Audio By Carbonatix
Ghana is bleeding. Not from the guns of war, but from the slow and painful destruction of its environment, its values, and its conscience. Our rivers, once the lifeblood of communities, are poisoned by illegal mining. Our forests, once a proud heritage, are stripped bare. Our morality, once anchored in honesty and communal pride, has been eroded by greed, corruption, and the silence of the majority. Our nation is at a crossroads, and the path we are treading threatens the very essence of our spirit, soul and survival.
The Environmental Tragedy
Illegal mining, or “galamsey,” has left gaping wounds across our landscape. Water bodies like the Pra, Ankobra, and Offin are now rivers of poison, choked with mercury and chemicals. Villages that once drew clean drinking water from streams now depend on sachet water or risk death. Children who once swam joyfully in clean streams can now only stand by the banks of toxic pits. Ghana is losing its veins and arteries, its rivers, and when a body loses blood, it dies. So too does a nation bleed when its environment is destroyed. This is not just an environmental crisis; it is an existential one. A nation that destroys its own sources of life destroys its future.
A Crisis of Conscience
What is most disturbing is not only the destruction, but the collective apathy. Politicians promise action but shield culprits. Traditional leaders take royalties from miners. Citizens, who should demand accountability, shrug their shoulders and say, “This is Ghana. This is normal.” We are a nation that proclaims to be highly religious; our churches and mosques overflow every week, but we return to dishonesty, corruption, and indifference as soon as we step outside. We sing hymns of holiness on Sunday and dig pits of destruction on Monday. We lift hands in prayer but use those same hands to bribe, pollute, and cheat. Religion without values is hypocrisy, and faith without morals is empty.
The Four-Way Test We Ignore
The Rotary International Four Way Test of the things we think, say or do challenges us with a simple but profound moral guide:
- Is it the truth?
We know the truth: galamsey is destroying our future. Yet we lie to ourselves that it brings “jobs” and “development.”
- Is it fair to all concerned?
There is nothing fair about poisoning rivers, robbing future generations of clean water, and enriching a few at the expense of the many.
- Will it build goodwill and better friendships?
How can a practice that pits communities against each other, destroys livelihoods, and breeds mistrust ever build goodwill?
- Will it be beneficial to all concerned?
The answer is clear: illegal mining benefits only a greedy few. For the majority, it brings death, poverty, and destruction.
If we applied this test honestly, every excuse we make for inaction would collapse.
The Price of Silence
A bleeding nation cannot heal if its people refuse to speak. Our silence is complicity. The danger is not only in the actions of those who mine illegally, but in the silence of those who know better yet do nothing. We cannot continue to worship in sanctuaries while our rivers die. We cannot preach morality but practice corruption. Conscience must awaken. Values must be lived, not recited. Morals must guide our daily choices, not just our speeches.
A Call to Courage
It is time for us to rise, not as passive spectators but as active defenders of what is right. To say no to the destruction of our water bodies. To say no to leaders who enrich themselves while the nation rots. To say no to the normalisation of corruption. Ghana needs men and women who will stand by the truth, even if they stand alone.
Ghana can still heal. But healing requires courage, courage from leaders to enforce laws without fear or favour, courage from citizens to reject bribes and call out wrong, and courage from communities to protect their land. Above all, it requires a return to conscience, values, and morals.
The question is simple: will we continue to let Ghana bleed, or will we rise to save her? The Four-Way Test is before us. The truth is before us. The choice is ours.
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