If imitation is the measure of success then I am a genius, a paraphrased quote from Oscar Wilde credits mavericks and loners whose behaviour sparks imitations from copycats. Now the famed bohemian’s assertions might have been self-serving but could also be a viable benchmark for unparalleled human achievement.
Kevin Prince-Boateng’s quest to switch nationality and seek solace playing for a country other than the nation of his birth might not represent a remarkable sporting feat but could in the long run inspire similar defections from nationals residing in countries as second or third generation citizens.
The Boateng saga is a slice of modernism, believe it or not. The millions of Ghanaians who left our shores are remitting the country with more than just foreign money.
The yet to be celebrated genius may have shown the way to our lawyers, doctors, engineers and all gifted professionals who have opted to commit their skills and abilities to the development of the western world in lieu of serving the continent that they hailed from.
As Kevin Prince-Boateng gains more favour in Ghana for being the victim of biased or unfair treatment of foreigners by Europeans, his status grows in dimension and scope thrusting him into the class of social icons like Rosa Parks who defied the status quo for the sake of social justice. The irony is that, iconoclastic behaviour initially tends to incur the wrath of on-lookers who are ill-equipped to discern the merits in non-conformist behaviour.
Placing Kevin’s decision in its proper context, one sees an act of virtue based on insight lost on some of the continent’s brightest products. Mario Balotelli, another sensational footballer of Ghanaian origin still awaits a call up to the Azzuris, the national squad of Italy. In spite of the many indicators that, he is better off committing his international career to Ghana, he is still nurturing the hope that he can make history as the first black player to break into the Italian squad. Boateng’s decision to play for Ghana is likely to discourage that kind of blind allegiance to a developed world that continues to ignore the efforts and merits of immigrants.
For showing the way, I dare call Mr Boateng a genius in keeping with Oscar Wilde’s definition of the term and bid all Ghanaians and Africans to welcome a noble son from the continent who saw the light under the most unusual of circumstances.
Kevin Prince-Boateng, you are welcome home!!!!!
Written by William Manful
Email: wmanful@yahoo.com
DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.
Tags:
Latest Stories
-
University lecturers praise Free SHS policy as visionary and transformative
28 mins -
Bond market: Turnover soars 13.14 percentage points on offshore investor boost
37 mins -
Insurance penetration rate in Ghana to remain around 1.0% – Deloitte
42 mins -
Cedi’s recovery continues; one cedi going for GH¢16.70
50 mins -
‘Stop the lies’ – Akufo-Addo challenges Mahama over 24-hour economy promise
1 hour -
Election 2024: Don’t appoint partisan election officers – Omane Boamah to EC
1 hour -
‘NDC Majority Caucus’ urges Speaker to reject NPP MPs’ recall request
2 hours -
Akufo-Addo commissions 4 District Hospitals in Ashanti Region
2 hours -
Bawumia lauds Lands Commission for digital initiatives, as he inaugurates new office complex
2 hours -
20,000 capacity Ghana Trade Fair Convention Centre to be ready in September 2025 – Bawumia
2 hours -
Sunon Asogli’s 560MW power plant restarts operations following government intervention
2 hours -
Government to align teacher training programmes with global standards
2 hours -
Sharaf Mahama champions community growth through sports at Harvard SEI Summit
2 hours -
We are committed to building a more robust and inclusive social system – SSNIT
2 hours -
We’ll take advantage of technology at DPE 2025 -says GREDA Prez
2 hours