Hey White Man, How Much Longer?
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Dr. Francis Hinga Lahai
Ing Francis Hinga Lahai was born in Moyamba Sierra Leone, the fifth child of Samuel Saidu Lahai and Fatmata Lahai (nee Dumbuya). He studied Civil Engineering at Nanjing’s South Eastern University in the People’s Republic of China and holds a Bachelor of Engineering. He also has a Master of Business Administration (MBA) from Agitel Formation, Ivory Coast (Cote D’Ivoire) and a Master of Water, Waste and the Environment from WEDC, Loughborough University in the UK. He completed his DSc with the Atlantic International University (AIU), USA, through long distance studies. He is an avid reader and has many other diplomas in Leadership, Customer service and Development. He has been an Elder at several Seventh Day Adventist churches in Abidjan, Cote D’Ivoire; Makeni, Sierra Leone and is presently the First Elder at the Good News SDA Church in Freetown, Sierra Leone. Ing Lahai’s love for humanity and the search for solutions to Africa’s development solutions spurred him to travel and live in many countries in Africa, Asia, Europe and the USA. This triggered the need to pen down his observations on race relations and the ensuing recommendations on how blacks, Asians and whites can all live in a new world without the need to seek to destroy each other in the pursuit of wealth and supremacy. He postulates that the era of white supremacy is coming to an end with Asian and African emergence in the next thirty years. Chinese super-power status will not have the same social impact as that of the Americans and the British, except drastic action is taken in this regard.
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Hey White Man, How Much Longer? - Dr. Francis Hinga Lahai
Copyright © 2022 Dr. Francis Hinga Lahai.
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be used or reproduced by any means, graphic, electronic, or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, taping or by any information storage retrieval system without the written permission of the author except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles and reviews.
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Scripture quotations are taken from the New King James Version of the Bible. Copyright 1982 by Thomas Nelson Inc. Used by permission. All rights reserved.
ISBN: 978-1-6632-3698-2 (sc)
ISBN: 978-1-6632-3699-9 (e)
Library of Congress Control Number: 2022904898
iUniverse rev. date: 03/18/2022
CONTENTS
Preface
Part I: My world in Which Africa Is about Left Out—and the Whites Are Falling
1. The Origins of Man
2. The Concept of the Supremacy of the Races
3. Racism among the Nations
4. Population Analysis of the Races
5. The Pursuit of Superpower Status, Economic Performance, and the Racism Nexus
6. Is There a Superrace?
7. Improving Race Relations for a Better Future of the World
8. COVID-19 Stokes the Flames of Racism That Still Kindles in the Hearts of Whites
9. A Word for the Wise among the Whites
10. A Word for the Wise to the Black Man in Africa and the Diaspora
Part II: So, What Should Africans Do?
11. A New Approach to Transformation for the African Continent
Concluding Remarks
References
T o my wife, Ashmiru Jeneba Lahai, who has always reminded me that I am the son of the Most High God, the God who made all men equal.
To my daughter, Christiana, and my sons, Emmanuel and Jeffrey, you have encouraged me all the way—and your encouragement has made sure I give it all it takes to finish what I have started.
PREFACE
T his book is written to contribute to the existing discussions about race, racism, discrimination, and racial inequality—discussions that have polarized many societies and even led to wars. It debunks some arguments in Why Nations Fail and explains the causes of African poverty and the future demise of White supremacy from an African perspective.
Many people have presented arguments that race-based prejudiced persons often use skin color as a signifier of identity and superiority of race. This illusion has become so deeply entrenched that races, including the Caucasian race or the White man
have demonized the dark skin to the extent that they feel there will never be a match between the varying skin hues. No matter how poor a light-skinned person is or how inefficient they are, the light-skinned person is still treated better by his race kin than a successful dark-skinned person or boss. Added to that, skin color has become a significant trait in the Western world to determine who gets employed, who gets convicted, and who gets elected (New York Times, 2010).
In this book, the words White man, Caucasian, Whites, Black man, Blacks, Negro, Africans, Indo-Chinese, Yellow man, and Asians are all used interchangeably but not to degrade any race. This is done with the anticipation that these terminologies will cease to serve as criteria for evaluation and judgment in the near future and to also have various readers identify with the content more easily.
The book goes through what I faced growing up in the southern towns of Moyamba and Bo, in Sierra Leone, West Africa in the 1960s, when the British Empire was slowly lowering the Union Jack in most of its colonial capital cities in the world, and the British influence was waning.
The centuries-old experience in the continents of Africa and Asia had already left a negative legacy that continues to have an impact on the social and economic position of Blacks in the world. The British and the Spanish, for example, succeeded in creating an elitist society for Europeans and a poor and slavish one for Blacks and Indo-Chinese.
In 1961, after a prolonged battle with the colonial administration for independence, Sierra Leone was granted freedom/independence, and the colony took over the administration. They collected taxes and accepted the responsibility of self-rule. The British Empire granted independence to its colonies and replaced it with indirect rule. The masters at the very top positions, like governors and district commissioners, governed using locals who had been trained as clerks and head teachers in schools at the lower cadres of administration. In French countries, on the other hand, a system of assimilation was introduced in which all were said to be equal, and Blacks and Whites could intermingle.
28862.png My Initial Experiences with Racism
My father, Samuel Saidu Lahai was a middle-class forestry officer, and he was among the few educated people who worked closely with the administration. We lived in a government clerks’ quarters that was meant for junior and senior staff. The colonial schools had very strict White inspectors of schools, and the locals never wanted to fall short in their administrative duties for fear of being sacked. That administration encouraged dissent that prevented the locals from uniting in opposition. By so doing, the White colonial master established multiple points of contact for information and support. There were basically three groups: the first group consisted of the good-performing Blacks who were chosen to lead based on their success in education, the rich Blacks who had established farms and businesses, and the locals who had no choice but to cooperate with the White masters—no matter what. The second group acted as middlemen for the colonial masters, and as such, their children were given better education because they were open to scholarship opportunities to study overseas. The third group were just ordinary citizens.
For the colonial master, outsmarting the Blacks and becoming victorious and superior at the end was the ultimate goal. This included various tactics like repression, unfair access to information, unequal wages, and conditions of service and elimination of perceived natural Black leaders. As such, policy objectives were to be met at all costs, and there was hardly any place for failure. Therefore, performance targets were set, roles were defined, appraisals were done, and the results were used as necessary. This divisive approach thrived and was used all over the world. Blacks and the Indo-Chinese often blackmailed each other for such favors. All the kings and queens of Europe wanted was relative peace in the colonies and royalties paid to the king’s or queen’s court. Once these conditions were met, the king or queen allowed the governors to have their field day.
My father was among the last generation of elites who worked directly with the colonial masters before Sierra Leone gained her independence in 1961. Other prominent elites of the time included the likes of Dr. Sir Milton Margai, Albert Margai, Siaka Stevens, Dr. Sorie Fornah, to name but a few.
After working for the White colonialists for about a century, this bunch of civil servants came to realize that the colonialists were men just like them, and they dropped their inferiority complex, thinking that if the Whites could rule the colony relying on them, they could probably do better in the same positions the White colonialists had occupied for decades. These men thought they better understood their people and their culture to handle their matters well. With that in mind, they sought independence.
Other West African and Asian countries did the same, and the Blacks and the Indo-Chinese sought the right to rule their countries. The color of the skin did not matter because these countries needed more than just race relations, particularly when the British had used their youngest and middle-aged to run the affairs of the colonies, leaving out the most experienced and skilled people in Europe. It turned out that these young British governors were no match for the seasoned African leaders and paramount chiefs.
As custodians of the lore of the land, the paramount chiefs were members of the African royal families, chosen from a rigorous competition between ruling houses within the chiefdom. As a result, the paramount chiefs had the clout to mobilize their people and get positive results. My father was one of such elites. He married the daughter of a paramount chief and was confident that things would change one fine day. With that hope, he put us through the best schools and always reminded us about that. Today, I see that education is the key that unlocks doors to very high places—no matter how low you come from.
I attended a Roman Catholic primary school, headed by a White man, Father Patrick Moore. Father Moore was of the Jesuit Order and was in charge of the Saint Francis Primary School in Bo. He showed great interest in me due to excellent class results and good behavior, and he appointed me as an altar boy at age eight. All the altar boys cleaned the church on Saturdays and prepared to serve on the altar on Sundays. It was an enviable position, reserved for only the most well-behaved and most disciplined schoolboys.
At that tender age, I saw the organizational skills of the White man. Though these were missionaries, they had similar traits to the colonial masters, having had similar upbringing and training. The missionaries were disciplined, but the colonial masters protected and considered them counterparts who used religion, evangelism, education, and health systems to subjugate the locals.
Our foods, climate, and the freedom to intermingle made Sierra Leone an appealing place. At the time, there was no perceived racial inequality, and there was mutual respect. The reverend fathers worked on saving the souls of the locals, and they reciprocated by sending regular gifts and offerings and inviting them to visit their homes as part of their missionary work. Discrimination and racism developed over time as one race began to feel and exercise dominance. Over time, this became entrenched, which led to a cultural rift.
In 1971, I passed the Selective Entrance Examinations and proceeded to Christ the King College, another Catholic school in Bo, to continue my secondary education. The reverend fathers were in charge of the school. Strict discipline was enforced, timeliness and order were imposed, and the teaching materials were of the highest grade. These were the hallmarks of quality education.
Whenever there was competition between the secondary schools in Bo City, the college boys,
as we were referred to, would be asked to behave themselves and respect the authority of whoever was arbitrating. That made us accept any results—good or bad. It sent the message around the country that CKC was a good school, and it attracted the best brains and the sons of the country’s elites.
The school attracted a class of international teachers from India, the UK, and the United States. I began to see a correlation between peace, diligence, and development. CKC was doing better academically than its rival schools—the Bo School, Ahmadiyya Secondary School, and United Christian Council (UCC) School—because of its strict discipline. We felt and looked different. We developed the cockiness characterized by the elitist group of schools, in line with the likes of the Grammar School, Annie Walsh, and the Prince of Wales Schools in the capital city, Freetown.
By the 1980s, things started to change as the reverend fathers became more entrenched. As the character of the Whites in relation to their perceived superiority evolved, events at the schools changed too. They deviated from their mandate of inculcating religious and moral standards of racial equality in their pupils. They were bold enough to insult locals and become involved in activities that were incompatible with their status. Their respect for the local people waned, and some had to be sent back to Ireland and Italy.
Upon completion of my secondary education, I spent a year teaching, and I eventually got a scholarship to study in the People’s Republic of China. Two of us were selected from an intense competition of more than two hundred students. Arriving in China, we took ten months to learn the Mandarin Chinese language. China has sixty-six ethnic groups, but the Han—who speak the commonly known Mandarin—are the largest. Their language is now the lingua franca of the People’s Republic of China. This was enforced by Mao Zedong, the first chairman of the Communist Party, as a way of unifying the country.
Putonghua (common language
in Chinese) is easier to write than its complicated Cantonese equivalent. We did our best, and within ten months, we were ready to enter university to do engineering. I impressed my friends and family by being so quick to learn how to speak and write the language. However, we were not admitted into the same class as the Americans and Europeans. Classification was by cultural and socioeconomic backgrounds. They also paid higher tuition fees and had different kinds of teachers.
By the tenth month, the Africans were speaking better Chinese and writing better Chinese. We were then accorded the same opportunity, and that amazed me. For the first time, I had the chance to sit under similar examination conditions