| |
Back to Index
Where
the sun don’t shine
Rejoice
Ngwenya
March 25, 2013
There are two
categories of Zimbabwean citizens whose professional and moral ‘vital
organs’ are destined to be on permanent public display - elected
politicians and civil servants. As such, they have to build up an
incredible array of ‘antibodies’ to immunise themselves
against legitimate contempt, cynical innuendos and, as Thought Leader
adds: “… emotive bluster, ad hominem attacks, gross
hyperbole, misdirection and baseless accusations...” It is
thus a miscalculation of astronomical proportions for a national
president, a prime minister, members of parliament, heads of parastatals,
councillors, mayors, heads of police or army to attempt masquerading
a ‘private life’ beyond the prying eye of citizens.
How much more idiotic can one call themselves ‘humble public
servant’ when they fight to prevent their deeds from being
publicly critiqued?
A politician who spends
several decades soliciting for votes yet systematically places impediments
and obstacles for citizens who demand accountability is paralysed
with self-delusion. There is an even more cancerous phenomena ancillary
to this pervasive behaviour – cronies who create a laager
of protectionism spiced with mechanical praise-singing, almost to
levels of Napoleonic euphoria – around these deluded ‘public’
servants. This small clique of compliantly grateful, usually well-schooled
diminished minds has been mandated to exude bellows of choking smoke
around their master; plastering a veneer of saintly infallibility
and indispensability to a point where the beneficiary of such feudal
excesses assumes Christ-like sanctity.
Just like Adolph
Hitler’s Gestapo – that privileged but misguided gang
of praise-singers - withhold the most critical information from
their ego-drunk master until the revolutionary bomb drops in his
proverbial stately lounge. More often than not, these self-righteous
starry-eyed dunderheads perish with their hallowed master. In rare
instances, while their master is gloating and basking in superficial
glory unaware of impending doom, the praise singers plot a rear
door exit, and then watch from a safe distance as the punch-drunk
master is squashed by the inevitable.
Seldom do heathen gods
wake up from their metallic slumber - unless where the God of Abraham
exercises his mercies – [the master, who by now is marinated
with psychotic self-satisfaction] – to reveal a small window
with which to expose his deceitful and cunning praise-singers. More
often than not, the master pretends that stark reality which confronts
him is in fact an illusion, wherefore he succumbs to self-delusion
only to miss that golden opportunity for redemption.
Therefore we Zimbabweans
- who have sacrificed so much to elude and resist the cruel and
demeaning ZANU-PF dictatorship – must avoid walking straight
into a political auditorium where only His Master’s Voice
is the sole octave on the hymn sheet of post-1999 emancipation.
When our ‘democratic leaders’ begin to walk, talk, dress,
sleep and bath like our black-on-black oppressors, we should peer
closely at the freedom dashboard for warning signals. Once our New
Leaders start to demand the same sort of allegiance, honour, respect
and attention as once wrung from defenceless citizens by those whose
‘revolutionary’ political mandate has long expired,
we know something has gone amiss.
As the freedom sun floods
the people of Zimbabwe who for so long have been subdued and bonded
by the darkness of a ZANU-PF revolution that lost its bearings,
let not our celebrations be marred by that rare club of educated,
idiotic praise singers who may cast artificial shadows on those
parts, the crevices of our so-called second generation liberators.
Before we know it, we could slide back into the 1980s unsavoury
scenario where leaders have sections of their public lives where
the sun don’t shine.
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.
TOP
|