David E. Maranz

African Friends and Money Matters, Second Edition


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Haibucher 1999b:10.

      A final example illustrates an aspect of African ways of doing things which Westerners would never imagine could be a matter of “respect”:

      40 Harries 2000:495, citing Mboya 1938.

      41 Thornton 2005:25.

      It is important to keep in mind that respect should be mutual or two-way. Respect must not only be given, but also received. For foreigners coming from egalitarian societies, this may require some adjustment of attitudes. Richard Dowden, with long experience in Africa at all levels of society, gives some pointers. These apply in business and in personal relations. He writes:

      I learned how to get by without causing offence. That meant, first,

       Avoid confrontation. Tease, joke, cajole, don’t demand or command.

       Don’t always seek a definite resolution of a problem; sometimes it is better to leave things unresolved.

       Don’t expect the truth and don’t blurt it out. Hint at it, work round to it, leave it understood but unspoken.

       Never, never get angry. Anger never works and loses you respect.

       Above all be patient. Everything takes more time in Africa than elsewhere.Good-hearted outsiders, idealists who truly want to help Africa, often find themselves mysteriously impeded by Africa because, in their enthusiasm to get things done, they come across as rude or domineering.42

      42 Dowden 2009:29–30.

      We have discussed respect as an overarching subject somewhat isolated from its social context. Actually, it is very difficult to adequately consider it in isolation. In many ways it is inseparable from social status, hierarchy, deference, authority, power, and more. Besides, each of these concepts is lived out in human interactions that are particular to each of the hundreds of African languages and cultures.

      To underline the fact of great cultural differences across Africa, note how this one concept, respect, can be considered in such a different way from one African culture to another. Thornton describes respect in terms of suffering. (Suffering is a common subject in many African cultures, where it is thought to be essential to human development.)

      43 Thornton 2005:26.

      A very different attribute of respect is observed by Mani:

      44 Mani 2010:4.

      In fact, more than one African society uses the generic phrase “without respect” as a metaphor of bad character.

      It is the duty of children to wait on elders, and not the elders on children.

      45 www.allgreatquotes.com.

      46 Amoako-Agyei 2011.

      When the child falls the mother weeps; when the mother falls the child laughs.

      47 www.allgreatquotes.com.

      Better the problem that makes an infant cry than one that makes an adult cry.

      48 Sylla 1978:117.

      49 Haibucher 1999a.