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The
world's Zimbabwe fantasy is not the reality
Percy
Zvomuya, Mail and Guardian (SA)
August 26, 2013
http://mg.co.za/article/2013-08-23-00-the-worlds-zimbabwe-fantasy-is-not-the-reality
In 2008 or so
I registered at the University of the Witwatersrand for a master's
degree with a rather interesting research component. I never got
to finish it. My thesis was to be an examination of the coverage
of Zimbabwe in South Africa's Sunday Times: using the prism of Zimbabwe
to debate local issues. The idea was to look at opinion and comment
pieces on the newspaper's pages not so much to examine Zimbabwe
itself but to use the country to the north as a touchstone to critique
the situation here.
Words like "Zanufication",
and phrases like "go the way of Zimbabwe" and even "from
breadbasket to basket case", were handy tools in this exercise.
They were not, in fact, meant to shoot down whatever was wrong about
Zimbabwe but instead to bend the barrel of the gun and target it
right back at South Africa.
When I conducted
some of this research, Thabo Mbeki was president and his battle
with Jacob Zuma couldn't have been more toxic. Among other issues
Mbeki, it was argued, was too soft on Zimbabwe; he was stifling
debate in the liberation movement; he was going to commit the cardinal
Mugabe sin – seeking a third term as ANC president. (If Mugabe
finishes his term, he will have been in power for 38 years.)
Fast-forward
the debate to this year and we don't seem to have moved an inch.
Voted into office for another term, Mugabe will remain in South
Africa's firmament for a while. The Mugabe ogre inches ever closer
towards the Limpopo River and, for this reason, Zimbabwe continues
to occupy a fantastical space in South Africa's imagination. Or
rather, South Africa's own problems increasingly make a Mugabe-style
approach to social justice ever more appealing for a segment of
the country's citizenry.
The agent of
the "Mugabefication" of South Africa is, of course, Julius
Malema. It's not helped by the fact that Malema, cast away by his
biological parents, the ANC, has found a home in Mugabe's Zanu-PF.
Like a good adoptive child, Malema spouts the doctrine of his new
family. Mugabe – after taking away land and giving it to black
farmers, who have generally made a success of it – is now
moving in on foreign-owned companies. The doctrine of nationalisation
is, of course, one that scares vast swaths of South Africa. The
nationalisation of companies, the culmination of Mugabe's lifetime
of work, is a sermon that Malema has been preaching for years now.
Zimbabwe (or
Rhodesia, its antecedent) has always occupied a mythical space in
the imagination of outsiders. In fact, many of the myths originated
from the majestic stone walls from which the name Zimbabwe comes.
Dzimba dza mabwe (houses of stone) came to be the rallying metaphor
for the nationalist struggles that began in the 1950s. Coined by
Michael Mawema, the future name of the country wasn't universally
accepted by the various factions at the time.
Decades earlier,
in 1891, the British South Africa Company (Cecil John Rhodes's vehicle
of imperialism) partnered with a research institute led by one JT
Bent to find out the origin of the stone walls. One of the conclusions
was that "the authors of these ruins were a northern race coming
from Arabia". Some even thought that Zimbabwe was the wealthy
Ophir region referenced in the Bible. "Zimbabwe is an old Phoenician
residence," Rhodes himself wrote.
Rhodes, like
many other British invaders, refused to believe that this was the
work of native Zimbabweans. In the book Great Zimbabwe, archaeologist
Peter S Garlake writes that to the white settlers, "the African
had not got the energy, will, organisation, foresight or skill to
build these walls. Indeed, he appeared so backward that it seemed
that his entire race could never have accomplished the task at any
period."
Most of the
early settlers had gone to Zimbabwe on the basis of what proved
to be a false alarm a myth, if you like. After hearing of the vast
gold riches of the Rand and Kimberley's diamond wealth, fortune-hunters
were told by Rhodes and some of his people that Zimbabwe was blessed
with even more gold.
Delirious in
the belief that the gold used by King Solomon had come from Zimbabwe,
the men who would soon trek up to Zimbabwe as part of the Pioneer
Column were not hard to convince. When they got to Zimbabwe, they
realised that the myth of the gold was just that: a myth. There
was gold, but not to rival that on the Reef. There was a lot of
land, though, and plenty of well-watered and fertile soil. And so
it was that the natives were dispossessed of their land the same
land that is central to Zimbabwe's current economic and political
struggle.
The myth of
Rhodesia had not just occupied the imagination of those near it
was equally bewitching to those further afield. From the United
States, the expression of this imagination would assume a form that
anyone aware of the civil rights struggles would instantly recognise.
In 1968, James Earl Ray, the man who is thought to have assassinated
Martin Luther King, Jr, was arrested in London on his way to Rhodesia.
A year before the assassination, Ray had expressed his desire for
"immigrating to Rhodesia" so that he could be in the land
of Ian Smith, who was "doing a good job".
According to
Hellhound on His Trail: The Stalking of Martin Luther King, Jr and
the International Hunt for His Assassin, a book about Ray by Hampton
Sides, "the idea of Rhodesia burned in his imagination, the
promise of sanctuary and refuge, the possibility of living in a
society where people understood".
Rhodesia was
then a renegade republic ruled by Smith, who had unilaterally declared
independence from Britain in 1965. By denying the black majority
the vote and stripping them of rights in their own land, Smith made
sure that only an armed solution would break the impasse.
Mugabe's refrain
– "we fought for this country" – was made
possible by Smith.
Even to this
day Zimbabwe remains, for many, just a metaphor not an actual physical
terrain whose people have hopes, ambitions and fears. Some Zimbabweans
will tell you that the suffering of the past decade that manifested
itself as food shortages and lack of forex was not really about
Zimbabwe. When the West imposed sanctions on Zimbabwe, what it was
really doing was warning South Africa that a Zimbabwe-style turn
wouldn't be accepted.
Let us face
it; Zimbabwe is quite insignificant in terms of global capital.
The suffering Zimbabweans endured was a vicarious warning to South
Africa, Africa's economic giant, a country whose social injustices
dwarf Zimbabwe's. Try what Zimbabwe did and see if you can get away
with it so the warning emblazoned on some virtual banner is supposed
to read.
Much in the
coverage of the recent elections still betrays that Zimbabwe remains
an abstraction for many, a place that is still host to the fantasies,
anxieties and fears of many South Africans. But Zimbabwe is its
own self, its own country, not some echo chamber from which people
hope to catch reverberated strains of their own discourses.
This piece
was first published in The Con Magazine – theconmag.co.za
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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