus some ugly realities stemming from differences engendered by religion, culture, ethnicity and even politics. By the time the story ends, the reader comes to the realization that the author craftily tells a story of very broad dimensions worthy of further study and discussion.

What I want to do here now is to give a cultural and sociological background that formed the author’s upbringing and helped to shape his perspective. I want to argue that this background gives credence to his viewpoint. I want to also argue that in this regard, although he tells a personal story, the story has far-reaching dimensions for the broader society; it tells the story of a people and a culture.

The theme I shall speak on this afternoon is “The Danger of a Single Story”. I give full credit to the young, brilliant and incorrigible Nigerian writer Chimamandi Ngozi Adiche. She writes, “Show people as one thing only over and over again and that is what they become.”

She tells a story about herself.  According to her, when she began to read, there were no characters in the books and stories that looked like her. All the characters were blue-eyed, blond haired children who ate apples, drank ginger beer and played in snow. At a very early age she had a desire to write and so she began to write short stories. She created characters like the ones she had read about; that’s all she knew… she thought these were the only kind of people about whom stories and books were written. Imagine that!

She said she considers herself fortunate to have discovered the African writers, the legendary Chinua Achibe and Camara Laye at an early age. They introduced her to a new frontier. Through reading them, she began to realize that there is no single story for a people. We all have various complex and multi-faceted stories — it all depends on who tells your story and from what point of view. Yes, the author’s perspective matters, as the African fable about the Lion and Hunter tells us: The story of the hunt is always told to us from the hunter’s perspective, not the lion’s. Maybe one day lions will learn to read and write their own stories, but until then, we have to live with the hunter’s tale.

Adiche emphatically warns us and illustrates the danger of reducing other people and cultures to a single story rather than recognizing that we have overlapping, multiple stories… stories that may be quite contrary to the popularly accepted views expressed by others about us. She says further: “When we reject the single story, we realize that there is never a single story about any place or people, we regain a kind of paradise.”

Let’s examine the case of Liberia for a brief moment. How did we come to have a single story? Was it by accident or design? I am prepared to argue that it was by deliberate design.

Our so-called founding fathers set out to carve a national story at the exclusion of various segments of the Liberian nation. The document referred to as the Liberian Declaration of Independence is tantamount to “A Recipe for Disaster.”  I shall examine it briefly by highlighting two brief quotations from the document. It says: “…While announcing to the nations of the world the new position which the people of this Republic have felt themselves called upon to assume, courtesy to their opinion seems to demand a brief accompanying statement of the causes which induced them, first to expatriate themselves from the land of their nativity and to form settlements on this barbarous coast, and now to organize their government by the assumption of a sovereign and independent character…”

The word “Nativity” strikes me as strange in this usage. Since these settlers were forcibly taken from their homeland, Africa, and taken to America where they were held as slaves, shouldn’t America be referred to as a land of bondage, instead of the land of nativity? Since the black man originated from the African continent, why was this group of settlers referring to America in such a manner? I think the consequences are indeed psychological and crippling.

One practical example comes to mind: The Jews were displaced from their homeland and scattered all over the world. They were once held in bondage in Egypt in biblical times. Many Jews were born in Egypt, Syria and other Arab countries. Do Jews dare refer to these foreign countries of their birth as the land of their “nativity”? No. Many Jews, in modern times were born in Europe. Let’s take Germany for an example. Do Jews refer to Germany as the land of their “nativity”?
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A second key point is the reference to the description of the African coast as “barbarous”. What makes this the barbarous coast? Was the barbarity not perpetuated against the peaceful inhabitants by so-called enlightened and civilized people of the West? It should be clear who the barbarians were in this case. To refer to the victims as barbarians is false, misleading and unconscionable. But that is what happens when the story of a people is told by others, instead of by the people themselves. The so-called civilized people of America created our story and sold it to the settlers and the settlers were happy to run with it. They created a single story, a story that depicts the indigenous African as warlike and barbaric, making America the dispenser of enlightenment and the settlers as its messengers… the story of the nation becomes the story of the settlers; that is an example of the danger of the single story.

Let’s examine a second quotation as it appears in the same document: “We, the people of the Republic of Liberia, were originally inhabitants of the United States of North America.” Again, one has to wonder about the usage of the word “originally”. Weren’t these people originally taken from Africa? If so, when does America become their original home? And here it does not take too much effort to come to the realization that the authors of this historic document only set out to tell the story of a small segment of the Liberian nation. Were all the people of Liberia “originally” from America? No. The attempt at deception and domination is quite obvious to the casual observer.

Revisionist accounts of history tell us that the tribes occupying the land mass that became known as Liberia were always at war. Perhaps the case is made that is was through Divine Intervention that the slave trade began… that the slave trade was a kind of salvation because the natives were always at war killing each other before these slaves were taken to America. So perhaps, slavery saved their lives? Hogwash, I’d say.

Let us examine empirical evidence to debunk this myth. Since the return of the settlers (former slaves) back to Liberia leading to the “founding” of the nation, there have been no major wars between and among the major indigenous tribes. The only uprisings in the country were directed against the government, in self defense. For example, there were the Kru Wars and the Grebo Wars. But the Krus never fought the Greboes, neither did the Krus fight the Bassas or the Kpelles against the Lormas. The Krahns never fought the Gios or the Manos. No tribe ever fought the Mandingoes nor did they fight against any other tribe? How does one explain this discrepancy? Again, if these tribes were so warlike and barbaric, why did they suddenly stop fighting each other? One must conclude that the theory is fabricated for the benefit of those telling our story.

I once again emphasize why this book is an important read. We are used to telling Liberia’s history from the narrow perspective of a very small segment of the population. We believed that the country belonged to the settlers at the exclusion of the indigenes, hence the myth of the “founding” theory. We are told over and over again. “Liberia was founded by former black American slaves.” In all fairness, that is partly true; but only partly so, the rest of the story is much more complicated and complex.

Let’s examine the issue of who is a bona fide Liberian and who is not. Liberians of various persuasions are quick to tell you that Mandingoes are not genuine Liberians. When pressed to argue the case, they are quick to point out that the Mandingoes are originally from Kankan, Beyla, N’Zerekore, Masedu (all in the Republic of Guinea) or even from Mali, Senegal, Mauritania or Sudan — anywhere but Liberia.

Press the case further and question why Mandingoes born on Liberian soil for generations should not be considered Liberians despite the fact that their ancestry hails from further afar? The answer is generally puzzling. It goes like this: “Because they have no known ancestral villages in Liberia.” They will continue, “I can show you Grebo towns, Kru towns, Gio and Mano towns, Kpelle and Lorma towns —- can you show me any Mandingo towns?”

At this point I know they have lost the argument. The constitution of Liberia does not stipulate or require any ownership of ancestral lands as a precondition for citizenship. The argument for ancestral land ownership by the group is bogus. And here is why. We have people in Liberia referred to as “Americo-Liberians” and in some cases as “Congaus”. Do these people have any genuine ancestral villages in Liberia? The answer is no. Does that disqualify them from been called Liberians? No. So why is the standard different for the two groups?

Furthermore, here is a group of people that boldly tells us that their ancestry lies somewhere in America, perhaps North Carolina, South Carolina, Georgia, Maryland or Pennsylvania. If we accept them as genuine Liberians, why should we deny people who come from neighboring African countries such as Guinea, Sierra Leone and the Ivory Coast? Once the logic is fully examined, the case becomes duly clear and convincing.

And that is why I want to thank the author again for insisting boldly and demonstrating clearly that Liberia does not have a single story. If the Liberian nation can adopt strangers from as far away as North America, it should not take too much of a stretch of imagination to accept other Africans, especially our very close neighbors and relatives. We must not be brainwashed into thinking or accepting the fallacy of a single story — we must beware the danger of the single story.

Word of the day

Happiness– brings good fortune. It is an expression of a state of well-being and nature of a satisfying experience. Happiness brings peace to the mind and makes your surrounding calm. If the pain is delicate and doesn’t final, one could buy uk viagra ignore it. It http://respitecaresa.org/caring/card-inside-right/ cialis generico mastercard has been shown to increase blood flow and might even be considered inexpensive. When it comes to changing your lifestyle, the sildenafil side effects most difficult thing to handle in many couples. Many cheap cialis this link men attempt to solve this problem not by re-evaluating their steroid stack, but by adding more drugs to the mix. Happiness brings joy and health and makes you to be appeased with your desires. Don’t let the experience of an event take away your happiness. Live happy everyday like is your happiest day.

“Happiness is not having what you want, but wanting what you have.” -Anonymous

The World Mourns the Death of Nelson Mandela-the lessons he taught

By James Golobah

Nelson Mandela was born in Mveso on July 18, 1918 in the Transkei, South Africa. Mandela died at the age of 95 on December 5, 2013. The death of Nelson Mandela brought tears to the eyes of the world. Mandela death brought tears to the eyes of the world because the world have lost a great one who brought hope to many and united a nation to respect human dignity. In South Africa, people were dancing and celebrating the great life of Nelson Mandela. The freedom generation born in 1994 in South Africa and never seen Apartheid are grateful and shows appreciation for the great life of Mandela. Nelson Mandela spent 27 years behind bars fighting for the right of his people and the freedom of all people shackled by apartheid rule. Mandela was released from prison on February 11, 1990. Nelson Mandela rise from prison to president after 27 years of fighting against oppression. Nelson Mandel, a Nobel Peace Prize winner in 1993.  Nelson Mandela, Martin Luther King and Mahatma Gandhi changed the world for the best and taught all nations and people around the world that freedom belongs to all people. Mandela taught the world how to go all out and strive for hope and bring hope to people. Mandela taught the world to forgive and fight oppression.

Mandela taught the world how to take courage and continue to fight fear. Mandela taught the world how to overcome fear and fight for rights. Mandela taught the world that everyone was born free and freedom is a right that belongs to all people.  Mandela taught the world that the state of being free is a true necessity. Mandela taught the world that freedom brings people together and gives people the ability to realize their potentials. Mandela taught the world how to negotiate for the right of all people.
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Mandela taught the world how to find way out of no way when people are locked behind bars. Mandela taught the world that for the sake of freedom one should leave his family and friends, and his career, and dedicate his life to bring freedom to people who have been oppressed for centuries. Mandela taught the world that we are all responsible for the well being of others. Mandela taught the world that never will any human being continue to oppress another human being while others sit idle and do nothing.  Mandela taught the world that South Africa could be a nonracial society even under majority rule. Mandela taught the world that South Africa can be united after apartheid rule. Mandela taught the world that humanity should never be subjected to oppression. Mandela taught the world that if  you can rise above your fear and stand up and face the physical threats that torture your life, you can withstand the moral threats that affect your mind.

Mandela taught the world that racial inequality can be overcome. Mandela taught the world that the oppressed can rise and bring true freedom to all people. Mandela taught the world that when you face your fear you can remove shame from the face of others and many in the time of distress. Mandela taught the world how to be committed and stand for something that brings hope to people. Mandela taught the world unity, peace, and respect for human dignity, freedom and justice for all. Mandela is truly one of the world’s greatest personalities that fought injustice and brought freedom to a nation that had been under apartheid when Daniel F. Malan reunited the National Party in 1948 that brought absolute rule and racial inequality to South Africa. Apartheid established white minority rule and racial segregation in South Africa. Under apartheid, the black majority was marginalized and was not allowed to vote and blacks had to carry pass or permits to travel from one settlement to another within South Africa. Blacks were treated and even considered less of a human within South Africa. In 1994 Mandela became South Africa first democratic elected president and the first black president of South Africa ending apartheid rule and bringing peace to a nation he called a rainbow nation.

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A look at five African Countries

FEATURING: ANGOLA, BENIN, CAPE VERDE, COTE D’ VOIRE AND KENYA

 REPUBLIC OF KENYA

Kenya is located on the East Coast of Africa facing the Indian Ocean

Border: Ethiopia, Somalia, Tanzania, Uganda and Sudan.

Capital: Nairobi Largest Cities: Nairobi, Mombasa, Kisumu, Nakuru, Machakos, Meru and Eldoret.

Independence: December 12, 1963

Major Languages: Swahili (National), English (Official), Kikuyu, and Maa

Currency: Shilling=100 cents

Key Farm Products: Bananas, beef, coffee, corn, pineapples, sisal, sugar cane, tea, wheat

Key Mineral Resources: Soda ash, fluorspar

Key Industrial Products: Cement, chemicals, petroleum products, processed food, textiles and vehicle

Exports: Tea, coffee, fruits and vegetables, petroleum products

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REPUBLIC OF ANGOLA

Angola is located on the Southwest coast of Africa.

Border: Namibia, Zambia, Zaire and the Atlantic Ocean.

Capital City: Luanda 

Population: 17,312,000 (IMF, 2009)

Independence: 1975

Official Language: Portuguese

Currency: Kwanza=100 lei

GDP Per Capita (PPP): US$6,116.52 (IMF, 2009)

GDP Per Capita (current prices, US Dollars) US$3,971.59 (IMF)

Key Farm Products: Bananas, Cassava, Coffee, Corn, Livestock, Millet, Palm oil, and Sugar cane.

Key Mineral Resources: Diamonds, Oil, and Iron ore.

Key Industrial Products: Beverages, Cement, Chemicals, Footwear, Processed food, and Textiles.

Exports: Oil and Diamonds.

REPUBLIC OF BENIN

Benin is located on the West coast of Africa extending 415 miles.

Border: Burkina Faso, Niger, Nigeria and Togo.

Capital: Porto-Novo/Cotonou

Population: 9.2 Millions (UN, 2010)

Independence: 1960

Official Language: French

Currency: CFA Franc GNI Per Capita: US$750 (World Bank, 2009)

Key Farm Products: Beans, Cassava, Cocoa, Corn, Coffee, Cotton, Millet, Peanuts, Rice, Sorghum, Sugarcane, Yams.

Key Mineral Resources: Limestone, and some offshore oil.

Key Industrial Products: Beverages, Cement, Palm oil, Sugar, and Textiles.

Exports: Cotton, Energy, Palm kernels and Palm oil.

REPUBLIC OF CAPE VERDE

Cape Verde is located on an Island on the West Coast of Africa near the mainland of the Republic of Senegal. Cape Verde is about 400 miles west of Senegal capital city Dakar. Cape Verde has ten Islands and five islets. Cape Verde economic is for the most part based on service industries.

Capital City: Praia.

Largest Cities: Praia and Mindelo

Population: Estimated at 512,600 (UN, 2010)

Independence: 1975, Cape Verde was formerly a colony of Portugal

Official Language: Portuguese

Cape Verde ethnic groups: African and European

Currency: Escudo=100 centavos, Exports: Oil and oil products, and fish.

Agriculture: Agriculture utilizes about one-fourth of the work force and import most of its food due to scanty rainfall and sporadic droughts.

Mining: Mining industry produces salt and a volcanic rock used by the cement industry.

 

COTE D’ VOIRE

 

Cote D’Voire: Formerly called Ivory Coast is situated on the West Coast of Africa. Cote D’ivoire has a border with Liberia, Guinea, Mali, Burkina Faso and Ghana. The Republic of Cote D’iVoire got its independence on August 7, 1960 from France. The Official language of Cote D’iVoire is French and currency is CFA Franc =100 cents.

 

In 1983 a new capital was built at Yamoussoukro, the birthplace of the late president Felix Houphouet-Boigny. He became president in 1960 until his death in 1993. The former capital Abidjan remains the economic and financial capital. Pope John Paul II sanctified a basilica in Yamoussoukro; and cost more than US$800 million to construct.

A GLANCE AT EGYPT

Egypt at a glance.jpgEGYPT-The Nation of Egypt is situated on the North coast of Africa along the Mediterranean, the Red Sea and bordering Libya in the West and Israel in the East with Sudan in the South. The Capital City of Egypt is Cairo and other major cities in Egypt are Alexandra, Giza, Port Said, Suez and Shubra al Khayma.

Economy-Key Products: barley, citrus fruits, cotton, dates, potatoes, rice, sorghum, sugar cane and wheat.

Key Mineral Resources: Oil and natural gas, phosphates, and iron ore.

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Exports: Oil and oil products, cotton goods, engineering and metal products

Source: Nations of Africa

Moving Africa forward

Appreciate Africa at newlinkafrica.com and share your thoughts.

 

 

 


You could be NEWLINKAFRICA Celebrity, People of the week, or Beauty of the week, be a part in appreciating Africa connecting to a new link. 

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The strive for safe drinking water in Africa

By Viola Hodge

Water-for-Africa.NLA    Nations in Africa and in other parts of the world people struggle to get safe drinking water every day. In major cities, most of the inhabitants rely on well-water dug within their communities. To get access to groundwater, people dig well by hand without a drill and the well does not have the capability of a pump. Stream water serves as a very important source for villager in Africa and rain water sometime help to occasionally reduce the burden of water shortage for couple of days. Some of the well-springs are privately owned or provided by a nonprofit organization for the entire community in major cities. In other parts of the world people may take safe drinking water for granted but in major cities and villages in Africa people take safe drinking water seriously because people are in continuous search for safe drinking water almost every day of their life. In villages, people fetch for drinking water in the streams and they use the same streams to bathe and do laundry. Most of these streams are not properly care for and as a result infected with water borne diseases.

People who have access to abundance water supply take long hot shower, waste water down the sink if they don’t need it; bath tubs are filled with water even though  they may not need to but just for luxury or relaxation. Others take shower any time of the day whenever they want, when brushing teeth the water keep running, toilets are flushed several times after use. Most countries in Africa and other parts of the world are long way from experiencing the luxury of having abundance water supply.
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According to a UN report, “water scarcity already affects every continent.  Around 1.2 billion people, or almost one-fifth of the world’s population, live in areas of physical scarcity, and 500 million people are approaching this situation. Another 1.6 billion people, or almost one quarter of the world’s population, face economic water shortage (where countries lack the necessary infrastructure to take water from rivers and aquifers).”  Read more: UN Water.

 

Newlinkafrica beauty of the week

NLA.Beauty.jpgSend us a short story about yourself including your hobbies, dream vacation and occupation.

 

 
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