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Goliath
will definitely fall
Mutsa Murenje
October 03, 2010
We have an opportunity
to make Zimbabwe a better nation, a better place for all of us,
including Goliath (Robert Mugabe) and his trusty henchmen who are
collectively responsible for the current political and economic
bog we find ourselves in. Our country-s situation is no doubt
analogous to the hopeless condition of the woman in Mark 5:25-34.
The woman terribly suffered from severe bleeding for twelve years
and many doctors treated her but she never got better. Instead,
she got worse all the time notwithstanding the huge sums of money
she had used to improve her health. She never lost hope. She had
the faith that: "If I just touch his clothes, I will get well"
(Mk 5:28). Her faith finally made her well as we hear in verse 34
that Jesus said to her: "My daughter, your faith has made
you well. Go in peace, and be healed of your trouble".
What makes the
above story comparable to our country-s situation is the fact
that Zimbabwe has a recent history of social, economic and political
violence/bleeding and lacks the institutional structures capable
of peacefully resolving internal conflicts. I maintain, as I have
argued in the past, that Zimbabwe emits a constant groaning, a cry
for redemption and restoration. We are all tired of carrying heavy
loads and we now, more than ever before, need the rest promised
us by the Saviour in Matthew 11:28.
Life is a huge
contradiction, indeed a continual story of shattered dreams and
Zimbabwe herself is a perfect example of a living contradiction.
I read in Ecclesiastes 9:11 that: "Fast runners do not always
win the race, and the brave do not always win the battle. The wise
do not always earn a living, intelligent people do not always get
rich, and capable people do not always rise to high positions".
This is the kind of contradiction that exists in Zimbabwe today
and this I have termed a dangerous gap between aspiration and reality.
We have, in one way or another, been at the heart of many of the
gravest breakdowns of social, economic and political order and tragic
human loss in recent history.
But Goliath
will fall one day. He may not fall today, he may not fall tomorrow
but one day Goliath will fall. David (we all know him!) will fell
Goliath and the worst will be over. We will start rebuilding and
reconstructing whatever Goliath and his allies have destroyed. Our
struggle for freedom from oppression requires that we remain optimistic
and positive. Like the woman in the book of Mark, I believe Zimbabweans
have the faith that can move Mugabe from power through the ballot
as opposed to the bullet, this faith will be exercised in the next
election and that is the very reason why I believe Goliath will
fall. Goliath will receive a lethal wound and militarism will not
save him either. We will defend our electoral gains with the last
drop of our blood. We have nothing to fear but fear itself. I for
one would want to be physically present to inflict this lethal wound.
The ballot and
not the bullet is our preferred fighting method. Goliath has never
won a free and fair election and he will never win a free and fair
election. No to abuse of the electoral process! Electoral malpractices
will be punished in the not-too-distant-future, please be warned.
But how are we going to defend our electoral gains should there
be an abuse of the electoral process this time around? GOD Himself
will intervene like He did in the case of the oppressed Israelites.
Pharaoh tried in vain not to let go the Israelites. But Yahweh,
the Holy One of Israel and the Cosmic Ruler of the Universe said
through the prophet Moses in Exodus 14:13, 14: "Don-t
be afraid! Stand your ground, and you will see what the LORD will
do to save you today; you will never see these Egyptians again.
The LORD will fight for you, and there is no need for you to do
anything". Need I say more? Not now, you are adequately answered.
I am particularly
concerned about the extent to which political corruption has eroded
key institutions of government and society i.e. the quality of public
services and utilities, the protection afforded to society by the
judiciary and the police, the diversion of national earnings by
the ruling elite as well as the use of political violence by the
Mugabe regime. A number of people in my present location have been
asking if the old man is a military leader. I have repeatedly told
them that he happens to be a civilian dictator being backed by the
military hence the reference to Zimbabwe as a military junta. I
wonder if Mugabe can even operate a gun!
Remember that:
"Our lives begin to end the day we become silent about things
that matter" (Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr). And the following
happens to be my greatest worry . . . . The Zimbabwean constitution
is at variance with democratic norms and practices mainly because
constitution making and reconstruction of the colonial state was
exclusively closed to a few elite. Indeed, the bulk of our political
opinion was patently excluded from constitutional discourse resulting
in a top-down process in which constitutional rules failed to reflect
Zimbabwean realities, national specificities, and, ipso facto, our
historical experiences. Our new constitution, therefore, must reflect
local realities and be relevant to the people.
The
Lancaster House Constitution is an outcome of political exigency
to free ourselves from the grip of colonial control without any
proper constitutional discourse. It was and still is a 'power-transfer
document-. This obsolete constitution which purports to serve
the people has created a very dark and difficult challenge to the
postcolonial state. Those who captured the evacuated structures
of colonial hegemony made little or no effort to initiate a national
debate on the constitution. The constitutional process has been
badly manipulated (from the year 1987) and the constitution itself
has been used to increase and enhance the power of the president
by monopolizing political space. What a contradiction! Is this really
what the liberation struggle was all about?
Are we also
saying that there could be no Zimbabwe without Robert Mugabe? Is
Robert Mugabe synonymous with Zimbabwe? God forbid! Zimbabwe was
in existence well before Robert Mugabe was born. I am quite optimistic
that we have more capable people who can move Zimbabwe forward.
In this regard, our future lies not in Mugabe and the military.
I believe the people themselves will choose their preferred leader
at the right time. And this won-t be long.
Mugabe has engaged
in opportunistic reforms that legitimized his autocratic approach
to governance and enhanced his monopoly of allocation of power.
The road of the Zimbabwean, therefore, is as long as you make it.
Mugabe is generally dictatorial and has made this road unnecessarily
long and rocky, with unnecessary stumbling blocks. This is what
we are trying to put to an end. We don-t have to be afraid.
All we have to do is to stand our ground and tell the dictator that
enough is enough. Zvakwana, sokwanele! Paulo Freire writes that:
"Freedom is acquired by conquest, not by gift. It must be pursued
constantly and responsibly. Freedom is not an ideal located outside
of man; nor is it an idea which becomes myth. It is rather the indispensable
condition for the quest for human completion."
Finally, I affirm
the indivisibility of Zimbabwe as a nation and her people-s
commitment to democracy and the rule of law. In the free Zimbabwe
we hope to establish I envision that the people themselves, Parliament,
civil society and a vigilant press will be the ultimate defence
against what Richard Joseph termed 'prebendal appropriation-
or simply put, the exploitation of public offices for private gain.
Aluta continua! The struggle continues unabated!
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