Kä Mana

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Godefroid Mana Kangudie
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Kä Mana
Born
Godefroid Mana Kangudie

3 November 1953
Congolese
Occupation(s)Writer
Professor
Theologian

Godefroid Mana Kangudie (3 November 1953 – 15 July 2021), known by his pen name Kä Mana, was a Congolese writer, professor, and theologian.[1][2] He was one of the most famous philosophers in the Democratic Republic of Congo[3] and served as President of the POLE Institute.[4]

He succumbed to the effects of COVID-19 in July 2021 at the age of 67.[5] He lectured Ethics and Philosophy of Peace at Université Evangélique en Afrique, UEA Bukavu DRC. Kä Mana was one of the most prolific writers of his time , in the DRC and Africa. He also lectured at UPAC in Cameroon. Some of his scholarly works include Changer la République Démocratique du Congo. He was passionate about the youth and showed great devotion to young people's empowerment through education. He was quite knowledgeable of the History of the DRC and Africa. He was a fervent Africanist scholar who shared many points of view in common with other contemporary African public intellectuals like CheikhAnta Diop, Theophile Obenga, Achille Mbembe and Mudimbe Vumbi Yoka, whom he very much acknowledged in his writings and lectures.

Career

He provided lectures and research supervision at different universities, including Université Evangélique en Afrique, UEA Bukavu, where Amani Kasherwa was one of his students.

Godefroid Kangudie Tshibembe (known as KÄ Mana) was a Congolese writer, professor, philosopher, and theologian. Born on November 3, 1953, in Congo-Kinshasa, he passed away on July 15, 2021, in Goma. Considered one of the most renowned philosophers and theologians, Professor Kä Mana was an impressive mind in scientific production, both in quantity and quality.

His pseudonym, Godefroid Mana Kangudie, is formed from the diminutive of his name "Kä" and his first name "Mana." He held a doctorate in philosophy from the Université libre de Bruxelles and a doctorate in theology from the Université de Strasbourg. He served as a pastor in the Reformed African Church (ERAF) and as a preacher in the Harrist Church (in 2005).

Biography

He served as President of the Pole Institute, an intercultural institute, in the Great Lakes region. Kä Mana contemplated the contributions and failures of previous schools of thought in shaping his own discursive practices of reconstruction. His intellectual foundation was built on African cultures and the concept of liberation.

He also addressed the discourse on God, impacting the socio-political life of Africans who allowed themselves to be informed and enlightened by reason. Despite being a Lutheran pastor, he warned against the dangers of foreign-origin religions in African life, cautioning against "the warlike deviations of Christianity and Islam."

Kä Mana's theology of reconstruction aimed at the holistic transformation of individuals. Besides analyzing crises, he focused on examining the perspectives from which people spoke. His theological project was epistemic, critiquing African intellectuals for remaining trapped in Western thought, serving as a lens for interpreting African life. Here he discussed the principles of collective stupefaction.

In his view, social crises in Africa coexisted with the existential crisis of the African intellectuals and the limitations of their tools. He spoke of the disoriented psyche of the African intellectuals and sought tools to analyze "our own defeats, our glaring failures in development, liberation, and the construction of a society of prosperity, dignity, and happiness." According to him, "The new Christ to be invented cannot be a Christ structured by our past defeats or our disintegrated values, but truly the Christ invented as the one who must come, a breath of lucidity, courage, and creativity to break free from the established religious system and to address the crucial challenges of the non-religious field where the Messiah would be a public, profane force of action and transformation."

Rediscovering Pharaonic sources, according to him, rehabilitated the psyche and humanity of Africans, envisioning a future independent of the "colonial library" (Mudimbe). Rejecting imitation of the European 16th-century Renaissance, the Congolese philosopher and theologian deconstructed and recreated an African imaginary in his work, carrying a social project.

Kä Mana and the Theology of Reconstruction

A prolific author, Kä Mana, notably theorized the theology of reconstructing a crisis-ridden Africa. According to the Congolese author, the continent's crisis is linked to a diseased imagination. Modern Africans are torn between torn and devalued ancient self-awareness and imported myths that both "fascinate and sterilize." These myths include the West, African identity, independence, political pluralism, and democracy. For the Congolese author, the task is to transform them into "problems that make us reflect and convert them into energies that make us act, and change the energies into a new reason for living and dying as well as into new reasons to hope and believe fundamentally." Proposing a strategy of "mental de-alienation" that considers cultural identity issues and specific African problems, he constructs them into a fertile reality. This involves "remaining imaginatively sensitive to the inherent creativity in the task of being human."


Political Analyst

The Lutheran pastor was also a recognized political analyst who did not hesitate to comment on significant current affairs. On June 30, 2021, for the 61st anniversary of the DR Congo's independence, he spoke about the occasion. "61 years after the independence of the DRC, there is progress on the economic front but with many challenges," he remarked, adding that "Congolese people need to understand that their responsibility is to build an economy of prosperity and shared happiness with all other countries."But as long as we do not have this awareness," he analyzed, "we will not understand what our independence means for Africa and for all African countries at the moment."

Bibliography

Pour sortir de la guerre à l'est de la République démocratique du Congo, 2016 La mission de l'Église africaine, 2005 La nouvelle évangélisation en Afrique, 2000 Chrétiens et Églises d'Afrique, 1999 Christ d'Afrique, 1994 L'Afrique va-t-elle mourir ?, 1993 Théologie africaine pour un temps de crise, 1993 L'Expérience poétique de la transcendance, 1987 Destinée négro-africaine, 1987 Cahier d'éducation à la transformation sociale, 2015 Pour l'éducation politique des jeunes, 2013 Les vrais enjeux de la renaissance africain, 2017 L'heure de l'économie éthique: les jeunes africains à la recherche du sens économique, 2014 (RE) Découvrir les mythes : développer le pouvoir créateur des sociétés africains, 2014

Notes et références

« Nord-Kivu : Décès du professeur Godefroid Kä mana [archive] », 15 juillet 2021 (consulté le 16 juillet 2021) Job KAKULE, « Decès à Goma du très respecté Professeur Godefroid Kä Mana [archive] », sur www.grandslacsnews.com (consulté le 16 juillet 2021) « RDC: décès du penseur Kä Mana [archive] », sur Actualite.cd, 16 juillet 2021 (consulté le 16 juillet 2021) Leslibraires.fr, « Kä Mana [archive] », sur www.leslibraires.fr (consulté le 19 avril 2022) « Invité Afrique - Kä Mana, professeur à Goma, président de Pole Institute [archive] », sur RFI, 1er décembre 2012 (consulté le 16 juillet 2021)

  1. ^ Bagheni, Prince (16 July 2021). "Nord-Kivu : Décès du professeur Godefroid Kä mana". Election-net (in French). Nord-Kivu. Archived from the original on 5 August 2021. Retrieved 18 July 2021.
  2. ^ Kakule, Job (15 July 2021). "Decès à Goma du très respecté Professeur Godefroid Kä Mana". Grands Lacs News (in French). Retrieved 18 July 2021.
  3. ^ "RDC: décès du penseur Kä Mana". Actualite.cd (in French). 15 July 2021. Retrieved 18 July 2021.
  4. ^ Rolley, Sonia (1 December 2012). "Kä Mana, professeur à Goma, président de Pole Institute". Radio France Internationale (in French). Retrieved 18 July 2021.
  5. ^ Kakule, Job (15 July 2021). "Decès à Goma du très respecté Professeur Godefroid Kä Mana". Grands Lacs News (in French). Retrieved 18 July 2021.