by Philip Emeagwali

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Technology
is the Root of All Evil
According
to history books, gun-wielding European slave traders kidnapped one in
five Africans and transported them across the oceans to the Americas. A
less visible, but no means less drastic technological tool of
suppression, is the compass, a device used worldwide for navigation. In
the same way that Britain used its maritime knowledge and the US
harnessed its intellectual capital to rule the world, the early slave
traders used the simple compass to wreak havoc on civilization.
It is a sad fact that the innocuous navigation tool originated during
and was fuelled by the Atlantic slave trade. The technological
development of the innocent compass, invented in China for religious
divination 2,000 years ago, allowed Africa to be ravaged in unspeakable
ways.
It was the compass that created the Atlantic slave trade, enabling the
early colonial navigators — and their blood merchants — to chart an
accurate course from Gorée Island, off the coast of Senegal, to
Brazil; paving the way for the trans-Atlantic slave trade, which began
on August 8, 1444. This trade in human merchandise covered four
continents and lasted four centuries, and serves as a shameful beacon
for the depravity of human greed and conquest.
The compass became the de facto weapon of mass destruction, which led
to the de-capitalization and decapitation of Africa. It created the
African Diaspora with one in five people taken out of the motherland.
It was the largest and most brutal displacement of human beings in
human history.
Today, it is hard to imagine that such destruction and the wholesale
abduction of a race could result from a tool as common as the compass.
Yet, as a people who survived the slave trade, we must draw our
strength from lessons learned from the past and draw our energy from
the power of the future. And the power of the future lies in
“controlling” technology and harnessing it for the benefit of mankind,
not for his destruction.
The people of Africa must take note that the Internet is our modern-day
compass, and within it resides our own clay of wisdom. As we prepare
for our great journey into the cyberspace of the future, with its
technological promise — its clay of wisdom — we must understand the
strategic value and potential of this all-important tool. Our image of
the future inspires the present and the present serves to create the
future.
Africa’s lack of substantial technological knowledge of the Internet
and its potential may lead it to be assaulted or manipulated in
unexpected ways, just as it was devastated generations ago for the lack
of a simple compass. We didn’t recognize the power of the compass then;
the danger is that we don’t recognize the power of technology today.
While Africa merely contemplates the future, the West, the quickest off
the mark to wield technology’s weapons, actually makes the future.
This fact, and how the power of technology can be wielded against the
poor, was brought home to me clearly when I received the following
email recently:
“About a year ago, I hired a developer in Africa to do my job. I am
paying him $12,000 a year to do my job, for which I am paid $67,000 a
year,” the sender wrote. “He’s happy to have the work and I’m happy
that I have to work only 90 minutes a day. Now I’m considering getting
a second job and doing the same thing.”
Technology in the hands of others has been used to exploit Africa for
centuries. But now it's time for Africa to grasp technology and finally
embrace the modern age’s clay of wisdom and advancement. Africa has the
chance to show the world how technology can be used for good, not evil.
And the people of Africa can use today’s technology, not to mimic their
own exploitation, but to right the wrongs of the past and empower
themselves with the same tool that has been used to oppress them in the
past. Africa can provide a shining example for the world in using
technology for its own upliftment and the benefit of mankind.
This time, it is our choice.
Excerpted from a keynote speech delivered by Philip Emeagwali at the
African Diaspora Conference in Tucson, Arizona. For the entire
transcript and video, visit emeagwali.com.
Nigerian-born Philip Emeagwali won the 1989 Gordon Bell Prize, the
Nobel Prize of supercomputing. He has been called “a father of the
Internet” by CNN and TIME; extolled as “one of the great minds of
the Information Age” by former US president Bill Clinton; and voted
history’s greatest scientist of African descent by New African.
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