By Paula Akugizibwe
This is Africa - July 23, 2012 — A week before he died, Sankara said, “revolutionaries as individuals can be murdered, but you cannot kill ideas”. And so, for us today, the final challenge rests not in finding more Sankaras, but in becoming them – in bringing these ideas to life
Thomas Sankara, former leader of Burkina Faso, was the apparent
opposite of everything we are often told that success should look like.
Mansions? Cars? Who? What? Get out of here. As Prime Minister and later
as President, Sankara rode a bicycle to work before he upgraded, at his
Cabinet’s insistence, to a Renault 5 – one of the cheapest cars
available in Burkina Faso at the time. He lived in a small brick house
and wore only cotton that was produced, weaved and sewn in Burkina Faso.
Going by his lifestyle, Sankara was the antithesis of success, but it
is this very distinction that enabled him to become the most successful
president Africa has ever seen, in terms of what he accomplished for
and with his people. Sankara would not have chopped P-Square’s money
given twice a chance – in fact, he might have sat him down and taught
him a thing or two about the creeping menace of pop culture patriarchy –
because Thomas Sankara, “The Upright Man”, was a feminist. In this and
many other ways, Sankara was the African dream come true, the only
living proof that hopes of African independence are not dead on arrival.
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