Thomas Sankara, born on December 21, 1949, killed on
October 15, 1987, was Burkina Faso’s president from
August 1983 until his assassination on October 15, 1987. Perhaps, more than any
other African president in living memory, Thomas Sankara, in four years,
transformed Burkina Faso from a poor country, dependent on aid, to an
economically independent and socially progressive nation.
Thomas Sankara began by purging the
deeply entrenched bureaucratic and institutional corruption in Burkina Faso.
He slashed the salaries of ministers
and sold off the fleet of exotic cars in the president’s convoy, opting instead
for the cheapest brand of car available in Burkina Faso, Renault 5. His salary
was $450 per month and he refused to use the air conditioning units in his office,
saying that he felt guilty doing so, since very few of his country people could
afford it.
Thomas Sankara would not let his
portrait be hung in offices and government institutions in Burkina Faso,
because every Burkinabe is a Thomas Sankara, he declared. Sankara changed the
name of the country from the colonially imposed Upper Volta to Burkina Faso,
which means land of upright men.
Thomas Sankara’s achievements are
numerous and can only be summarized briefly; within the first year of his
leadership, Sankara embarked on an unprecedented mass vaccination program that
saw 2.5 million Burkinabe children vaccinated. From an alarming 280 deaths for
every 1,000 births, infant mortality was immediately slashed to below 145
deaths per 1,000 live births. Sankara preached self-reliance, he banned the
importation of several items into Burkina Faso, and encouraged the growth of
the local industry. It was not long before Burkinabes were wearing 100% cotton
sourced, woven and tailored in Burkina Faso. From being a net importer of food,
Thomas Sankara began to aggressively promote agriculture in Burkina Faso,
telling his country people to quit eating imported rice and grain from Europe,
said, “let us consume what we ourselves control,” he emphasized.
In less than 4 years, Burkina Faso
became self-sufficient in foods production through the redistribution of lands
from the hands of corrupt chiefs and land owners to local farmers, and through
massive irrigation and fertilizer distribution programs. Thomas Sankara utilized
various policies and government assistance to encourage Burkinabes to get
education. In less than two years as a president, school attendance jumped from
about 10% to a little below 25%, thus overturning the 90% illiteracy rate he
met upon assumption of office.
Living way ahead of his time, within
12 months of his leadership, Sankara vigorously pursued a reforestation program
that saw over 10 million trees planted around the country in order to push back
the encroachment of the Sahara Desert. Uncommon at the time he lived, Sankara
stressed women empowerment and campaigned for the dignity of women in a
traditional patriarchal society. He also employed women in several government
positions and declared a day of solidarity with housewives by mandating their husbands
to take on their roles for 24 hours.
A personal fitness enthusiast, Sankara
encouraged Burkinabes to be fitted and was regularly seen jogging unaccompanied
on the streets of Ouagadougou; his waistline remained the same throughout his
tenure as president.
In 1987, during a meeting of African
leaders under the auspices of the Organization of African Unity, Thomas Sankara
tried to convince his peers to turn their backs on the debt owed western
nations. According to him, “debt is a cleverly managed reconquest of Africa. It
is a reconquest that turns each one of us into a financial slave.” He would not
request for, nor accept aid from the west, noting that “…welfare and aid
policies have only ended up disorganizing us, subjugating us, and robbing us of
a sense of responsibility for our own economic, political, and cultural
affairs. We chose to risk new paths to achieve greater well-being.”
Thomas Sankara was a pan-Africanist
who spoke out against apartheid, telling French President Jacques Chirac,
during his visit to Burkina Faso, that it was wrong for him to support the
apartheid government and that he must be ready to bear the consequences of his
actions. Sankara’s policies and his unapologetic anti-imperialist stand made
him an enemy of France, Burkina Faso’s former colonial master. He spoke truth
to power fearlessly and paid with his life. Upon his assassination, his most
valuable possessions were a car, a refrigerator, three guitars, motorcycles, a
broken down freezer and about $400 in cash.
Few young Africans have ever heard of
Thomas Sankara. In reality, it is not the assassination of Thomas Sankara that
has dealt a lethal blowed to Africa and Africans; it is the assassination of
his memory, as manifested in the indifference to his legacy, in the lack of constant
reference to his ideals and ideas by Africans, by those who know and those who
should know. Among physical and mental dirt and debris lie Africa’s heroes
while the younger generations search in vain for role models from among their
kind. Africans have therefore, internalized self-abhorrence and the convictions
of innate incapability to bring about transformation. Transformation must runs
contrary to the African’s DNA, many Africans subconsciously believe.
Africans are not given to celebrating
their own heroes, but this must change. It is a colonial legacy that was
instituted to establish the inferiority of the colonized and justify
colonialism. It was a strategic policy that ensured that Africans celebrated
the heroes of their colonial masters, but not that of Africa. Fifty years and
counting after colonialism ended, Africa’s curriculum must now be redrafted to
reflect the numerous achievements of Africans.
The present generation of Africans are
thirsty, searching for where to draw the moral, intellectual and spiritual
courage to effect change. The waters to quench the thirst, as other continents
have already established, lies fundamentally in history - in Africa’s forbears,
men, women and children who experienced much of what most Africans currently
experience, but who chose to toe a different path. The media, entertainment
industry, civil society groups, writers, institutions and organizations must
begin to search out and include African role models, case studies and examples
in their contents.
For Africans, the strength desperately
needed for the transformation of the continent cannot be drawn from World Bank
and IMF policies, from aid and assistance obtained from China, India, the
United States or Europe. The strength to transform Africa lies in the
foundations laid by uncommon heroes like Thomas Sankara; a man who showed
Africa and the world that with a single minded pursuit of purpose, the worst
can be made the best, and in record time too.
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