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Citizens are the real heroes
Rejoice
Ngwenya
November 27, 2009
I am not a street
activist, but more from the irritable pool of intellectual key-punchers
who hope that Robert Mugabe and his cronies are literate enough
to notice how collective resentment and hatred for shameless, fascist
dictatorship is better expressed in the written word. This I say
because there is a fallacy pervading Zimbabwean society that the
number of times and period that one is beaten and arrested is the
only means of verifying serious political activism. And perhaps
there is precedence to this malnourished viewpoint, given that the
icons of Africa-s liberation struggle have, at one time or
other, had a bruising encounter with local justice systems.
The tragedy
is that nationalists, like Mugabe, have used this as a basis for
extended stay in power, arguing that long periods spent in colonial
gaol gives them the right to oppress their countrymen. Critics of
Professor Arthur Mutambara have raised the same argument that he
never received as much political bashing and detention as Morgan
Tsvangirayi, thus his claim to political fame is flimsy and frivolous.
The good news is that this viewpoint is devoid of good judgement
and destined for extinction.
In awarding
Magodonga Mahlangu the coveted Robert F. Kennedy Human Rights Award,
United States President Barack Obama mentioned that the firebrand
Zimbabwean activist has been arrested more than thirty times. No
doubt all progressive cadres of the struggle against Mugabe-s
'scientific- tyranny will and should applaud Mahlangu-s
recognition, but I am one of the few who do not particularly subscribe
to the theory that the number of times one is convicted for a good
cause emits a force equal to or equivalent to the motion towards
liberation. Moreover, the struggle takes a further mortal knock
when one, like Mahlangu does, goes further to justify activism purely
on the basis that his or her parents, friends, neighbours and relatives
were at one time or another, victims of Mugabe-s Gukurahundi
genocide.
More often than
not, we Zimbabwean activists exaggerate our encounters in the struggle.
ZANU-PF has always been reminded that everyone fought against colonialism,
thus heroism is not only a preserve of former Mozambican and Zambian
exiles, members of the Central Committee or victims of post-independence
detention and genocide.
Girl child activist
Betty Makoni is currently exiled in England, advancing, like many
of those Zimbabweans who inhabit that land, another case of persecution
by the ZANU-PF government for exposing alleged ministerial girl-child
abuse. No doubt she is in line for another award of recognition
for her 'struggle- against tyranny. There is no doubt
that other cadres like former political hostage Jestina Mukoko,
human rights lawyer Otto Saki and constitutional activist Dr Lovemore
Madhuku deserve all the accolades they get from the world movement
for democracy. A crucial part of the struggle against oppression
is confronting and defeating ZANU-PF it in its natural habitat -
in the streets, but to limit recognition of this struggle only to
the number of times one is arrested from the trenches belittles
greater good.
My point is
that the struggle to unseat tyranny is not about 'rented-
college students doing street push-ups, old women and lactating
mothers sacrificed on the altar of fiery fury of the dragon, merely
to score political points. More often than not, strategic partners
of governance and democracy have been accused of supporting only
institutions that 'raise hell and dust- in running battles
with Mugabe-s uniformed sympathisers in the alleys. This is
a narrow view of resistance, for there is more like us who find
pride in pounding tyranny from the keyboard. It may not be glamorous,
elicit blood or swollen foreheads, but the message spreads far and
wide. Street activists accuse us of 'conference room activism-
because there is no glitz and glamour accrued from making interviews
for CNN from hospital beds.
The moral of
my argument is that when seminar attendance registers and police
charge sheets become the only genuine evidence of political activism,
strategic partners have taken the eyes off the ball. 'Anniversary-
day activism manifested in protest handbills and posters, glossy
advertisement, angry press statements and red roses handed out at
street corners are part of the continuum of the struggle against
ZANU-PF dictatorship.
However, the
demands of modern day transformative revolution require that we
shift the gear from mere defiance to a higher pedestal of popular
resistance. The answer lies in paralysing the business supply systems
that keep the ZANU-PF dragon bite venomous. Restrictive and targeted
sanctions are part of this exciting high-yield strategy; the other
is embedded in protest consumerism.
*Rejoice Ngwenya is an affiliate of www.AfricanLiberty.org
and founding director of Coalition for Liberal Market Solutions,
a think tank based in Harare.
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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