© K. Sello Duiker
Ayi Kwei Armah is a Ghanaian writer, essayist and poet, well known and loved for his intense writing. He began his writing career with poems and short stories before writing his first novel, “The Beautyful Ones Are Not Yet Born,” published in 1968.
The Beautyful Ones Are Not Yet Born is a deeply powerful novel that explores corruption and moral decay in post-independence Ghana. Through the eyes of the protagonist, Armah presents a society that has failed to live up to the hopes of independence. A society where dishonesty and abuse of power have become the norm. Freedom is still an abstract idea. In a part of the book, on freedom, Armah writes “Yes but I am not free. I have not stopped wanting to meet the loved ones and to touch them and be touched by them. But you know that the loved ones are dead even when they walk around the Earth like the living, and you know that all they want is that you throw away the thing in your mind that makes you think you are still alive, and their embrace will be welcome unto death.”
He asks why we “waste so much time with sorrow and pity for ourselves?” Why losing control of ourselves and our beliefs is so often demanded from us? And why so many men give into it? The novel is not just about political failure and societal and moral collapse, but also about the emotional and psychological strain of trying to remain principled in a world that rewards compromise.
Armah’s writing is deeply profound and highly descriptive. It is often uncomfortable and haunting. He reflects on the protagonist's experiences in a way that leaves a bitter taste in your mouth, and a discomfort in your body. The Beautyful Ones Are Not Yet Born is short but heavy. It represents resistance - resistance to being misled, deceived and fooled. Overall, it is an important African novel and a necessary critique of a society running through the pain of trying to hold on to integrity.
Ayi Kwei Armah, and other African writers like him who tell stories of discomfort, are necessary for building a stronger African community, for strengthening our unity, and confronting our deepest flaws.
“And where is my solid ground these days? Let us just say that the cycle from birth to decay has been short.”