Sierra Leone Chesterton Center
À propos du SLCC
THE BRIDGE BETWEEN BALANCE AND FOLLY:
CHESTERTON’S DISTRIBUTIST IDEAS AT WORK IN AFRICA
By John Kanu (Founder and Director of the Sierra Leone Chesterton Center (SLCC))
What started as a dream or better still, a bridge between balance and folly in 1999 is beginning to bear fruits. That is to say, G. K. Chesterton’s ‘distributist’ ideas are at work in Sierra Leone-one of Africa’s poorest countries. On 4th October 1999, I took the X-90 coach from London (after 3 days stay in London with my former parish priest, the good old Canon Fr. Herbert Veal) to Oxford to start yet another round of encounters. My encounter however with a soft-spoken English man represents a life-changing and an everlasting positive turn of events. The soft-spoken English man-a God-sent philosophy lecturer-was Mr. Stratford Caldecott (blessed memory). Mr. Caldecott was the master of the Christianity and Society (C&S) class at Plater College, a Catholic residential college founded in 1921 in Oxford in memory of Fr. Charles Plater (SJ) to provide a second-chance education opportunity for Catholic workers who like me, had dropped-out of main stream education because I had to find work to fend for my young family. It was from Caldecott through his soul-searching tutorials in his small office room at Plater College that I learnt about G. K. Chesterton and his ideas of ‘Distributism’. So, what was it that so much fascinated me about G K Chesterton, an Englishman who never came to Africa? Although Chesterton never came to Africa and I have never heard of him or his works until I met Mr Caldecott in 1999, I was struck and still fascinated today about his candour and the parallels of his writings and my experiences of community life in Kabonka, a typical small African village. In other words, Chesterton in his distributist writings gave expression to the best qualities of traditional African communitarian values. Although I left with a master’s degree in the social sciences from Oxford University, attending Stratford’s CS classes was the best education experience I got from Oxford! My providential encounter with Stratford Caldecott sets off a litany of other encounters some of which I will someday describe in another piece, such as my encounter with the Penfolds (Celia and Peter Penfold) and the “magnificent 4” (Aidan Mackey, Clark Durant, Dale Ahlquist and the ‘consumate’ Marco Sermarini). ‘’Distributism holds that, politically and economically, the best kind of society is one characterized by widespread ownership of property […and I will add, in the case of our realities in Sierra Leone…the means of production and productive communal assets including the possession of relevant capacity or skills’’]. The truth is: there is no way I could have returned back to Sierra Leone-a war devastated place-after three years living in Oxford with my family and a job offer if I had not discovered Chesterton’s distributism ideas. Through this encounter, I saw for the first time the fulfilment towards the dream and the commitment of my village folks, who as a child, had argued and debated whether or not to have me, one of their own ‘sent to school’. Today, three little initiatives are taking hold in Sierra Leone in honour and fulfilment of my discovery of G. K. Chesterton’s ideas:
-
The establishment of the Sierra Leone Chesterton Center (SLCC):
Founded in Oxford in 2002 and registered in Sierra Leone in 2006 as a community-based organization, the impact of the SLCC is mostly realized in Kono district, the epicentre of artisanal small-scale mining of diamonds and gold. The SLCC initiative is focused on-working with smallholder farmer households (8 family members using rudimental tools to cultivate an average of 1.5 acres of rice fields per year) has resulted to the organization into cooperatives and capacity building of more than 2,000 smallholder farmers (80% women). After 15 years involvement in this work, we now have irrefutable evidence to demonstrate that the cooperative approach is an effective ‘distributist’ model. Through this model, families living in mining affected communities have cooperated with each other to convert, reclaim and own-lands degraded and previously lost to decades of mineral exploitation. Today, in two communities for example, a total of 10 acres (40,470 sq. meters) of such lands were converted into productive communal agricultural assets and fish ponds-from which, each family is now better able to feed itself and one child per family has been sent to the village school. Tuition fees are paid from the proceeds and sales of agricultural products as the outcome of their combined labour. SLCC’s focus to protect land ownership is not misplaced because land, in traditional African values is not just a place to grow crops for food but also, a resource with aesthetic cultural, social and spiritual values. To start with, land does not belong to one person but must be accessible to all the members of a family or clan. It is a resource to be tended with care and honest stewardship and to be passed on from one generation to the other. Land in Africa symbolizes the connection between the past, the present and the future. It is on this same land that our ancestors had toiled, took responsibility for their community and off-springs and therefore, the next generation should be desirous to do the same;


2. The establishment of the Chesterton Academy of Sierra Leone:
Founded on 9th September 2021 with only 14 pupils, the school, just at the right time-has become a beacon of hope and a resource for the community to mitigate the age-old problem of poor education. With over 500 pupils today, the CASL is among the top schools, using quality and Catholic practical education pedagogy in Science and Technology, a discipline Chesterton described as “Scientia Est Aut Instrumentum Aut Ludus’’ (science is either a tool or toy). From this school, we hope to scale up to a Chesterton University where a future generation of artisans, auto-engineers, computer specialists, agriculturists, business entrepreneurs and critical trade-leaders would be trained to address the extensive social and economic challenges facing their local communities-with compassion and Chesterton’s candour and laughter;
3. Establishment of the Chesterton Vocational and Skills Development Institute (CVSDI):
With dogged determination and the counsel of Archbishop Edward Tamba Charles, the idea to establish the CVSDI to cater for youth 18 years above took prominence in 2022. Like the cooperative farmer model implemented in rural Kono, the CVSDI is focused on building capacity along relevant and employable skills for youth-who dropped out of formal education or missed the chance to go to school and who, without this support, will never fully participate in the dynamics of their local economies. In sum, the CVSDI is in tandem with distributist objectives because, the lack and/or equipping these youth with ‘capacity’ or ‘skills’ is what would make a difference regarding the numbers of youth unemployment in Sierra Leone, susceptibility to drugs and other forms of abuse or the incremental number of youths as fodder for dangerous internal and external migration. The CVSDI is an attempt to rediscover and enhance ‘middle-man-power skills’ which have been neglected or forgotten in modern education despite the importance of such skills in job creation and the local economy. Thankfully, the CVSDI was officially opened and dedicated to God on 7th October 2025 by Archbishop Edward Tamba Charles. Unlike extant development models, the blend of trainings conducted in this vocational institute are based on the outcomes of stakeholder consultations and a structured socio- economic study conducted in the Western Rural District which specifically illustrated a high demand and interest for the undermentioned skills area. As of the time of this publication, a total of 54 youth (86% women) is currently registered and at various levels pursuing trainings in: Catering/Culinary and Hospitality skills; Tailoring and Fashion Design; Hair Dressing & Cosmetology; Information & Communication Technology (ICT- Hard and Software); Electrification and Solar Power Installation all of which, will mitigate the prevailing challenges of high youth unemployment and poverty in the district. Upon completion of an18 months training cycle in any of the above skills sets, successful candidates will be awarded proficient certificates by the National Commission of Technical Education and then, organized into small-scale enterprise cooperatives accompanied with one-off financial and technical inputs to ensure success and sustainability.

Vision et mission
-
Soutenir la sécurité alimentaire et la diversification des moyens de subsistance par la création de coopératives agricoles féminines dans les communautés rurales et affectées par l’exploitation minière ;
-
Investir dans l’éducation formelle (maternelle, primaire et secondaire) ainsi que dans l’alphabétisation des adultes, tout en aidant les jeunes hors scolarisation et sans emploi à acquérir des compétences techniques et professionnelles pour améliorer leurs opportunités économiques dans leurs communautés rurales ;
-
Utiliser des techniques innovantes de restauration environnementale pour atténuer l’impact de l’exploitation minière sur les communautés rurales ;
-
Renforcer les capacités communautaires afin de défendre l’accès à de meilleurs services et faciliter la redistribution des richesses aux communautés rurales en Sierra Leone.
« Nous envisageons une société sierra-léonaise dynamique, active dans la promotion de la justice sociale et économique, une population où les droits des femmes et des jeunes sont respectés et, à leur tour, désireux d’assumer leurs rôles et responsabilités dans leurs communautés ».
Nos valeurs fondamentales :
.jpg)
Distributism
Nous croyons au « distributisme », c’est-à-dire :
« la propriété largement répartie des moyens de production / des biens productifs par les membres de nos communautés, et non concentrée »,
comme décrit dans The Return to Common Sense (G. K. Chesterton) et dans Rerum Novarum (Pape Léon XIII) ;
Économie rurale
Nous croyons en « l'économie rurale », en la « famille », en l'intégrité du travail sur la terre et en la force des communautés pour transformer leur situation (également en tandem avec les valeurs communautaires africaines).
Développement inclusif
Nous croyons au développement inclusif sans distinction de sexe, d’origine, de race, de tribu, de religion ou de handicap
Capacity Building
Nous croyons au renforcement des capacités comme fondement du développement durable
.jpg)
Notre objectif :
Garantir que le SLCC soit en mesure d'apporter un soutien pertinent, durable et de qualité aux communautés rurales, composées en grande partie de femmes, de jeunes et d'enfants vivant dans des conditions difficiles. Nos résultats contribuent à une amélioration durable de leurs conditions de vie.
Notre travail se concentre sur le renforcement des capacités communautaires et le changement des mentalités par l’éducation afin d’aider ces communautés à devenir autonomes.
Pour cette raison, nous avons consacré beaucoup de temps à aider les communautés à acquérir des compétences agricoles intelligentes face au climat ainsi que des compétences en commercialisation. À ce jour, un total de 2 000 familles de petits exploitants dans 121 communautés minières artisanales (ASM) ont bénéficié de diverses interventions pertinentes.
Ce travail contribue également à assurer la sécurité alimentaire et nutritionnelle dans ces communautés.
Profil de l'organisation :
Le Sierra Leone Chesterton Center (SLCC) a été fondé à Oxford en 2000 et enregistré en Sierra Leone en 2006 en tant qu’organisation communautaire (CBO). L’organisation est gouvernée par un conseil d’administration dont les membres sont des bénéficiaires issus de diverses coopératives communautaires. Les activités du SLCC sont guidées par le plan stratégique de l’organisation (2025-2029).
Notre vision et notre travail s’appuient sur la philosophie économique de G. K. Chesterton, le « distributisme » — une distribution plus large des ressources et des moyens de production au plus grand nombre possible de membres de nos communautés.
Le SLCC est présent dans le district de Kono, dans l’est de la Sierra Leone, depuis 2011, en soutien aux communautés appauvries par une série d’événements liés : un conflit civil brutal (2001-2002), des épidémies (Ebola en 2014, COVID-19) et une dégradation environnementale causée par des décennies d’exploitation minière non réglementée (diamants et or).