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Farewell
to political activism: Reflections from South Africa
Mukoma
Wa Ngugi
August 01, 2007
http://www.pambazuka.org/en/category/comment/42869
We either value African
life, understand a black life as equal to a white life, and the
poor as equally deserving as the wealthy - or we do not.
This reformulation of
Frantz Fanon's 'a given society is either racist or not'; or better
yet of Malcolm X's 'If you stick a knife nine inches into my back
and pull it out three inches, that is not progress' are reminders
that there are no fractions when it comes to human dignities and
freedoms. They either exist in full or they do not. Africans, however,
have been prescribed quarter-doses of health and education, one-sixteenth
dignities, and piece-meal freedoms for so long that what would not
be acceptable elsewhere is welcomed in Africa.
These were my thoughts
recently as I traveled back from Durban, South Africa, where I spent
the last two weeks of June and the first week of July as one of
the organisers of the third international Toward an Africa Without
Borders Conference.
This simple recognition,
that we either value Africans or we do not, was fueled by one more
frightening thought. The kind of activism that we, the political
activists, have been doing is not enough. It can never be enough.
Problems facing the African continent, from slavery through colonialism,
neocolonialism, and now the hurricane of globalisation that opens
up African markets, leaving more poverty in its wake, have never
been fully addressed.
Slavery was abolished
and the millions who died were swept under the rugs of progress.
When colonialism ended, true independence was bargained away at
the Lancaster and Paris tables, colonial history and its dead blown
away by the 'winds of change'. In the 1970s and 1980s we struggled
against neocolonialism; but against our dying and the dead we have
globalisation which has swept the idea of social justice under the
carpet of a Democracy without content.
At what point in history
do we simply say what we are doing is not enough? Not because the
path we have chosen is bad, or entirely wrong-headed. But simply
because the problem is clearly much bigger than the solution we
are struggling for? And if we keep doing the same things but expecting
different results, aren't we just a little bit mad?
Whether we are conservatives,
World Bank officials, NGO activists, philanthropists, political
and scholar-activists, the whole lot of us, we all share the same
statistics. We find them indicating that in Africa infant mortality
is on the rise (the only place in the world where such indicators
are actually worsening). We find that millions are projected to
die from Aids and the poverty that feeds the fury of treatable diseases
like Malaria and TB. We look at the statistics that find African
economies counting foreign aid as part of the national budget; that
indicate Africa loses more money through unfair trade than it gets
in foreign aid. We find indicators of the extent of environmental
degradation, and the human misery caused through exploitation of
resources such as oil in places like the Niger Delta. We look at
statistics which, like bread crumbs, can be followed back to days
of slavery; that show present day exploitation of resources and
a rather bleak future if things continue as they are.
Yet, in the face of these
enormous problems, based on our ideological professions, we proscribe
solutions that have one thing in common - inadequacy. Conservatives
launch an anti-corruption campaign, and prescribe more foreign aid,
but to accountable governments. World Bank officials call for the
opening of markets and transparency. Philanthropists set up more
save-the-African-child foundations. NGO activists call for strategic
donations and fairer US intervention. Political and scholar activists
have their international conferences and alternative world summits
only to pass resolutions calling for better representation of Africa
in international media. In the meantime, in a most myopic move,
African leaders at the helm of this sinking ship gather in Accra
to call for a United Africa to be led by one president and a 2,000,000
strong army.
In a word, our various
remedies have long been outstripped by the maladies. Cynicism is
not mine alone here. Nelson Mandela, the face of the anti-apartheid
struggle, started in 2003 a joint foundation with the apartheid/colonialism
crusader Cecil Rhodes' Trust. The Mandela-Rhodes Foundation, the
website declares, seeks 'to build exceptional leadership capacity
in Africa'. What could be more cynical? Who is fooling who here?
In another context, this would be unbelievable: we could never imagine
Jewish Nobel Peace Prize laureate Elie Wiesel starting a Wiesel-Himmler
Foundation, for example - but somehow in Africa we are willing to
suspend our disbelief. With all due respect - is this madness? Have
we become this cynical, or are we suffering from collective schizophrenia
that allows us launder history through foundations and other self-help
projects?
We are in a peculiar
position of being behind history. We misread the present. And for
it, the future is not ours. Each day unveils what the future will
hold - the US Africa Command Centre, wars on terror that, like globalisation,
have no boundaries, and an African leadership whose best foot is
Mbeki's embrace of international capital at the expense of the majority
of South Africans. We must stop sending one another congratulatory
notes after each successful rock concert, international conference,
or summit.
These were my thoughts
as I stood in the middle of Inanda Township in Durban, as I walked
through settlements demolished under the watchful eye of the ANC
government. Near a chemical plant, children tickled by our presence
broke into giggles; but my laughter died where their feet were discoloured
by walking barefoot in chemical soaked homes and playgrounds.
I could trace these thoughts
to 2004 in Kenya's Dandora slums. Sitting under a tree with writer
Binyavanga Wainaina, my brothers and sisters, and members of the
Kalamashaka Hip Hop band, we could hear random gunshots announcing
random deaths a few miles away. Later that evening we left the slum
for Runda Estate, one of the richest estates in Nairobi, to visit
a progressive Kenyan politician, where we were served food by maids
and cooks dressed in snappy white checkered uniforms. Then it occurred
to me that our political leadership really do not see the people
in Dandora, Mathare or Kangemi slums as having lives with value.
The anger and the most
basic humanism that moved the revolutions of the 19th and 20th centuries
are gone. They have been replaced by 'progressive' politics laced
with contempt for the poor; as if history did not happen; as if
- here comes another statistic - the 380,000,000 Africans living
in dire poverty are stubbornly refusing to take advantage of the
all-you-can-eat democracy buffet. These politicians do not have
the political imagination or the will to deal with the devastation
of extreme poverty and the historical legacies of colonialism.
But in 2004 it had not
occurred to me that even we, the political activists, had lost that
imagination, if not the will. We too were speaking the same language
as the politician. Realising earlier this month that African life
lacked as much value in South Africa as in Kenya, that there was
nothing more Pan-African than shared poverty, and the many of ways
of dying, that Aids is as much a Pan-African issue as African culture,
I had to admit that my way of doing things has been wholly inadequate.
Not because I was waiting for a magic wand that can be waved (it
is locked away in coffers of the global rich in the little drawer
titled stop living at the expense of others); rather, my activism
was miles away from comprehending, let alone squarely addressing,
problems that were multi-generational, sanctioned by history, and
local and international at the same time.
Understanding the problem,
history not withstanding, lies in comprehending when and why the
revolutionary became a political activist. The activist, as I understand
it, was born in the late 1980s and early 1990s, when the revolutionary
died. Revolutions under the banner of Marxism had degenerated to
coups and counter-coups which produced paranoid movements and dictators.
By the early 1990s, even
the thin banner of Marxism was no longer being hoisted. It was war
for power, one group against the other for the State house. Communism
in the East collapsed; and with the chaos and deaths that followed,
it was no longer fashionable to talk about the masses, classes and
revolution.
But movements of trickle-down
economics and welfare also produced the same results - war for profit,
coups and counter-coups, paranoid dictators. Only the left took
the blame. So when Margaret Thatcher declared that there was no
alternative to capitalism, not only did the conservative, liberal
and radical politicians believe her, but so did the would-be revolutionaries
who, looking to the East, only saw chaos and turmoil.
Political activism as
the mainstay of change rose out of the ashes of revolutionary activism.
And imbedded in the idea of political activism is the belief that
there are no other alternatives. Herein is the paradox: we, the
political activists work within a closed system of no alternatives
even when we think we do not. Anti-globalisation will not make a
dent on globalisation; and anti-capitalism cannot counter movement
of massive international capital. We simply have to break way from
this closed system; offer, and fight for other alternatives.
If we are to stare boldly
at the problems facing the African continent, we must dare to say
that there are alternatives not only to how societies are arranged
but to how we can bring about those changes. We must return to these
two twin aspects of change: the boldness of revolutionary thinking
and dreaming and the boldness of action. People power movements
in Latin America, exemplified by Chavez, are one alternative. We
must speak about their potential as well as their limitations. We
cannot turn our back on what is happening in Latin America. It is
our duty to keep Cuba alive, that star the United States has been
trying to dull, so that it remains an example of what is possible.
But if we see potential in Latin America, we must use it to jump-start
our own ideas and approaches to change, not as a template to be
blindly copied.
In Africa we must invest
time and energy in developing a Pan-Africanism from below, one that
recognises we are not uniting governments but the people; one which
is revolutionary, in that it will unite the people as it frees them
from local and international exploitation; that sees the emancipation
of women as an integral part of its vocation, and has the content
of social and economic justice. The only way to make sure of this,
contrary to the July African Union meeting in Accra, is by a people's
mandate.
Pan-Africanism cannot
be a lofty idea that comes from an enlightened leadership. The days
of the missionary, the small glorious band of men, the talented
tenth, the revolutionary van-guard are gone. Pan-Africanism will
have to travel through the same borders as refugees, breaking down
barriers and borders along the way. It has to travel through African
languages, dynamic cultures, and the shared politics of anti-colonial
struggles (after all, anti-apartheid was a pan-African struggle),
and resistance in this day of globalisation. Only then shall Africans
become visible to each other. And it is only when Africans are visible
to each other that African solutions become possible.
There are collective
questions that cannot be answered by one person in the same way
a solution cannot be an individual affair. And what do the African
people want? What would the economy of a united Africa look like?
What kind of political systems would we create? What kind of culture
would pan-Africanist frameworks produce? What kind of social-gender
relations should the Africa of the future embrace? What would a
borderless Africa look like? In trying to answer these questions
from our various locations, we will be creating the much needed
alternatives - and implementing them.
Political activism would
not dream of changing governments or unifying African people. Revolutionary
thinking that is cognizant of the world as it stands will. In this
21st century of a thousand changes: we are either revolutionary,
or we are not.
* Mukoma Wa Ngugi is
the author of Conversing with Africa: Politics of Change (Kimaathi
Publishers, 2002), the collection of poetry Hurling Words at Consciousness
(Africa World Press, 2006), and editor of the forthcoming New Kenyan
Fiction (Ishmael Reed Publications, 2008).
Please credit www.kubatana.net if you make use of material from this website.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License unless stated otherwise.
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