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Who's
your daddy?
Chris Kabwato, Zimbabwe in Pictures
February 26, 2010
Sometime
in 1997 that cartoon of a president, Mr. Fredrick Chiluba, came
to Harare. He held a press conference where, clasping his hands
and looking up to the sky as if in prayer he said:
"Tanzania
has its father, Julius Nyerere, South Africa has its father, Nelson
Mandela and Zimbabwe has its father, Robert Mugabe. Zambia has no
father - our father is gone, Kenneth Kaunda has run away.
Please bring our father back home."
It was a surreal
scene but then African and Latin American characters, in fiction
and reality, tend to be just that. The occasion of Chiluba-s
hysterics was the failed coup d-etat in Zambia and the subsequent
finger of suspicion that the Short One pointed at Mr. Kaunda.
This scene came
back to mind as two neighbouring countries celebrated two very contrasting
"Fathers" - Mr. Nelson Mandela (20 years of freedom)
and Mr. Robert Mugabe. (86 years on Mother Earth). For Mr. Mandela
there was universal affection and for Mr. Mugabe the usual -
beneficiaries of his well-oiled patronage system ululated, and us
citizens and migrants despaired.
As he turned
91, Mr. Mandela exuded his usual humour and with a twinkle in his
eye spoke of the shorter journey ahead. With Mr. Mugabe, 21 February
was the occasion for the obligatory annual ranting on sycophantic
television, ZBC or Dead BC - take your pick.
The elephantine
retinue of hangers-on hung onto every word from the old warhorse.
After all, it is heavenly to be a senior member of ZANU PF -
despite having to sing praises for supper you harvest where you
have not sown. Blessed be the earthly Father.
But who are
these fathers of the nation? Who ordains these patriarchs? If there
are fathers, who are the mothers of the nation? Are we citizens
the children - forever children at that?
When Mr. Joshua
Nkomo died in 1999 the Inter Press Service led with the following
story under a blazing headline - Nkomo the founding father
of modern Zimbabwe, is dead:
Vice President
Joshua Nkomo, widely regarded as the founding father of the modern
Zimbabwe, has died. He was 82. President Robert Mugabe, speaking
to the nation in a live radio address today, said that Zimbabwe
had lost a hero. Nkomo died after a long illness. Nkomo, who celebrated
his 82nd birthday on June 7, died at the Parirenyatwa hospital in
the capital, Harare, today.
Mugabe described
Nkomo as a father figure and founder of the Zimbabwean nation whose
life was spent.
There are confusing
messages in this story that also reflect the wider confusion in
Zimbabwe. If we accept the patriarchal notion of the Big Man who
founds a nation then who is the Founding Father of Zimbabwe? Well
prior to Zimbabwe-s independence in 1980, Mr. Joshua Mqabuko
Nyongolo Nkomo was called Father Zimbabwe. And it seems he deserved
it. He was the founder of the National Democratic Party (NDP) and
when this was banned he formed the Zimbabwe African People-s
Union (ZAPU).
The revision
of Mr. Nkomo-s role and the Father title began in 1963 when
Messrs Ndabaningi Sithole and Robert Mugabe and others decided to
split and form the Zimbabwe African National Union (ZANU). Although
the original split may have been along personality differences down
the road this divide took overt ethnic tones - ZAPU became
largely a Ndebele-supported party and ZANU a Shona one.
The vilification
of Mr. Nkomo reached its nadir in post-independence Zimbabwe when
in 1983 "Father Zimbabwe" had to flee the country via
Botswana after being accused of wanting to overthrow Mr. Mugabe-s
government. The Mugabe state media had a field day. I remember distinctly
in 1983 seeing a cartoon in government-s The Sunday Mail by
Jay Gee that showed Mr. Nkomo in a woman-s dress crossing
a river by stepping on crocodiles.
The story of
Mr. Nkomo escaping dressed as a woman was a lie peddled by the state
and its apparatchiks - it meant to mock and humiliate. Now
ZANU PF would never dare to repeat that lie - but I am running
ahead.
In trying to
understand this patriarchal concept of Nation Fathers that we seem
to be stuck with I reached for a little book that turned out to
be very well written - Kizito Muchemwa and Robert Muponde-s
Manning the Nation: father figures in Zimbabwean literature and
society (Weaver Press, 2006).
There is an
excellent chapter in that book by Professor Sabelo J. Ndlovu-Gatsheni
entitled Fatherhood and nationhood: Joshua Nkomo and the re-imagination
of the Zimbabwe nation and is a must-read for the latter-day chimurenga
stalwarts (at home and abroad).
I will be reviewing
this book next week.
In the meantime
let us wish Mr. Mugabe a happy 86th Birthday and hope that he will
wish all Zimbabweans the same. We don-t need cakes. Just bread,
water; and some air to breathe.
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