Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-fbnjt Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-19T18:44:31.620Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

From Wisdom to Witchcraft: Ambivalence Towards Old Age in Rural Ghana

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  03 March 2011

Abstract

This article presents fragments of conversation with elderly and younger people in the rural town of Kwahu Tafo. The statements of the various speakers are often contradictory. The borders between respect and hatred, admiration and envy, affection and fear prove porous. The article is an attempt to understand the changing sentiments of the young towards the old, and vice versa. Elders pronounce both blessings and curses. Their spiritual power is sometimes appreciated as wisdom, the fruit of lifelong experience. At other times that spiritual power is denounced as witchcraft. Theologically these statements sound confusing and contradictory. From a sociological point of view, however, they make sense. They express the basic ambivalence of young people towards the old. On one hand there is respect, a cultural code which is almost ‘natural’: one regards with awe and admiration what came before. On the other, old people engender resentment because of their overbearing attitude and their refusal to ‘go’. The fact that young people die while old people remain alive is a reversal of the natural order and reeks of witchcraft.

Résumé

Cet article présente des bribes de conversation avec des personnes âgées et des jeunes dans la ville rurale de Kwahu Tafo. Les propos des divers intervenants sont souvent contradictoires. La limite entre respect et haine, admiration et envie, affection et peur s'avère perméable. L'article tente de comprendre 1'évolution des sentiments des jeunes à l'égard des vieux, et vice versa. Les anciens prononcent à la fois des bénédictions et des malédictions. Leur force spirituelle est parfois reconnue comme de la sagesse, le fruit de l'expérience de toute une vie. A d'autres moments, cette force spirituelle est dénoncée comme de la sorcellerie. Sur un plan théologique, ces propos semblent déroutants et contradictoires. D'un point de vue sociologique, cependant, ils ont un sens. Ils expriment l'ambivalence fondamentale des jeunes vis-à-vis des vieux. D'un côté, il y a du respect, un code culturel presque “naturel”: on considère avec respect et admiration ce qui nous a précédé. De l'autre côté, les personnes âgées engendrent du ressentiment en raison de leur attitude dominatrice et leur refus de “partir”. Le fait que des jeunes meurent alors que des personnes âgées restent en vie est un renversement de l'ordre naturel qui exhale la sorcellerie.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © International African Institute 2002

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Apt, N. A. 1996. Coping with Old Age in a Changing Africa: social change and the elderly Ghanaian. Aldershot: Avebury.Google Scholar
Arhin, K. (ed.). 1979. BrongKyempim: essays on the society, history andpolitics of the Brongpeople. Accra: Afram Publications.Google Scholar
Bartle, P. 1977. ‘Urban Migration and Rural Identity: an ethnography of a Kwawu community’. Ph.D. thesis, Legon: University of Ghana.Google Scholar
Bleek, W. 1975. Marriage, Inheritance and Witchcraft: a case study of a rural Ghanaian family. Leiden: Africa Studies Centre.Google Scholar
Bleek, W. 1976a. ‘SexualRelationships and Birth controlin Ghana: a case study of a ruraltown’. Ph.D. thesis, Amsterdam: University of Amsterdam.Google Scholar
Bleek, W. 1976b. ‘Witchcraft, gossip and death: a socialdrama’, Man 12, 526–41.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Brempong, O. 1986. ‘Akan Highlife in Ghana: songs of cultural transition’, two volumes. Ann Arbor MI: UMI Dissertation Services.Google Scholar
Busia, K. A. 1951. The Position of the Chief in the Modern Political System of Ashanti. London: Oxford University Press for the International African Institute.Google Scholar
Christaller, J. G. 1933 (1881). Dictionary of the Asante and Fante Language. Basle: Evangelical Missionary Society.Google Scholar
Collins, J. 1994. ‘The Ghanaian Concert Party: African popular entertainment at the crossroads’. Ann Arbor MI: UMI Dissertation Services.Google Scholar
Culpit, G. 1998. ‘Justice, age and veneration’, Ethics 108, 702–18.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Danquah, J. B. 1928. Akan Laws and Customs and the Akim Abuakwa Constitution. London: Routledge.Google Scholar
Debrunner, H. 1961. Witchcraft in Ghana: a study on the belief in destructive witches and its effect on the Akan tribes. Accra: Presbyterian Book Depot.Google Scholar
Field, M. J. 1960. Search for Security: an ethno-psychiatric study of rural Ghana. London: Faber.Google Scholar
Foner, N. 1984. Ages in Conflict: a cross-cultural perspective on inequality between the old and young. New York: Columbia University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fortes, M. 1949. The Web of Kinship among the Tallensi. London: Oxford University Press for the InternationalAfrican Institute.Google Scholar
Fortes, M. 1969. Kinship and the Social Order. London: Routledge.Google Scholar
Gluckman, M. 1963. ‘Gossip as scandal’, Current Anthropology 4, 307–15.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Handelman, D. 1973. ‘Gossip in encounters: the transmission of information in a bounded socialsetting’, Man 8, 210–27.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kennedy, J. G. 1967. ‘Psychological and sociological explanations of witchcraft’, Man 2, 216–25.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Marwick, M. G. 1965. Sorcery in its Social Setting: a study of the Northern Rhodesia Cewa. Manchester: Manchester University Press.Google Scholar
Meyer, B. 1992. ‘“If you are a devil you are a witch and if you are a witch you are a devil”: the integration of “pagan” ideas into the conceptual universe of Ewe Christians in south-eastern Ghana’, Journal of Religion in Africa 22 (2), 98132.Google Scholar
Meyer, B. 1999a. Translating the Devil: religion and modernity amongthe Ewe in Ghana. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press for the International African Institute.Google Scholar
Meyer, B. 1999b. ‘Popular Ghanaian cinema and “African heritage”’, Africa Today 46 (2), 93114.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Miescher, S. F. 1997. ‘Becoming a Man in Kwawu: gender, law, personhood and the construction of masculinities in colonial Ghana, 1875–1957’. Ph.D. thesis Evanston IL: Northwestern University.Google Scholar
Oppong, C. 1982. Middle Class African Marriage. London: Allen & Unwin.Google Scholar
Owusu-Sarpong, C. 1998. ‘Language and the cryptic reality of witchcraft (bayie) in Asante’, Papers in Ghanaian Linguistics 11, 89106.Google Scholar
Paine, R. 1967. ‘What is gossip about? An alternative hypothesis’, Man 2, 278–85.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Parkin, D. 1972. Palms, Wine and Witnesses. London: Intertext Books.Google Scholar
Rattray, R. S. 1923. Ashanti. Oxford: Clarendon Press.Google Scholar
Rattray, R. S. 1927. Religion and Art in Ashanti. Oxford: Clarendon Press.Google Scholar
Rattray, R. S. 1929. Ashanti Law and Constitution. Oxford: Clarendon Press.Google Scholar
Rattray, R. S. 1930. Akan-Ashanti Folk-tales. Oxford: Clarendon Press.Google Scholar
Stucki, B. R. 1995. ‘Managing the Social Clock: the negotiation of elderhood among rural Asante of Ghana’. Ph.D. thesis, Evanston IL: Northwestern University.Google Scholar
Van der Geest, S. 1992. ‘“Tegen haat geen medicijn”: het lied van een melaatse in een Ghanees dorp’ (‘No medicine against hatred’: the song ofa leper in a Ghanaian town), Etnofoor 5 (1–2), 146–64.Google Scholar
Van der Geest, S. 1997a. ‘Money and respect: the changing value of old age in rural Ghana’, Africa 67 (4), 534–59.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Van der Geest, S. 1997b. ‘Between respect and reciprocity: managing old age in rural Ghana’, Southern African Journal of Gerontology 6 (2), 20–5.Google Scholar
Van der Geest, S. 1998a. ‘ɔpanyin: the ideal of elder in the Akan culture of Ghana’, Canadian Journal ofAfrican Studies 32 (3), 449–93.Google Scholar
Van der Geest, S. 1998b. ‘Yebisa wo fie: growing old and building a house in the Akan culture of Ghana’, Journal of Cross-cultural Gerontology 13 (4), 333–59.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Van der Geest, S. 2002 ‘“I want to go!” How elderly people in Ghana look forward to death’, Ageing and Society, forthcoming.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Van der Geest, S. n.d. ‘“Anyway”. Cars and Highlife in Ghana: inscriptions and means of transport’. Unpublished manuscript.Google Scholar
Warren, D. M. 1974. ‘Disease, Medicine and Religion among the Techiman-Bono of Ghana: a study in culture change’. Ann Arbor MI: UMI Dissertation Services.Google Scholar
Yankah, K. 1995. Speakingfor the Chief. Okyeame and the politics of Akan royal oratory. Bloomington and Indianapolis IN: Indiana University Press.Google Scholar