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Sodom
and Zimbabwe
Trudy
Stevenson
August 09, 2007
http://www.newzimbabwe.com/pages/opinion279.16785.html
"PERHAPS
there are fifty just men in the town? Will you not spare the place
for the fifty just men in it?"
So asked Abraham
of God, according to the Bible, when God was about to investigate
reports of massive evil and sin in Sodom.
God replied:
"If at Sodom I find fifty just men in the town, I will spare
the whole place because of them."
Abraham went
on to reduce the number of just men who might be found to 45, then
40, then 30, then 20 and finally 10, and each time the Lord replied
that he would spare the whole town if he found that number of just
men. But in the end he did not even find 10 just men, and so Sodom
was destroyed in a rain of burning sulphur.
My mind jumped
to the government and the ruling party Zanu PF when I revisited
this reading recently, because of the dire straits we find ourselves
in. We are so desperate for complete change that we are intent on
destroying the party and its evil system that has brought us to
our knees and separated our families in the most cruel and traumatic
fashion.
So would we
be right to destroy the entire Zanu PF edifice if we found fifty
good people among them? No, I do not believe this would be justified.
And if there were only forty-five good people? No. And only forty?
No. And so on. But surely we would find at least ten good people
in Zanu PF? This would perhaps prevent us from taking the dire action
of total and dramatic annihilation wreaked upon Sodom!
There is indeed
a great danger, whenever great evil has been perpetrated, that victims
will demand that the entire people, institution or whatever that
perpetrated that evil be annihilated, without any regard to the
rights of the few "just men" who happen to be in the guilty
camp.
This danger
is at the root of many efforts to get to the truth and instigate
a system of justice, reparation and reconciliation in recent times,
notably the Nuremburg Trials post-Second World War and the South
African Truth and Reconciliation Commission post-apartheid.
The need for
justice for the victims has somehow to be balanced with the need
for respect for the rights of those who are not guilty. This is
extremely difficult, and even South Africa 's admirable effort has
not been perfect. Indeed it is heavily criticised in some quarters
for allowing the guilty to "get off scot-free" for simply
telling the truth. The element of reparation seems to be missing
in that process.
Before change
finally comes in Zimbabwe, as it surely will, we need national debate
on the issue of our own system for truth and justice, so that we
are agreed before the question arises. How far back do we go - Gukurahundi,
Liberation War, Mbuya Nehanda, Ndebele raids, flight of the Khoisan,
.?
And also let
us acknowledge that the current opposition is not exactly squeaky
clean. Indeed, in some instances there is no difference between
the two sides. Violence, corruption, greed, power-hunger, arrogance,
lust, sloth, deceitfulness - all are present in both sides of the
national divide, as they will always be present wherever human beings
are present, because these are the eternal human weaknesses and
will never be entirely overcome. This is why we will always need
laws and a system of police and justice, but we need rule of law,
not the selective application of the law we have at present. This
is a fundamental difference between Zanu PF and MDC.
National debate
on these and other matters needs to begin now, and I submit that
it is important to include Zanu PF in this debate. We may find that
there are far more than fifty just men in Zanu PF, while there may
not be many more than fifty in MDC or any other opposition party
or civil society group!
The churches'
effort at instigating this debate with their draft National Vision
document, doctored though it was at the last minute, is nevertheless
commendable, and worth resuscitating if it can take us forward without
destroying each other in a rain of burning sulphur!
Trudy Stevenson
is MP for Harare North and secretary for policy and research and
also shadow minister for local government and housing in the MDC
faction led by Arthur Mutambara
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