Reading a popular Zambian online
newspaper the other day, I came across a comment apparently posted by a South
African who said and I paraphrase,
I am a South African and I have never been
to any African countries but I have traveled widely overseas…. [in relation to
the Zambian Vice-President’s outbursts about the South African president and the
South African government] I don’t understand why these Africans who do not
like us keep jumping our borders to come to our Country. After all, what can
Zambia give us? All it is, from what I see, is a run-down third world country
with nothing but poverty…
The lengthy comment went on,
following the same line of thinking more or less. I puzzled over this for a few
hours while taking my regular think-walks, mostly focusing on the many dichotomies
or binaries that we Africans, as a collective, have come to imbibe. There is
Pan-Africanism which in my view is a response to the torn-up communities of
what are our visions of a once united and peaceful African continent used to be
prior to imperial and colonial invasion. And then there are discourses of
development, densely decorated in abundant vocabularies about regional and
global economic integrations, the vast majority of which are Keynesian and even
Adam Smithian economics language albeit tinged here and there in newer
discourses about the environment, gender and so on. However, the exact
pragmatics of pursuing such, call them, ideologies are desperately at odds. On another
entry I will reflect on some of the difficulties associated with ethnic,
traditional, nationalist, regionalist and finally, Africanism sentimentalisms.
In my view, such –isms are inherently incompatible, and the definition for an African
Renaissance does well to free itself from such futile attempts to consolidate
them.
But the very interesting thing
about the comment I have quoted above (and which I have paraphrased to reduce
the more crude and offensive language the commenter used when they posted it)
is as follows; South Africa in 1994 emerged out of close to 5 decades of
Apartheid, preceded by 350 to 400 years of colonial rule. We are therefore
looking at just under 5 centuries of oppressive ruled in which the direction of
the country more and more, as the oppression grew stronger and stronger from
its inception, became the outcome of intentions or wills of people other than
the natives themselves. By 1994, when the second and more significant
independence happened, Pretoria, Johannesburg, Durban and Cape Town (to mention
the most prominent cities) had already been established as major metropolitan
areas not only in relation to just other African cities but even in relation to
other cities in the globe generally. In those days, South Africa’s economy, in
spite of its dehumanizing and ruthlessly segregative orientation, was
nonetheless already a huge, albeit largely isolated, force on the continent. It
therefore becomes striking when this “monument” of an economy, built via the
deliberate instrumentalization of a dehumanized “racial other” seamlessly
becomes grafted in by an African commenter on a Zambian online newspaper as a
beacon of South African supremacy and a standard for “othering” other African peoples.
Some would argue that it was in
fact African labor that built those monuments, and yet the superior argument
would for me be that any artifact or monument built in the absentia of the will
of the concerned people is an affront on their humanity. Which is precisely
why, even with South Africa’s huge economy, it was not enough for Africans to
simply stare and marvel at the tall buildings and the big highways. Rather they
aspired for self-determinism via the philosophy of democracy in which the trajectory
of their nation would reflect their “wills” as a collective. These contradictions
are not isolated to the South African case, for even as early as 1964, only eight
months after the establishment of an independent Malawi, Kamuzu Banda (Malawi’s
ruthless dictator) begun to imprint his very personality onto the Malawi state via
the use of the very monuments of power that had characterized the colonial
period.
Now, these very sketchy considerations
make us aware of boarder, cross-cutting conditions of the self-ruled African dispensation
after the collapse of the colonies. This dialectic of castigating the
colonialists, while at the same time celebrating about the very monuments which
should rightly only be recognized as witnesses to our oppression, has permitted
the entry of a dual discourse which can only function within the diameters of
an acutely oppressive political supervision. What do I mean? Discourses about
freedom from an oppressor cannot naturally exist alongside the practices of
celebrating the monuments set up by the oppressor which themselves remind us
strongly of the oppression we lived through. As such, the liberators (that is
the so-called freedom fighters) ascribed unto themselves the roles of deciding
what makes up the narrative of a free Africa and what does not. And therefore,
the selection of things to be adopted into what we could loosely call African
culture falls precisely upon their laps to arbitrarily decide what constitutes
an African rebirth and what doesn’t. This in turn facilitates the further
creation of board concepts such as nationalism as ideas born out of the
continuously unfolding actions of the liberators themselves, occasioning in the
first place, the early instances of control masked in performances of
unification, and in the last place, open declarations about what constitutes a
cultural nationalism definition and what doesn’t, thereby furthering the
othering of dissenting Africans. This is in a nutshell the long and short of
the Kamuzu Banda dictatorship of independent Malawi.
When considered closely, it is
understandable as to why then a rather politically active population
responsible for the tearing down of oppressive systems prior to independence,
become docile and susceptible to totalitarian control by a movement led by
freedom-fighters. The overcoming of an oppressive system not only challenges
the political establishment but it is also hinged upon the ideals of something
that was lost or denied, something only sentimentally and vaguely envisaged but
not concretely defined. That something
to which the Africans of the colonial period aspired was taken over, in its
definitions, by their liberators, thereby occasioning the sort of cultural
definitions that only suited those in power and allowed them psychological
control over the African people. I find this condition perhaps nowhere better
established on the African continent than in present day Zimbabwe where somehow
a full dictatorship operates side-by-side with a Judiciary and a National
Assembly. For me, the mechanism works as follows. The idea of a Zimbabwean
democracy is only elaborated by the incumbent president, and all other arms of
government must operate within that prescribed definition handed down by that
president. Zimbabwean culture is therefore handed-down. Zimbabwean nationalism
is similarly handed-down. All in favor are true Zimbabwean nationals, and all
dissenting are the others who have lost their African roots. The political
vocabulary is frozen within that simple but immensely powerful binary whose one
side is filled with abundant “handed-down” vocabulary, and whose other side is
merely defined as “unAfrican” and therefore, intolerable.
Furthermore, in examining this
condition more closely, it is not surprising that other definitions pertaining
to, for instance, how specific aspects of African culture ought to occur within
the “dictated” democracy are similarly handed down and practiced as prescribed.
However, the very deep sentimentality brought about by the initial
pre-independence galvanizing messages of the liberators depicting our
independence as being a return towards a
something lost do not only permit for the passive reception of these forms
of control but also short-circuit the other silenced implications of an African
renaissance, namely, open debate and more importantly, the right to create and
institute as a living people within very unique circumstances, relevant systems
of culture as well as broader definitions of a post-colonial African experience.
After all, if Africanism was defined by Africans of a prior generation, they
themselves having acquired that from other prior Africans, why can’t today’s Africans
be afforded the similar right to decide their own customs and traditions? Some of
the blackmail for offsetting this sure consistency has been leveraged upon a
politically strengthen narrative of ancestral spirits as being the ones who
expect it of all Africans to live a certain way; that way itself being described
and defined only by our liberators. The freedom of narrative was thus reduced
to the mere re-telling of stories of our strong men during the fight for
independence alongside folklore tales of ancestors, African prophets and
spiritualists, elephants, hyenas and rabbits (hares) aimed at instilling a
power friendly discipline into our
young ones and ourselves. The African imagination became reduced to a
politically-blunt object, designed only to receive definitions about what we
ought to do today, and re-telling those tales of a handed-down or dictated history
as if it were an “openly-deliberated” and consensually agreed definition of African
culture, traditions, nationalism, and general experience. In conclusion
therefore, African de-colonization was merely, by and large, a re-entry into an
alternative form of colonization setup by the political freezing of our
numerous objects and symbols of culture and experience.
In much of the SADC region, to
varying degrees and with the notable exception of Botswana (even though it two
shows several parallels), we find that culture and nationalism, when tracked
back to the hay-days of independence, emanated as handed-down definitions for
the supposed purpose of national unity building. Today, these ideas are shoved
down the throats of other Africans as gospels of a re-found African experience.
As such, for me, it is clear that control aided by the celebrating of our false
trophies speaks of a general political fear to allow the African to experience
and define for themselves what orientation they ought to acquire or develop in
order to be better compatible with the things that confront them. And so women
are, for instance, tightly kept to a strict presentation of what an African woman
ought to be, and rape, which is in my opinion the work of person who has
intended in his own heart to violate another human being, comes to be seen as
an incidence arising from a woman whose demeanor violated that African woman’s
presentation of herself. In a twisted way, therefore, every act of violence against
women, in spite of the political rhetoric about how bad and evil it is,
ferments the problem further, instilling more powerfully the misinformed
position that certain kinds of women who violate the cultural code invite upon
themselves this “lesson”. Indirectly, the person who perpetrates the crime – who
might be arrested if they are truly unfortunate
– is only symbolically sanctioned officially via the performances and
discourses of the state set up, while in the domain of a strictly monitored
process of how African culture ought to unfold, such incidences on further the false-expectation
that if only we could all revert to that thing we lost during colonialism,
these things would automatically melt away. When in my opinion, the problem
arises from the very “colonizing” of what African culture ought to be by our
liberators.
In returning back to the
quotation I opened this brief and sketchy discussion with, this taking for
trophies the very marks of our oppression highlights just how largely false our
liberation was, and how furthermore, we have allowed ourselves to be doubly
inflicted by not only the dehumanizing features of our past colonies, but the
also the further colonization under the banner of an African Renaissance. Daily
we are reminded to be Africans in our mud huts and broken schools by people
riding in convoys that are nothing but modern.
We walk barefoot to rallies to be addressed by leaders who live in State
Palaces which are modern. We trustingly
subject ourselves to traditional and cultural rituals, wallowing in
dehumanizing poverty, to – in the evening – turn on our battery powered radios
to listen to budget presentations quoted in figures and articulated in modern economics theory. And somehow, we
are not yet able to see that cultural sentimentalism is an othering force,
empowering us only to the extent to which we are only able to police ourselves
into an politically acceptable order; while disempowering us from our place as Africans
ready to question and demand more appropriate visions for our present
conditions. Our resistance towards freeing ourselves from these crippling
definitions about who an African is, to the extent that we disallow others in
our societies to be whatever they choose to be, resembles only a form of
political and social surveillance in my view. And it allows us to misguidedly “other”
other Africans in that false-enlightened manner of the author of that scathing
comment about the people of Zambia. The troubling thing is, however, that we
all seem inflicted by this quest for a gone and dead African authenticity, and
therefore prone to removing ourselves from open debate aimed towards the
creation of a more applicable agreement of what being an African in 2013 ought
to look like.
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