A review of Radiance of Tomorrow by Ishmael Beah, NY 2014
This is a sad and truthful book. It is fiction, but in the
context of the story the author speaks eloquently to the realities of African
life in the aftermath of war and in face of a harsh modern world where
traditional values succumb to the pressures of new times. In the wake of civil
war the novel recounts the saga of how a family in Sierra Leone revitalizes
itself in an effort to restore harmony and peace in their village. Even as the older ways, based on strong
interpersonal relationships, are being reconstituted, new disruptive ways
intrude in the form of a mining company and the disruption it brings. Eventually, the new ways win out. The village is destroyed and its people co-opted
by corruption. Dismayed by their fate, remnants of the family flee to the
capital city, but there too face agonies of unemployment, scams and the
collapse of social fabric.
The novel begins in a hopeful fashion wherein first elders
and then families return to their abandoned village not only to pick up and
bury the bones of the dead, but also to rebuild their lives and village
society. They succeed only gradually as
villagers harbor fears and scars from the war.
Included among the returnees are a man and his two children whose hands
were cut off by rebel militia. Also
appearing was the young man, who while being called “commander cutlass”, was
the perpetrator of the amputations. He
is remorseful, but they cannot reconcile.
The story soon focuses on Bockerie and Benjamin and their
families. They survived the war by fleeing, but return to their jobs as
teachers. The school has nothing but
students – no equipment and no books – but the teachers love their work and
labor on. Soon the principal regularly steals what little there is, including
teacher salaries. Just as the village is
getting settled, a mining company opens operations nearby. This causes havoc. The company is uncaring and
unresponsive to village concerns. It pollutes their water. Its trucks run down
their children. Its men harass and rape village women. Remonstrations have no
effect as national officials are in the pockets of the company. But the company does provide jobs, and finally
Bockerie and Benjamin find no alternatives other than seeking employment
there. First the company undermines the
soul of the village and eventually destroys it physically
in its quest for ore.
Ultimately Bockerie and his family travel to the city to
seek new beginnings, but alas more trouble. As country bumpkins they are not
prepared for slick city ways. Despite
setbacks, the family perseveres.
Author Bleah throws every kind of disaster into the paths of
his protagonists. All too often he makes
expatriates, i.e. the mining company, or western influence the scapegoats for
every pernicious event. Clearly part of
his message to the world via this novel is that external actors must be more
understanding and caring about the societies they encounter. Yet much of the author’s ire is saved for
domestic corruption and leaders who sell out their people for the all mighty
dollar. But the novel is more than that
too, it is a study of the aches and pains that people go through as the world
around them changes. They cannot go
backwards, nor even find a stable present, but must go forward. The challenge in doing that is not to lose
one’s humanity and moral compass in the process.
I read this novel by a Sierra Leone author in August of 2014
while I was in Freetown during the height of the Ebola crisis. Even though the Ebola plague is not part of
the novel, I found the theme of confronting life’s woes to resonate strongly. That is precisely what so many citizens are
compelled to do in the face of the uncertainties of this terrible disease.
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