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WHAT IS WRONG WITH OUR YOUTH?

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OLOL   

WHAT IS WRONG WITH OUR YOUTH?

 

COMMENTARY

BY M.M. Afrah,

Toronto (Canada)

 

 

Having been raised as a "good boy" and changing over to become a sluggish copy boy in a newspaper office and later climbing up the ladder to become an editor and then editor-in-chief. But as I got older, I thought I liked to think that I have a strong sense of right and wrong. I joined anti-colonial demonstrations and with the help of hand operated press we printed inflammatory anti-colonial leaflets that naturally upset our colonial masters.

 

The Somali Youth League (SYL) formerly the Somali Youth Club (SYC) was formed by 13 devoted Somali youngsters who fought relentlessly for independence in their own way. Their slogan was 'XORNNIMO AMA GEERI" (independence or death). Thousands of like minded boys, girls and elders joined them in their wholehearted and noble struggle. They all had grand dreams for the future of Somalia. Hence, the nationalist song "Soomaaliyey toosa." This Wake Up call paved the way for full independence in July 1960 despite various obstacles put up by you know who.

 

I also know that young students, like George Padmore, Kwame Nkrumah, Du Bois and Jomo Kenyatta among others created the great Pan Africanist movement in Britain in the 1930s and 1940s. From that humble beginning Africa sprung up to a full independence in 1960 when dozens of African countries became independent which subsequently led to the creation of the Organization of African Unity (OAU). Unfortunately, old Haile Selassie hijacked the organization and used it to undermine Somalia's fledging independence, convincing African heads of state that infant Somali government was an expansionist. Our delegates have been outnumbered and outmaneuvered by the emperor and his like minded cohorts within the OAU. As a result of these behind the scene machinations, a calamity was in the making in the form of border skirmishes intermingled with war of words. And eventually a full-scale war that claimed the lives of our youth in the spring of their lives. Historians now link those very machinations with the present conflict in Somalia as well as the volatile situation in the Horn of Africa. But that's another story.

 

What bugs me most is why our contemporary youth became docile and indifferent to the grim events in our country? I understand that not all people can get along due to the cancer of clan loyalties back home. But would it not make more sense for the youth in the Diaspora to join together and step out into the world as a unified force to bring about peace in their native country?

 

Now I may be an old fashioned man who has gone through the mills, but I am sure I am not the first person who has entertained this notion. Take for example the postings on the Banadir Public Forum by Libangedon who has been preaching a united Somali youth to fight the villains at home who ruined our country and reduced our people to paupers and corpses. The country became rapidly without government and people, a country where foreigners who wanted could come in and could go out at will without so much as by your leave. As a matter of fact a foreign diplomat described Somalia, unlike Afghanistan, as a fruit hanging from a tree (READY TO BE PICKED UP!).

 

This was not the way the founders of the SYL visualized that Somalia should be run, and that it needed to be put straight. That's where you come in. You should not expect manna to fall from the sky. Only you could make a difference. It is not for me to say who is called to lead the United Somali Youth and who is not. It is not for me to say whether or not someone is qualified to start the new movement or not, it just seems to me to be unnecessary to have the Somali youth divided along clan lines forever. I had always believed that the youth in the Diaspora are free from that cancer called tribalism or clanism.

 

This leads me to wonder what is wrong with our youth today? I believe many would say I am a dinosaur and that boys wearing ear rings and spending hours glued to the BET channel, listening to rap music or wearing over sized pants are "the in thing". But I ask myself: do those Pan Africanists and the founders of the Somali Youth League long time ago did not know what they were doing and as such it is necessary to be ashamed to be a Somali, and that boys wearing ear rings and watching the BET channel day in and day out is "Cool". I am sure BET will never teach you how to rebuild the country from the ashes of vicious clan wars or resuscitate the economy. Today the old Wake up Call is as important as it was 50 or 60 years ago.

 

No doubt that after you have been uprooted from your native country by nasty people with guns, it has been challenging living in the Diaspora face-to-face with stone-faced immigration honchos, beefy security men and bullying landlords. But thanks to our Somali ingenuity and tenacity we are still standing and it is time to begin to look ahead to all the good things the old country has in store for us in the near future.

 

You may have faltered, you may have stumbled or you may even have considered yourself an outright failure, but dear future leaders of Somalia I want you to rise and prepare yourself for tomorrow. There is nothing you can do about what had happened to our country during the last ten years. Yes, the past may be a story written in blood but the future can be written in gold. Do not be discouraged about the sad stories emanating daily from Somalia. For almost every great country on earth had gone through similar turmoil, or even worse. Here are few examples, the American and Spanish civil wars, not to mention the devastation of the Two World Wars and the Bolshevik Revolution that claimed the lives of millions of people. Again, it was the youth and the womenfolk who rebuilt their countries from scratch under extreme difficult circumstances.

 

The ball is NOW in your court.

 

I VALUE YOUR COMMENTS AND ENCOURAGE YOU TO SEND YOUR EMAILS TO ME OR TO THE PUBLIC FORUM www. Banadir.com (IT IS GOING TO BE THE BEDROCK OF A FUTURE BOOK, HOPEFULLY).

 

Afrah95@hotmail.com

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OLOL   

the SYL founders were younger than most of us and that itself is mind-boggling. they were awsome young liberators. I wonder what the 20 years old or even 30 years old somalis now in Diaspora are up to.

 

1 - Abdulkadir Saqawa-diin born in 1919 in Tiyegloow in Upper Jubba region was only 24 years old and died in 1945- two years after SYL was formed.

2- Mohammed Hersi Nur Sidi was born in Mareeg,in 1915 – 28 years old

3- Mohammed Osman Barbe, Born in Bardheere in 1910 was 33 years old and the oldest founder.

4- Yasin Haji Osman Kenadid was born in Hobyo in 1917 and was 26 years old when SYL was founded.

5. Haji Mohammed Hussein was born in Mogadishu in 1917 – He was 26 years old too.

6- Haji Mohammed Abdalla Hayeesi was born in Mogadishu in 1918 – 25 years old.

7- Osman Ghedi Raghe, Mogadishu, 1925 – 18 years old

8-Dhere Haji Dhere, Mogadishu, 1926 – 17 years old ( teenager)

9- Dahir Haji Osman, Hobyo, 1925, 18 years old, now living in Ottawa, Canada

10-Ali Hassan Maslah, From Hobyo.

11- Mohammed Ali Nur, Mogadishu, 1927, the youngest founder was only 16 years old.

12- Mohammed Farah Hilowleh – Born in Mareeg, 1926 – another teenager 17 years old.

13 Hudoow Moalin Abdullahi – Born in Mareeg, 1926 – 17 years old at the time

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Haddad   

Originally posted by OLOL:

But would it not make more sense for the youth in the Diaspora to join together and step out into the world as a unified force to bring about peace in their native country?

That's an interesting question. One would assume being in the Diaspora would lead to unity and harmony, but I don't think so. I believe one's condition at home reflects one's condition in the Diaspora. This is evidenced in the numerous incompetent Somali organizations, associations, clubs and etc in the Diaspora.

 

Take for example the postings on the Banadir Public Forum by Libangedon who has been preaching a united Somali youth to fight the villains at home who ruined our country and reduced our people to paupers and corpses.

I have debated with Libangedon for a number of years; his ideas and proposals are weird and fanciful, he's also a diehard secularist and far from being any semblance of a uniter.

 

As usual, M.M. Afrah's articles and talking points are thought-provoking, eloquent & inspiring.

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Baashi   

No doubt that after you have been uprooted from your native country by nasty people with guns, it has been challenging living in the Diaspora face-to-face with stone-faced immigration honchos, beefy security men and bullying landlords. But thanks to our Somali ingenuity and tenacity we are still standing and it is time to begin to look ahead to all the good things the old country has in store for us in the near future.

 

You may have faltered, you may have stumbled or you may even have considered yourself an outright failure, but dear future leaders of Somalia I want you to rise and prepare yourself for tomorrow. There is nothing you can do about what had happened to our country during the last ten years. Yes, the past may be a story written in blood but the future can be written in gold. Do not be discouraged about the sad stories emanating daily from Somalia.
For almost every great country on earth had gone through similar turmoil, or even worse.
Here are few examples, the American and Spanish civil wars, not to mention the devastation of the Two World Wars and the Bolshevik Revolution that claimed the lives of millions of people. Again, it was the youth and the womenfolk who rebuilt their countries from scratch under extreme difficult circumstances.

Right on!

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Rahima   

I once upon a time used to have hope in the youth-no longer. I have thrown out such a thought.

 

The youth have become the identical images of their parents. If we list off all that which is wrong with the older generation, we will find the same and in many instances even worse points in the youth.

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Baluug   
Originally posted by OLOL: I wonder what the 20 years old or even 30 years old somalis now in Diaspora are up to.

 

LOL Most of them are too busy either trying to look like 50 Cent or some other rapper or they are wasting their time at Tim Horton's (in Canada,anyway),drinking gallons of tea and chewing jaad until their teeth are rotten

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You have a point.

 

What is wrong with our somalian youth? I truely dont know. Some somalian youth have lost faith hopes and dreams.

All I can say is May Allah guide us.

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