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This article participates on the following special index pages:
Talks, dialogue, negotiations and GNU - Post June 2008 "elections" - Index of articles
Of deliberations on liberation
Fungai Machirori
November 14, 2008
I-ve recently stopped
reading, watching or listening to any news remotely relating to
Zimbabwe-s power-brokering deal. At the rate at which the
talks between the ruling party and the opposition are dawdling on
at, I think I-d rather watch cement-paving set in, if offered
the option.
And so over
the past few months, I-ve turned my attention to more fruitful
pursuits like the Obama/ McCain presidential race, the splinter
Lekota/ Shikowa formation and the Formula One motor racing championship.
At least, unlike the incessant chatter happening across the SADC
region, they have all born something reasonably tangible and satisfying
for the people. Quite frankly, I think our Zimbabwean dialogues
have become a talk show to rival even Oprah-s expertise. All
they seem to lack now is their own customised signature tune. And
God help us all if we go into the new year with these deliberations
still hovering over us like a hellish halo.
But sarcasm aside, the
plight of many ordinary Zimbabweans has become unspeakable. Like
a leper picking away at her open sores, Zimbabwe has become the
unbearable sight no one wishes to set their eyes upon. Her people
pour and bleed from street to street and bank to bank in search
of basic survival. Her waters, so scarce, have become infested with
disease, and her dejection shows on the countenance of her decaying
infrastructure. And as I write this, I am sitting in the flickering
waning light of the last candlestick in this house wondering when
exactly the electricity will come on for the night. The only certainty
that remains in this land of so much unmet promise, it seems, is
dysfunction.
Perhaps I should say
there still remain two certainties; the other being our passive
acceptance of this horrid situation. For as long as we are content
to forage for basic commodities like our hunter-gatherer predecessors
and retrogress into primeval existence, we will never affect the
course of history. And we will be merely recorded in the annals
of the world-s course as the nameless, faceless, nebulous
forms that inhabited this land but never became its citizens.
It-s easy
to talk, especially before one has felt the sour strike of a policeman-s
baton stick against bare flesh, or felt their heart quake in fear
at the sound of a soldier-s rifle riddling the air, fertile
with protest. But Steve Biko, in his writings on Black Consciousness
noted that the most potent weapon in the hands of the oppressor
is the mind of the oppressed. He added that, "Once the latter
(the mind of the oppressed) has been so effectively manipulated
and controlled by the oppressor as to make the oppressed believe
he is a liability . . . ., then there will be nothing the oppressed
can do that will really scare the powerful masters."
The mind is
the key battleground for all forms of emancipation. And it is the
fear of death, of further pain and strife that prevents us from
demanding our own liberation. So it-s easy for me to sit at
my table writing this article with decorative English words that
don-t mean anything to the many who need water and not wit,
order and not ornateness. But it-s not so easy for me to take
to the streets and demand change because, like so many of us, I
know that the battle is not against men or machinery or artillery.
The battle lines are drawn across our minds and deepest apprehensions.
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